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 1       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

 2 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

 3          Plaintiff-Appellee,

 4 v.                                                                  No. A-1-CA-35306

 5 TRENEESHIA MCBRIDE,

 6          Defendant-Appellant.

 7 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
 8 Mark A. Macron, District Judge Pro Tempore

 9   Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
10   Santa Fe, NM
11   Walter M. Hart, III, Assistant Attorney General
12   Albuquerque, NM

13 for Appellee

14   Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender
15   Kathleen T. Baldridge, Assistant Appellate Defender
16   Tania Shahani, Assistant Appellate Defender
17   Santa Fe, NM

18 for Appellant

19                                MEMORANDUM OPINION

20 VANZI, Judge.
 1   {1}   Defendant Treneeshia McBride appeals the district court’s enhancement of

 2 her sentence, arguing that, although it was consistent with her 2008 plea

 3 agreement, the enhancement was barred by a 2009 verbal agreement with the State.

 4 Defendant also argues that the prior felony convictions did not fall within the

 5 statute providing for habitual offender enhancements and that there was

 6 insufficient evidence that she violated the conditions of probation. We affirm.

 7 BACKGROUND
 8   {2}   Defendant’s arguments are based on the following sequence of events.

 9 I.      The 2008 Plea Agreement

10   {3}   In 2008 Defendant executed a “Repeat Offender Plea and Disposition

11 Agreement” (the 2008 Plea Agreement) in which she agreed to plead guilty to two

12 counts of false imprisonment and two counts of aggravated battery resulting in

13 great bodily harm in exchange for basic sentences totaling nine years.

14   {4}   In addition, Defendant admitted that she had been convicted of four other

15 felonies in 1999, 2000, and 2003, including shoplifting over $250, trafficking of

16 cocaine by distribution, tampering with evidence, and aggravated battery with a

17 deadly weapon. Defendant’s prior felonies exposed her to enhanced habitual

18 offender sentences pursuant to NMSA 1978, § 31-18-17(C) (2003), which provides

19 that a “basic sentence shall be increased by eight years” when a defendant “has

20 incurred three or more prior felony convictions.” Hence, Defendant faced potential



                                             2
 1 habitual offender enhancements of eight years for each charge to which she pled

 2 guilty, i.e., thirty-two years. See State v. Howard, 1989-NMCA-029, ¶ 17, 108

 3 N.M. 560, 775 P.2d 762 (“If a person with a prior felony conviction is convicted of

 4 multiple felonies, then there are several basic sentences. Thus, there may be

 5 multiple enhancements.”). Despite this exposure, the State agreed to an

 6 enhancement of only one year based on Defendant’s admission that she was

 7 convicted of aggravated battery with a deadly weapon in 2003. This one-year

 8 habitual offender enhancement brought Defendant’s total prison sentence under the

 9 2008 Plea Agreement to ten years.

10   {5}   Although the 2008 Plea Agreement provided for a habitual offender

11 enhancement of only one year, it also provided that Defendant could be subject to

12 additional habitual offender enhancements if Defendant violated the conditions of

13 probation or any other law. Specifically, it provided that “[i]f . . . Defendant later

14 violates [her] probation, she could do the balance of the sentence and the State may

15 bring additional [h]abitual [o]ffender enhancements as [to] each felony [c]ount.”

16 Additionally, it provided that:

17         [D]efendant understands that if she violates any law after she enters
18         this plea and before she completes her sentence in this case, she will
19         be subject to additional habitual offender proceedings based on the
20         convictions listed [in the 2008 Plea Agreement]. The State also may
21         bring additional habitual offender proceedings if the defendant
22         violates any condition of probation or parole. The State may bring
23         additional habitual offender proceedings if the violation is admitted or



                                              3
 1         proven, even if probation or parole is not revoked or [D]efendant is
 2         not convicted of the new crime.

 3   {6}   After a hearing in June 2008, Defendant was sentenced in accordance with

 4 the 2008 Plea Agreement to a term of ten years, of which eight were suspended,

 5 with two years to be spent incarcerated. The district court ordered four years of

 6 supervised probation following incarceration. However, due to pre-sentence

 7 confinement credit, Defendant’s probation began shortly after the 2008 hearing.

