Harris v. Superior Court ( 2015 )


Menu:
  • Filed 12/1/15 (unmodified opn. attached)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    MORRIS GLEN HARRIS, JR.,                                 No. B264839
    Petitioner,                                     (Super. Ct. No. BA408368)
    (Henry J. Hall, Judge)
    v.
    ORDER MODIFYING DISSENTING
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS                                OPINION
    ANGELES COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF
    CALIFORNIA,
    Real Party in Interest.
    THE COURT:
    It is ordered that the dissenting opinion filed herein on November 18, 2015, be
    modified as follows.
    Delete the first full sentence on page 9 beginning with the word “Presumably,”
    and replace it with the following:
    Also affected may be plea bargains in cases covered by any statute enacted
    that would retroactively result in a reduced sentence.
    Associate Justice Richard M. Mosk
    Filed 11/18/15 (unmodified version)
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION FIVE
    MORRIS GLEN HARRIS, JR.,                            No. B264839
    Petitioner,                                 (Super. Ct. No. BA408368)
    v.                                          (Henry J. Hall, Judge)
    THE SUPERIOR COURT OF LOS
    ANGELES COUNTY,
    Respondent;
    THE PEOPLE,
    Real Party in Interest.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDING. Petition for writ of prohibition from an order of the
    Superior Court of Los Angeles County. Henry J. Hall, Judge. Petition denied.
    Ronald L. Brown, Public Defender, Albert J. Menaster, Head Deputy Public
    Defender, Rourke Stacy, Mark Harvis, Deputy Public Defender, for Petitioner.
    Jackie Lacey, District Attorney, Phyllis Asayama, Matthew Brown, John
    Pomeroy, Deputy District Attorneys, for Real Party in Interest.
    _____________________
    As part of a plea agreement, defendant Morris Glen Harris, Jr. (defendant) pled
    guilty to a felony charge of grand theft from a person and agreed to admit a prior strike
    and receive a six-year prison sentence, in exchange for dismissal of the more serious
    felony charge of robbery. More than a year later, California voters passed Proposition
    47, which allowed defendant to petition for reduction of his felony grand theft conviction
    to a misdemeanor. The issue presented is whether the People may withdraw from the
    plea agreement and reinstate the original charges where the plea-bargained felony charge
    becomes a misdemeanor as a result of Proposition 47.
    Under the circumstances of this case, we conclude that reduction of the plea-
    bargained felony charge to a misdemeanor under Proposition 47 deprives the People of
    the benefit of the bargain of its plea agreement. Therefore, the People are entitled to
    withdraw from the plea and reinstate the previously-dismissed charges, thus returning the
    parties to the status quo ante.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    On February 11, 2013, Francisco Pascual Diego was walking down the street
    when a person he later identified as defendant approached him from behind, hit him on
    the face, and took his cell phone. Diego chased defendant and flagged down two police
    officers. Diego pointed out defendant, who was running down the street, and told the
    officers that defendant had stolen his cell phone. There was no one else running down
    the street. The officers chased defendant and detained him. Diego’s cell phone was
    found on the ground about one foot away from defendant’s left foot.
    The People filed an information charging defendant with one count of robbery in
    violation of Penal Code section 211.1 The information alleged that defendant had six
    prior felony convictions, including a prior conviction for robbery (§ 211), which is a
    1      All further statutory references are to the Penal Code, unless otherwise specified.
    2
    serious felony under section 667, subdivision (a)(1) and therefore a “strike” for purposes
    of the three strikes law.
    Defendant then sought to resolve the case for a “non-strike” offense. On April 17,
    2013, the parties entered into a plea agreement, by which defendant pled to one count of
    grand theft from a person (§ 487, subd. (c)), which is not a serious or violent felony under
    sections 667.5, subdivision (c) and 1192.7, subdivision (c), and therefore not a “strike”
    offense for purposes of the three strikes law. As part of the agreement, defendant
    admitted the prior strike allegation and the People dismissed the robbery charge and other
    related allegations. Defendant was sentenced to six years in prison in accordance with
    the parties’ plea agreement. He was given credit for 170 days in custody: 85 actual days
    and 85 days of good time/work time. Because defendant admitted a prior “strike,” his
    post-sentencing credits are capped at one-fifth the total term of imprisonment.
    (§ 1170.12, subd. (a)(5).) Thus, his earliest possible release date was October 7, 2017.
    On November 4, 2014, California voters passed Proposition 47, “The Safe
    Neighborhoods and Schools Act.” Its goal was to “ensure that prison spending is focused
    on violent and serious offenses, to maximize alternatives for nonserious, nonviolent
    crime, and to invest the savings generated from this act into prevention and support
    programs in K-12 schools, victim services, and mental health and drug treatment.”
    (Ballot Pamp., Gen. Elec. (Nov. 4, 2014) text of Prop. 47, § 2, p. 70.) To that end, a
    number of felony offenses were redefined as misdemeanors, including thefts of property
    valued at less than $950. (See § 490.2, subd. (a).)
    Proposition 47 also enacted section 1170.18, which creates a statutory scheme for
    the resentencing of individuals who were already serving a felony sentence for a crime
    that became a misdemeanor under Proposition 47. Section 1170.18, subdivision (a)
    states: “A person currently serving a sentence for a conviction, whether by trial or plea,
    of a felony or felonies who would have been guilty of a misdemeanor under the act that
    added this section (‘this act’) had this act been in effect at the time of the offense may
    petition for a recall of sentence before the trial court that entered the judgment of
    conviction in his or her case to request resentencing in accordance with Sections 11350,
    3
    11357, or 11377 of the Health and Safety Code, or Section 459.5, 473, 476a, 490.2, 496,
    or 666 of the Penal Code, as those sections have been amended or added by this act.”
