State v. Godkin ( 2015 )


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    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'05- 09:02:35 2015.12.09
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 2015-NMCA-114
    Filing Date: August 20, 2015
    Docket No. 32,340
    STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    SEAN GODKIN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
    Michael E. Martinez, District Judge Pro Tempore
    Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
    James W. Grayson, Assistant Attorney General
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellee
    Jorge A. Alvarado, Chief Public Defender
    B. Douglas Wood III, Assistant Appellate Defender
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellant
    OPINION
    KENNEDY, Judge.
    {1}     Revocation proceedings, even if they include necessary competency determinations,
    must be completed prior to the expiration of the defendant’s probation, else the district
    court’s jurisdiction expires and the defendant must be discharged. Under NMSA1978,
    Section 31-20-8 (1977), a criminal defendant is fully discharged from further obligation to
    the court, and the district court loses jurisdiction over the case, whenever the period for
    which the sentence was suspended expires without being revoked. This loss of jurisdiction
    is unaffected by a defendant’s waiver of the time limits within which a revocation hearing
    1
    must be held under Rule 5-805 NMRA after a violation of probation is alleged. Staying
    revocation proceedings to determine the defendant’s competency likewise does not toll the
    district court’s loss of jurisdiction under Section 31-20-8.
    {2}     In resolving this interlocutory appeal of the denial of Defendant’s motion to dismiss
    for lack of jurisdiction following our remand, we also correct any misconceptions generated
    by our memorandum opinion in State v. Godkin, No. 31,638, mem. op. (N.M. Ct. App. May
    23, 2012) (non-precedential). In that opinion, we reversed the district court’s denial of
    Defendant’s requested continuance to finish evaluating Defendant’s competency prior to
    revoking his probation. Since the district court could not revoke Defendant’s probation
    absent first resolving the question of Defendant’s competency, we also reversed the
    revocation, as well as the habitual offender enhancement imposed as a result of the
    revocation. We intended our remand to allow the court to accomplish such proceedings as
    might be appropriate to resolve the competency issue and the probation revocation.
    However, Defendant’s probation expired without a valid revocation, leaving the district
    court without jurisdiction to proceed any further. On remand, Defendant’s motion to dismiss
    should have been granted; we therefore remand the case to the district court for the discharge
    of the Defendant and closing of his case.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    {3}      Defendant’s probation was scheduled to conclude on August 13, 2011. The State
    filed a second motion to revoke probation toward the end of Defendant’s period of probation
    in April 2011. A revocation hearing in June 2011 was continued twice by Defendant, who
    waived the time limits in which to commence the hearing under Rule 5-805(H) and (J). In
    the meantime, the case was assigned to a judge pro tempore, who ordered a competency
    evaluation based on Defendant’s motion of July 8, 2011.
    {4}     The results of the evaluation were to be presented to the district court during a
    revocation hearing set for July 21, 2011. Yet, Defendant was not transported to his July 18
    evaluation appointment. Defendant’s attorney who had raised competency resigned from the
    Public Defender’s Office and new counsel entered her appearance on July 12. On July 21,
    prior to the hearing commencing, new counsel requested a continuance, asserting that her
    lack of preparation and the incomplete evaluation would render her representation ineffective
    were she to proceed that day as Defendant’s attorney. The district court denied the motion
    to continue, saying Defendant’s previous attorney had “promise[d]” the court that evidence
    on competency would be available at that hearing. The probation revocation hearing
    commenced with the State’s first witness.
    {5}    Prior to Defendant’s cross-examination of this witness, the district court expressed
    a changed desire to grant the continuance. The State informed the court that its jurisdiction
    2
    would lapse on August 12, 20111 and absent revoking Defendant’s probation, he would be
    “scot-free.” Defense counsel agreed, stating that, “Once the jurisdiction runs on this case,
    it’s done, whether it’s stayed for competency or not.” After defense counsel stated that it was
    not certain whether the competency evaluation could be performed before the deadline, the
    district court again denied the motion to continue and proceeded with the hearing, explicitly
    stating that it was the continuance, not the motion regarding competency, that was denied.
    After closing arguments, the district court found Defendant competent:
    I find that in a previous proceeding[,] competency was raised, and the [c]ourt
    was given assurances that evidence would be presented on the issue of
    competence. There has been no evidence, other than raising the issue
    provided. There [have] been past determinations that . . . Defendant was
    competent[] and, therefore, for purposes of today’s hearing, I find
    [Defendant] is competent and has violated probation.
    An arraignment and habitual offender proceeding immediately followed this determination.
    The district court entered its order on August 11, 2011, revoking Defendant’s probation and
    sentencing him to an additional eleven years as an habitual offender.
