State v. Miller , 2013 NMSC 48 ( 2013 )


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    integrity of this document
    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'05- 16:19:17 2013.12.19
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 
    2013-NMSC-048
    Filing Date: November 18, 2013
    Docket No. 33,571
    STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    Plaintiff-Petitioner,
    v.
    ANDREW JAMAL MILLER,
    Defendant-Respondent.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI
    Kenneth H. Martinez, District Judge
    Gary K. King, Attorney General
    Ralph E. Trujillo, Assistant Attorney General
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Petitioner
    Bennett J. Baur, Acting Chief Public Defender
    William A. O’Connell, Assistant Appellate Defender
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Respondent
    OPINION
    VIGIL, Justice.
    {1}      We issued a writ of certiorari to review the Court of Appeals’ decision that the
    district court’s sentence of Defendant Andrew Miller violated the terms of a plea agreement
    that the district court had accepted. We agree with the Court of Appeals that his sentence
    violates the plea agreement. However, we disagree with the remedy that the Court of
    Appeals ordered and clarify our case law on this account. Accordingly, we reverse the Court
    of Appeals and remand to the Court of Appeals for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    1
    I.     BACKGROUND
    {2}     In 2008, Defendant faced sixty-one counts consisting mostly of fraud and
    embezzlement charges between two indictments against him. He entered into a plea
    agreement with the State covering both indictments, which the district court accepted.
    Defendant pleaded Guilty or No Contest to four second-degree felonies and two third-degree
    felonies. In exchange for Defendant’s pleas, the State dropped all but six charges against
    him.
    {3}     The plea agreement in this case contains three provisions relevant to sentencing.
    First, the agreement states that the parties agree to run the sentence for each count
    consecutively. Second, under the heading “SENTENCING AGREEMENT” it reads, in part:
    “The parties agree that there shall be a minimum sentence of ten (10) years and a maximum
    sentence of 40 years at initial sentencing.” There was also a handwritten clause below this
    that stated: “The remaining two years of the 42 year exposure shall run concurrent with
    parole of two years.” Finally, under the heading “POTENTIAL INCARCERATION” it
    reads:
    If the court accepts this agreement, the defendant will be ordered to serve a
    minimum sentence of ten (10) years and a maximum sentence of 40 years in
    the Department of Corrections at initial sentencing. The Defendant may be
    given a period of probation. If the defendant later violates that probation or
    parole, the defendant may be incarcerated for the balance of the sentence.
    {4}      Prior to sentencing, Defendant moved to withdraw his pleas, arguing that the State
    was not fulfilling its promise regarding allowed visitations from his son. The State responded
    that it would be highly prejudiced if Defendant were permitted to withdraw his pleas. The
    district court denied Defendant’s motion and sentenced Defendant. The judgment and
    sentence the district court ordered provided, in part:
    The sentences in [the first indictment] are to [run] consecutively to the
    sentences in [the second indictment] for a total incarceration of forty two
    [sic] (42) years, followed by two years of parole. The court further orders that
    nine (9) years is suspended for an actual sentence of imprisonment of thirty
    three (33) years.
    Instead of signing the judgment and sentence, Defendant wrote by the signature line that he
    objected to the length of the sentence, among other things.
    {5}     Defendant then appealed to the Court of Appeals, arguing that the district court
    imposed a longer sentence than contemplated by the plea agreement since the plea agreement
    called for a maximum sentence of forty years and the court sentenced him to forty-two years.
    State v. Miller, 
    2012-NMCA-051
    , ¶ 17, 
    278 P.3d 561
    . The State responded that the forty-
    year maximum term in the plea agreement applied solely to “initial sentencing,” meaning
    2
    it only applied to the cap on the initial period of incarceration. 
    Id.