    (§ 1170.18, subd. (a) [emphasis added].)
    On its face, therefore, Proposition 47 was intended to apply to prisoners who pled
    to felonies covered by the law, as well as those convicted following trial. (See also T.W.
    v. Superior Court (2015) 
    236 Cal.App.4th 646
    , 653 [petitioner entitled to Proposition 47
    relief even though his conviction was obtained by plea agreement].) Section 1170.18
    also makes clear that the inmate must choose to petition for resentencing. A court may
    not grant Proposition 47 relief sua sponte to a prisoner who does not proactively seek it.
    Pursuant to section 1170.18, defendant filed a petition for recall of sentence on
    January 27, 2015, seeking to have his grand theft conviction reclassified as a
    misdemeanor. Taking into account his pre-sentencing custody credits, he had served just
    over two years and two months in prison at that time.
    The People did not contest defendant’s claim that he was entitled to relief under
    Proposition 47. Instead, it filed a motion to withdraw from the plea agreement and
    reinstate the previously-dismissed charges. The People argued that defendant was
    entitled to reclassification of his conviction, but the result would deny the People the
    benefit of the bargain of the negotiated plea agreement, thus entitling it to withdraw from
    the agreement. The trial court then ordered defendant to personally appear so that he
    could decide, with the advice of counsel, whether to proceed with his petition, or to
    withdraw it in light of the People’s motion to withdraw from the plea agreement.
    After defendant elected to proceed with his petition for relief under Proposition
    47, the trial court issued an order granting both defendant’s petition for recall of sentence
    and the People’s motion to withdraw from the plea and reinstate the original charges.
    Defendant subsequently filed a petition for writ of mandate, seeking review of the trial
    court’s order granting the People’s motion to withdraw the plea agreement and reinstate
    the previously dismissed charges. After we summarily denied the petition, the Supreme
    Court granted a petition for review and directed us to issue an order to show cause. On
    4
    October 7, 2015, we issued an order to show cause why the court should not grant the
    relief sought by defendant. We now deny the petition.
    DISCUSSION
    A.     Legal Standard
    “We traditionally review findings of fact under a deferential standard of
    substantial evidence, and findings of law under a de novo standard.” (People v. Holmes
    (2004) 
    32 Cal.4th 432
    , 442.) “A negotiated plea agreement is a form of contract, and it is
    interpreted according to general contract principles.” (People v. Shelton (2006) 
    37 Cal.4th 759
    , 767.) “‘The fundamental goal of contractual interpretation is to give effect
    to the mutual intention of the parties. (Civ. Code, § 1636.)’” (Ibid.)
    B.     Benefit of the People’s Bargain
    The Supreme Court has explained the nature of plea bargaining as follows: “‘The
    process of plea bargaining which has received statutory and judicial authorization as an
    appropriate method of disposing of criminal prosecutions contemplates an agreement
    negotiated by the People and the defendant and approved by the court. . . . Pursuant to
    this procedure the defendant agrees to plead guilty in order to obtain a reciprocal benefit,
    generally consisting of a less severe punishment than that which could result if he were
    convicted of all offenses charged.’” (People v. Collins (1978) 
    21 Cal.3d 208
    , 214
    (Collins), quoting People v. Orin (1975) 
    13 Cal.3d 937
    , 942.)
    “‘“A plea agreement is, in essence, a contract between the defendant and the
    prosecutor to which the court consents to be bound.”’” (People v. Segura (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 921
    , 931.) The trial court may decide not to approve the terms of a plea
    agreement if it does not believe the agreed-upon disposition is fair. (Ibid.) However,
    once the trial court accepts the agreement, then it, like the parties, are bound by its terms.
    (Id. at p. 930.)
    In Collins, the Supreme Court addressed head on the question of what happens
    when a change in law deprives either the People or the defendant of the benefit of the
    5
    bargain of the plea agreement. The defendant in Collins was charged with fifteen felony
    counts. (Collins, supra, 21 Cal.3d at p. 211.) Pursuant to a plea agreement, he pled to
    one count of non-forcible oral copulation in exchange for dismissal of the other fourteen
    charges. (Ibid.) Before judgment was entered, the court found the defendant to be a
    mentally disordered sex offender and ordered him committed for an indefinite period.
    (Ibid.) While defendant was committed, the Legislature decriminalized non-forcible oral
    copulation. (Ibid.) The Supreme Court held the defendant could not be convicted and
    sentenced as contemplated by the plea agreement, as the pled-to offense was no longer a
    punishable crime. (Id. at p. 213.) At the same time, the Court held, the People were
    entitled to restore the dismissed counts. (Id. at p. 215.) This was because the change in
    law had “destroy[ed] a fundamental assumption underlying the plea bargain — that
    defendant would be vulnerable to a term of imprisonment” — thus depriving the People
    of the benefit of its bargain. (Id. at pp. 215-216.)
    The People argue, and we agree, that Collins controls the outcome in this case. As
    part of the plea agreement, the parties agreed that defendant would serve a six-year prison
    term in exchange for dismissal of the robbery charge and related allegations. This prison
    term was a “fundamental assumption” of the plea bargain. (See Collins, supra, 21 Cal.3d
    at p. 215 [“The state, in entering a plea bargain, generally contemplates a certain ultimate
    result; integral to its bargain is the defendant’s vulnerability to a term of punishment”].)
    At the time of his petition for resentencing under Proposition 47, defendant had served
    just over two years in prison, including his pre-sentencing custody credits. Because
    misdemeanors are punishable by a maximum of six months in county jail (§ 19),
    defendant would be immediately released upon resentencing, having already served the
    maximum sentence for the reclassified crime.