 8 II.     The 2009 Probation Revocation and Second Enhancement of Sentence

 9   {7}   In 2009, the State moved to revoke Defendant’s probation. At the hearing on

10 the motion, the State informed the district court that Defendant faced the

11 immediate potential for thirty-one additional years of habitual offender

12 enhancements, and that Defendant had rejected the State’s offer of an eight-year

13 enhancement for the probation violations at issue. As the State was describing

14 Defendant’s probation violations, counsel for Defendant interjected to ask for a

15 recess. After the recess, the parties informed the district court of their agreement

16 that Defendant would admit to the probation violation and the State would seek a

17 habitual offender enhancement of eight years for one of the 2008 false

18 imprisonment counts. The substance of this verbal agreement (the 2009 Verbal

19 Agreement) between the State and Defendant is the crux of Defendant’s

20 arguments.




                                            4
 1   {8}    The district court sentenced Defendant to eighteen years, stating in a written

 2 order, “Defendant was originally sentenced to ten (10) years on June 10, 2008.

 3 Defendant’s sentence for false imprisonment, as charged [in] . . . the original

 4 indictment in this matter, was enhanced by eight years of mandatory incarceration

 5 pursuant to [Section] 31-18-17.” After calculating Defendant’s confinement

 6 credits, the district court committed Defendant to the Department of Corrections

 7 for a confinement of 2630 days and sentenced her to three years of probation and

 8 one year of parole. Defendant began her probationary term in March 2014.

 9 III.     The 2015 Probation Revocation and Third Enhancement

10   {9}    In 2015, the State moved to revoke Defendant’s probation for battery against

11 Karim Cunningham and Janelle Martinez. An evidentiary hearing on the State’s

12 motion was held over four days and the district court found that the State had met

13 its burden to show that Defendant had violated the terms of her probation by

14 committing battery against Cunningham and Martinez. Additional facts related to

15 the sufficiency of the evidence are included in our discussion of Defendant’s

16 arguments below.

17   {10}   The day after the district court stated its findings, the State filed a

18 supplemental information in which it sought an additional eight-year habitual

19 offender enhancement of Defendant’s sentence. At a hearing on the supplemental




                                               5
 1 information, Defendant argued that any additional enhancement was contrary to

 2 the 2009 Verbal Agreement and moved to dismiss the supplemental information.

 3   {11}   The district court denied Defendant’s motion and concluded that

 4 “Defendant’s exposure at sentencing is the remaining underlying time . . . (three

 5 years less probation credit from March 21, 2014) and one eight[-]year habitual

 6 offender enhancement on the remaining [f]alse [i]mprisonment conviction.” It

 7 revoked Defendant’s probation and sentenced her to eight years of incarceration.

 8 Defendant appeals the eight-year habitual offender enhancement.

 9 DISCUSSION
10   {12}   Defendant makes three arguments. First, she argues that the evidence was

11 insufficient to support the district court’s 2015 finding that she violated her

12 probation. Second, she maintains that the district court’s decision to enhance the

13 2015 sentence was contrary to the 2009 Verbal Agreement. Finally, she argues that

14 the 2015 enhancement of her sentence was illegal because the prior felony

15 convictions on which the enhancement was based were more than ten years old.

16 IV.      There Was Sufficient Evidence to Support the Probation Violation

17   {13}   “A violation of the conditions of probation must be established with such

18 reasonable certainty as to satisfy the conscience of the court of the truth of the

19 violation. It does not have to be established beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v.

20 Guthrie, 2011-NMSC-014, ¶ 14, 150 N.M. 84, 257 P.3d 904 (alteration, internal



                                            6
 1 quotation marks, and citation omitted). “To meet this burden, the [s]tate must

 2 introduce evidence that a reasonable and impartial mind would be inclined to

 3 conclude that the defendant has violated the terms of probation.” State v. Leon,

 4 2013-NMCA-011, ¶ 36, 292 P.3d 493. “Once the state offers proof of a breach of a

 5 material condition of probation, the defendant must come forward with evidence to

 6 excuse non-compliance.” Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The

 7 Rules of Evidence do not apply to hearings related to revocation of probation. Rule

 8 11-1101(D)(3)(d) NMRA.