    {6}     Initially, the Court of Appeals determined that the forty-two-year sentence might be
    a clerical error in the written judgment so it remanded the case to the district court to clarify
    the sentence and enter findings or a corrected judgment. Id. ¶ 6. However, the district court
    did not amend the sentence and instead entered a finding that “by its plain meaning the cap
    on the term of incarceration applies only at, ‘initial sentencing.’” Such language does not
    speak to the overall sentencing exposure for the required basic sentences which the court
    must impose for each count.” The district court also entered several conclusions of law,
    which discussed the district court’s authority to sentence and concluded that it was required
    by law to impose a forty-two-year sentence in the absence of aggravating or mitigating
    factors. The district court determined that Defendant had “no grounds on which to be
    allowed to withdraw his plea agreement” and denied Defendant’s motion to withdraw his
    plea agreement.
    {7}     The Court of Appeals “reverse[d] the denial of Defendant’s motion to withdraw his
    plea.” Id. ¶ 27. However, the Court of Appeals then also concluded “that the district court
    rejected the plea agreement by sentencing Defendant to two years more than the maximum
    contemplated by the agreement” and held that Defendant must be given the opportunity to
    withdraw his plea or, if both parties agreed, “the district court may also re-sentence
    Defendant in accordance with the plea.” Id. ¶ 28.
    {8}      The State petitioned for a writ of certiorari, which we granted. The State argues that
    the district court sentenced Defendant in conformity with the explicit terms of the plea
    agreement. We disagree with the State and agree with Defendant and the Court of Appeals
    that the forty-two-year sentence violates the plea agreement. However, we reverse the Court
    of Appeals’ remand order for the reasons explained below. We remand to the district court
    to sentence Defendant according to his reasonable understanding of the plea agreement,
    requiring that his sentence contain a total period of incarceration between ten and forty
    years.
    II.     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    {9}     Since the State maintains that Defendant was sentenced according to the terms in the
    plea agreement, our task is to evaluate the terms in the plea agreement. “Upon review,
    [appellate courts] construe the terms of the plea agreement according to what Defendant
    reasonably understood when he entered the plea.” State v. Fairbanks, 
    2004-NMCA-005
    , ¶
    15, 
    134 N.M. 783
    , 
    82 P.3d 954
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); accord State
    v. Mares, 
    1994-NMSC-123
    , ¶ 12, 
    119 N.M. 48
    , 
    888 P.2d 930
    . “A plea agreement is a unique
    form of contract whose terms must be interpreted, understood, and approved by the district
    court.” State v. Gomez, 
    2011-NMCA-120
    , ¶ 9, 
    267 P.3d 831
    . If the language in the written
    agreement is ambiguous, it is the district court’s task to resolve that ambiguity with the
    parties. 
    Id.
     If the court resolved the ambiguity, the agreement can no longer be said to be
    ambiguous as to that point. 
    Id.
     But if the court failed to resolve the ambiguity and there is
    3
    no presentation of extrinsic evidence that would resolve it, then we “may rely on the rules
    of construction, construing any ambiguity in favor of the defendant. Under such
    circumstances, we review the terms of the plea agreement de novo.” 
    Id.
     (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    {10} The State argues that the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the district court
    abused its discretion by denying Defendant’s motion to withdraw his guilty plea. However,
    the Court of Appeals ultimately evaluated the plea agreement for ambiguity using a de novo
    standard. Miller, 
    2012-NMCA-051
    , ¶¶ 25-27. The abuse of discretion standard of review is
    inappropriate in this case because Defendant was entitled to appeal the sentence based upon
    his claim that it did not conform to the agreed upon plea agreement regardless of whether
    he had ever moved to withdraw his pleas. N.M. Const. art VI, § 2 (providing that aggrieved
    parties have the absolute right of one appeal); see, e.g., Gomez, 
    2011-NMCA-120
    (addressing the defendant’s appeal of the district court’s sentence, which he argued violated
    the terms of his plea agreement).
    III.   DISCUSSION
    {11} As in this case, the interplay between our sentencing statutes is often the source of
    confusion in disputes over whether a sentence complies with a plea agreement. The
    Legislature has imposed basic sentencing requirements, but it has also granted courts broad
    discretion over certain sentencing elements. NMSA 1978, Section 31-18-15(B) (2007)
    requires that “[t]he appropriate basic sentence of imprisonment shall be imposed . . . unless
    the court alters the sentence pursuant to the provisions of the Criminal Sentencing Act.”