    As in Collins, defendant is unquestionably entitled to a reduction in his sentence
    under Proposition 47, if he seeks it. The result, however, is a windfall to defendant that
    neither party contemplated at the time they entered their plea agreement. As the Collins
    court stated: “Defendant seeks to gain relief from the sentence imposed but otherwise
    leave the plea bargain intact. This is bounty in excess of that to which he is entitled.”
    6
    (Collins, supra, 21 Cal.3d at p. 215 [footnote omitted].) The People’s remedy is to seek
    restoration of the dismissed charges and allegations. (Ibid.)
    We are not persuaded by defendant’s argument that Collins is distinguishable
    because that case involved a statute defining a crime that was repealed entirely. Collins
    applies the unremarkable principle that plea agreements are contracts entered into
    between the People and the defendant for reciprocal benefits. (Id. at p. 214.) “When
    either the prosecution or the defendant is deprived of benefits for which it has bargained,
    corresponding relief will lie from concessions made.” (Ibid.) The People are surely
    deprived of the benefit of its bargain whether the bargain-for term of imprisonment is
    entirely eliminated (as in Collins) or drastically reduced (as in this case). (See In re
    Blessing (1982) 
    129 Cal.App.3d 1026
    , 1031 [prosecution permitted to withdraw from
    plea where change in law reduced the defendant’s negotiated sentence of 16 1/3 years to
    12 1/3 years].)
    The defendant also argues that Collins was impliedly overruled by Doe v. Harris
    (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 64
     (Doe). Again, we disagree. Doe does not address Collins, and the
    holding in Doe does not repudiate the Supreme Court’s reasoning in Collins in a way that
    renders the two decisions irreconciliable. (See Richmond Ramblers Motorcycle Club v.
    Western Title Guaranty Co. (1975) 
    47 Cal.App.3d 747
    , 758 [“‘[O]verruling by
    implication is no more favored than repealing by implication, and important cases of
    record of recent origin are not ordinarily to be considered as overruled by implication’”];
    Meskell v. Culver City Unified School Dist. (1970) 
    12 Cal.App.3d 815
    , 824 [“‘[A]
    subsequent decision cannot, by mere implication, be held to overrule a prior case unless
    the principle is directly involved and the inference is clear and impelling’”].)
    The defendant in Doe was charged with six counts of lewd and lascivious acts
    upon a child under 14. (Id. at p. 66.) Pursuant to a plea agreement, he pled to one of the
    counts in exchange for dismissal of the others. (Ibid.) The written change of plea form
    stated that the maximum penalties for his conviction would be probation, participation in
    work furlough programs, fines, testing as required by former section 290.2, and
    registration as a sex offender under section 290. (Doe, supra 57 Cal.4th at p. 66.) The
    7
    parties did not discuss section 290 during the plea negotiations, other than to
    acknowledge that the defendant would have to register under its provisions. (Doe, supra,
    57 Cal.4th at p. 67.) At the time of the plea, section 290 provided that information
    gathered as part of sex offender registration process was available only to law
    enforcement officers. (Doe, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 66.) Thirteen years later, the
    Legislature adopted “Megan’s Law,” making public the names, addresses, and
    photographs of registered sex offenders. (Doe, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 66.) In 2007, the
    defendant filed a civil complaint in federal court, asserting that application of the law’s
    public notification provisions to him violates his plea agreement. (Id. at p. 67.) The
    district court agreed with the defendant, finding that “‘one cannot reasonably interpret the
    language of the plea agreement, which reads “P.C. 290,” to mean [anything] other than
    compliance with that section of the Penal Code, as it was written at the time of the plea.’”
    (Ibid.)
    On appeal, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal certified a question to the Supreme
    Court, which rephrased the inquiry as follows: “‘Under California law of contract
    interpretation as applicable to the interpretation of plea agreements, does the law in effect
    at the time of a plea agreement bind the parties or can the terms of a plea agreement be
    affected by changes in the law?’” (Doe, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 66.) After reviewing a
    series of relevant cases, the Court responded: “the general rule in California is that the
    plea agreement will be ‘“deemed to incorporate and contemplate not only the existing
    law but the reserve power of the state to amend the law or enact additional laws for the
    public good and in pursuance of public policy . . . .”’” (Id. at p. 73.) Concomitantly,
    “requiring the parties’ compliance with changes in the law made retroactive to them does
    not violate the terms of the plea agreement, nor does the failure of a plea agreement to
    reference the possibility the law might change translate into an implied promise the
    defendant will be unaffected by a change in the statutory consequences attending his or
    her conviction.” (Id. at pp. 73-74.)
    Doe did not involve a negotiated term of a plea agreement, but rather, a “statutory
    consequence” of conviction. The sex offender registration requirement at section 290 is
    8
    “a statutorily mandated element of punishment for the underlying offense.” (People v.
    McClellan (1993) 
    6 Cal.4th 367
    , 380.) It “is not a permissible subject of plea agreement
    negotiation” and neither the prosecutor nor the court has authority to exempt a defendant
    from mandatory sex offender registration. (Ibid.) Precisely because the requirement of
    sex offender registration was not bargained-for (and could not have been bargained-for)
    between the parties, a change in law that affects it cannot possibly undermine or alter the
    bargain made by the parties. (See also Johnson v. Department of Justice (2015) 
    60 Cal.4th 871
    , 888 fn. 10 [citing Doe for the proposition that a defendant’s plea agreement
    is not violated where subsequent changes in the case law alter the defendant’s eligibility
    for relief from sex offender registration requirements].)