    {6}     Defendant appealed the district court’s denial of his motion to continue, as well as
    the sentence enhancement. We issued the memorandum opinion referenced above. In that
    opinion, we acknowledged the “lapse in jurisdiction on August 13, 2011,” Godkin, 31,368,
    mem. op. at 4, and held that the district court abused its discretion in refusing to grant a
    continuance for the competency evaluation. We reversed the orders of the district court and
    remanded for a new hearing. Our remand was intended to permit three things: “for
    Defendant to expressly waive the adjudicatory deadline, for the competency evaluation to
    take place, and for a new revocation hearing, if applicable.” 
    Id. at 5.
    Our mandate issued on
    July 18, 2012.
    {7}     On the July 19, 2012 hearing on remand, the district court repeated our instructions
    and called on Defendant to waive adjudicatory time limits, but defense counsel stated that
    there no longer remained anything waivable, because jurisdiction ran the previous August,
    and the commencement of a revocation hearing under Rule 5-805 was no longer the legal
    question. The State responded that it had previously argued, as noted in our memorandum
    opinion (Id. at 4), that Rule 5-805 would no longer be applicable were jurisdiction to lapse
    on August 13. It maintained that we knew of the jurisdictional problem, and “just kind of
    disregarded it.” The State maintained that even if the Defendant did not waive the deadline,
    we had remanded for at least a new sixty-day period under Rule 5-805 within which to have
    1
    The record and briefs lack a clear statement as to the date that the district court lost
    jurisdiction over Defendant. Our previous opinion uses August 13, 2011, and since the
    variations are of no consequence to our ruling, we adopt August 13, 2011 as the final date
    of Defendant’s probation, on which the district court’s jurisdiction lapsed.
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    an adjudicatory probation revocation hearing. At the State’s request, and in light of our
    second directive to have an evaluation performed, the district court stayed proceedings
    pending a new evaluation of Defendant’s competency. The district court scheduled another
    hearing more than a month later, to allow for the evaluation to be completed.
    {8}      Defendant filed a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, arguing that the August
    13, 2011, time limit was jurisdictional and could not be waived, and the absence of a valid
    probation revocation hearing prior to the probationary period expiring had divested the
    district court of jurisdiction. The State conversely argued that by remanding for a hearing
    “if applicable,” we had recognized that the competency evaluation might postpone further
    hearings, and had tacitly acknowledged that jurisdiction could be extended following
    defendant’s waiver of time limits under Rule 5-805. The district court denied Defendant’s
    motion, but certified the matter for an interlocutory appeal, which we granted.
    II.     DISCUSSION
    {9}     A district court’s authority to sentence an offender is conferred by statute, is an issue
    of subject matter jurisdiction, and cannot be waived. State v. Frost, 2003-NMCA-002, ¶ 8,
    
    133 N.M. 45
    , 
    60 P.3d 492
    . Section 31-20-8 states: “Whenever the period of suspension [of
    sentence] expires without revocation of the order, the defendant is relieved of any
    obligations imposed on him by the order of the court and has satisfied his criminal liability
    for the crime.” This section was intended by the Legislature to limit the district court’s
    jurisdiction over a defendant and terminate his criminal liability when his probation term
    expires. State v. Travarez, 1983-NMCA-003, ¶ 4, 
    99 N.M. 309
    , 
    657 P.2d 636
    . Because a
    defendant has a reasonable expectation of finality in his case, once the sentence is
    completely served, the trial court loses jurisdiction over it, including any ability to enhance
    the sentence. See State v. Roybal, 1995-NMCA-097, ¶ 8, 
    120 N.M. 507
    , 
    903 P.2d 249
    . Here,
    we must determine whether the probationary period can be tolled, or whether Defendant’s
    motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction was erroneously denied.
    A.      Standard of Review
    {10} We review the district court’s application of Section 31-20-8 de novo. See State v.
    Lara, 2000-NMCA-073, ¶ 4, 
    129 N.M. 391
    , 
    9 P.3d 74
    (stating that the interpretation of a
    statute is an issue of law to be reviewed de novo). Similarly, to the extent it may apply, we
    also review the application of Rule 5-805(J) de novo. See State v. Maestas,
    2007-NMCA-155, ¶ 28, 
    143 N.M. 104
    , 
    173 P.3d 26
    .
    B.      We Have Not Previously Decided the District Court’s Jurisdiction
    {11} The State urges us to continue with what it characterizes as an “issue of jurisdiction
    already implicitly resolved in the first appeal” based on the law of the case doctrine. See
    State ex rel. King v. UU Bar Ranch Ltd. P’ship, 2009-NMSC-010, ¶¶ 20-27, 
    145 N.M. 769
    ,
    
    205 P.3d 816
    (outlining law of the case doctrine). If applicable, this doctrine is one that is
    4
    applied with flexibility. See also Reese v. State, 1987-NMSC-110, ¶ 5, 
    106 N.M. 505
    , 
    745 P.2d 1153
    (“[T]he law of the case is merely one of practice or court policy, and not of
    inflexible law, so that appellate courts are not absolutely bound thereby, but may exercise
    a certain degree of discretion in applying it[.]”(internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted)).
