INTRODUCTION
¶ 1 Francisco Candedo was placed on nine years of probation after pleading guilty to three felonies arising from his participation in a fraudulent investment scheme. Candedo did not object to the term of probation at sentencing. Instead, on direct appeal to the court of appeals, he challenged the legality of his probation sentence under rule 22(e) of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure or, alternatively, under the doctrine of exceptional circumstances. Candedo argued that his nine-year probation sentence, authorized under Utah Code section 77-18-l(10)(a)(i), violated his substantive due process rights. The court of appeals affirmed his sentence without reaching the merits by finding that his claim failed to meet the requirements of either rule 22(e) or the doctrine of exceptional circumstances.
¶ 2 On certiorari, Candedo argues that (1) the cоurt of appeals erred in holding that his due process arguments could not be raised under either rule 22(e) or the doctrine of exceptional circumstances, and (2) the imposition of a nine-year probation term violates his right to due process. We hold that the court of appeals erred in failing to reach the merits of Candedo’s constitutional claim under rule 22(e). But we nevertheless hold that Candedo’s probation sentence does not violate his substantive due process rights and is therefore constitutional. Because we reach the merits of Candedo’s claim under rule 22(e), we need not address the applicability of the exceptional circumstances doctrine.
BACKGROUND
¶ 3 Francisco Candedo and others operated a fraudulent pyramid investment scheme that defrauded 146 Utah victims. The victims, including many elderly individuals, lost their retirement funds, their homes, them credit ratings, and their jobs. The Utah Attorney General’s Office computed restitution for the victims at $3,373,060.
¶ 4 In 2005, Candedo pled guilty to three felonies: one count of securities fraud, a second-degree felony; one count of sales by an unlicensed broker-dealer or agent, a third-degree felony; and, one count of employing an unlicensed broker-dealer or agent, a third-degree felony. The district court sentenced Candedo to concurrent terms of one-to-fifteen years for the second-degree felony and zero-to-five years for each third-degree felony. Although the presentenee report recommended incarceration and restitution, the court suspended Candedo’s prison sentence, imposed 108 months, or nine years, of probation and ordered restitution in the amount of $3,373,06o. 1 The sentencing court indicated that it ordered the lengthy probation term specifically because оf the amount of restitution Candedo owed.
¶ 5 Candedo challenged the legality of his probation term on direct appeal to the court of appeals, arguing that his nine-year probation term ordered pursuant to Utah’s probation statute violates substantive due process under the Utah and United States Constitutions. Because Candedo conceded that his due process claim was not preserved in the district court, he argued that the court of appeals could reach the merits of his claim under either rule 22(e) of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure or the doctrine of exceptional circumstances.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 7 “On certiorari, we review the decision of the court of appeals, not the trial court.”
State v. Billsie,
ANALYSIS
1. RULE 22(e) ALLOWS U.S. TO REACH THE MERITS OF CANDEDO’S CONSTITUTIONAL CLAIM
¶ 8 Candedo argues that the court of appeals should have reached the merits of his constitutional claim under rule 22(e) of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure. We agree.
¶ 9 Under rule 22(e), a court “may correct an illegal sentence, or a sentence imposed in an illegal manner, at any time.” Utah R.Crim. P. 22(e). Rule 22(e) applies to sentences that are manifestly or patently illegal.
See State v. Telford,
¶ 10 Based on language in
Telford,
thе court of appeals held that Candedo’s due process claim did not fall within the ambit of rule 22(e).
State v. Candedo,
¶ 11 The court of appeals’ definition of illegal sentence entirely precludes allegations of constitutional viоlations as a basis for challenging a sentence. This narrow definition is contrary to our holding in
Telford,
where we used rule 22(e) to reach the petitioner’s claim that his sentence was unconstitutional. Although we rejected Telford’s separation of powers and Eighth Amendment challenges to his sentence, we reached and considered the merits of those challenges under rule 22(e).
Telford,
¶ 12 This conclusion is consistent with our recent decision in State v. Yazzie, where we adopted the following definition of illegal sentence within the сontext of rule 22(e):
“[An illegal sentence is] one which is ambiguous with respect to the time and manner in which it is to be served, is internally contradictory, omits a term required to be imposed by statute, is uncertain as to the substance of the sentence, or is a sentence which the judgment of conviction did not authorize.”
¶ 13 While we used the definition of illegal sentence in Yazzie to address the failure of a sentencing court to comply with express statutory provisions, the same definition also encompasses Candedo’s alleged constitutional violations. Specifically, if an offender’s sentence is unconstitutional, the sentence is not authorized by the “judgment of conviction,” and is therefore illegal.
¶ 14 The State contends that Cande-do fails to address the threshold question of whether a nine-year probation sentence is “patently” or “manifestly” illegal. But when a petitioner raises an articulable basis fоr challenging the constitutionality of a sentence, the court may reach the issue of whether the sentence is “patently” or “manifestly” illegal after considering the merits of the claim, not beforehand. We therefore hold that the court of appeals erred in failing to reach the merits of Candedo’s substantive due process challenge because the definition of illegal sentence under rule 22(e) is sufficiently broad to include constitutional violations that threaten the validity of the sentence. This holding allows us to reach the merits of Candedo’s claim and thus we need not address the applicability of the exceptional circumstances doctrine. We now turn to the merits of Candedo’s due process claim.
II. UTAH’S PROBATION STATUTE IS CONSTITUTIONAL AND CANDE-DO’S SUBSTANTIVE DUE PROCESS RIGHTS WERE NOT VIOLATED
¶ 15 Utah’s probation statute “authorizes a court to impose probation as a sentencing alternative, but nowhere does it provide a limitation on the length of probation a court may set.”
