{1} On February 2, 1993, Gilbert Villalobos pled guilty to fourth-degree felony larceny (over $250). He received a sentence of eighteen months, the “basic sentence” for the crime pursuant to NMSA 1978, § 31-18-15(A)(6) (1977), which the court suspended. As part of the order suspending sentence, he was placed on probation for three years. The principal issue in this case is whether the fact that Villalobos was on probation, as opposed to parole, after the expiration of his basic sentence, gave him a reasonable expectation of finality regarding the potential for further punishment arising out of his last felony conviction.
{2} The State revoked probation on June 29, 1995, after the eighteen-month basic sentence period expired because Villalobos failed to comply with probationary conditions. He had three prior felony convictions and therefore the prosecutor filed a supplemental information accusing him of being a habitual offender within the meaning of NMSA 1978, § 31-18-17 (1979). The District Court granted Villalobos’ motion to dismiss the information and the District Attorney appealed. The Court of Appeals reversed the District Court and this Court granted Villalobos’ Petition for Writ of Certiorari on May 9, 1996. We affirm the Court of Appeals.
{3} Villalobos and his Public Defender had entered into a plea agreement with the prosecutor. The agreement included the following language:
The State shall not file habitual offender proceedings against the Defendant except that if the Defendant receives a suspended sentence and thereafter violates the terms of that suspended sentence, the State may bring habitual offender proceedings against him. The Defendant expressly waives any and all time limits for filing habitual offender proceedings.
Directly above Villalobos’ signature the agreement stated:
I fully understand that is as part of this agreement, I am granted probation, a suspended sentence or a deferred sentence by the court, the terms and conditions thereof are subject to modification in the event that I violate any of the terms or conditions imposed.
{4} Villalobos argues that, the plea agreement notwithstanding, he legitimately had a reasonable expectation of his sentence’s finality, and that jurisdiction to enhance it did not lie in the District Court after the basic sentence period expired. See State v. Travarez,
{5} Under DiFrancesco, the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy extends to punishments that would follow from a second conviction for the same offense.
{6} The controlling statutes in this case are NMSA 1978, § 31- 18-19 (1955), which reads in relevant part, “If at any time, either after sentence or conviction, it appears that a person convicted of a noncapital felony is or may be a habitual offender, it is the duty of the district attorney ... to file an information charging that person as a habitaal
{7} In March, this Court held that earned meritorious deductions from the defendant’s sentence created a reasonable expectation that the court would not impose an enhanced sentence after the expiration of his or her shortened sentence. Id. In State v. Gaddy,
{8} Villalobos argues that a distinction exists, to be susceptible to a judicial determination of habitual offender status, between probation and parole. The common law difference between probation and parole is that the former involves suspending the imposition of a sentence, classically a task of the trial judge, while the latter partakes of the nature of a pardon, traditionally within the discretion of the executive. See 21 Am. Jur.2d Criminal Law § 567 (1981). The Legislature defined the two terms maintaining this distinction, in the Probation and Parole Act at NMSA 1978, § 31-21-5 (1978), that reads as follows:
A. “probation” means the procedure under which an adult defendant, found guilty of a crime upon verdict or plea, is released by the court without imprisonment under a suspended or deferred sentence and subject to conditions;
B. “parole” means the release to the community of an inmate of an institution by decision of the board or by operation of law subject to condition imposed by the board and to its supervision!!]
{9} The legislative scheme continues with NMSA 1978, § 31-21-14(0 (1955), which provides that if a parolee violates his or her parole, “the board may continue or revoke the parole or enter any other order as it sees fit.” The statute requires the court give probation violators credit for time served equal to the length of the suspended sentence. NMSA 1978, § 31-21-15 (1963); State v. Kenneman,
{10} Since both probation and parole violators’ fate is highly uncertain, no substantial difference may exist between probation and parole for purposes of one’s objectively reasonable expectation of finality in a sentence while out on release. Villalobos therefore argues that this Court should overrule Roybal or draw a legal distinction between Roybal and the instant case since the defendant in Roybal was apparently re-imprisoned for probation violation, while the eighteen months of Villalobos’ basic sentence had passed.
{11} We hold that Villalobos had no objectively reasonable expectation of finality
{12} In addition to these legislative provisions, it has been judicial policy to use probation as an acute form of punishment and a rehabilitation tool. As stated in State v. Donaldson,
A judge in fashioning the terms of probation, may impose conditions reasonably related to the probationer’s rehabilitation, which are designed to protect the public against the commission of other offenses during the term ... and which have as their objective the deterrence of future misconduct.
(Citations omitted.) We think the law and policy underlying the probation process prevent a reasonable expectation of finality in a probation sentence, even after the suspended sentence period.
{13} Not only was Villalobos on statutory notice that violating his probation had serious consequences, he consciously agreed to a plea bargain. That is, if he violated the terms of his suspended sentence, he expressly waived the time limits for the filing of supplemental information. Villalobos therefore hardly had any expectation in the finality of his sentence. See State v. Freed,
{14} Finally, Villalobos claims that this appeal is moot because he “completed his three-year supervised probation period on March 8, 1996.” In fact, the record shows that the state revoked probation on June 29, 1995. His sentence has therefore not been completed and imposition of an enhanced sentence is timely. Gaddy,
{15} For the foregoing reasons, this Court affirms the Court of Appeals’s judgment.
{16} IT IS SO ORDERED.