    {12} The State characterizes the decision reached in our memorandum opinion as an
    implicit determination that jurisdiction did not lapse on August 13, 2011. This assertion is
    grounded in the opinion’s pointing to defense counsel’s willingness at that point to waive
    the sixty-day limit within which adjudicatory hearings on revocation must be commenced
    under Rule 5-805(J) and reversing so Defendant could again “expressly waive the
    adjudicatory deadline” for the probation revocation and proceed with the competency
    determination. Unfortunately, our focus on the probation adjudication deadline and
    competency process obscured the issue of jurisdiction itself. Although we said that
    Defendant’s evaluation scheduled for August 3 was ten days prior to the “lapse in
    jurisdiction on August 13, 2011[,]” in the next paragraph we called it the “adjudicatory
    deadline” and later the “[NMRA] Rule 5-805(H) deadline on August 13.” Godkin, No.
    31,368, mem. op. at 4-5.
    {13} Also, the attention given in our memorandum opinion to the mandatory stay of
    proceedings required when a competency evaluation is ordered, missed “the lapse in
    jurisdiction on August 13” that we had noted earlier (emphasis added). The State now uses
    this discrepancy between adjudicatory and jurisdictional time limits in our opinion to
    conclude that we implicitly or explicitly determined jurisdiction could be waived, or that
    because of Defendant’s waiver there would not be a bar to the district court’s continued
    jurisdiction on remand.
    {14} Because jurisdiction cannot be waived, Frost, 2003-NMCA-002, ¶ 8, there is no “law
    of the case” here. Farmers’ State Bank of Texhoma, Okla. v. Clayton Nat’l Bank, 1925-
    NMSC-026, ¶ 24, 
    31 N.M. 344
    , 
    245 P. 543
    (stating that, “when we conclude that a former
    decision is erroneous, and we still have the opportunity to correct it as affecting those parties
    whose interests are concerned in the original ruling, we should apply the law of the land
    rather than the law of the case”). Our mandate requiring Defendant “to expressly waive the
    adjudicatory deadline” is ineffectual if the district court’s continued jurisdiction to hear the
    case has ended.
    C.      The Plain Language of Section 31-20-8 Divests the District Court of Jurisdiction
    When A Probationary Term Expires
    {15} When a defendant’s probation term ends without being revoked, the defendant is
    relieved of any obligations imposed by the court and has completely satisfied all criminal
    liability for the crime. See § 31-20-8; State v. Apache, 1986-NMCA-051,
    ¶ 9, 
    104 N.M. 290
    , 
    720 P.2d 709
    . The jurisdictional nature of the statute is clear in our
    holding in Lara, where owing to Section 31-20-8, we held that a “court lacks further
    5
    jurisdiction over the defendant, even though the motion to revoke the sentence has . . . been
    filed[]” before the end of the probation term. Lara, 2000-NMCA-073, ¶ 11. Our Supreme
    Court, agreeing with this proposition, has similarly held a district court has no jurisdiction
    to hear a pending motion to revoke “once the probationary period has expired[.]” State v.
    Ordunez, 2012-NMSC-024, ¶ 9, 
    283 P.3d 282
    .
    {16} Defendant cannot waive the expiration of the district court’s jurisdiction. See Frost,
    2003-NMCA-002, ¶ 8. Our Supreme Court observed that this has been the case “[f]or
    decades[.]” Ordunez, 2012-NMSC-024, ¶ 9. Although revoking probation after the
    maximum term of suspension had expired was once permitted, the enactment of Sections 31-
    20-8 and -9 eliminated the district courts’ power to do so. See Travarez, 1983-NMCA-003,
    ¶ 4 (recognizing that statutes and previous case law permitting the practice had been
    abrogated by the Legislature). A bright-line rule promotes the strong policy interest that
    “defendants who have completed their sentences have a reasonable expectation in the finality
    of their sentences[.]” State v. Davis, 2007-NMCA-022, ¶ 10, 
    141 N.M. 205
    , 
    152 P.3d 848
    .
    The State cautions us that interpreting Section 31-20-8 to divest the district court of
    jurisdiction when the probationary period expires leaves the court without “the power to
    monitor the probationer for ‘all’ of the term of probation[.]” The State is incorrect; no
    provision exists to toll a probation term absent wrongful actions by the defendant because
    after it expires, there is no more “term of probation” and the district court has no jurisdiction
    to revoke a term of probation that no longer exists.
