The sole issue in this case is whether the trial court committed an error of law in refusing to order a sentence in an attempted sexual assault case to run concurrently with a prior sentence which Vincent Apodaca (Apodaca) was serving on parole at the time of the later conviction. Apodaca’s appeal is taken from an order denying his motion presented pursuant to WYO.R.CRIM.P. 35 in which he sought correction of an illegal sentence. We hold that the sentence is not an illegal sentence, and Wyo.R.Crim.P. 35 is not an appropriate vehicle to present the issue. The order of the district court denying Apo-daca’s motion is affirmed.
Apodaca represented himself in this appeal. He states the issue to be:
The court below abused its discretion by denying Mr. Apodaca’s motion to correct an illegal sentence.
In its Brief of Appellee, the State reframes that same issue in this language:
Did the district court abuse its discretion in denying Appellant’s motion to correct an illegal sentence?
On June 1, 1989, Apodaca was convicted, after a jury trial, of attempted first-degree sexual assault. Apodaca was on parole from a conviction in 1976 for second degree murder. Apodaca had initially been sentenced for the murder to not less than twenty, nor more than forty, years in the Wyoming State Penitentiary but, subsequently, had been the beneficiary of two executive commutations which reduced his murder sentence to a period of eight to twenty years. In an amended judgment and sentence for the attempted first-degree sexual assault entered on August 30, 1989, the district court sentenced Apoda-ca to a term of eight to twenty-five year’s in the Wyoming State Penitentiary.
Apodaca had requested the new sentence be made to run concurrently with the murder sentence from which he had been paroled. The district court stated it would withhold a determination as to how the sentence should be served until the parole board had acted. After the board revoked Apodaca’s parole, Apodaca again requested his sentence for attempted first-degree sexual assault be made to run concurrently with the earlier sentence. The district court declined to take any action until Apodaca’s appeal from the conviction of attempted first-degree sexual assault had been resolved.
In 1991, following the affirmance of his conviction, Apodaca filed a motion for reduction of sentence. The district court concluded the original sentence “was and is appropriate” and denied that motion on May 17, 1991. On April 6, 1994, Apodaca filed a Motion to Correct Illegal Sentence in which the district court was requested to issue an order to the Wyoming State Penitentiary correcting the illegal application of his sentence. Apodaca contended his sentence for attempted first-degree sexual assault had been ordered to commence on July 21, 1989, when it was pronounced, and the Wyoming *85 State Penitentiary improperly was treating that sentence as consecutive to the earlier murder sentence. The result of the decision of the prison authorities is that commencement of the attempted first-degree sexual assault sentence is deferred until after the completion of the murder sentence. The district court denied Apodaca’s Motion to Correct Illegal Sentence without a hearing on April 22, 1994.
It is clear that, in Wyoming, a sentence which is longer or shorter than the law provides is illegal.
Capwell v. State,
In this case, the district court was aware of the fact Apodaca was on parole from a prior sentence. The district court refused Apodaca’s request that the sentence on the new charge for first-degree sexual assault be made to run concurrently with the prior sentence. Further, our rule is clear that, when an individual is convicted for separate crimes in separate cases, the sentencing judge has discretion to determine whether the sentences shall be served consecutively or concurrently and there is no presumption of a concurrent sentencing.
Pearson v. State,
This case is analogous to
DeSpain v. State,
The order of the district court denying the Motion to Correct an Illegal Sentence is affirmed.
