¶ 1 In this special action, petitioner Jose Calderon-Palomino contends the respondent judge abused his discretion by denying Calderon-Palomino’s request to have real party in interest the State of Arizona pay for translating disclosure and court documents from English into Spanish in the underlying criminal proceeding. Although Calderon-Palomino has a remedy by appeal, we accept jurisdiction of this special action because he has presented a constitutional issue of first impression that is a matter of statewide concern and likely to recur.
Vo v. Superior Court,
¶ 2 Calderon-Palomino is a Mexican citizen charged with first-degree murder. The state is seeking the death penalty. Calderon-Palomino is fluent in and reads Spanish, but neither speaks nor reads English. He has been provided with two appointed counsel, one of whom is bilingual, a bilingual investigator, and an interpreter at all hearings. The state’s disclosure amounts to some 3,000 pages of documents in English. Calderon-Palomino filed a motion asking that the state be required to pay for translating all documents into Spanish at an approximate cost of $110,000. According to one estimate, it would take approximately eight months to complete the translation. The respondent judge ordered defense counsel to narrow the translation request, resulting in the defense’s identification of 237 documents, totaling at least 1,595 pages. 1 The respondent judge then denied the motion, concluding Calderon-Palomino is “in the same position as every indigent Spanish speaking defendant,” and finding there is “no compelling precedent.”
¶ 3 In this special action, we must decide whether the respondent judge made a determination that is “arbitrary and capricious or an abuse of discretion.” Ariz. R.P. Special Actions 3(c), 17B A.R.S. We will not grant special action relief if a judge reaches the right result for the wrong reason.
Special Fund/No Ins. Section v. Industrial Comm’n,
¶4 Calderon-Palomino first argues that principles of due process under the federal and state constitutions, United States Constitution Amendment XIV, § 1; Arizona Constitution, article II, § 4, require the state to provide the requested translations and that the respondent judge therefore abused his discretion by denying Calderon-Palomino’s motion. No Arizona ease has squarely addressed this issue. But it is well settled that due process requires that the state provide indigent defendants with “the raw materials integral to the building of an effective defense.”
2
Ake v. Oklahoma,
¶ 5 Courts must carefully weigh three factors to determine whether items included within a defendant’s particular request constitute integral “raw material.”
The first is the private interest that will be affected by the action of the State. The second is the governmental interest that will be affected if the [request is granted]. The third is the probable value of the [request], and the risk of an erroneous deprivation of the affected interest if [the request is not granted].
Ake,
¶ 6 Although Calderon-Palomino unquestionably has a strong interest in actively participating in his defense to insure an accurate fact-finding process,
see Ake,
¶ 7
Natividad,
upon which Calderon-Palomino relies, does not compel a different result. In that case, our supreme court held that non-English-speaking, indigent defendants have a right to an interpreter at trial proceedings.
¶ 8 Calderon-Palomino next argues that the respondent judge’s denial of his motion violated his equal protection rights under the federal constitution. U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1. Specifically, he suggests that by being deprived of the translated materials, he is being treated differently based on his national origin.
¶ 9 State action that results in disparate treatment of persons based on a suspect classification such as race, gender, and national origin or based on a person’s exercise of a fundamental right is not valid unless it survives strict scrutiny.
Wigglesworth v.
¶ 10 The record here does not establish that language is a proxy for national origin.
See Flores v. State,
¶ 11 “The cost in time, money and administrative disruption” of providing “foreign language services” are legitimate governmental interests.
Soberal-Perez v. Schweiker,
¶ 12 Calderon-Palomino also argues that he is entitled to the translations because Rule 15.1, Ariz. R.Crim. P., 16A A.R.S., requires the state to make disclosure “to the defendant.” Specifically, he argues that for the disclosure to a defendant to be meaningful, it must be made in a language the defendant can understand. Rule 15.1 does not, however, require disclosure in a language other than English. It merely requires disclosure. And, nothing in Rule 15.1 prevents disclosure to a non-English speaking defendant through his or her bilingual counsel. Thus, we cannot conclude that Rule 15.1 mandates the desired translations.
¶ 13 Calderon-Palomino next argues the state entered into a binding stipulation to provide the translations. The respondent judge, however, permitted the state to withdraw from that stipulation. Given the limited record before us, we cannot say the respondent judge abused his discretion in making that decision.
See Harsh Building Co. v. Bialac,
¶ 14 Calderon-Palomino finally argues the respondent judge was estopped from denying his motion because Calderon-Palomino detrimentally relied on the respondent judge’s promise to order the translations if Calderon-Palomino established that he could adequately read Spanish. Even if such a promise could support Calderon-Palomino’s detrimental reliance claim, the record before us does not reflect that the respondent judge clearly made any such promise. Thus, we cannot conclude the respondent judge induced any detrimental reliance.
St. Joseph’s Hosp. and Med. Ctr. v. Reserve Life Ins. Co.,
¶ 15 Because Calderon-Palomino has not established that the translation
Notes
. Calderon-Palomino listed 122 documents with a total page length of 1,480 pages, and 115 documents with an undisclosed page length.
. Calderon-Palomino does not argue that he is entitled to the translation under A.R. S. § 13-4013(B), which requires counties to pay for experts and investigators in capital cases if it is reasonably necessary to do so. Accordingly, we do not address that issue.