    {17} This jurisdictional provision also stands apart from flexible time limits to commence
    trial, or waivable periods within which to commence a probation revocation hearing. See,
    e.g., Rule 5-805(H), (J). The State argues based on Trujillo v. Serrano, 1994-NMSC-024,
    ¶ 14, 
    117 N.M. 273
    , 
    871 P.2d 369
    , that the jurisdictional line drawn by Section 31-20-8 is
    “a ‘more equivocal’ type of jurisdiction[.]” The implied “discretion to overlook technical
    violations” conferred by Trujillo, 1994-NMSC-024, ¶ 13, does not extend to loosening the
    grip of a statute that explicitly ends a district court’s jurisdiction to revoke probation or
    enhance a sentence.
    {18} Next, contending that the district court’s jurisdiction to revoke Defendant’s
    probation, is “not a true jurisdictional limit” and should be subject to waiver, the State points
    to our opinion in State v. Baca, 2005-NMCA-001, 
    136 N.M. 667
    , 
    104 P.3d 533
    . In Baca, the
    defendant challenged the district court’s probation revocations and imposition of new
    probation periods based on NMSA 1978, Sections 31-21-15(B) (1989) and 31-20-5(A)
    (2004), Baca, 2005-NMCA-001, ¶ 8. Baca involved re-imposing new terms of probation
    within the time allowed by Section 31-20-8. Baca, 2005-NMCA-001, ¶ 12, and does not
    apply here. Against this legal background, we now consider propriety of the district court’s
    denial of Defendant’s motion to dismiss.
    D.      The Stay of Proceedings Required to Determine Competency Does Not Toll
    Probation
    6
    {19} The State argues that Section 31-9-1, by staying pending proceedings in the court,
    also operates to toll defendant’s proration. Section 31-9-1, though staying proceedings for
    competency determinations, is silent as to tolling jurisdiction. The state’s argument is
    otherwise unsupported by any authority or circumstance apart from a frail analogy to being
    a fugitive. In the absence of any other authority that might support tolling, we assume no
    such authority exists. See State v. Casares, 2014-NMCA-024, ¶ 18, 
    318 P.3d 200
    . The sole
    basis in law for tolling a probation term is predicated on a wrongful act of absconding
    committed by the defendant. See § 31-21-15(C) (establishing fugitive status and allowing
    time spent as a fugitive to be deducted from time spent on probation); State v. Sosa,
    2014-NMCA-091, ¶ 11, 
    335 P.3d 764
    (noting that Section 31-21-15(C) is based on the
    maxim that “one should not benefit from one’s own wrongdoing”). A defendant about whom
    competency has been raised, in a manner that has resulted in a court issuing an order for such
    an evaluation, has engaged in no wrongdoing, nor has absconded, but has unequivocally
    remained under the power of the court. Such a person cannot be adjudicated while his
    competency is in doubt and he is under the court’s protection. A defendant in this position
    has not done anything to justify tolling his probation as a penalty for any delay. We conclude
    that the Legislature’s directive to stay proceedings while competency is determined does not
    affect the running of time spent on probation or, as a result, the jurisdictional time limit in
    Section 31-20-8, and decline to adopt a position permitting its tolling.
    E.     Absent A Valid Revocation of Probation, The District Court Was Without
    Jurisdiction To Impose An Habitual Offender Enhancement
    {20} A person may be charged as an habitual offender “so long as the [district] court
    retains jurisdiction over the defendant.” March v. State, 1989-NMSC-065, ¶ 5, 
    109 N.M. 110
    , 
    782 P.2d 82
    (stating that the actual time during which the state may enforce a habitual
    offender enhancement is limited to the time before an offender has an objectively reasonable
    expectation of finality in the sentence). We held that where a defendant “[C]ompletely serves
    the valid underlying sentence before the state proves he is a habitual offender, he has
    extinguished his criminal liability and there is no sentence left to enhance.” State v. Gaddy,
    1990-NMCA-055, ¶ 8, 
    110 N.M. 120
    , 
    792 P.2d 1163
    . “Once a defendant has completely
    served his or her underlying sentence, the [district] court loses jurisdiction to enhance that
    sentence, even if the [s]tate filed the supplemental information before the defendant finished
    serving the underlying sentence.” Roybal, 1995-NMCA-097, ¶ 4. As discussed above, the
    hearing during which the district court found Defendant to be an habitual offender occurred
    when all proceedings should have been stayed. Because the enhancement hearing should
    never have commenced, and the jurisdictional time has now expired, we also reverse the
    habitual enhancement of Defendant’s sentence.
    III.   CONCLUSION
    {21} Since the district court lost jurisdiction over Defendant as of August 13, 2011,
    pursuant to Section 31-20-8, it was without jurisdiction to proceed further in this case after
    that date. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s denial of Defendant’s motion to
    7
    dismiss and remand for final discharge of Defendant.
    {22}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    _________________________________
    MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
    _________________________________
    J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
    8