    The notion that Doe referred to unbargained-for “statutory consequences” of a
    conviction, rather than a negotiated term of the plea agreement, is reinforced by the cases
    examined and relied upon by the Doe Court. The holding in Doe — that a plea
    agreement is “‘deemed to incorporate and contemplate not only the existing law but the
    reserve power of the state to amend the law or enact additional laws for the public good
    and in pursuance of public policy. . . .’” (See Doe, supra, 57 Cal.4th at pp. 66, 73;
    People v. Gipson (2004) 
    117 Cal.App.4th 1065
    , 1070 (Gipson).)
    The defendant in Gipson pled guilty in 1992, when section 667 provided for a
    recidivist penalty of five years for each prior serious felony and a one-year enhancement
    for each prior prison term served. (Gipson, supra, 117 Cal.App.4th at p. 1068.) When
    the defendant committed another felony nine years later, section 667 had been amended
    by the three strikes law to requiring doubling of the base term for each prior serious
    felony conviction. (Gipson, supra, 117 Cal.App.4th at p. 1068.) Like the sex offender
    registration provision addressed in Doe, the recidivist penalties at section 667 are
    “statutory consequences” of a conviction. They are not negotiated as part of a plea
    agreement. And like the Doe Court, the Gipson court held that the defendant’s 1992 plea
    agreement was deemed to incorporate “‘the reserve power of the state to amend the law
    or enact additional laws for the public good and in pursuance of public policy.’”
    (Gipson, supra, 117 Cal.App.4th at p. 1070.)
    9
    Three other cases discussed in the Doe opinion also relate to the statutory
    consequences of a conviction, rather than negotiated terms of the plea agreements. In re
    Lowe (2005) 
    130 Cal.App.4th 1405
    , addressed the Governor’s authority to review parole
    decisions — an authority that did not exist at the time of the defendant’s plea agreement.
    The court noted that the parties’ plea agreement did not contemplate who would make
    defendant’s parole decision, and concluded that the Governor’s review of the defendant’s
    parole determination did not violate his plea agreement. (Id. at 1426.)
    People v. Acuna (2000) 
    77 Cal.App.4th 1056
     and People v. Arata (2007) 
    151 Cal.App.4th 778
     both involved defendants who pled to committing a lewd act upon a
    child under age 14 at a time when the law permitted them to seek expungement of the
    conviction after they successfully completed probation. (Acuna, supra, 77 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1058; Arata, supra, 151 Cal.App.4th at pp. 781-782.) The law was amended to
    prohibit expungement before the two defendants completed probation. In Acuna, the
    court held that the change in law did not deprive the defendant of the benefit of his plea
    agreement, which did not mention expungement. (Acuna, supra, 77 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1062.) The Arata court granted relief, finding that the “implicit promise” of
    expungement was “significant in the context of the plea bargain as a whole.” (Arata,
    supra, 151 Cal.App.4th at p. 788.)
    Notably, in discussing Arata, the Doe Court observed that the Arata court “did not
    find that as a general rule any law in effect at the time of a plea agreement becomes a
    term of the agreement.” (Doe, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 73.) In other words, the Doe Court
    understood the Arata decision in light of the court’s factual conclusion that expungement
    was a “term of the agreement” at issue in that case. The suggestion, of course, is that the
    result would have been different if expungement were simply a consequence that attached
    to the defendants’ convictions, rather than a negotiated term. This distinction is
    consistent with Doe’s statement that “it is not impossible the parties to a particular plea
    bargain might affirmatively agree or implicitly understand the consequences of a plea
    will remain fixed despite amendments to the relevant law.” (Id. at p. 71.)
    10
    In this case, there can be no question that Proposition 47 changes material and
    negotiated terms of the plea agreement, rather than the “statutory consequences” attached
    to defendant’s conviction. Defendant was on felony probation at the time of the crime
    charged in this case. He had six alleged prior felonies, including a serious felony that
    counts as a first “strike” under the three strikes law. He was charged with robbery, a
    violent felony that would have counted as a second “strike” against him. There was no
    doubt that the crime he committed was a robbery, and his counsel never argued
    otherwise. Nor does there appear to have been any weaknesses in the prosecution’s case
    against him. He was arrested as he fled the scene with the victim’s cell phone, which was
    found on the ground about a foot away from his left foot. The victim positively identified
    him at the scene. His maximum exposure was fifteen years. As the trial court observed,
    a plea to a misdemeanor and a short county jail sentence was “not a viable and just
    resolution” of the case and it would not have approved the plea if that, in fact, had been
    the proposed disposition.
    Rather, the People agreed to a six-year prison term and a felony disposition in
    exchange for a quick and certain resolution. Those were unquestionably “integral” and
    negotiated terms in the plea agreement (as in Collins), rather than unnegotiable statutory
    consequences that attached to the conviction (as in Doe and the cases it discusses).
