OPINION
{1} Dеfendant appeals his conviction as a fourth-time offender of driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor (DWI). The sole question raised on appeal is whether the district court erred in determining that Defendant was subject to being sentenced as a fourth-time DWI offender instead of a third-time offender. For the reasons discussed herein, we affirm the district court’s judgment and sentence.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE
{2} Defendant pled guilty to DWI and careless driving on February 3, 1984, in the Alamogordo municipal court. The judgment and sentence, inter alia, ordered that Defendant pay a $100 fine and attend DWI school. In 1994 Defendant was again arrested and charged with DWI and other motor vehicle violations in the Otero County mаgistrate court. However, on October 6, 1994, the State and Defendant entered a plea and disposition agreement whereby Defendant entered a plea of nolo contendere to DWI first offense. The 1994 plea and disposition agreement entered after consultation with defense counsel, recited in appliсable part that Defendant’s plea was subject to:
the following understandings, terms and conditions:
1. That the following disposition will be made of the charges: Sentencing in the discretion of the Court. However [the] State will not oppose mandatory minfimum] sentence of 48 hours. [The] State will not oppose deferred fines on any or all possible fines.
2. That the following charges will be dismissed, or if not yet filed, shall not be brought against the [Defendant: No Registration; Improper Use of [License] Plate.
{3} The following year, Defendant was once more arrested and charged in the Lincoln County magistrate court with DWI, together with the additional offenses of careless driving and driving while his license was revoked. On May 31, 1995, the State and Defendаnt entered into a plea and disposition agreement whereby Defendant, who was charged with his third DWI offense, entered a plea of nolo contendere to aggravated DWI second offense and driving on a suspended or revoked license. The 1995 judgment and sentence recited that the court found Defendant guilty of “AGGRAVATED DWI 2ND [and] DRIVING WHILE LICENSE REVOKED.” In 1998 Defendant was arrested for DWI a fourth time. On October 21,1998, Defendant pled no contest to the charge of DWI, contrary to NMSA 1978, § 66-8-102 (1997). Defendant’s plea agreement to this charge did not contain any limitation concerning the sentence which could be imposed and, at the sentencing hearing, the State presented evidence that Defendant hаd three prior DWI convictions.
{4} Defendant challenges the efficacy of his first DWI conviction in 1984 and thus argues that the district court erred in finding that he had three prior DWI convictions. Defendant testified that the municipal judge for his 1984 plea of guilty to DWI told him that the DWI- conviction would be removed from his record upon his successful completion of DWI sсhool, his payment of a fine, and his maintaining a clear record during his probationary period. Defendant testified that he complied with these conditions and believed his first DWI conviction had been removed from his record.
{5} The district court in the present case concluded that the State’s exhibits established that Defendant entered а plea of guilty to DWI in 1984, and that the 1984 incident was, in fact, the first of four DWI convictions involving Defendant. Based upon this determination, the district court sentenced Defendant as a fourth-time DWI offender. Defendant hás filed a timely appeal from that judgment and sentence.
DISCUSSION
{6} Defendant does not contest the fact that he has entered no contest or guilty pleas to four separate DWI charges, or that he is the same person involved in each of those eases. Instead, Defendant argues that because the municipal court judge who presided over his first DWI conviction in 1984 promised him that his first conviction would be dropped from his record, under due process principles, he was entitled to rely on that promise. Consequently, he reasons that the district court in the present case erred in sentencing him as a fourth-time DWI offender.
