A juvenile appeals the trial court’s orders of disposition and restitution, after his admission to burglary of a dwelling. He claims that the trial court erroneously included restitution for items not listed in the original charging document. The court also imposed a special condition of juvenile probation that the juvenile not associate with persons under supervision, members of gangs, or whose contact is prohibited by the juvenile’s probation officer, parent or guardian. He contends that these were not authorized conditions of release, were overbroad and vague, and violated separation of powers. As to both issues on appeal, we reverse the trial court, concluding that the court ordered restitution for items not contained in the charging document and that the conditions on release were not authorized, were over-broad, and violated separation of powers.
Restitution
The juvenile, T.J.J., entered a plea of no contest to burglary of a dwelling and agreed to pay restitution to the victim. The original charging document included a narrative and listed the items stolen as a “blue Dell lap top computer, ... assorted jewelry, a Sony PS3 [PlayStation 3] controller, three PS3 games, and a blue ray DVD system all valued at around $1,200.00.” The order notes that “these are the only items listed as having been reported stolen ... [and] no supplemental report regarding the stolen items was ever prepared, nor was an updated or amended narrative ever created.... ”
At the restitution hearing, however, the court entered an order requiring payment for assorted items of jewelry, fifty video games which included 20 PS2 video games and 30 PS3 video games, a PS3 controller, five Blue Ray DVD video games, and assorted coins and change. These all totaled $2,718, or more than twice what the charging document states. Over objection by T.J.J., the court entered an order requiring restitution in this amount.
“[W]hen a defendant agrees to pay restitution as part of a plea agreement, the defendant’s agreement is limited to restitution arising out of the offense charged by the State as reflected in the information and/or by the factual basis for the plea....” Malarkey v. State,
We therefore partially reverse the order of restitution with directions to delete therefrom restitution for the coins and all video games except three PS3 games. Otherwise, we affirm the award. Although T.J.J. makes a challenge to the trial court’s
Special Condition of Juvenile Probation
The trial court imposed a special condition of probation on T. J. J. That condition provided for no contact between T.J. J. for general groups of persons:
The child shall have no voluntary, willful and knowing contact with:
1) any person on probation or under any supervision by any juvenile or adult court;
2) any known or organized criminal street gang or gang members; or
8) any person whose contact or association is prohibited by his or her juvenile probation officer (JPO), par-entis), guardian(s), or custodian(s). Before having voluntary, willful and knowing contact with any persons outside of school, the child has the affirmative obligation to make an inquiry with his or her JPO to determine if that person is on probation or under any supervision by any juvenile or adult court. JPOs are authorized to permit, or refuse to permit, in their discretion any such voluntary, willful and knowing contact between the child and any such youth and/or adults who are not related by blood or marriage to one another on a case-by-case basis.
Defense counsel objected to this provision as: (1) not authorized by statute or rule; (2) vague and overly broad; (3) violating the separation of powers doctrine; and (4) violating double jeopardy. He appeals the inclusion of this condition of his probation.
Neither section 985.435, Florida Statutes (2012), nor Form 8.947 of the juvenile rules of procedure contains as a condition of probation, a blanket prohibition of willful contact with anyone on supervision by juvenile or adult court, a member of a criminal gang, or someone whom the child’s parent, guardian or probation officer prohibits the child from contacting. The statute contains no provision respecting contact with others; the form contains only a special condition prohibiting contact with the victim. The form contemplates that the order will include the name of a specific person. (“The child may have no.contact with victim(s),.(name(s)).”). Because it was not a statutorily imposed general condition, the condition must be related to the crime committed. See Biller v. State,
In addition, the condition is invalid for vagueness and overbreadth. The court may not impose conditions which are over-broad and could be violated unintentionally by the supervised individual. See Hughes v. State,
This case is similar to Huff v. State,
Finally, T.J.J. argues that the condition that he have no voluntary, willful and knowing contact with “any person whose contact or association is prohibited by his or her juvenile probation officer” should be stricken because it violates the separation of powers doctrine. We agree.
Only a court can set conditions of probation. In re T.L.D.,
T.J.J. also argues that the clarified condition requiring the “affirmative obligation to make an inquiry with his or her JPO to determine if that person [with whom the defendant wishes to contact] is on probation or under any supervision” violates double jeopardy because it amounts to an additional condition imposed after the sentence was originally imposed without any proof that the defendant violated the terms of his probation. The state concedes that this “affirmative obligation” was not a part of the original condition and was added only after the defendant’s motion to correct disposition order.
Probation cannot be enhanced without first a determination that the probationer violated probation. J.H. v. State,
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the special condition of probation. Because there are no facts in this record to suggest that a condition prohibiting contact with others is related to this case, we order its deletion from the special conditions of probation.