    Because Proposition 47 “fundamentally alters the character” of the bargain in this case
    and deprives the People of the benefit of its bargain, we hold under Collins that the
    People are entitled to withdraw from the plea agreement and reinstatement of the
    previously-dismissed charges against defendant.2
    2       Defendant’s reliance on Way v. Superior Court (1977) 
    74 Cal.App.3d 165
     (Way)
    is also misplaced. Way consolidated two cases filed by judges, district attorneys, and
    taxpayers who challenged the retroactivity provision of the Determinate Sentencing Law
    (DSL). The plaintiffs argued that the retroactivity provision had to be invalidated
    because it undermined numerous plea bargains and therefore violates article I, section 9
    of the California Constitution, which states: “‘A . . . law impairing the obligation of
    contracts may not be passed.’” (Way, supra, 74 Cal.App.3d at p. 180.) The Way court
    did not address whether retroactive application of the DSL deprive the People of the
    benefit of its bargain, nor did it consider whether the People could withdraw from the
    11
    We are not persuaded by defendant’s argument that our holding would “gut”
    Proposition 47 because the vast majority of all criminal cases are resolved through plea
    bargains. Although the interpretation of a ballot initiative turns on the voters’ intent, the
    issue raised by defendant does not involve an interpretation of Proposition 47. On its
    face, Proposition 47 permits inmates to petition for resentencing and reclassification of
    their crimes even if their conviction resulted from a plea. However, Proposition 47 never
    addresses the issue presented here, i.e., whether the reclassification and resentencing
    deprives the People of the benefit of its bargain. That is a contract issue, and its
    resolution is not controlled by the statutes enacted by Proposition 47, but rather by the
    laws governing contract interpretation. After all, “voters are presumed to have been
    aware of existing laws at the time the initiative was enacted.” (Professional Engineers in
    California Government v. Kempton (2007) 
    40 Cal.4th 1016
    , 1048.) In the face of the
    voters’ silence on the matter, the traditional rules of contract govern.
    Nor do we believe the voters’ intent is contrary to our holding in this case.
    Proposition 47 was intended to reduce penalties for certain defendants who have
    committed nonserious and nonviolent crimes. At the same time, its intent was not to
    reduce penalties for those who have committed serious crimes. To that end, the initiative
    states: “The people enact the Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act to ensure that prison
    spending is focused on violent and serious offenses, [and] to maximize alternatives for
    nonserious, nonviolent crime.” (Ballot Pamp., Gen. Elec. (Nov. 4, 2014) text of Prop. 47,
    § 2, p. 70.)
    Under our holding today, defendants who committed serious crimes but pled down
    to a less serious felony may choose to keep the benefit of that bargain by declining to
    petition for resentencing under section 1170.18, or they may seek a trial on the more
    serious crime that was alleged against them. What they may not do is claim the benefit of
    a law that was intended to assist nonserious and nonviolent criminals, when their actual
    crimes were serious or violent or both. This result is fully in line with the intent of the
    plea bargain and reinstate previously-dismissed charges. It therefore has no bearing on
    our decision today.
    12
    voters, who intended to withhold relief from serious or violent criminals just as much as
    they intended to grant relief to nonserious and nonviolent criminals.
    13
    C.     Benefit of the Defendant’s Bargain
    Having concluded that the People may reinstate the original robbery charge and
    related allegations against defendant, the next question that arises is whether any
    sentencing restrictions will apply if defendant is later convicted of the previously
    dismissed charges. Citing Collins and double jeopardy principles, the trial court held that
    defendant’s exposure was limited to the six years that he agreed to as part of his plea
    agreement. In its return to the order to show cause, the People argue this decision was
    erroneous, and that the parties must be returned to the status quo ante.
    Because the People did not file a petition for writ of mandate challenging this
    decision, the matter is not squarely before this court. (See Campbell v. Superior Court
    (2005) 
    132 Cal.App.4th 904
    , 922 [court may not grant writ relief to respondent based on
    arguments raised in opposition, unless the respondent has filed her own petition for writ
    of mandate].) Nonetheless, because this matter may arise upon subsequent proceedings,
    we provide the following guidance to the trial court.
    In concluding that the defendant in Collins was entitled to preserve the benefit of
    his bargain, the Supreme Court highlighted the fact that the plea agreement in that case
    was undermined by “external events and not defendant’s repudiation” of the agreement.
    (Collins, supra, 21 Cal.3d at p. 216.) It cited to double jeopardy cases, where the Court’s
    concern “was specifically to preclude vindictiveness and more generally to avoid
    penalizing a defendant for pursuing a successful appeal.” (Ibid.) Given that the
    defendant in Collins was merely exercising his right to overturn an erroneous conviction,
    he should not be “penalized . . . by being rendered vulnerable to punishment more severe
    than under his plea bargain.” (Id. at p. 217.) In other words, the plea agreement in
    Collins was voided by external events, and not through the repudiation of the defendant.
    As a result, he was permitted to keep the benefit of his bargain and his sentence was
    capped at his maximum exposure under the plea agreement.
    In this case, however, Proposition 47 does not void defendant’s plea agreement,
    but only renders it voidable at defendant’s option. He may elect to keep the benefit of his
    14
    bargain and not petition for resentencing. Once he decides to exercise his option to
    petition for a lesser conviction than what he agreed to, then he effectively repudiates the
    plea agreement. Having done so, the plea agreement is deemed to be rescinded, and the
    parties are returned to the status quo ante. (See Collins, supra, 21 Cal.3d at p. 216 fn. 3
    [“whether the defendant repudiated his guilty plea . . . is a significant inquiry when
    determining whether the defendant ought to be permitted to enforce a plea bargain
    undermined by external events”].)
    DISPOSITION
    The petition for writ of prohibition is denied.
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    KIRSCHNER, J. *
    I concur:
    TURNER, P.J.
    *Judge of the Los Angeles County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice
    pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    15
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    Harris v. SCLA
    B264839
    MOSK, J., dissenting
    I respectfully dissent.
    Petitioner originally was charged with robbery (Pen. Code, § 2111) and other
    offenses, but pursuant to a plea agreement2 in 2013, he pled guilty to grand theft from a
    person (§ 487, subd. (c)) and was sentenced to six years in prison. Before completing
    that sentence, petitioner successfully petitioned to have his conviction reduced to a
    misdemeanor under Proposition 47, “The Safe Neighborhoods and Schools Act”
    (§ 1170.18), approved by the voters in November 2014. Then, at the request of the
    People, real party in interest, the respondent court, in effect, vacated petitioner’s plea and
    set his case for trial on the theory that the People did not receive the benefit of the bargain
    in the plea agreement.
