State v. Quintana
State v. Quintana
Opinion
{1} The unopposed motion for publication filed by the State was granted. The Memorandum Opinion filed in this case on January 14, 2019, is withdrawn and this Formal Opinion is substituted in its place.
{2} Defendant Ricky Quintana appeals the district court's order of commitment on the ground that the district court improperly extended the period of commitment based on aggravating circumstances from fifteen years to twenty years. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
The Facts Leading to Appeal
{3} Michael Grube (Decedent) was found dead on the floor of Defendant's residence. The State and Defendant stipulated that "Defendant ... took the life of Michael Grube on or about April 11, 2003, and amputated Mr. Grube's penis, scrotum and testes." Defendant was charged with an open count of murder and tampering with evidence.
{4} Roughly three years later, in June 2006, the parties stipulated that (1) Defendant was incompetent to stand trial and dangerous; (2) there was not a substantial probability that he would attain competency within a reasonable period of time; (3) there was clear and convincing evidence that he committed second degree murder; (4) aggravating circumstances existed; and (5) the court should enter an order of commitment for a period not to exceed eighteen years-a term based on the fifteen-year sentence for second-degree murder with an additional three years for aggravated circumstances. Defendant has been housed at the New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute from the date of arrest to the present.
{5} Approximately eight years later, Defendant was found competent to proceed to trial. However, shortly before trial was to begin, questions about Defendant's competency to stand trial were raised during a motion hearing. The district court vacated the trial setting and instead held an evidentiary hearing in April 2016 pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 31-9-1.5 (1999) to determine the sufficiency of the evidence for the two charges in this case: an open count of murder and tampering with evidence. After the hearing, the parties stipulated that the evidence was clear and convincing that Defendant had committed the crime of second-degree murder.
{6} At a commitment hearing in February 2017, the district court took additional evidence regarding mitigating and aggravating circumstances. Based on evidence at the April 2016 and February 2017 hearings, the district court found that
4. The Defendant committed the murder of [Decedent] with extreme viciousness and brutality, as evidenced by testimony presented at the evidentiary hearing on April 11th, 2016 and the commitment hearing on February 24th, 2017; to include the near decapitation of the body, the removal of the genitals, the stabbing of the anus, as well as the numerous wounds to [Decedent]'s head and torso;
....
6. ... Defendant committed the murder of [Decedent] while in a state of psychosis as evidenced by expert testimony at the evidentiary hearing on April 11th, 2016 and the commitment hearing on February 24th, 2017. Based on evidence at those same hearings, ... Defendant had also previously attacked his brother while in a state of psychosis. If released without supervision, there is a danger that ... Defendant would be medically non-compliant and his psychosis would return, thereby creating a threat of harm to the community[.]
The district court also found that both "[t]he brutality and viciousness with which this crime was committed" and "[the] threat to community safety" were "valid aggravating factor[s] by which to increase Defendant's commitment to the New Mexico Behavioral Health Institute (NMBHI) [.]" Based on these findings, the district court ordered Defendant to be committed to NMBHI for fifteen years (the basic sentence for second-degree murder) plus five years for aggravating circumstances. See NMSA 1978, § 31-18-15(A)(4) (2016) (stating that the sentence for a second-degree felony resulting in death is fifteen years); NMSA 1978, § 31-18-15.1(A) (2009) (permitting alteration of a basic sentence up to one-third based on aggravating or mitigating circumstances).
The New Mexico Mental Illness and Competency Code (NMMIC)
{7} The NMMIC has two purposes: "to protect an incompetent defendant from indefinite and unjust commitment to a mental health institution without due process of law and to protect society from dangerous criminals."
State v. Chorney
,
{8} "The court is further required to conduct a hearing every two years on the issues of competency and dangerousness" and to continue with criminal proceedings if, at any point, the defendant is determined to be competent. Id . ; see § 31-9-1.5(D)(4).
DISCUSSION
{9} Defendant argues that the enhanced sentence based on aggravating circumstances is not permitted under the NMMIC. He does not argue that the commitment order is otherwise erroneous.