    (Emphasis added.) The Criminal Sentencing Act provides the guidelines for altering the
    basic sentence, permitting the court to consider mitigating and aggravating factors to reduce
    or increase the basic sentence by up to one-third. See NMSA 1978, § 31-18-15.1(A), (G)
    (1993, amended 2009), held unconstitutional by State v. Frawley, 
    2007-NMSC-057
    , ¶ 29,
    
    143 N.M. 7
    , 
    172 P.3d 144
     (unconstitutionality abrogated by the 2009 amendment—the court
    now must find that aggravating factors exist beyond a reasonable doubt). A sentencing court
    also has authority to defer the sentence or suspend the execution of a sentence. See NMSA
    1978, § 31-20-3(A), (B) (1985). Also, “whether multiple sentences for multiple offenses run
    concurrently or consecutively is a matter resting in the sound discretion of the trial court.”
    State v. Allen, 
    2000-NMSC-002
    , ¶ 91, 
    128 N.M. 482
    , 
    994 P.2d 728
     (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted). Finally, the court has control over whether the maximum period of
    incarceration applies solely to initial sentencing or to post-sentencing aspects as well, such
    as probation revocation consequences. See NMSA 1978, § 31-21-15(B) (1989) (giving the
    court broad discretion when a probation violation is established to “continue the original
    probation, revoke the probation and either order a new probation with any condition
    provided for in Section 31-20-5 or 31-20-6 NMSA 1978, or require the probationer to serve
    the balance of the sentence imposed or any lesser sentence” or for deferred sentences, “the
    court may impose any sentence which might originally have been imposed”).
    {12}   Parties have discretion in negotiating these sentencing and incarceration terms when
    4
    forming a plea agreement. See Mares, 
    1994-NMSC-123
    , ¶ 11 (“[T]he parties should be able
    to negotiate the terms of a plea agreement to the full extent allowed by law.”). A defendant
    can negotiate for the actual sentence ordered at initial sentencing—within the limits of
    Section 31-18-15.1—by negotiating for the consideration of mitigating factors or for the
    State not to consider aggravating factors, as well as the amount of that sentence that the court
    actually executes either through suspension or deferment, and even whether any of that
    suspended time can be executed in post-sentencing procedures. See 
    id.
     (rejecting the state’s
    argument that a plea agreement promising a maximum period of incarceration deprives the
    court from incarcerating a defendant for a probation violation and holding that this Court
    will enforce such an agreed-upon provision). However, Rule 5-304(A)(1) NMRA commands
    that the district court judge not be a participant in any plea negotiations between the state and
    a defendant. “The judge’s role is explicitly limited to acceptance or rejection of the bargain
    agreed to by counsel for the state, defense counsel, and defendant.” Rule 5-304, comm.
    commentary.
    {13} Consequently, it is vital that the language in a plea agreement unambiguously explain
    which sentencing element has been bargained-for in order to avoid any misunderstandings
    between the parties or between the parties and the court over whether a term applies to the
    sentence to be ordered, the term of years that must be suspended, the initial period of
    incarceration, or the maximum period of incarceration. If the language in a plea agreement
    is unclear as to which sentencing element it contemplates, it is the court’s responsibility to
    clarify the ambiguity so that the parties are truly in agreement and the court understands
    exactly what sentence it is agreeing to order if it chooses to ratify the agreement. See Gomez,
    
    2011-NMCA-120
    , ¶ 9.
    A.      Defendant’s Plea Agreement Is Ambiguous
    {14} In this case, since the parties agreed to run the sentences for each count
    consecutively, the court and the State are correct that the required starting point was a basic
    sentence of forty-two years since Defendant pleaded to four second-degree felonies and two
    third-degree felonies. See § 31-18-15(A)(6), (9) (stating the basic sentence for a second
    degree felony is nine years imprisonment and the basic sentence for a third degree felony is
    three years imprisonment). However, the district court was not bound by that figure. The
    court could have reduced the basic sentence for mitigating factors per Section 31-18-
    15.1(A)(1) by up to one-third, or fourteen years in this case. Further, the court also had
    discretion to determine what part of the ordered sentence must actually be served in prison.