{7} The issue thus presented is whether, the alleged promise of the judge in 1984 and the plea and disposition agreements entered in Defendant’s other two prior DWI convictions restrict the trial judge’s hands in the present case so as to preclude Defendant from being sentenced as a fourth-time DWI offender. The issue posed by Defendant involves a mixed question of fact and law. Cf. State v. Attaivay,
{8} In order for the State to enhance Defendant’s sentence as a third or subsequent DWI offender, the State bears the initial burden of presenting evidence of the validity of each of his prior convictions. See State v. Duncan,
{9} At trial, Defendant’s testimony was the only oral evidence offered in support of his claim that he was told that his 1984 conviction would be dropped from his record. Defendant also testified that after finishing DWI school in 1984 and completion of his period of probation, he had never been recalled for sentencing and thus he assumed the first conviction had been dropped from his record. Defendant asserts that he testified that he had admitted his guilt or pled no contest to subsequent DWI charges in 1994 and 1995, based on his understanding that the 1984 conviction had been dropped, and that the plea bargains in 1994 and 1995 in effect constituted acknowledgments by the State that the 1984 conviction had been dismissed and did not constitute a valid DWI conviction for the purposes of enhancing his current sentence. Considering that Defendant was responding to leading questions propounded by his attorney, the district court was not bound by Defendant’s understanding or version of the events. See State v. Lopez,
{10} The State presented documentary evidence bearing upon the efficacy of Defendant’s 1984 DWI conviction. In support of the 1984 conviction, the State introduced a 1984 judgment and sentence, a waiver of counsel, and a 1984 Alamogordo Department of Public Safety arrest record. The judgment and sentence stated that in 1984 Defendant pled guilty to DWI and careless driving. It also reflects that the municipal court found Defendant guilty of these charges, imposed a fine, ordered Defendant to attend DWI school. The State also presented documentary evidence indicating that Defendant completed DWI school in 1984. The 1994 judgment and sentence imposed by the Otero County magistrate court indicates that Defendant was charged with aggravated DWI second offense, but the court found him guilty of aggravated DWI first offense. The 1995 judgment and sentence indicates that Defendant was charged with aggravated DWI third offense and that pursuant to a plea agreement Defendant pled no contest to aggravated DWI second offense. There is nothing in the documents showing any acknowledgment by the State that the degree of the offense was required by any previous sentence, plea, or plea bargain.
{11} The State argues that the district court in the present case could properly determine that Defendant had been convicted of three prior DWI offenses and enhance Defendant’s sentence because a conviction means an adjudication of guilt, irrespective of what sentence was ultimately imposed. See State v. Woodruff,
{12} New Mexico law provides that a finding of guilt constitutes a conviction, even if there is a deferred sentence ending in dismissal of the charges, a pardon, or the entry of an order setting aside a conviction following a defendant’s satisfactory completion of probation. See Padilla v. State,
{13} This interpretation is shared by courts in states with analogous DWI statutory schemes. See State v. Waalkes,
{14} Defendant asserts that the State has failed to respond to his argument that the municipal judge’s promise that his 1984 DWI conviction would be dropped and the failure to directly respond to this argument precludes the subsequent use of his first DWI conviction. We disagree. While the State bears the ultimate burden of persuasion, it is within the district court’s discretion to determine whether Defendant established the existence and terms of the alleged promise. See State v. Brown,
{15} The district court in the present case entered the following finding in its judgment and sentence:
Defendant has three (3) prior convictions of Driving While Under the Influence of Intoxicating Liquor or Drugs, and that this conviction a 4th Offense, to wit: First conviction in the Alamogordo Municipal Court on February 3, 1984; Second conviction in the Otero County Magistrate Court on October 6, 1994; and Third conviction in the Lincoln County Magistrate Court in Ruidoso on June 7,1995.
At the sentencing hearing, the district court noted, among other things, that Section 66-8-102(L)(2) (1997) defines “conviction” as “an adjudication of guilt and does not include imposition of a sentence,” and therefore it concluded that each of the prior adjudications of Defendant’s guilt constituted a conviction for purposes of enhancement of his present DWI sentence. Thе district court also determined that the State’s documentary exhibits established that Defendant entered a guilty plea to DWI in 1984. Regarding Defendant’s testimony as to his understanding of what he was promised by the judge at his 1984 plea, the district court, as the fact finder in the present ease, could accord whatever weight it deemed appropriate to Defendant’s testimony. Nothing in the documentary exhibits introduced by the State limit the enhancement of Defendant’s sentence in the event of subsequent DWI convictions.
{16} Defendant cites State v. Carlos A,
{17} This Court addressed an analogous issue to that posed in thе instant case in Collyer v. State of New Mexico Taxation & Revenue Department,
{18} The instant ease, however, is distinguishable from Collyer. First, the plea bargain at issue in Collyer was significantly different than the plea agreements in this ease. Specifically, the parties to the Collyer plea bargain provided that Collyer would be trеated as a first-time DWI offender so that his driver’s license would not be revoked. The plea bargain explicitly so provided. In contrast, the trial court could find that the parties in this case never agreed in 1994 and 1995 that Defendant’s 1984 conviction would not be used to enhance subsequent DWI convictions in the event of subsequent violations of the DWI statute. The fact that Defendant received more lenient treatment in his prior DWI sentences than was authorized by statute does not bind the State to similar lenient treatment in subsequent cases.
{19} In sum, we conclude that the district court neither abused its discretion nor denied Defendant his constitutional rights to due process in concluding that Defendant had three prior convictions which could be used to aggravate Defendant’s current DWI sentence.
CONCLUSION
{20} The judgment and sentence are affirmed.
{21} IT IS SO ORDERED.
