OPINION
Defendant, who is serving a sentence for escape from the Los Lunas honor farm of the New Mexico State Penitentiary, appeals from a denial of release after a combined hearing for relief under a writ of error coram nobis and Rule 93, promulgated after his writ was filed.
For background consideration of the points he raises (and hereafter detailed), defendant-appellant adverts that he entered a plea of guilty to the charge of escape from such honor farm; that such plea was actually induced by a promise of the district attorney, in furtherance of which he was initially sentenced, in effect, for two years to run concurrently, however, with time spent in jail; but that thereafter, on motion of the district attorney, the sentence was vacated, and without the defendant withdrawing his plea of guilty, the trial court directed the entry of a plea of not guilty, and after conviction by a jury, he was sentenced for a period of not less than two years; and that such indeterminate sentence contemplates life imprisonment as the maximum with two years as the minimum. At the time he was transferred from the state penitentiary to such farm, the defendant emphasizes that he was obliged to sign a trustee’s pledge providing that an escape would carry an additional penalty of two years without specifying any time beyond such period.
In a prior appeal (reported as State v. Peters,
“Any person confined in the state penitentiary who shall escape or attempt to escape therefrom shall be guilty of a felony and upon conviction thereof, shall be imprisoned in the state penitentiary for not less than two [2] years, which sentence shall not run concurrently with any other sentence such person then be serving.” (Emphasis supplied.)
The sentence initially imposed (of “not less than two years” and conditioned “to run concurrently with previous sentences being served by defendant”) was held by this court in State v. Peters, supra, to be contrary to law, therefore void, and could be vacated even though it had been partially served.
To the vacation of such sentence and (after conviction by a jury) imposition of sentence in accordance with the applicable statute, the defendant complains, as resulting in excessive punishment. Resolution of the instant appeal involves four points, the first two of which were the only ones argued (with authorities submitted only in connection with the first point) and the remaining two of which were called to the court’s attention pro forma.
For point one, stressing that “cruel and unusual punishment” is unconstitutional under the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article II, section 13 of the New Mexico State Constitution, defendant-appellant contends an indeterminate sentence of not less than two years for non-violent escape from the honor farm is tantamount to such punishment.
That such an indeterminate sentence of not less than two years, with no maximum statutory provision, amounts to imprisonment for life, the defendant acknowledges. McCutcheon v. Cox,
Rather, defendant relies on cases that are neither analogous nor applicable. For instance, he refers to Weems v. United States,
“It is for the legislature to determine what acts shall be regarded as criminal and how they shall be punished. It would be going too far to say that their power is unlimited in these respects. Ordinarily, the terms ‘cruel and unusual’ imply something inhuman and barbarous in the nature of the punishment.”
Weems v. United States, supra, referred to by the defendant, involved a case of imprisonment for twelve years and a day (for forgery or falsification of a public document), at hard and painful labor (emphasis supplied), with a chain at the ankle hanging from the wrist, and after such imprisonment, being “forever kept under the shadow of his crime, forever kept within voice and view of the criminal magistrate” (in the Philippines), and surveillance of the authorities during life. As the United States Supreme Court noted in the Weems case, supra, 217 U.S. p. 368, 30 S.Ct. p. 549, “it has been said that ordinarily the terms (cruel and unusual punishment) imply something inhuman and barbarous.” No less inapplicable is defendant’s reference to State ex rel. Garvey v. Whitaker,
As defendant does not properly posture an attack on the constitutionality of the statute pursuant to which he was sentenced, this point essentially resolves itself to a consideration of whether or not a sentence in accordance with such statute is invalid. Yet this court, in State v. Peters, supra, already held that the previous sentence, having been void, could be vacated even though he had already served part of it.
Cruel and unusual punishment, as the court noted in Weber v. Commonwealth,
Without merit, therefore, is defendant’s first point. Likewise without merit is defendant’s point two wherein he argues, without benefit of any authority, that “the State should not be permitted to welch upon its bargain,” purportedly resulting from his having signed the aforementioned trustee’s pledge and having entered a plea of guilty based on a promise by the district attorney of a two-year sentence to run concurrently, whereas subsequently, on motion of the district attorney, the sentence was vacated and after conviction by a jury, the sentence, of which he now complains, was imposed.
Yet, as already noted, this court in State v. Peters, supra, determined that such sentence was contrary to statute, void and could be vacated.
That the state in its governmental capacity cannot be estopped (Martinez v. Cox,
Submitted pro forma (with counsel’s indication, “lest any right of the appellant be prejudiced by counsel’s failure to present it to this court”) and without any supporting authorities, defendant’s points three and four simply contend:
(Three) That he was denied due process and equal protection of the laws by failure to provide him counsel at preliminary and first arraignment (when he pleaded not guilty), and
(Four) That the action of the trial court (after vacating the sentence this court held was null and void) in directing entry of a plea of not guilty and consequent conviction by a jury, subjected him to double jeopardy.
Undisputed it is, though, that the district court, after defendant’s arraignment, appointed counsel who represented him at the time he entered á plea of guilty and at all other times. Nor is there any showing that defendant was prejudiced by failure to have court-appointed counsel prior to any preliminary hearing or prior to his first appearance before the district court.
However, as this court held in State v. Blackwell,
“ * * * entry of a plea in the district * * * when represented by competent counsel, served as a waiver of any defects in the preliminary hearing, including failure to advise of right or to provide counsel.”
See, also, Gantar v. Cox,
In State v. Nance,
“The former jeopardy clause of the constitution does not preclude a retrial of a defendant whose sentence is set aside because of an error in the proceedings leading to the sentence or conviction. * * * ”
Nor, as this court held in State v. Rhodes,
So points three and four are likewise without merit, and in view of the foregoing, the action of the trial court should be, and hereby is, affirmed.
It is so ordered.
