OPINION
The central issue presented in this case is whether the trial court, in sentencing a habitual offender, may determine that a mandatory prison term is constitutionally impermissible under the Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution, and Article II, Section 13 of the New Mexico Constitution. We hold that in extremely limited circumstances, a trial court may do so. Because the trial court in the present case could properly make such a determination on the facts presented to it, we affirm.
FACTS
Defendant was originally charged with unlawfully distributing marijuana, a controlled substance, in violation of NMSA 1978, Section 30-31-22 (Repl.Pamp.1989). Defendant pleaded guilty to the charge. The trial court sentenced Defendant to eighteen months’ imprisonment, which was suspended except for time served. The State filed a supplemental information, alleging that Defendant had committed the crime of possession of marijuana in Texas in 1991. In a bench trial, Defendant was found to be the same person who committed the earlier offense.
Scott Ferris, Defendant’s probation officer, testified at the sentencing hearing on Defendant’s behalf. Ferris testified that he is a licensed practical nurse and that his wife is asthmatic. Ferris stated that when he visited Defendant for the first time while she was in the Lea County Jail, she was doing satisfactorily. After the jail physician reduced Defendant’s medication, Ferris saw Defendant a second time while she was in custody. Ferris testified that he was concerned about Defendant’s condition during this second visit because she was breathing with difficulty and was incoherent.
Ferris testified that Defendant would not get adequate medical care for her asthma at the Grants Correctional Facility. He stated that the facility, like the county jail, would not have twenty-four hour medical staff available and that the prison also would not allow Defendant to keep her medication with her. Ferris testified that the physician at the Grants facility was not an asthma expert and that incarceration at the Grants facility could jeopardize Defendant’s life. Ferris stated on cross-examination that it would be standard practice for the Grants physician to contact a specialist if necessary and that he knew of nothing to prevent the Grants physician from taking such action. The trial judge stated that he believed that Ferris was qualified to give an opinion concerning Defendant’s sentence because of Ferris’s experience and training, and he asked Ferris to make such a recommendation. Ferris recommended that Defendant be sentenced to the custody of her family, located out of state. During the course of the hearing, the trial judge acknowledged that he considered himself a “semi-expert” on asthma, and he said that he had experienced an asthma attack that almost killed him.
Although the State argued that the trial court was required to commit Defendant to the Department of Corrections because the habitual-offender statute requires mandatory sentencing, the State presented no factual evidence at the hearing to rebut any of Defendant’s claims. Nor does the State argue on appeal that this case should be remanded to give it an opportunity to factually rebut any of Defendant’s evidence. Defense counsel argued that the trial court had the discretion to sentence Defendant to some sort of punishment other than incarceration, such as house arrest or the Delancey Street program. The trial court determined that Defendant’s medical needs could not be met in prison, that any prison sentence would be life threatening to her, and that a one-year prison sentence would be cruel and unusual punishment in violation of Defendant’s constitutional rights. The trial court also determined that it had discretion under the circumstances to specify where Defendant should serve her sentence and ordered her to serve the one-year unsuspended portion of her sentence in the custody of her parents.
ANALYSIS
The State argues on appeal that the trial court was required to impose a one-year sentence pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 31-18-17(B) (Repl.Pamp.1990), and that the trial court had no discretion to determine where Defendant could serve
Under Section 31-18-17(B), (C), and (D), the basic sentence of habitual offenders is to be increased by one, four, or eight years. The basic sentence is a sentence of imprisonment, NMSA 1978, § 31-18-15(A) (Repl.Pamp.1990), unless the trial court defers or suspends the sentence, NMSA1978, § 31-20-3 (Repl.Pamp.1990). The increase in sentence mandated by the habitual-offender statute may not be suspended or deferred. Section 31-18-17(B), (C), and (D). Thus, persons sentenced under the habitual-offender statute ordinarily must be imprisoned in a corrections facility designated by the corrections department. NMSA 1978, . § 31-20-2(A) (Repl.Pamp.1990). No argument is made that the trial court’s sentence of Defendant to the custody of her parents is a permissible incarceration pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 31-20-2(A) and (D) (Repl.Pamp.1990), allowing local incarceration for sentences between one year and eighteen months if there is a joint-powers agreement between the governing authority in charge of the place of incarceration and the corrections department.
However, we disagree .with the State’s assertion that the trial court must, in all instances, impose a prison term. While we acknowledge that it is a legislature’s prerogative to dictate criminal penalties, a mandatory sentence is still subject to constitutional scrutiny. See State v. Patterson,
In State v. Augustus,
To the contrary here, we conclude that, on the unusual facts of the present case, the trial court could find that a sentence of incarceration would constitute a deliberate indifference to Defendant’s serious medical needs. The evidence was uncontroverted that incarceration would be life-threatening to Defendant and that adequate medical care would not be available to her in a correctional facility. The State presented no evidence to controvert any of
Ferris testified that he was not confident of the ability of the women’s prison in Grants to handle a severe asthma case. He also testified that there was not twenty-four hour coverage in the medical unit and that he believed the prison officials would probably try to keep Defendant from possessing a supply of her necessary medication for fear that other prisoners would steal it. In addition, Ferris testified that the prison would resist allowing Defendant to have immediate access to her medication.
We believe that the foregoing testimony is sufficient evidence to support the trial court’s findings. Ferris’s status as a probation and parole officer gave him insight into prison operations that an ordinary medical expert would not have. In addition, his experience as a practical nurse and his marriage to an asthma sufferer gave him unique insight into Defendant’s medical needs. Thus, we believe that the trial court could have reasonably believed Ferris when he testified that the prison would not or could not provide Defendant with necessary medical care. See State v. Sparks,
The State asserts that Ferris could not be certain about the prison’s willingness to allow Defendant ready access to necessary medication. In addition, the State argues that Ferris never cited to any prison rules or regulations that prevent such an arrangement. Nevertheless, we believe that those are matters of weight and credibility left to the fact-finder’s judgment. See State v. Vialpando,
The judgment and sentence is affirmed.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