{10} Our review of this statutory construction question is de novo.
See
Chorney
,
Chorney
,
{11} Section 31-9-1.5(D)(1), (2) provides that, upon the district court's finding that the defendant committed the crime, and is incompetent and dangerous,
(1) the defendant shall be detained by the department of health in a secure, locked facility; [and]
(2) the defendant shall not be released from that secure facility except pursuant to an order of the district court which committed him or upon expiration of the period of time equal to the maximum sentence to which the defendant would have been subject had the defendant been convicted in a criminal proceeding ;
(emphasis added). To the extent Defendant argues that the phrase "maximum sentence" in Section 31-9-1.5(D) refers only to the basic sentences set out in Section 31-18-15, we disagree.
{12} The Criminal Sentencing Act, NMSA 1978, §§ 31-18-1 to -26 (1977, as amended through 2016), plainly distinguishes between basic sentences and enhanced or maximum sentences. The Legislature made clear that a sentence may consist of a "basic" sentence plus additional terms of imprisonment to be imposed after assessment of additional factors. For example, Section 31-18-15(A) defines the "basic sentences" for felonies and Section 31-18-15(B) provides for alteration of those basic sentences: "The appropriate basic sentence of imprisonment shall be imposed upon a person convicted and sentenced pursuant to Subsection A of this section, unless the court alters the sentence pursuant to the provisions of the Criminal Sentencing Act."
See
§ 31-18-15.1 ("The judge may alter the basic sentence as prescribed in Section 31-18-15" upon certain findings); § 31-18-17 (providing that a "basic sentence shall be increased" by given periods for habitual offenders). Our cases similarly distinguish between "basic" and "maximum" sentences.
See, e.g.
,
State v. Guerra
,
{13} Further, our Court in
Chorney
recognized that the use of "maximum sentence" in the NMMIC encompassed not just the basic sentence set forth in Section 31-18-15(A) but also could include enhancements based on a defendant's dangerousness.
See
Chorney
,
{14} In
Chorney
, the specific question before this Court was "whether the Legislature intended the habitual offender enhancement to be employed even where its application bears no reasonable relationship with dangerousness as defined in the [NMMIC]."
{15} Here, the district court increased the commitment term by five years based in part on the "extreme viciousness and brutality" of Defendant's conduct. Generally, a district court may properly consider the brutality of a defendant's conduct in assessing aggravating circumstances.
See
State v. Kurley
,
{16} Defendant contends that his enhanced sentence cannot be justified on the ground that the circumstances surrounding the crime demonstrated that Defendant is dangerous because "dangerousness is a separate-and predicate finding-required before the incompetent defendant may be committed for treatment." Defendant provides no support for the idea that, having determined that a defendant is dangerous as a predicate to commitment, the district court may not also consider the circumstances of the defendant's conduct, and their bearing on defendant's future dangerousness, in determining the term of commitment. Contrary to Defendant's argument,
Chorney
held that a defendant's dangerousness relates directly to the term of commitment, stating, "The 'maximum sentence' ... addresses the possible dangerousness
of an incompetent defendant and provides the outer limits for commitment for the purpose of protecting society."
{17} Defendant makes one final argument: he argues that aggravating circumstances relate to a defendant's culpability and that a commitment term enhancement based on such culpability is inappropriately punitive and violates due process. The problem with this argument is that it fails to recognize that, in the criminal sentencing context, all sentences are based on the defendant's culpability. In other words, "as applied to sane defendants, all sentences of imprisonment, whether measured by an extended term or not, have as their goals punishment and deterrence."
People v. Pastewski
,
CONCLUSION
{18} For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court's order of commitment.
{19} IT IS SO ORDERED.
WE CONCUR:
JULIE J. VARGAS, Judge
JENNIFER L. ATTREP, Judge
Reference
- Full Case Name
- STATE of New Mexico, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Ricky QUINTANA, Defendant-Appellant.
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published