Court Opinion

ID: 9736675
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-26 19:02:21.835201+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T18:27:08.015685
License: Public Domain

Per Curiam.
Defendant, Mary Ann Longmier, was sentenced in Recorder’s Court of Detroit on March 26, 1980, to a prison term of three to five years for violation of probation received for her October 24, 1978, conviction of attempted manslaughter.
On appeal, defendant claims that she was denied her due process right to confrontation because the trial court made findings with respect to conduct not charged in the notice of probation violation.
*353The notice of probation violation alleged that defendant had violated the probation order by failing to report to the probation office since January 10, 1979, and that her whereabouts were unknown to the probation office. At the probation revocation hearing, defendant pled not guilty to the charges. Defendant’s probation officers presented sufficient evidence to show that defendant had violated the terms of her probation order. However, the record indicates that the trial court may have considered alleged misconduct that was not charged in the notice of probation violation.
In issuing its ruling, the trial court made the following statement:
"Based on the testimony I heard here today, that is the testimony of Mrs. Hodgson and Mrs. Judy Bica, I find that your client is guilty of violation of probation. She did not report as ordered and that the whereabouts are unknown.
"Mrs. Hodgson testified that she left a note. She went out there where she was supposed to be living and was unable to locate her. Based on all that I find that she is in violation of her probation in that she did not report and therefore does not warrant further probation from me.
"Further I want to say Mr. Bracy, I know you were not here at sentencing, I took into special consideration her pregnancy, the fact of her income and everything when I sentenced her.
"She killed a man and pled guilty to attempt [sic] manslaughter.
"I did not assess any cost to her because I knew she didn’t have any resource [sic], I knew that many times they come up here and say well the probation officer said if I didn’t have any money when I come back they were going to put me in jail and I avoided that.
"I didn’t assess any cost. She had no reason not to report.
"I’m sure that if she called Mrs. Bica and told her I’m *354in the hospital and I just had a baby, I can’t report, that would have been noted in the record.
"There is no problem with that; but I don’t think she made any effort to do anything except get out and start shooting drugs. I am not going to conspire to aid her to shoot drugs.
"So the only thing I can do is lock her up and she won’t be albe [sic] to get them, unless she can get them in there.”
A probationer is entitled to be heard and to present witnesses and documentary evidence at a probation revocation hearing. People v Rocha, 86 Mich App 497; 272 NW2d 699 (1978). The probationer is entitled to a written copy of the charge and a hearing on the charge. MCL 771.4j MSA 28.1134. Only evidence relating to the charge may be considered, and only such evidence may provide the basis for a decision to revoke the probationary order. People v Elbert, 21 Mich App 677; 176 NW2d 467 (1970).
Although the trial court stated that defendant’s probation was to be revoked because defendant failed to report to her probation officer or make her whereabouts known, the trial court apparently allowed uncharged conduct to taint its decision. See People v McNeil, 104 Mich App 24; 303 NW2d 920 (1981). The court referred to defendant’s alleged use of heroin, an allegation raised only by the trial court and denied by defendant. Therefore, defendant was not accorded a proper revocation hearing and the order revoking her probation must be vacated. People v Givens, 82 Mich App 336, 341; 266 NW2d 815 (1978).
Accordingly, we order a new revocation hearing before a different Recorder’s Court judge.
Order vacated and remanded.