1. The question presented by this appeal is whether someone under no obligation to report to jail can be guilty of escape from jail. Our answer is no.
BACKGROUND
2. Defendant first raised the issue in a motion to dismiss after she was charged with escape from jail. At the district court hearing on the motion, she and the State stipulated to the following facts:
1. [Defendant] was committed to the Otero County Detention Center on the 24th day of October 1995 by Judge Barber, Alamogordo Municipal Court, to serve a term of one-hundred-seventy-nine (179) days.
2. [Defendant] was released from the jail to complete her sentence on electronic monitoring.
3. On March 11, 1996, John Whitely, Detention Services Manager, allocated [Defendant] time to be outside her home until 5 p.m. in order to appear in Municipal Court and to keep an appointment with Income Support Division.
4. [Defendant] did not return home at the appointed time.
5. Nor did [Defendant] report thereafter and was eventually arrested on a warrant.
Defendant argued that the stipulated facts could not sustain a conviction for escape from jail.
3.The district court denied the motion, and Defendant entered a no-contest plea, reserving the right to appeal the issue raised by her motion. See State v. Hodge,
DISCUSSION
4. “Escape from jail consists of any person who shall have been lawfully committed to any jail, escaping or attempting to escape from such jail.” NMSA 1978, § 30-22-8 (1963). We have repeatedly held that a prisoner can violate the statute without breaking out from the confines of the jail itself. See State v. Hill,
5. The present case is distinguishable from the above precedents because Defendant was under no obligation to report to jail at any future time. A recent decision by this Court assumed that failure to abide by the terms of a house arrest would not constitute the crime of escape. State v. Fellhauer,
6. In its memorandum in opposition the State refers to decisions from other states upholding escape convictions under facts similar to those in this case. But those decisions rely on statutory language that is considerably more expansive than Section 30-22-8. See State v. Williams,
7. The opinion most helpful to the State is State v. Esmond,
[The defendant] was booked into the Benton County Correctional Facility, given an alternate cell assignment and advised that departure from his residence without approval from his probation officer would constitute escape from custody. During the relevant 90-day period, he was in the constructive custody of the Benton County Correctional Facility[.]
Id.,
8. We are not persuaded. The Oregon statute interpreted in Esmond penalized “the unlawful departure of a person from custody or a correctional facility,” and defined “correctional facility” as “any place used for the confinement of persons charged with or convicted of a crime or otherwise confined under a court order.” Id. The broad language of the Oregon statute could readily be interpreted to encompass court-ordered home detention. The New Mexico statute, in contrast, speaks specifically of escaping from a “jail.” See § 30-22-8. A jail is a “building designated by law, or regularly used, for the confinement of persons held in lawful custody.” Black’s Law Dictionary 834 (6th ed.1990). It is too much of a stretch of the English language to say that Defendant was “constructively” in jail. See Commonwealth v. Cowan,
9.Given the statutory language in New Mexico, we cannot uphold Defendant’s conviction. Although the State claims that this leads to an absurd result, the undesirable result arises from a gap in a 1963 statute that did not contemplate home detention. This Court has no authority to remedy gaps in the criminal code. That task rests with the legislature.
10. Finally, we reject the State’s suggestion that Defendant’s conviction could be predicated on her home detention agreement, in which she apparently acknowledged that she could be prosecuted for escape. The elements of a criminal offense are set by statute; they cannot be modified by private agreement. The State cites no authority to the contrary. See In re Doe,
11. We reverse Defendant’s conviction and sentence.
12. IT IS SO ORDERED.
