The defendant was charged under G. L. c. 90, § 24G (a),
1
with homicide by motor vehicle while intoxicated.
The defendant admitted at trial that he had consumed ten beers and a shot of liquor on the day of the accident. He stated to police officers that he and the decedent left the tavern where they had been drinking and drove to a restaurant to eat. After the two left the restaurant, the fatal accident occurred. The defendant stated that he was traveling approximately sixty miles per hour in a forty mile per hour zone. He could not recall all the events of the crash, but did remember colliding with a van. Officers at the scene observed heavy damage to the passenger side of the defendant’s vehicle, and called for the fire rescue team. The officer who first approached the vehicle noticed the defendant in the driver’s seat, bleeding from the head, and he detected an odor of alcohol emanating from the automobile. Other officers at the scene observed empty beer bottles in and around the defendant’s vehicle. Witnesses told police that the defendant was traveling at a high rate of speed and apparently lost control of his vehicle, striking the sidewalk, a snowbank, and another automobile before finally colliding with the van. The defendant was arrested and given his Miranda warnings before being transported to a hospital for treatment. The defendant’s passenger was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead.
On appeal, the defendant claims that the statute under which he was convicted and sentenced is unconstitutional. We disagree.
The minimum penalty provided under section 24G (a) is a one-year commitment to a house of correction. Under the statute, the sentence “shall not be reduced to less than one year, nor suspended, nor shall any person convicted under this subsection be eligible for probation, parole, or furlough or receive any deduction from his sentence . . . .” 2 We shall address each of the defendant’s constitutional challenges to the statute in turn.
1.
Cruel and unusual punishment.
The defendant contends that the one-year minimum mandatory prison term imposed by § 24G
(a)
is so disproportionate to the offense of homicide by motor vehicle while intoxicated that it constitutes cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment .to the United States Constitution, and art. 26 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. Over a decade ago, this court upheld against an identical challenge the mandatory minimum one-year sentence for the offense of carrying a firearm without a license in violation of G. L. c. 269, § 10
(a). Commonwealth
v.
Jackson, supra
at 909. In
Jackson,
we utilized a tripartite test
We need not embark on a lengthy discussion to pass the sentencing provisions of § 24G (a) by each prong of the disproportionality test. 4 The defendant concedes that the first prong of the test is satisfied. Although the defendant may have intended the victim no harm, we must consider the danger inherent in negligently operating a motor vehicle while intoxicated in light of the total and irreversible harm caused to the victim and the threat that such activity poses to society. In enacting § 24G, the Legislature has demonstrated its unwillingness to tolerate the alarming increase of highway deaths caused by negligent and intoxicated drivers.
The defendant urges, however, that upon comparing the mandatory sentencing provision of § 24G
(a)
with punishments
Nor are we convinced that the mandatory one-year jail term is unconstitutionally disproportionate to the penalties imposed by other States. Although Massachusetts was the first State to subject first offenders convicted of motor vehicle homicide while intoxicated to a nonreducible mandatory prison sentence, the range of possible sentences that a similar offender faces in other jurisdictions is comparable to, if not greater than, those prescribed by § 24G (a). See, e.g., Alaska Stat. § 11.41.120 (1983), and § 12.55.125 (1984 & 1987 Supp.) (manslaughter — twenty years); Cal. Penal Code § 191.5 (Deering Supp. 1987) (gross vehicular manslaughter while intoxicated — four, six or ten years’ imprisonment); N.Y. Penal Law § 125.12 (Consol. Supp. 1986) (vehicular manslaughter, 2d degree — class D felony — seven-year prison term maximum).
2.
Due process.
To succeed in a due process attack on the mandatory minimum one-year sentence the defendant must
3. Separation of powers. The defendant requests that we reconsider our reasoning in Commonwealth v. Jackson, supra at 920-925 (upholding a one-year minimum sentence for carrying an unlicensed firearm), and rule that in the circumstances of the instant case the one-year minimum prison sentence under § 24G (a) violates the separation of powers doctrine embodied in art. 30 of the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights. We disagree.
The victim in this case lost his life at the hands of the defendant, who recklessly or negligently drove his vehicle while intoxicated. We refuse to read into the Legislature’s one-year minimum sentencing mandate “some saving flexibility in favor of a sympathetic defendant enmeshed in the web of a mandatory sentence.”
Commonwealth
v.
Lindsey,
4.
Conclusion.
The mandatory minimum sentence provision in § 24G (a) does not offend the provision against cruel and unusual punishment as expressed in the United States Constitution and the Massachusetts Constitution, or due process prin
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Two other complaints (operating under the influence of liquor and operating to endanger) were properly dismissed as duplicitous. See
Commonwealth
v.
Jones,
General Laws c. 90, § 24G (a) (1984 ed.), provides in part that whoever “shall be guilty of homicide by a motor vehicle while under the influence of an intoxicating substance, . . . shall be punished by imprisonment in the state prison for not less than two and one-half years or more than ten years and a fine of not more than five thousand dollars, or by imprisonment in a jail or house of correction for not less than one year nor more than two and one-half years and a fine of not more than five thousand dollars.”
Subsequent to our decision in Jackson, the United States Supreme Court in Solem, supra, espoused a virtually identical three-prong test to consider a cruel and unusual punishment claim involving a life sentence imposed for a false check violation under a State repeat offender statute. In defining its “proportionality analysis,” the Court held that judicial review of Eighth Amendment cases should be “guided by objective criteria, including (i) the gravity of the offense and the harshness of the penalty; (ii) the sentences imposed on other criminals in the same jurisdiction; and (iii) the sentences imposed for commission of the same crime in other jurisdictions.” Solem, supra at 292. The Court further explained that, in considering the gravity of the offense under the first prong of the test, “[cjomparisons can be made in light of the harm caused or threatened to the victim or society, and the culpability of the offender.” Id. The Solem decision confirms that the dis-proportionality test adopted by this court in Commonwealth v. Jackson sets forth the appropriate standard for reviewing the defendant’s cruel and unusual punishment claim under both State and Federal constitutional law.
In Solem v. Helm, supra, the United States Supreme Court noted, “In view of the substantial deference that must be accorded legislatures and sentencing courts, a reviewing court rarely will be required to engage in extended analysis to determine that a sentence is not constitutionally disproportionate.” Id. at 290 n.16.