    A majority of this court denied petitioner’s petition for a writ to set aside the
    respondent court’s order. I dissented and said we should issue an order to show cause.
    The Supreme Court granted a petition for review and transferred the case back to this
    court with directions to vacate the order denying mandate and to issue an order directing
    the respondent court to show cause why the relief sought by petitioner should not be
    granted.
    I agree with petitioner’s position that when a defendant pleads guilty to a lesser
    felony charge pursuant to a plea bargain, and that charge is later reduced to a
    misdemeanor pursuant to Proposition 47, the trial court cannot rescind the plea, recall the
    sentence, and reinstate the original charge or charges.
    1      All further statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    2      See section 1192.7, subdivision (b) for a definition of plea bargaining.
    A.      Standard of Review
    The issue here is one of law, and therefore the review is de novo. (People v.
    Cromer (2001) 
    24 Cal.4th 889
    , 893-894.)
    B.      Section 1170.18
    Proposition 47 enacted section 1170.18, which provides in part as follows: “(a) A
    person currently serving a sentence for a conviction, whether by trial or plea, of a felony
    or felonies who would have been guilty of a misdemeanor under the act that added this
    section (‘this act’) had this act been in effect at the time of the offense may petition for a
    recall of sentence before the trial court that entered the judgment of conviction in his or
    her case to request resentencing in accordance with Sections 11350, 11357, or 11377 of
    the Health and Safety Code, or Section 459.5, 473, 476a, 490.2, 496, or 666 of the Penal
    Code, as those sections have been amended or added by this act. [¶] (b) Upon receiving
    a petition under subdivision (a), the court shall determine whether the petitioner satisfies
    the criteria in subdivision (a). If the petitioner satisfies the criteria in subdivision (a), the
    petitioner’s felony sentence shall be recalled and the petitioner resentenced to a
    misdemeanor pursuant to Sections 11350, 11357, or 11377 of the Health and Safety
    Code, or Section 459.5, 473, 476a, 490.2, 496, or 666 of the Penal Code, those sections
    have been amended or added by this act, unless the court, in its discretion, determines
    that resentencing the petitioner would pose an unreasonable risk of danger to public
    safety. [¶] . . . [¶] (d) A person who is resentenced pursuant to subdivision (b) shall be
    given credit for time served and shall be subject to parole for one year following
    completion of his or her sentence, unless the court, in its discretion, as part of its
    resentencing order, releases the person from parole. [¶] (e) Under no circumstances
    may resentencing under this section result in the imposition of a term longer than the
    original sentence. [¶] . . . [¶] (i) The provisions of this section shall not apply to persons
    who have one or more prior convictions for an offense specified in clause (iv) of
    2
    subparagraph (C) of paragraph (2) of subdivision (e) of Section 667 or for an offense
    requiring registration pursuant to subdivision (c) of Section 290.”
    C.     Analysis
    As petitioner satisfied the criteria set forth in section 1170.18 enacted by
    Proposition 47, the trial court properly resentenced him to a misdemeanor. That statute
    only permits the trial court to reduce the qualifying felony conviction to a misdemeanor,
    resentence the petitioner, and place him on parole. That statute does not authorize the
    trial court to reinstate dismissed counts.
    The trial court did not have any inherent authority to reinstate counts upon a recall
    of the sentence. Courts have only the powers specified by statute. (See Frederick v.
    Justice Court (1975) 
    47 Cal.App.3d 687
    , 689-690; see Terry v. Superior Court (1999) 
    73 Cal.App.4th 661
    , 665; see also People v. Segura (2008) 
    44 Cal.4th 921
    , 930.)
    A change in the law does not affect a plea agreement. In Doe v. Harris (2013) 
    57 Cal.4th 64
     (Doe), the defendant entered into a plea agreement in which he agreed to plead
    nolo contendere to one of six counts of lewd and lascivious acts upon a child under the
    age of 14 (former § 288, subd. (a)), an offense that required sex offender registration,
    including providing certain information (former § 290), which at the time was only
    available to law enforcement. Years later the Legislature made that information available
    to the public. (§ 290.46.) The defendant filed an action in a federal court arguing that
    requiring him to comply with the new law’s notification provisions violated the plea
    agreement. In responding to a question certified by the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Ninth Circuit, the California Supreme Court considered whether a defendant’s
    plea agreement was, in effect, breached or violated by the amendment to California’s Sex
    Offender Regulation Act (§ 290 et seq.). The court held that the defendant was bound by
    the plea agreement notwithstanding the change in the law. The court said that, as
    explained in People v. Gipson (2004) 
    117 Cal.App.4th 1065
    , “the parties to a plea
    agreement—an agreement unquestionably infused with a substantial public interest and
    3
    subject to the plenary control of the state—are deemed to know and understand that the
    state, again subject to the limitations imposed by the federal and state Constitutions, may
    enact laws that will affect the consequences attending the conviction entered upon the
    plea.” (Doe, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 70.). The court added that “prosecutorial and judicial
    silence on the possibility the Legislature might amend a statutory consequence of a
    conviction should not ordinarily be interpreted to be an implied promise that the
    defendant will not be subject to the amended law.” (Id. at p. 71.) The court said that the
    “general rule in California is that the plea agreement will be ‘“deemed to incorporate and
    contemplate not only the existing law but the reserve power of the state to amend the law
    or enact additional laws for the public good and in pursuance of public policy.”’