 9   {14}   Although Defendant “challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting

10 each of his [or her] probation violations, if there is sufficient evidence to support

11 just one violation, we will find the district court’s order was proper.” Leon, 2013-

12 NMCA-011, ¶ 37. We conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in

13 finding that the State met its burden as to the battery against Cunningham and that

14 Defendant did not present evidence to excuse her behavior. Id. ¶ 36. This

15 conclusion obviates the need to address the sufficiency of the evidence related to

16 battery against Martinez and Defendant’s argument that the district court

17 improperly admitted Martinez’s testimony.

18   {15}   The district court heard the following evidence. Defendant began her

19 probation in October 2014. While on probation, Defendant stayed with Karim

20 Cunningham in his apartment for a short period. Cunningham testified that in



                                             7
 1 November 2014, as a result of a verbal disagreement between the two, Defendant

 2 struck him “eight or nine times” in the face with a closed fist, scratched him, and

 3 caused a knot on his forehead, and that the battery occurred near the back door of

 4 his apartment. Cunningham testified that a “light, skinny guy, a brown skinny guy”

 5 stood nearby while Defendant was hitting him and that two other women were

 6 standing in the back doorway. After Defendant left with the other unidentified

 7 people, Cunningham called the Albuquerque Police Department and officers

 8 arrived shortly thereafter.

 9   {16}   One of the officers responding to Cunningham’s call testified that, when he

10 arrived, Cunningham had dried blood around his nose and a laceration on his chest.

11 The officer testified that Cunningham told the officer that Defendant had punched

12 Cunningham in the head while he was near the back door of his apartment. The

13 officer testified that Cunningham had also reported to the officer that Defendant

14 and a “light-skinned Black male” had both beaten him, and that two other

15 unidentified women stood in the back doorway during the affray. The officer’s

16 lapel video from his interview with Cunningham was admitted without objection

17 during the hearing.

18   {17}   The district court found that Defendant committed a battery upon

19 Cunningham and that there was “no indication of self-defense or other defenses”

20 justifying her conduct. It acknowledged that there were “some inconsistencies in



                                             8
 1 [Cunningham’s] testimony, but not regarding [Defendant]’s participation.

 2 [Cunningham] clearly testified that she participated in a battery.” It went on,

 3 “[t]here was physical evidence of a battery upon [Cunningham] to his nose and

 4 head. He was able to identify [Defendant], based on the fact he knew her, and that

 5 she had resided at his residence.” It reiterated that “there was no indication of self-

 6 defense or other defenses that would mitigate or eliminate those allegations.”

 7   {18}   Defendant argues that the inconsistencies between Cunningham’s testimony

 8 and what he told the officer at the scene “render[ Cunningham’s] entire version of

 9 events untrustworthy” and that Cunningham had a motive to lie to “get

10 [Defendant] in trouble with the law.” Some of the things that Cunningham told the

11 officer were inconsistent with Cunningham’s testimony. For instance, the officer

12 testified that Cunningham stated that the dispute began when he told Defendant she

13 had to leave his apartment because he did not want her using the phone to threaten

14 people, whereas Cunningham testified that it began when he told Defendant that

15 her friend could not also stay in the apartment. However, as Defendant also

16 recognizes, resolution of conflicts in the testimony and credibility determinations

17 are for the trier of fact. We do not reweigh the evidence and instead “defer to the

18 district court when it weighs the credibility of witnesses and resolves conflicts in

19 witness testimony.” State v. Salas, 1999-NMCA-099, ¶ 13, 127 N.M. 686, 986

20 P.2d 482.



                                              9
 1   {19}   Moreover, Defendant does not point to any other evidence in the record to

 2 overcome the reasonable inference from the above testimony that Defendant

 3 committed battery in violation of the conditions of her probation. Nor does she

 4 point us to any evidence that she had an excuse for this non-compliance.

