Defendant appeals from his conviction for possession of drug paraphernalia. Defendant’s sole contention on appeal is that the trial court erred in denying him presentence confinement credit for a period when he was incarcerated on a parole violation due to the charges in this ease. The first calendar notice proposed summary reversal. The second calendar notice proposed summary affirmance. The third calendar nоtice proposed summary reversal and remand for resentencing. The state received an extension of time to file a memorandum in opposition to the third calendar notice. However, the state filed a response to calendar notice, indicating that, although it believes that a remand is not necessary because the trial court imposed a valid sentence, it will not be filing a memorandum in opposition to this court’s proposed summary reversal and remand. Defendant did nоt file a response to the third calendar notice, and the time for doing so has expired. For the reasons set out below, we reverse and remand for resentencing.
FACTS
On October 11, 1990, while on parole, defendant was arrested and charged with pоssession of a controlled substance (methadone) and drug paraphernalia. Defendant spent five days in jail before his release on bond for these charges. Defendant remained free on bond from October 16,1990, until he was rearrested on Dеcember 21, 1990, for violating conditions of his parole. The October 1990 arrest on drug charges was the basis for the alleged violation of defendant’s parole. Defendant’s parole was revoked on December 21, 1990, and he was remanded to the stаte penitentiary. The record indicates that defendant was indicted by grand jury on the drug
Defendant entered into a plea and disposition agreement, pursuant to which he pled guilty to possession of drug paraphernalia. The trial court sentenced defendant to 364 days in jail, to be sеrved at the Bernalillo County Detention Center with no good-time credit and with work release authorized only if verified. Defendant moved for a determination of presentence confinement credit. Credit for the five days spent in jail in October 1990 after his initiаl arrest, and for the time period spent in jail after May 10, 1991, was not in dispute below, nor is it in dispute on appeal.
At the hearing held on defendant’s motion, defendant argued that he should receive credit for the time between December 21, 1990, and May 10, 1991, which wаs the time served upon revocation of his parole. The trial court denied defendant’s request for presentence confinement credit against his possession of drug paraphernalia conviction for this period of incarceration. Defendant appeals from this denial.
DISCUSSION
This court has consistently held that where confinement is related to the charges for which a defendant is ultimately sentenced, he is entitled to presentence confinement credit against such sentence, even where the confinement was not exclusively related to those charges. State v. Miranda,
The state contends that defendant is not entitled to presentence confinement credit for the time during which he was incarcerated for violating the conditions of his parole. It argues that the presentence confinement period еnded when defendant’s parole was revoked because defendant then was confined pursuant to the prior conviction. The state relies on Stewart v. State,
The supreme court stated in Stewart that “[t]he presentence confinement period ends when parole is revoked, because petitioner then is confined pursuant to the pri- or conviction.”
We do not think the court in Stewart intended to depart from the three-part test discussed in State v. Facteau,
The state also relies on Section 31-18-21 in support of its contention that defendant was properly denied presentence confinement credit in this case. The state contends that it is impossible to grant presentence confinement credit concurrent with credit for time served upon revocation of parole on the prior sentence and follow the mandate of Section 31-18-21(B). We disagree with this narrow interpretation of Section 31-18-21(B).
Section 31-18-21(B) provides that “[a]ny person, who commits a crime while [on parole,] and who is convicted and sentenced [for such crime,] shall serve the sentence consеcutive to the remainder of the [parole] term [under which he was released], unless otherwise ordered by the court in sentencing for the new crime.” (Emphasis added.) Subsection A provides, in part, that “[w]henever an inmate in a penal institution * * * is sentencеd for committing any felony while he is an inmate, the sentence imposed shall be consecutive to the sentence being served.”
The legislature made a distinction between crimes committed by persons while they are in a penal institution versus while they are outside of a penal institution on parole. We interpret Section 31-18-21(B) as providing the sentencing judge with discretion regarding whether to impose a sentence for a new crime consecutively or concurrently to the sentence for whiсh the person is serving parole time. We interpret Section 31-18-21(A) as removing discretion from the sentencing judge, such that when a person commits a crime while serving time in a penal institution, the sentencing judge must impose the sentence on the new crime consecutive to the sentence that was being served when the crime was committed. Since defendant in this case was outside of a penal institution on parole when the drug paraphernalia offense was committed, the sentencing judge had disсretion under Section 31-18-21(B) to make defendant’s sentence run concurrent or consecutive to any sentence defendant was then serving for a parole violation. Thus, we see no barrier in Section 31-18-21(B) to a decision authorizing discretion in the triаl court judge to award presentence confinement credit on the facts of this case.
The state also relies on State v. Facteau in support of its contention that defendant was properly denied presentence confinеment credit. In Facteau, the defendant was serving time in the penitentiary on a burglary conviction when he escaped. When he was captured, he was immediately incarcerated to continue to serve time on his burglary conviction. He was lаter sentenced to an additional nine years for the escape, to run consecutively to his original burglary conviction. The trial court later granted the defendant’s pro se motion for presentence confinement credit. The state appealed from such grant and our supreme court reversed, holding that the defendant was not entitled to presentence confinement credit.
The distinction made in Section 31-18-21 between crimes committed by persons while they are serving time in a penal institution versus while they are outside of a penal institution on parole was recognized
Defendant’s situation in the present case is similar to that of Facteau’s codefendant. We hold that, under Section 31-20-12 and Orona, the trial court had discretion to award defendant presentence confinement credit for that time spent in custody after his parole was revoked based on the drug paraphernalia charge for which he was ultimately sentenced in this case. We note that in Facteau Justice Baсa restated and applied the three-part test set out in Orona to determine if presentence credit is appropriate. Facteau denied the claim for credit because there was “not a sufficient connection” between the circumstances underlying the incarceration for which credit was claimed and the sentence against which the defendant desired credit.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, we reverse and remand for the purpose of allowing the trial court to consider a discretionary grant of presentence confinement credit in light of our clarification, as set out above, of recent cases construing Section 31-20-12 in light of Section 31-18-21.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
