OPINION
{1} We consider in this appeal the district court’s ability under NMSA 1978, § 31-21-10(C) (2004) (amended 2005 and 2007) to attach a two-year parole period to a consecutive sentence for third and fourth degree felonies. We hold that the district court may do so and affirm.
BACKGROUND
{2} Based on a plea and disposition agreement, Defendant Lisa Utley pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter with a firearm enhancement, a third degree felony; tampering with evidence, a fourth degree felony; and possession of a firearm or destructive device by a felon, a fourth degree felony. The district court sentenced Defendant to a commitment of six years for the third degree felony, one year for the mandatory firearm enhancement, and eighteen months for each of the two fourth degree felonies. The district court ordered the sentences to be served consecutively, for a total commitment of ten years, and to be followed by a parole period of two years. Apparently, the district court wanted Defendant, who suffered from bipolar disorder and had a long history of drug abuse, placed in an intensive in-patient treatment program during her parole period
{3} After subsequent discussions between counsel concerning whether the proper duration of parole was one or two years, the State filed a motion to clarify the sentence. In response, Defendant argued that New Mexico Supreme Court precedent required Section 31-21-10(C) to be interpreted to limit Defendant’s parole period to one year. The district court disagreed, ruling that Section 31-21-10(C) authorized the two-year parole period included in Defendant’s sentence. Defendant appeals, arguing that the district court imposed an illegal sentence.
PERIOD OF PAROLE AFTER MULTIPLE CONVICTIONS
{4} Under these circumstances, we review the district court’s sentencing authority as a matter of statutory construction under de novo review. See State v. King,
Except for sex offenders as provided in Section 31-21-10.1 NMSA 1978, an inmate who was convicted of a first, second or third degree felony and who has served the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the court in an institution designated by the corrections department shall be required to undergo a two-year period of parole. An inmate who was convicted of a fourth degree felony and who has served the sentence of imprisonment imposed by the court in an institution designated by the corrections department shall be required to undergo a one-year period of parole. During the period of parole, the person shall be under the guidance and supervision of the [parole] board.
Section 31-21-10(C) is silent, however, on the subject of consecutive sentences.
{5} Another statute relevant to our analysis is NMSA 1978, § 31-18-15(0) (2003) (amended 2005 and 2007), which states, in part, that “[t]he period of parole shall be deemed to be part of the sentence of the convicted person in addition to the basic sentence.” Our Supreme Court has relied on Section 31-18-15(0) to prohibit the separation of a parole period from its period of imprisonment in order to stack multiple periods of parole that are part of a consecutive sentence. Brock v. Sullivan,
{6} Our Supreme Court also relied on Section 31-18-15(C) in analyzing the requirements of Section 31-21-10(C) in Gillespie,
{7} Defendant contends that Gillespie is dispositive of this appeal. According to Defendant, the plea and disposition agreement and the judgment and sentence both list Defendant’s offenses in the order of their seriousness, with the third degree felony first, leading Defendant to believe that she would first serve the sentence for the third degree felony. Defendant further contends that without ambiguity in the plea and disposition agreement, or at least without the district court considering evidence to resolve any ambiguity in the agreement, the plea and disposition agreement must be construed in her favor. Under Gillespie, if Defendant first serves her imprisonment for the third degree felony, she will serve her corresponding two-year parole term while she is imprisoned for the fourth degree felonies. We note, however, that our Supreme Court in Gillespie did not rule on the sequence of prison terms in a consecutive sentence and only vacated the judgment that ordered the one-year parole period to be served after the completion of imprisonment for both a fourth degree felony and a misdemeanor. Id.
{8} At the hearing on the motion to clarify the sentence in this case, the State urged the district court to correct any problem caused by Gillespie by ordering Defendant to serve the sentence for the third degree felony last. In response, the district court stated that the common practice is to list the most serious crime first but that the order is ultimately “insignificant.” It relied on Section 31-21-10(C) as providing the authority to order the two-year parole period regardless of whether the third degree felony was listed first or last in its sentencing order.
{9} Indeed, the district court’s position is supported by our reading of the legislative intent behind the Probation and Parole Act. See Brock,
{10} We thus affirm the district court’s sentence. The district court did not direct the order in which Defendant was to serve the consecutive sentences. Although the plea and disposition agreement and the judgment and sentence listed the most serious crime first, the district court stated that the order was “insignificant.” Regardless of the order of the listing, the plea and disposition agreement clearly stated that sentencing was left to the district court’s discretion. The district court very clearly exercised its discretion — Defendant was to serve a two-year parole period. In the absence of the district court placing the sentences in a particular order, we will presume that the sentence was correct and that the third degree felony will be served last. See In re Ernesto M., Jr.,
{11} We lastly note the State’s argument attacking the continued vitality of Gillespie and Brock. In State v. Lopez,
{12} We do not address that argument. Like Lopez, the dissenting opinions in Gillespie and Brock relied on Section 33-2-39, as did this Court’s opinion in Smith. Gillespie,
CONCLUSION
{13} The district court ordered Defendant to serve three sentences consecutively. We construe the judgment and sentence to require Defendant to serve the sentence for voluntary manslaughter with a firearm enhancement, a third degree felony requiring a two-year parole period, after she serves the other two sentences. We affirm the district court’s judgment and sentence.
{14} IT IS SO ORDERED.
