OPINION
{1} The State appeals from the district court order dismissing with prejudice one count of homicide by vehicle, NMSA 1978, Section 66-8-101(C) (2004), and one count of accident involving death or personal injuries, NMSA 1978, Section 66-7-201(0 (1989). Although Defendant was not the driver of the vehicle, Defendant was charged pursuant to the parties to a crime provision of the Motor Vehicle Code. See NMSA 1978, § 66-8-120 (1978). In dismissing the charges against Defendant, the district court concluded that this Court’s decision in State v. Marquez,
BACKGROUND
{2} The State alleges that on the evening of November 25, 2008, and in the early morning hours of November 26, 2008, Carlos Fierro and Defendant went out drinking. According to the State, it was Defendant’s idea to go out and get a few drinks and smoke a cigar. The two men first consumed alcohol at the Rio Chama Steakhouse, and then Fierro drove the two of them to Willie’s Blues Bar at Defendant’s encouragement. The two men consumed more alcohol at Willie’s Blues Bar — alcohol purchased by Defendant. After leaving the bar, Fierro struck William Tenorio with his vehicle as Tenorio was crossing the street outside of the bar. Witnesses testified that Fierro and Defendant drove away from the scene of the accident. Fierro was later identified as the driver, and Defendant was identified as the passenger of the vehicle that struck Tenorio. After Fierro’s car was stopped by police, the police concluded that Fierro was intoxicated. Tenorio later died from the injuries he sustained from being hit by Fierro’s vehicle.
{3} On June 3, 2009, subsequent to this Court issuing its opinion in Marquez, the State filed charges against Defendant on a theory of accomplice liability under Section 66-8-120. The district court dismissed the charges on the basis that Marquez could not be retroactively applied to Defendant. The district court found that Defendant did not have fair notice that his conduct, which occurred prior to Marquez being decided, exposed him to the possibility of criminal prosecution.
DISCUSSION
This Court’s Decision in Marquez
{4} We begin our analysis by first examining this Court’s decision in Marquez. In Marquez, we were presented with the issue of whether there was “such a charge as party to the crime of homicide by a vehicle and great bodily injury by a vehicle.” Marquez,
{5} Section 66-8-101(0 provides:
A person who commits homicide by vehicle or great bodily harm by vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or while under the influence of any drug or while violating [NMSA 1978, Section 66-8-113 (1987)] is guilty of a third degree felony.
{6} Section 66-8-120 provides:
Every person who commits, attempts to commit, conspires to commit or aids or abets in the commission of any act declared herein to be a crime, whether individually or in connection with one or more other persons or as a principal, agent or accessory, shall be guilty of such offense, and every person who falsely, fraudulently, forcibly or willfully induces, causes, coerces, requires, permits or directs another to violate any provision of the Motor Vehicle Code [Section 66-1-1 ] or any other law of this state pertaining to motor vehicles is likewise guilty of such offense.
{7} We pointed out in Marquez that Section 66-8-120 makes it a crime to aid or abet in violation of any provision of the Motor Vehicle Code. Marquez,
The District Court Erred in Dismissing the Charges Against Defendant
{8} In the district court order granting Defendant’s motion to dismiss the charges against him, the district court concluded:
[Pjassengers simply could not have been on notice or had fair warning of the standards set forth in Marquez. Assuming for purposes of this [o]rder that Defendant’s actions were the same as those of the defendant in Marquez, that he shared the driver’s criminal intent, and that all factual issues were resolved in favor of the State, he could not have had fair notice prior to Marquez of the criminal liability defined by the standards set forth in that case.
In support of its ruling, the district court stated that, prior to Marquez, there were no established standards as to the requisite mens rea for homicide by vehicle or as to what level of participation would subject a passenger to criminal prosecution, and it was only by means of this Court’s decision in Marquez that these standards were established.
{9} “We have previously considered the due process implications of retroactively applying the interpretation of a criminal statute to a defendant whose conduct, at the time of the alleged offense, did not fall under the statute.” State v. Myers,
If a judicial construction of a criminal statute is unexpected and indefensible by reference to the law which had been expressed prior to the conduct in issue, it must not be given retroactive effect. Otherwise, a criminal defendant is deprived of due process of law in the sense of fair warning that his contemplated conduct constitutes a crime.
Id. (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
{10} In determining whether application of a new construction of a criminal statute would violate due process, our task is to determine whether the new interpretation was foreseeable. Id. ¶ 18; see State v. Johnson,
{11} The State argues that, unlike other cases in which a judicial interpretation has been held to violate due process if retroactively applied, this Court’s decision in Marquez neither overturned preexisting ease law nor constituted a judicial enlargement of a criminal statute. We find the State’s argument persuasive. In Alderette, this Court overruled a previous judicial interpretation of the escape from jail statute.
{12} Similarly, in Bouie, the United States Supreme Court held that the South Carolina Supreme Court’s interpretation of a statute regarding criminal trespass could not be retroactively applied to the defendants where the language of the statute did not proscribe the petitioner’s conduct.
{13} Such a judicial enlargement did not occur in the present case. Here, the plain language of the statute indicates that it is a crime to aid and abet in a violation of the Motor Vehicle Code. This Court in Marquez neither changed a previous interpretation of Section 66-8-120 nor enlarged the scope of the conduct criminalized by our Legislature’s enactment of Section 66-8-120. Instead, this Court relied on pre-existing case law to define common terminology contained in the statute. Our interpretation of Section 66-8-120 was neither “unexpected” nor “indefensible by reference to the law which had been expressed prior to the conduct in issue[.]” Myers,
{14} To the extent the district court concluded that, prior to Marquez, passengers were not on “notice that they would be subject to criminal liability as a party to the crime of homicide by vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor,” we construe the district court’s order as concluding that Section 66-8-120 was unconstitutionally vague. Similar to our analysis above of whether Marquez was a foreseeable interpretation of Section 66-8-120, “[t]he vagueness doctrine is based on the principle of fair notice in that no one may be held criminally responsible and subject to criminal sanctions for conduct without fair warning as to the nature of the proscribed activity.” Santillanes v. State,
{15} Section 66-8-120 clearly sets out that it is a crime for a person to aid and abet in a violation of the Motor Vehicle Code. Section 66-8-101(C), which provides that it is a third degree felony to commit homicide by vehicle or great bodily injury by vehicle while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or drug, is contained in the Motor Vehicle Code. To the extent Marquez set forth standards for applying Section 66-8-120 by examining how we have interpreted accessory provisions under the Criminal Code, the Legislature’s failure to define these standards within Section 66-8-120 does not render the statute unconstitutionally vague. To the contrary, “[t]he [Legislature is not required to write statutes for the understanding of persons who cannot or will not apply ordinary meanings to plain words[J” Rogers,
{16} Finally, the fact that Marquez was the first time Section 66-8-120 had been interpreted by an appellate court in this state is of little consequence to our decision. “A judicial construction of a statute is an authoritative statement of what the statute meant before as well as after the decision of the case giving rise to that construction.” Rivers v. Roadway Express, Inc.,
CONCLUSION
{17} For the foregoing reasons, we reverse and remand to the district court for the charges against Defendant to be reinstated.
{18} IT IS SO ORDERED.