    [Citation.] That the parties enter into a plea agreement thus does not have the effect of
    insulating them from changes in the law that the Legislature has intended to apply to
    them.” (Id. at p. 66.) Thus, a plea agreement is not breached or revocable just because a
    change in the law disadvantages one party or the other. (See also Way v. Superior Court
    of San Diego County (1977) 
    74 Cal.App.3d 165
    .)
    The following language in the dissent from Doe, supra, 
    57 Cal.4th 64
     supports the
    application of Doe in the instant case: “Today, this court’s majority holds that ‘requiring
    the parties’ compliance with changes in the law made retroactive to them does not violate
    the terms of the plea agreement . . . .’ (Maj. opn., ante, at p. 73.) This broad language
    means that new changes in the law must be followed even though they were not
    contemplated by the parties when they negotiated the terms of their agreement, which is a
    form of contract.” (Id. at p. 74, Kennard, J., dissenting.)
    Both a defendant, as in Doe, supra, 
    57 Cal.4th 64
    , and the People, as here, are
    bound by a plea agreement despite a later change in the law. There is no meaningful
    distinction in the context of this case between the “statutory consequences” of a plea-
    agreed conviction as in Doe and a negotiated term of a plea agreement. Both involve the
    consequences of the plea agreement and the conviction resulting from it.
    4
    The Supreme Court reaffirmed the principle that plea agreements are not subject to
    changes in the law in Johnson v. Department of Justice (2015) 
    60 Cal.4th 871
    , 889,
    footnote 10 when it said, “As for [sex] offenders who entered plea agreements, ‘the
    general rule in California is that a plea agreement is ‘“deemed to incorporate and
    contemplate not only the existing law but the reserve power of the state to amend the law
    or enact additional laws for the public good and in pursuance of public policy.’”’
    (Doe[, supra,] 57 Cal.4th [at p.] 73.) It therefore follows that ‘requiring the parties’
    compliance with changes in the law made retroactive to them does not violate the terms
    of the plea agreement, nor does the failure of a plea agreement to reference the possibility
    the law might change translate into an implied promise the defendant will be unaffected
    by a change in the statutory consequences attending his or her conviction.’ (Id. at pp. 73-
    74.)”
    Other cases have followed Doe, supra, 
    57 Cal.4th 64
    . For example, the court in
    People v. Smith (2014) 
    227 Cal.App.4th 717
    , 730, which considered how an amendment
    to section 1203.4 impacted a plea agreement, said, “We start from the premise that, in the
    absence of constitutional restrictions, the general rule governs here (Doe, supra, 57
    Cal.4th at p. 68), and that rule is plea agreements do not insulate the parties thereto ‘from
    changes in the law that the Legislature has intended to apply to them.’ (Id. at p. 66.) The
    corollary to that rule also governs here: ‘prosecutorial and judicial silence on the
    possibility the Legislature might amend a statutory consequence of a conviction should
    not ordinarily be interpreted to be an implied promise that the defendant will not be
    subject to the amended law.’ (Id. at p. 71.) [¶] . . . [¶] In our view, the contract
    envisioned by [defendants] must be subject to the same rules as those that govern plea
    bargains and other contracts, as stated in Doe. In other words, in the absence of
    constitutional constraints, the contract to which a grant of probation gives rise must be
    ‘“‘deemed to incorporate and contemplate not only the existing law but the reserve power
    of the state to amend the law or enact additional laws for the public good and in
    pursuance of public policy.’”’ (Doe, supra, 57 Cal.4th at p. 66, quoting People v.
    5
    Gipson[, supra,] 117 Cal.App.4th [at p.] 1070.) We conclude, in the absence of
    constitutional constraints, a probationer’s entitlement to relief under section 1203.4 is not
    frozen at the time of the probationary grant but is subject to subsequent legislative
    amendments to the statute.”
    The court in T.W. v. Superior Court (2015) 
    236 Cal.App.4th 646
     (T.W.) applied
    Doe, supra, 
    57 Cal.4th 46
     in a Proposition 47 case to permit a plea bargained disposition
    to be reduced to a misdemeanor. In that case, the juvenile court had refused to reduce the
    minor’s adjudication to a misdemeanor because it concluded that Proposition 47 did not
    apply to plea bargains. The juvenile had admitted the truth of the allegation that he
    received stolen property in violation of section 496. The prosecution dismissed a charge
    of robbery in violation of section 211 as part of the plea agreement. The court noted that
    Proposition 47 applied to convictions obtained both by trial and plea and concluded that
    the language and intent of Proposition 47 plainly intended it to apply to plea-bargained
    dispositions. The court said, “This outcome is consistent with the general rule announced
    by our Supreme Court in Doe[, supra,] 
    57 Cal.4th 64
    : ‘[T]he general rule in California is
    that the plea agreement will be ‘“deemed to incorporate and contemplate not only the
    existing law but the reserve power of the state to amend the law or enact additional laws
    for the public good and in pursuance of public policy. . . .’” [Citation.] That the parties
    enter into a plea agreement thus does not have the effect of insulating them from changes
    in the law that the Legislature has intended to apply to them.’ (Id. at p. 66.)” (T.W.,
    supra, 236 Cal.App.4th at p. 653, fn. 4.)
    Also persuasive is the United State Supreme Court case of Freeman v. United
    States (2011) __ U.S. __, 
    131 S.Ct. 2685
    , in which a plurality decision held that federal
    defendants who enter into plea agreements that specify a particular sentence as a
    condition for a guilty plea are eligible for a sentence reduction under 18 U.S.C. section
    3583(c)(2), which authorizes a district court to modify a sentence when the defendant has
    been sentenced to a term of imprisonment based on a sentence range that has
    subsequently been lowered by the Sentencing Commission through a retroactive
    6
    amendment to the Sentencing Guidelines. The plurality took the view that sentences
    imposed pursuant to binding agreements are eligible for later modification by a change in
    the law. Justice Sotomayor in a concurring opinion concluded, “In short, application of
    section 3582(c)(2) to an eligible defendant does not—and will not—deprive the
    Government of the benefit of its bargain.” (Freeman v. United States, 
    supra,
     131 S.Ct. at
    p. 2699.)
