MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
This mаtter comes before the court on the proposed findings and recommended disposition of the United States Magistrate. On April 24, 1989, respondent filed objections to the proposed findings and recommended disposition. Having made a de novo determinаtion of those portions of the Magistrate’s proposed findings and recommended disposition objected to, I conclude that the proposed findings and recommended disposition of the United States Magistrate should be adopted with a further explanation as set forth below.
The United States Supreme Court adopted the “jurisdictional exception” to the double jeopardy defense in
Diaz v. United States,
The United States Supreme Court in
Brown v. Ohio,
The test the United States Supreme Court employs to determine the same offense for double jeopardy purposes is the “same evidence” test as stated in
Blockburger v. United States,
The applicable rule is that where the same act or transaction constitutes a violation of two distinct statutory provisions, the test to be applied to determine whether there are two offenses or only one, is whether each provision requires proof of a fact which the other does not ... Blockburger at 304,52 S.Ct. at 182 .
The implication of the Brown decision is that even if the same conduct violates two distinct criminal statutes, one a felony and the other a misdemeanor, a second prosecution in district court of general jurisdiction would be barred by the double jeopardy clause following a prosecution of the misdemeanor in a magistrate court of limited jurisdiction. Even though the Court did not address the “jurisdictional exception” in its opinion, the Court’s holding that two prosecutions for the same offense is unconstitutional necessarily prеvents the use of the “jurisdictional exception” to circumvent the double jeopardy clause.
*371
In
Waller v. Florida,
In
Waller,
the Court specifically overruled other state court decisions which had treated municipalities and the state as separate sovereigns.
Waller
n. 3. Included among the state cases that wеre overruled was
State v. Garcia,
Courts from jurisdiсtions other than New Mexico which have considered claims that the “jurisdictional exception” of
Diaz, supra,
is still viable have rejected it in light of
Waller v. Florida, supra, Illinois v. Vitale,
In
Robinson v. Neil,
In light of the United States Supreme Court decisions which imply that the “jurisdictional exception” is no longer viable, New Mexiсo may not allow two courts within the State to place a defendant on trial for the same offense in violation of the double jeopardy clause. New Mexico adopted the “same evidence” test in
Owens v. Abram,
Applying the approved test to the present case, I conclude that petitioner Sa-laz was twice placed in jeoрardy. Salaz pleaded guilty on December 19, 1985 in Magistrate Court to the lesser included charge of resisting, evading or obstructing a police officer and was sentenced to 364 days in the Roosevelt County Jail. On April 11, 1986, a jury in state district court convicted Salaz of thе greater felony offense of battery on police officer and Salaz was sentenced to 18 months of incarceration in the State Penitentiary on May 13, 1986. It was conceded that both convictions arose out of the same criminal conduct. In viоlation of the double jeopardy clause, Salaz has been prosecuted and punished twice for the same offense.
The Supreme Court of New Mexico in
State v. Goodson,
The Supreme Court of New Mexico upheld the “jurisdictional exception” in
State v. Manzanares,
In applying the “jurisdictional exception” the court in
Manzanares, supra,
reasoned that without it defendants would abuse the multi-level judicial system. By pleading “... guilty to all misdemeanor charges arising from a criminal act in magistrate court [the defendant would] never be in jeopardy fоr a felony prosecution involving similar evidence in the district court”.
The New Mexico decisions point out that the “jurisdictional exception” protects the state from abuse of the multi-level judicial system by defendants. The courts do not want to allow a defendant to rush into a court of limited jurisdiction and plead guilty to a misdеmeanor charge and thereby preclude the state from bringing a felony charge against the defendant in a court of general jurisdiction. While this is a valid concern, I conclude that it does not warrant protection at the expense of the rights of individuаl defendants. The facts in this case clearly do not present the type *373 of problems which have concerned the New Mexico courts. Both charges against petitioner were filed on the same date in the same court by the same proseсutor, who represented the state in both cases. The prosecutor chose to prosecute the petitioner in separate actions on offenses which arose out of the same alleged criminal act. Indeed, it would be a strange intеrpretation of the double jeopardy clause to hold that the “jurisdictional exception” allows a prosecutor separately to prosecute a defendant for a lesser and greater offense as long as the separate prosecutions take place in different courts in the same state. When the state controls prosecutions in its multi-level judicial system, the double jeopardy clause is a defendant’s only protection.
The New Mexico Supreme Court has suggested that the situation presented in this case could be avoided if prosecutors would cooperate with one another.
State v. Tan-ton,
In
State v. Fugate,
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the proposed findings and recommendations of the United States Magistrate are adopted by the Court and that the New Mexico District Court of the Ninth Judicial District, Roosevelt County, is ordered to vacate the judgment and sentence in State v. Salaz, No. 86-CR-01.