 5 Accordingly, we conclude that the evidence was sufficient for a reasonable mind to

 6 conclude that Defendant violated her probation. Hence, the district court did not

 7 abuse its discretion in finding that Defendant had violated her probation by

 8 battering Cunningham.

 9 V.       The 2008 Plea Agreement Governed the 2015 Enhancement

10   {20}   Defendant also argues that the district court’s imposition of a habitual

11 offender enhancement in 2015 was improper because the 2009 Verbal Agreement

12 “reflected an agreement with the State that her sentence was no longer subject to

13 habitual offender enhancements.” “A plea agreement is a unique form of contract

14 the terms of which must be interpreted, understood, and approved by the [district]

15 court.” State v. Fairbanks, 2004-NMCA-005, ¶ 15, 134 N.M. 783, 82 P.3d 954

16 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); see Rule 5-304(B) NMRA

17 (providing that the district court “may accept or reject the [plea] agreement”).

18 When reviewing plea agreements, “we construe the terms of the plea agreement

19 according to what [the d]efendant reasonably understood when he [or she] entered

20 the plea.” Fairbanks, 2004-NMCA-005, ¶ 15 (internal quotation marks and citation



                                            10
 1 omitted). “If the [district] court resolves alleged ambiguities with the parties at the

 2 time of the plea, and no further objection is made, the agreement is no longer

 3 ambiguous on those points addressed by the court.” Id. (alteration, internal

 4 quotation marks, and citation omitted). “However, if the ambiguities are not

 5 addressed by the district court and there is no other relevant extrinsic evidence to

 6 resolve the ambiguity, the reviewing court may rely on the rules of construction,

 7 construing any ambiguity in favor of the defendant.” Id. In doing so, we apply a de

 8 novo standard of review. Id.

 9   {21}   Defendant first argues that she reasonably understood the State’s statements

10 at the 2009 hearing to offer (1) a single enhancement of eight years, and (2)

11 forbearance of future habitual offender enhancements in exchange for her

12 admission of the alleged 2009 probation violations. In a variation of this argument,

13 she contends that the 2009 Verbal Agreement replaced or modified the 2008 Plea

14 Agreement. We disagree with both contentions.

15   {22}   Although Defendant focuses her arguments on the 2009 Verbal Agreement,

16 that agreement does not exist in a vacuum. Rather, it must be considered in light of

17 the 2008 Plea Agreement, in which the State unequivocally reserved its broad

18 authority to seek habitual offender enhancements should Defendant violate the

19 terms of her probation. See State v. Leyba, 2009-NMCA-030, ¶ 21, 145 N.M. 712,

20 204 P.3d 37 (stating that “the [s]tate [has] broad discretion to seek habitual



                                             11
 1 offender enhancement[s]”). The State appeared to acknowledge the 2008 Plea

 2 Agreement at the 2009 hearing by observing that Defendant was subject to thirty-

 3 one years of habitual offender enhancements. This calculation is consistent with

 4 the possible habitual offender enhancements (eight years for each of the four

 5 counts to which Defendant pled guilty in the 2008 Plea Agreement), less one year

 6 for the enhancement already imposed at the initial sentencing. See § 31-18-17(C)

 7 (providing for habitual offender enhancements of eight years when the defendant

 8 has been convicted of three or more prior felonies); Howard, 1989-NMCA-029, ¶

 9 17 (stating that each “basic sentence” imposed may be enhanced). In addition to

10 the State’s reference to the potential enhancements, the district court conducted a

11 colloquy with Defendant as to each of the four admitted prior convictions listed in

12 the State’s supplemental information and noted that they were the same four prior

13 convictions listed in the 2008 Plea Agreement. The 2008 Plea Agreement thus was

14 invoked multiple times at the 2009 hearing.

15   {23}   Here, Defendant argues that her interpretation of the 2009 Verbal Agreement

16 was reasonable because “nothing in the 2009 hearing . . . indicated that

17 [Defendant] would ever be subjected to any part of the remaining habitual offender

18 time.” However, this argument ignores the existence of the 2008 Plea Agreement.