    People v. Collins (1978) 
    21 Cal.3d 208
     (Collins), cited by the real party in interest,
    does not govern. That case involved a fully repealed statute defining a crime. The court
    said, “When a defendant gains total relief from his vulnerability to sentence, the state is
    substantially deprived of the benefits for which it agreed to enter the bargain.” (Id. at p.
    215, italics added.) In Collins, the defendant was indicted in 1974 on 15 separate felony
    counts, including six counts of burglary, two counts of forcible rape, three counts of
    forcible oral copulation, and other charges. Pursuant to a plea bargain, defendant pleaded
    guilty to one count of non-forcible oral copulation, and all other charges were dismissed.
    Between the time that he pleaded and was sentenced, the Legislature completely repealed
    the statute that was the basis of his conviction. Thus, the defendant had been sentenced
    on a charge that had been repealed. Our Supreme Court agreed that the defendant could
    not be sentenced on the repealed crime, and reversed the conviction. The court held that
    the prosecution was deprived of the benefit of its bargain by the relief the court was
    granting (reversing the sole conviction), and concluded that the dismissed counts could
    be restored. (Ibid.) Unlike in Collins, petitioner here does not “escape from vulnerability
    to sentence” (ibid.), for he remains convicted and his punishment is simply reduced.
    Even if Collins, supra, 
    21 Cal.3d 208
     is not distinguishable from the instant case,
    it cannot be reconciled with Doe, supra, 
    57 Cal.4th 64
    , which did not mention Collins,
    and thus Collins, to the extent applicable, must be deemed impliedly overruled. (See
    Everett v. Everett (1976) 
    57 Cal.App.3d 65
    , 71 [“If Stevens v. Kelly [(1943) 
    57 Cal.App.2d 318
    ] ever correctly stated California law, it surely did not survive Berry v.
    Chaplin [(1946) 
    74 Cal.App.2d 652
    ], which simply ignored it. The two cases cannot
    7
    coexist in a jurisdiction which purports to decide disputes on a rational basis”].) As
    stated in 9 Witkin, Cal. Procedure (5th ed. 2008) Appeal, section 541, page 612,
    “Overruling may also occur in two stages: (1) A prior authority may be first overlooked,
    ignored, or purportedly distinguished on untenable grounds. (2) Then, in a later
    decision, it may be recognized that the early case was ‘impliedly overruled’ by the later
    one.”
    People v. Collins (1996) 
    45 Cal.App.4th 849
    , cited by real party in interest is not
    applicable. That case involved a plea agreement conditioned on the juvenile’s
    truthfulness. The trial court found that the juvenile gave false testimony and thus set
    aside the plea bargain and reinstated the original petition. That case had nothing to do
    with a change in the law, but rather with the failure of the juvenile to comply with his
    express obligation to be truthful. To the extent that case and In re Blessing (1982) 
    129 Cal.App.3d 1026
    , another case cited by real party in interest, support real party in
    interest’s position, in view of Doe, supra, 
    57 Cal.4th 64
    , they are no longer good law.
    In re Ricardo C. (2013) 
    220 Cal.App.4th 688
    , also was cited by real party in
    interest. The court held that a juvenile court’s dispositional order was unlawful when it
    ordered a minor placed in a facility other than the Youth Offender Program to which the
    parties had agreed as part of a negotiated plea agreement. The court in what appears to
    be dicta said that the juvenile court should have set aside the plea and reinstated all the
    allegations of the petitions filed against minor. Thus, this case involving a juvenile
    proceeding (see Alejandro N. v. Superior Court (2015) 
    238 Cal.App.4th 1209
    [Proposition 47 applies to juvenile proceedings]) concerned the trial court’s decision—
    not a change of law. To the extent applicable here, it would be inconsistent with existing
    law as set forth in Doe, supra, 
    57 Cal.4th 64
    . In People v. Superior Court (Sanchez)
    (2014) 
    223 Cal.App.4th 567
    , referred to by real party in interest, the trial court imposed a
    sentence less than agreed to in the plea bargain. Under those circumstances, the court
    said the People were entitled to reinstatement of all counts against the defendant. Here,
    8
    in contrast, the sentence under the plea agreement was consistent with the plea agreement
    and authorized by law. Thus, People v. Superior Court (Sanchez) is distinguishable.
    If applying Proposition 47 to plea agreements can result in vacating the plea and
    reinstating the original changes, such application would lead to absurd results and would
    be contrary to the intent of the voters. Plea agreements resolve a vast majority of
    criminal cases. (See Recent Cases, 121 Harv. L.Rev. (2008) 2230.) If a reduction of a
    sentence under Proposition 47 results in the reinstatement of the original charges and
    elimination of the plea agreement, the financial and social benefits of Proposition 47
    would not be realized, and the voters’ intent and expectations would be frustrated. Plea
    agreements would be subject to nullification depending on later enacted provisions. The
    District Attorney conceded at oral argument that if her position prevailed “quite a few
    cases” would be affected. Presumably, also affected could be plea bargains in cases
    covered by Proposition 36 (§ 1170.126), which provides mandatory probation and drug
    treatment for various nonviolent drug possession offenses. Convictions pursuant to plea
    bargains should not be subject to being set aside by the People years later because of a
    change in the law
    Accordingly, I would grant the petition for writ of mandate.
    MOSK, J.
    9