State v. Lindsey

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 20, 2017
Docket34,814
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Lindsey (State v. Lindsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Lindsey, (N.M. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 Opinion Number: _______________

3 Filing Date: March 20, 2017

4 NO. 34,814

5 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

6 Plaintiff-Appellant,

7 v.

8 ZACHERY E. LINDSEY,

9 Defendant-Appellee.

10 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF OTERO COUNTY 11 Angie K. Schneider, District Judge

12 Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General 13 Santa Fe, NM 14 M. Anne Kelly, Assistant Attorney General 15 Albuquerque, NM

16 for Appellant

17 Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender 18 Santa Fe, NM 19 Sergio J. Viscoli, Appellate Defender 20 Albuquerque, NM

21 for Appellee 1 OPINION

2 HANISEE, Judge.

3 {1} Defendant Zachery Lindsey was convicted of two fourth-degree

4 felonies—shoplifting and conspiracy to commit shoplifting—and sentenced as a

5 habitual offender under NMSA 1978, Section 31-18-17(A) (2003), based on his prior

6 conviction for residential burglary. The district court imposed a five-year sentence of

7 imprisonment, which included two mandatory one-year habitual offender

8 enhancements. The court then suspended the sentence in its entirety, finding

9 substantial and compelling reasons to do so, and placed Defendant on probation.

10 {2} The State’s appeal requires that we address a statute that has yet to be

11 exactingly scrutinized by our appellate courts. To do so, and to ascertain whether the

12 district court erred in suspending the portion of Defendant’s sentence earned by virtue

13 of his status as a habitual offender, we must interpret the phrase “substantial and

14 compelling reasons” as contained in Section 31-18-17(A). We affirm Defendant’s

15 sentence.

16 BACKGROUND

17 {3} In October 2013 Defendant pled no contest to residential burglary, a third-

18 degree felony, and larceny, a fourth-degree felony, offenses committed in November

19 2012 when Defendant was nineteen years old. For those offenses, Defendant received 1 a conditional discharge, contingent upon his successful completion of five years’

2 probation and repayment of up to $1,417 in restitution.

3 {4} In November 2014 while still on probation, Defendant was apprehended as he

4 ran from a Wal-Mart store in Alamogordo, New Mexico. He was indicted for (1)

5 shoplifting (over $500) and (2) conspiracy to commit shoplifting (over $500), both

6 of which are fourth-degree felonies. Defendant again pled no contest to the charges.

7 {5} At sentencing, the prosecutor stated that he was “at a loss as to what to do”

8 regarding Defendant, acknowledging Defendant’s youth but also stating that

9 Defendant “has done poorly on probation” and “is a young person that appears to be

10 on the road to not a good position in life.” The prosecutor suggested that the court

11 “send [Defendant] to [a] diagnostic [center], perhaps as a stop-gap measure, an in-

12 between measure.” Defense counsel asked that Defendant’s sentence be suspended

13 for “compelling reasons,” including Defendant’s youth and that Defendant was by

14 then performing well on probation, paying restitution for his prior offense, gainfully

15 employed, and expecting a child. Undecided, the district judge continued the

16 sentencing proceedings in order to hear from Defendant’s probation officer, Wolf

17 Fielenbach.

18 {6} At the follow-up hearing, the State reiterated its request for a sixty-day

19 diagnostic commitment. Defense counsel continued to argue for a suspended

2 1 sentence. Mr. Fielenbach testified that Defendant had done “very well on probation

2 until” he re-offended, but that after spending a couple of weeks in prison Defendant’s

3 probation was reinstated, “mainly for the reason that he can pay off his restitution.”

4 Mr. Fielenbach explained that Defendant had been “on and off of jobs,” making

5 restitution payments difficult, but that Defendant was employed and “doing well”

6 since being back on probation. He also elevated Defendant’s probationary status to

7 “high risk,” meaning that he checked on Defendant once or twice a month and that

8 he usually found Defendant “working in his dad’s shop in the evenings.” Mr.

9 Fielenbach concluded: “I think he’s on the right track.” Defendant’s father and wife

10 also testified on Defendant’s behalf, describing Defendant’s demonstrated

11 commitment to his new employment and family and requesting an outcome that

12 would allow Defendant to “continue on the path that he’s on.”

13 {7} In final remarks, the prosecutor argued that Section 31-18-17(A) does not

14 permit a mandatory habitual offender sentence to be suspended “merely” because (1)

15 Defendant resumed restitution payments, (2) Defendant was a married father-to-be,

16 and (3) Defendant was employed. He argued that those attributes are “not defined”

17 as substantial and could not justify imposition of a suspended sentence “in the interest

18 of justice.” The prosecutor added that “restitution was the order of another court” and

19 therefore “not something that we can consider now because it’s not substantial and

3 1 compelling.” He stated that he was “not necessarily disagreeing with any of it. It’s

2 just not substantial and compelling.”

3 {8} The district court—in accordance with NMSA 1978, Section 31-18-15(A)(13)

4 (2007) and Section 31-18-17(A)—sentenced Defendant to eighteen months for each

5 of the counts on which he was found guilty, adding the one-year enhancements for

6 each of the counts because of his habitual offender status. But the district court found

7 that justice would not be served by Defendant’s imprisonment, observing that

8 Defendant had already served fifty-three days of pre-sentence confinement.

9 Therefore, the district court suspended Defendant’s entire sentence—including the

10 habitual offender time—and instead placed him on probation “based on the fact that

11 [Defendant is] doing well” and “complying with [the] terms and conditions of

12 probation.” Acknowledging the State’s argument that Defendant was already required

13 to comply with the terms and conditions of his probation for past violations, the

14 district court nonetheless ruled that “justice is better served by getting [Defendant]

15 on probation and having [Defendant] do what [he’s] supposed to do as a requirement

16 of [his] probation” in both the present and past cases. In addition to imposing terms

17 of probation such as random urinalysis, drug and alcohol screening, and prohibiting

18 alcohol consumption, the district court ordered that Defendant attend a “circle of

19 security class” at Children in Need of Services (CHINS), which the court described

4 1 as “not just a parenting class” but a “wonderful program,” a “life-skills course” that

2 could “really benefit [Defendant].” In its written judgment, the district court stated

3 that “[j]ustice will not be served by [requiring that Defendant serve] the [h]abitual

4 [o]ffender enhancement[s] for the prior nonviolent felony conviction. Defendant is

5 capable of supervision at this time and is doing well on probation in CR-2013-15 as

6 reported by his probation officer, Wolf Fielenbac[h].”

7 {9} From this judgment, the State appealed.

8 DISCUSSION

9 {10} Our inquiry is two-fold. First, what does the term “substantial and compelling

10 reasons” mean as contained in Section 31-18-17(A)? Second, did the district court

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State v. Lindsey, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lindsey-nmctapp-2017.