19 Leyba is instructive on this point. There, the defendant “agreed to plead guilty . . . ,

20 and the State agreed to dismiss the remaining three charges and not bring habitual



                                              12
 1 offender proceedings . . . “IF AND ONLY IF [the d]efendant complete[d] at least

 2 one year of inpatient alcohol treatment, and successfully complete[d] probation

 3 without violation.” 2009-NMCA-030, ¶ 2 (alterations, internal quotation marks,

 4 and citation omitted). One month after he was sentenced, the defendant was

 5 terminated from the inpatient treatment program he had entered as a special

 6 condition of his probation. See id. ¶ 4. The defendant admitted the violation in an

 7 agreement with the [s]tate. Id. The defendant’s prior felony convictions were listed

 8 in the probation violation agreement, but had been crossed out. Id. ¶ 21. After a

 9 series of events not relevant to our discussion, the [s]tate filed a supplemental

10 information and argued that the defendant’s initial sentence “should be enhanced[,]

11 pursuant to . . . [Section] 31-18-17(C).” Id. ¶ 7. In pertinent part, the defendant

12 argued that the probation violation agreement should be interpreted to prohibit the

13 State from seeking a habitual offender enhancement, even though such

14 enhancements were permitted in the initial plea agreement. Id. ¶ 19.

15   {24}   The Court rejected this argument. The Court observed that “there [wa]s no

16 express language in the . . . probation violation agreement binding the [s]tate from

17 subsequently seeking an enhanced sentence” and the fact that the prior felony

18 convictions had been crossed out “d[id] not control whether the [s]tate had

19 authority to seek a habitual offender enhancement . . . under the terms of the

20 original . . . plea and disposition agreement.” Id. ¶ 21. It concluded that, “[g]iven



                                            13
 1 the terms of the original plea and disposition agreement, coupled with the [s]tate’s

 2 broad discretion to seek habitual offender enhancement, the absence of any express

 3 language limiting this discretion demonstrates that no such agreement between the

 4 [s]tate and [the d]efendant was reached.” Id.

 5   {25}   Like in Leyba, the 2009 Verbal Agreement was silent as to its effect on the

 6 State’s broad authority to enhance as set out in the 2008 Plea Agreement. Hence,

 7 given the explicit and repeated references in the 2008 Plea Agreement to the

 8 State’s ability to seek future enhancements and the absolute silence as to future

 9 enhancements in the 2009 Verbal Agreement, it was unreasonable for Defendant to

10 understand the 2009 Verbal Agreement as precluding all future enhancements.

11   {26}   For the same reasons, the 2009 Verbal Agreement did not modify or

12 supplant the 2008 Plea Agreement. “The parties to a written contract may modify

13 that contract by express or implied agreement as shown by their words and

14 conduct.” Medina v. Sunstate Realty, Inc., 1995-NMSC-002, ¶ 14, 119 N.M. 136,

15 889 P.2d 171. However, silence on habitual offender enhancements is not evidence

16 of intent by the parties to alter the provisions of the 2008 Plea Agreement

17 explicitly providing for such enhancements. See State v. Trujillo, 2007-NMSC-

18 017, ¶ 12, 141 N.M. 451, 157 P.3d 16 (stating that “the plea agreement’s silence on

19 the subject of habitual-offender charges cannot inure to [the defendant]’s benefit”);

20 cf. Leyba, 2009-NMCA-030, ¶ 22 (stating that the defendant “may not rely on the



                                             14
 1 absence of” certain language in a “probation violation agreement to [bar] the

 2 subsequent filing of the habitual offender supplemental information”); Valley Bank

 3 of Commerce v. Hilburn, 2005-NMCA-004, ¶ 25, 136 N.M. 741, 105 P.3d 294

 4 (“[T]he law requires that an oral modification to a written contract be proved by

 5 clear and convincing evidence[.]”).

