¶ 1 After a jury trial, Christopher Francis was convicted of multiple felony charges related to his involvement in marijuana trafficking. The trial court sentenced him under A.R.S. § 13-3419 for multiple drug offenses committed on separate occasions and consolidated fоr trial. On appeal, he contends the court improperly imposed enhanced sentences for several of his convictions. 1 We affirm.
Background
¶ 2 “We view the facts and all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to upholding the verdiсts.”
See State v. Tamplin,
¶ 3 When Butler answered the door, he was talking on several cellular telephones. He told the officers he was visiting the house and his friend “Michael” lived there. While talking to officers, Butler answered a call and told them the caller said the police did not have a warrant and Butler could not let them in the housе. At the same time, other officers found two bales of marijuana behind the back wall of the house and saw footprints leading from the back door to the bales.
¶4 After officers obtained warrants to search both houses, they first searched the Laguna Seca house and found documents bearing Francis’s name, photographs of Francis and Guzman, letters addressed to individuals at the Calle Lado Al Rio address, marijuana, ledgers, a digital scale, and packing materials. In the master bedroom, they found a drug lеdger and shipping receipts in Francis’s handwriting, with the Calle Lado Al Rio address. They also found $12,940 in cash and two handguns in the master bedroom closet.
¶ 5 When officers searched the house on Calle Lado Al Rio, they found it unoccupied and sparsely furnished. In it they found a pistol, wooden crates, shipping boxes, a fifty-pound digital scale, marijuana, some ledgers, and a piece of cardboard with Francis’s handwriting on it. Francis was indicted, and a warrant issued for his arrest.
¶ 7 The state obtained a second indictment encompassing both the charges from the first indictment and new transportation charges alleged after the April 2007 incident. 2 The state charged Francis with thirteen felony counts, including one count of conspiracy to commit рossession and/or transportation of marijuana for sale, one count of possession of a deadly weapon during the commission of a felony drug offense, one count of possession of marijuana for sale, and ten counts of transportation of marijuana for sale.
¶ 8 After a twelve-day trial, the jury found Francis guilty of all counts except three counts of transporting marijuana for sale. 3 The trial court imposed a combination of consecutive and concurrent, presumрtive sen-fences under § 13-3419, totaling fourteen years’ imprisonment. This appeal followed.
Discussion
¶ 9 Francis contends the trial court improperly enhanced his sentences because he had received no notice of the state’s intent to seek sеntence enhancements before trial. The state did not cite § 13-3419
4
in the indictment nor did it file a separate allegation related to that statute. But the indictment charged Francis with multiple drug offenses committed on different days. After counsel argued to the court whether § 13-3419 could be applied, the court sentenced Francis under that statute. “Sentencing determinations are reviewed for abuse of discretion,”
State v. Davolt,
¶ 10 Section 13-3419 provides that a dеfendant convicted of two or more of certain drug-possession offenses “that were not committed on the same occasion but ... are consolidated for trial” is subject to the sentencing range set forth in that statute. For Francis’s class two felonies involving more than the statutory threshold amount of drugs, the presumptive sentence under § 13-3419 is five years for a defendant convicted of two offenses and seven years for a defendant convicted of three or more offenses. § 13-3419. 5
¶ 11 As Francis concedes, “no court has specifically addressed the notice required to apply a sentence enhancement under ... § 13-3419.” But, as he also points out, courts have required the state to give defendants notice if it wishes to enhance a sentence pursuant to other statutes. In requir
ing
¶ 12 To that end, in the context of sentences enhanced by prior convictions, courts have required “[n]otice ... such that the defendant is not ‘misled, surprised or deceived in any way by the allegations’ of prior convictions.”
Benak,
¶ 13 In
State v. Tresize,
however, our supreme court ruled that a defendant had sufficient noticе a sentencing enhancement would apply when the state alleged the use of a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument in the indictment even though it did not make a separate allegation or include a citation to the relevant statutе in the indictment.
¶ 14 Indeed, § 13-3419 is “the exclusive sentencing provision for multiple drug offenses not committed on the same occasion but consolidated for trial.”
State v. Dominguez,
¶ 15 Because the indictment alleged all the facts necessary for the trial court to sentence Francis under § 13-3419, the exclusive sentencing provision for his crimes, Francis presumptively was aware of “ ‘the full extent of the potential punishment that he face[d] before trial.’ ”
Waggoner,
¶ 16 Our conclusion that § 13-3419 may be applied in these circumstances is bolstered by its history. In 1993, the legislature enacted several statutes to address problems with thе state’s mandatory sentencing system. See Cami Byrd, Legislative Review, Criminal Code Revision, 26 Ariz. St. LJ. 341, 342-43 (1994). Among these new statutes were several addressing drug offenses, including § 13-3419. Id. at 346-47 & n. 40. 6
This statute and its companion, A.R.S. § 13-702.02, supplanted the practice of alleging “Hannah ” priors.... For instance, previously, under [State v.] Hannah, [126 Ariz. 575 ,617 P.2d 527 (1980),] when a defendant was convicted of three felony counts that were tried together, the state could allege two of the convictions as priors for the other conviction, thus subject ing a defendant who came to court without a prior conviction to a lengthy prison term. The sentencing provisions promulgated in A.R.S. section 13-702.02 and -3419 are much less severe.
State v. Christian,
Disposition
¶ 17 For the foregoing reasons, as well as those set out in our separate memorandum decision, we affirm Francis’s convictions and sentences.
Notes
. Francis raises other issues that do not meet the criteria for publication. See Ariz. R. Sup.Ct. 111(b). We address them in a separate, contemporaneously filed memorandum decision. See Ariz. R. Sup.Ct. 111(h). Although not directly relevant to the issue discussed here, we provide the facts and procedural background in this opinion to provide context for our discussion.
. The trial court later dismissed the earlier case as to Francis because the indictment for the current case included those charges.
. At the close of the state's case, the court granted the state’s motion to dismiss one of the transрortation charges and it declared a mistrial as to two other transportation counts for which the jury had been unable to reach a verdict.
. The Arizona criminal sentencing code has been renumbered, effective "from and after Decеmber 31, 2008.” See 2008 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 301, §§ 1-120. For ease of reference and because the renumbering included no substantive changes, see id., we refer in this decision to the current section numbers rather than those in effect at the time of the offense in this case.
. In contrast, five years is the presumptive sentence for a defendant convicted of a single class two felony. A.R.S. § 13-702(D).
. In 1996, the legislature amended A.R.S. § 13-3419(A) to apply in cases where the defendant’s prior conviction did not qualify as an historical prior felony convictiоn, thereby "increasing] the number of drug offenses for which a prison sentence was mandatory.”
State v. Christian,