State v. Wallace,
A. Because Candedo’s Claim Does Not Implicate a Fundamental Right, Rational Basis Revieiv Applies
¶ 16 When undertaking a substantive due process analysis under both ar-
we have never subjected the criminal process to [that] sort of truncated analysis.... Every person has a fundamental right to liberty in the sense that the Government may not punish him unless and until it proves his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt at a criminal trial conducted in accordance with the relevant constitutional guarantees. But a person who has been so convicted is eligible for, and the court may impose, whatever punishment is authorized by statute for his offense so long as that penalty is not cruel and unusual, and so long as the penalty is not based on an arbitrary distinction that would violate the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.
Id.
at 465,
¶ 17 Where a defendant has been found guilty, and no arbitrary distinction in sentencing is present, courts aрply a rational basis standard in reviewing sentencing statutes.
Id; see also United States v. Angelos,
¶ 18 Candedo does not argue that his nine-year probation sentence was based on an arbitrary distinction such as race or that he was treated differently from other similarly situated defendants. Instead, Candedo asserts that the only purpose of probation is rehabilitаtion and that its rehabilitative purpose, if achieved at all, will be achieved within a relatively short period of time. We disagree with both of these premises. Even were we to accept them, however, they do not give rise to the conclusion that Candedo’s probation sentence implicates a fundamental right because a defendant’s liberty interest may be infringed by a rational criminal sentence once he has been found guilty as lоng as the sentence is not cruel or unusual, arbitrary, or discriminatory.
See Chapman,
B. Candedo’s Substantive Due Process Claim Fails Because the Probation Statute Is Rationally Related to a Legitimate State Interest and His Sentence Was Not Arbitrary
¶ 19 “When a fundamental right is not at issue, a statute will not violate substantive due process if it is rationally
¶ 20 Candedo argues that Utah’s probation statute is not rationally related to the legislatively-stated purpose of probation, which is rehabilitation. Specifically, Candedo asserts that rehabilitation, if achieved at all, will be achieved within a relatively short period of time — five years or less. Thus, lengthy probation terms, such as the one imposed in this case, are not rationally related to a valid legislative purpose and therefore violate due process.
¶21 We are unpersuaded that the only legitimate and legislatively stated purpose of Utah’s probation statute is rehabilitation of the offender who is placed on probation.
4
Our case law recognizes numerous legitimate purposes of probation, including rehabilitation,
State v. Spiers,
¶ 22 We want to be clear that an absence of maximum time limits in the probation statute does not raise the same constitutional concerns as those raised in
Kansas v. Hendricks
regarding civil commitment statutes.
(1) a presently confined person who ... has been convicted of a sexually violent offense and is scheduled for release; (2) a person who has been charged with a sexually violent offense but has been found incompetent to stand trial; (3) a person who has been found not guilty by reason of insanity of a sexually violent offense; and (4) a person found not guilty of a sexually violent offense because of a mental disease or defect.
Id.
at 352,
¶ 23 Finally, while we recognize the potential for a trial judge to arbitrarily impose an absurdly long probation pеriod compared to the severity of the crime committed, these concerns are not present in Candedo’s ease. The court was authorized to sentence Cande-do to a fifteen-year prison sentence, but instead imposed the nine-year probation sentence and ordered restitution to the victims of his fraud, a far less severe sentence. We can envision a ease where a defendant could successfully challenge a probation sentence that is truly arbitrary or discriminatory under the due process clause or prove that the probation statute is cruel and unusual, but such a case is not before us now.
¶ 24 Under a rational basis standard of review, a statute will meet the requirements of due process “if it has ‘a reasonable relation to a proper legislative purpose, and [is] neither arbitrary nor discriminatory.’ ”
Tindley v. Salt Lake City Sch. Dist.,
CONCLUSION
¶25 We hold that the court of appeals erred by refusing to reach the merits of Candedo’s constitutional claim under rule 22(e). Specifically, the court of appeals failed to properly construe an “illegal sentence” to include constitutional violations. Courts must consider constitutional as well as statutory and jurisdictional challenges to sentences under rule 22(e). But we do not find that Utah’s probation statute violates due process because the statute is rationally related to the legitimate state interest in restitution, among other interests. Accordingly, Candedo’s constitutional challenge to the imposition of his nine-year probationary term under Utah’s probation statute fails. We therefore affirm the district court’s decision to order restitution and a nine-year probationary term.
Notes
. On November 4, 2009, Candedo filed a suggestion of mootness pursuant to Utah Rule of Appellate procedure 37(a) that requires a defendant to “inform the court of any circumstanсes which have transpired subsequent to the filing of the appeal.” Candedo did not take the position that his appeal had become moot, but he let the court know that Adult Probation and Parole removed Candedo from supervised probation and placed him on "court probation to continue to monitor the repayment of the restitution amount.” State of Utah Adult Probation and Parole,
Protected Progress/Violation Report,
November 6, 2009. Because Candedo is still under court probation and is subject to contempt or reinstatement of his original sentence if he fails to remit his restitution payments, we agree that his appeal is not moot.
See State v. Nones,
. Rule 22(e) is not properly invoked for "ordinary or 'run-of-the mill' errors” that are approрriately reviewed under rule 4(a) of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure.
State v. Thorkelson,
. Candedo's brief dedicates a substantial amount of space to challenging our interpretation of Utah's probation statute in Wallace. Since the Wallace decision was issued in 2006, the legislature has neither modified nor altered the language in Utah’s probation statute. We therefore see no basis for revisiting our ruling in that case.
. We have scoured Utah’s probation statute, including the specific provisions cited by Candedo, and are unable to find any indication that rehabilitation is the “legislatively-stated purpose of probation" as Candedo asserts. While our case law certainly indicates that rehabilitation is a significant objective of probation, the statute itself gives no explicit indication of such legislative intent.