 6   {27}   Finally, Defendant argues that, because “the district court did not address [at

 7 the 2009 hearing] any potential future enhancements with [Defendant] nor did it

 8 discuss the continuing applicability of the 2008 [P]lea [A]greement,” the 2009

 9 Verbal Agreement was ambiguous and should be construed in her favor. As noted

10 above, however, given the explicit provisions in the 2008 Plea Agreement and the

11 lack of evidence that both parties intended to modify that agreement, silence in the

12 2009 proceedings does not, by itself, create an ambiguity in the 2009 Verbal

13 Agreement.

14   {28}   To the extent Defendant argues that the district court’s failure to specifically

15 advise her in the 2009 hearing that she remained exposed to future enhancements

16 rendered the 2009 Verbal Agreement otherwise improper, we disagree. Cf.

17 Marquez v. Hatch, 2009-NMSC-040, ¶¶ 7-11, 146 N.M. 556, 212 P.3d 1110

18 (stating that “when a defendant’s plea will most certainly result in an immediate

19 sentence enhancement because of the defendant’s prior convictions, the district

20 court must advise the defendant of such likelihood before accepting the plea”). The



                                               15
 1 2008 Plea Agreement provided, among other references to habitual offender

 2 enhancements, that “[i]f . . . Defendant later violates . . . probation, she could do

 3 the balance of the sentence and the State may bring additional [h]abitual [o]ffender

 4 enhancements as [to] each felony [c]ount” for which Defendant was charged. Thus,

 5 both the 2009 probation violation proceeding and the imposition of a habitual

 6 offender enhancement were contemplated by the parties in the 2008 Plea

 7 Agreement. Given our conclusion that the 2009 Verbal Agreement did not supplant

 8 or alter the 2008 Plea Agreement, the district court was not required to reiterate the

 9 terms of the 2008 Plea Agreement at the 2009 hearing. Cf. State v. Garcia, 1996-

10 NMSC-013, ¶ 17, 121 N.M. 544, 915 P.2d 300 (stating that “provided the record

11 shows the defendant had the requisite information, the court need not be the only

12 source of . . . information” about the charges to which the defendant is pleading

13 guilty). But see Rule 5-303(F)(2) NMRA (providing that “[t]he [district] court shall

14 not accept a plea of guilty or no contest without first, . . . informing the defendant

15 of and determining that the defendant understands . . . the mandatory minimum

16 penalty provided by law, if any, and the maximum possible penalty provided by

17 law for the offense to which the plea is offered, including any possible sentence

18 enhancements”).1


          1
          Rule 5-303(F)(2) was amended after the New Mexico Supreme Court
   issued its decision in Marquez to include the phrase “including any possible
   sentence enhancements.” See Rule 5-303 Comm. cmt. The March 2009 hearing at

                                             16
 1 VI.      The 2015 Enhancement Was Not Barred by Section 31-18-17(D)(1)

 2   {29}   Section 31-18-17(D)(2) provides that a prior felony may be the basis of an

 3 enhancement “when less than ten years have passed” between “the instant felony

 4 conviction” and the date “the person completed serving his sentence or period of

 5 probation or parole for the prior felony[.]” Defendant argues that under State v.

 6 Triggs, 2012-NMCA-068, ¶¶ 17-19, 281 P.3d 1256, the prior felony convictions in

 7 the 2008 Plea Agreement could not be used in 2015 to enhance her sentence

 8 because “they had since expired under Section 31-18-17(D)(1).” Whether

 9 Defendant’s “previous felony conviction[s] can be used for the purposes of

10 sentence enhancement under Section 31-18-17 is a question of law that we review

11 de novo.” Leon, 2013-NMCA-011, ¶ 43.

12   {30}   As a preliminary matter, we note that the date contemplated in Section 31-

13 18-17(D)(1) is the date “the person completed serving his sentence or period of

14 probation or parole for the prior felony[.]” Both parties base their arguments on the

15 dates that Defendant was convicted of the prior felonies and there is no indication

16 in the record of the dates on which Defendant completed her sentences for the prior


     issue here predated both Marquez and the effective date of the amendment
     (December 3, 2010). Hence, the amended rule did not apply here. See Howell v.
     Heim, 1994-NMSC-103, ¶ 17, 118 N.M. 500, 882 P.2d 541 (“New Mexico law
     presumes that statutes and rules apply prospectively absent a clear intention to the
     contrary.”); see also NMSA 1978, § 12-2A-8 (1997) (“A statute or rule operates
     prospectively only unless the statute or rule expressly provides otherwise or its
     context requires that it operate retrospectively.”).

                                             17
 1 felony convictions. Because the dates of the completion of Defendant’s sentences

 2 perforce fall after the dates of conviction, we likewise rely on the dates of

 3 conviction in our analysis.

 4   {31}   In Triggs, the question before the Court was whether the district court

 5 correctly concluded that it lacked discretion to order habitual offender

 6 enhancements to run concurrently. 2012-NMCA-068, ¶ 13. The district court had

 7 imposed habitual offender enhancements to “each of the seven [underlying]

 8 offenses [of] four years, and ordered the sentences to be served consecutively,

 9 resulting in a total sentence of twenty-eight additional years in prison.” Id. ¶ 1. The

10 district court apparently agreed with the State that “where a parole violation

11 triggers habitual offender enhancements to a sentence, the enhanced sentence is not

12 a new sentence and must run consecutive if the underlying crimes being enhanced

13 run consecutive.” Id. ¶ 17. This Court disagreed and held that “the original

14 judgment does not bind the judge who revokes parole.” Id. It went on, “[t]his

15 principle is consistent with case law stating that enhanced sentences are new

16 sentences and that in imposing the new enhanced sentences, the [district] court’s

17 arrangement of the manner in which the new enhanced sentences were to be served

18 was not limited by the arrangement for serving the regular sentences.” Id.

19 (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). The matter was




                                             18
 1 remanded to the district court to exercise its discretion as to whether the

 2 enhancement periods should run concurrently or consecutively. Id. ¶ 23.

 3   {32}   Defendant extrapolates from the Court’s statement that “enhanced sentences

 4 are new sentences” the proposition that an enhancement may be based only on a

 5 prior felony convictions that occurred within ten years of the date of the probation

 6 revocation. But the issue in Triggs was the scope of the district court’s discretion

 7 and whether it was limited by the way the original sentence was structured. The

 8 phrase relied on by Defendant must be understood in that context.

 9   {33}   This Court recently recognized the limits of the Triggs holding in State v.

10 Yazzie.2 2018-NMCA-001, ¶ 20, 410 P.3d 220, cert. denied, ___ P.3d ___ (No. S-

11 1-SC-36544, Aug. 30, 2017). Before the Court was the apparent tension between

12 Triggs and State v. Ortega, in which this Court stated that “[a] probation violation

13 is not a crime and does not trigger an enhancement as a habitual offender” and,

14 consequently, “enhancement at the time of the probation violation relates to the

15 district court’s sentence for the underlying crimes.” 2004-NMCA-080, ¶ 8, 135

16 N.M. 737, 93 P.3d 758. The Yazzie Court held that there was “no conflict” between

17 Ortega and Triggs because “Triggs [merely] reaffirms the discretion of the district

18 court in determining the manner in which a defendant will serve multiple

19 sentences.” Yazzie, 2018-NMCA-001, ¶ 20. Thus, “[e]nhanced sentences may be

            2
            Defendant properly alerted this Court to Yazzie, which was pending before
     this Court when she filed the brief in chief.

                                             19
 1 new—in that they are newly imposed after the original sentence for a probation

 2 violation—but this does not strip a newly imposed sentence of its relationship to

 3 the original sentence, the grounds for which the sentence is being enhanced.” Id.

 4   {34}   Defendant does not dispute that the prior felony convictions listed in the

 5 2008 Plea Agreement were entered within ten years of the 2008 conviction. Hence,

 6 consistent with Yazzie and Ortega, the 2015 enhancement was valid because the

 7 prior felony convictions on which the district court relied occurred within ten years

 8 of the 2008 convictions.

 9 CONCLUSION
10   {35}   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm.

11   {36}   IT IS SO ORDERED.


12                                                  ______________________________
13                                                  LINDA M. VANZI, Judge

14 WE CONCUR:


15 ________________________________
16 KRISTINA BOGARDUS, Judge


   ________________________________
17 JACQUELINE R. MEDINA, Judge




                                             20