    {15} The State and the district court disagreed with Defendant over whether the ten-year
    minimum and forty-year maximum required by the plea agreement applied to the initial
    period of incarceration that the court would order Defendant to serve in prison or to the total
    incarceration time to which Defendant was agreeing to be exposed. Defendant maintains
    that, as he understood it, he would face no more than forty years of incarceration under any
    circumstance, while the State maintains that the agreement made clear he was exposing
    himself to forty-two years of total incarceration if he violated probation conditions after
    5
    serving the initial executed sentence.
    {16} We examine the language in the plea agreement to evaluate the reasonableness of
    Defendant’s understanding. We first note that the “maximum sentence of 40 years” language
    in the plea agreement indicates that the actual sentence imposed by the court could be no
    more than forty years. We agree with the Court of Appeals that the “at initial sentencing”
    language does not transform the forty-year maximum sentence into a forty-year cap for the
    initial period of incarceration. See Miller, 
    2012-NMCA-051
    , ¶¶ 21-22. The language simply
    does not reflect the State’s intent for the period to apply to the initial period of incarceration.
    {17} The State argues that other portions of the agreement made it clear to Defendant that
    the court would be imposing a sentence of forty-two years, all of which he could potentially
    serve. We observe that nowhere in the agreement does it state that the court was required to
    or that it would be imposing a basic sentence of forty-two years. Under the heading
    “PENALTIES” the plea agreement states, “[t]he maximum penalty for these charges are” and
    then provides the basic sentence for each count to which Defendant pleaded guilty or no
    contest. (Emphasis added). The “maximum” language indicates that the sentence could total
    forty-two years if one did the math, not that it must.
    {18} The State further argues that Defendant also knew he was exposing himself to a total
    of forty-two years of potential incarceration based on the handwritten “42 year exposure”
    clause in the agreement. However, according to Defendant, the State was not aware that the
    sentences totaled forty-two years rather than forty and that he “did the math” himself. When
    he discovered that the basic sentences could total forty-two years instead of forty, he insisted
    that the district attorney “do something with that two years before [he] went in front of the
    judge” because he “would not take” the additional two years. He told the State to “make [the
    sentence] equal 40,” and the State responded by offering to “run it two years with parole.”
    The confusing handwritten “42 year exposure” clause in the plea agreement was thus the
    result of Defendant’s insistence to make the maximum time he could ever serve in prison be
    forty years. Therefore, at least from Defendant’s perspective, the handwritten clause
    certainly could not have been intended to represent his agreement to face up to forty-two
    years incarceration total if he were to ever violate probation.
    {19} The State claimed at oral argument that the “42 year exposure” clause was only
    intended to indicate that at least two years of the forty-two year sentence would be
    suspended, and that Defendant got an even better deal by getting nine years suspended.
    However, even if that was the State’s intent, the language does not reflect that intent, as it
    refers to concurrence, not suspension.
    {20} It is unclear to us exactly what the handwritten clause explicitly required the court
    to do, since the court does not have the authority to run a sentence concurrently with parole.
    See § 31-18-15(D) (requiring that when a court suspends or defers a sentence, “the period
    of parole shall be served in accordance with the provisions of Section 31-21-10 NMSA 1978
    for the degree of felony for the basic sentence for which the inmate was convicted”); NMSA
    6
    1978, § 31-21-10(D) (2009) (requiring a two-year period of parole for second and third-
    degree felony convictions).
    {21} This confusing handwritten clause that contains a promise that could not be fulfilled,
    coupled with the promise of a ten- to forty-year “sentence,” render the language in the plea
    agreement ambiguous. Defendant’s understanding that the language promised he would
    receive a sentence between ten and forty years is not unreasonable since he cannot be
    expected to understand the sentencing laws unless their repercussions were clear in the
    agreement. Both the ten- to forty-year maximum “sentence” and the handwritten clause
    demanded clarification that did not occur anywhere in the language of the plea agreement.
    Thus, we next turn to whether the district court clarified these issues prior to sentencing
    Defendant.
    B.     Since the District Court Failed to Resolve the Ambiguity Prior to Sentencing,
    We Construe the Plea Agreement in Favor of Defendant’s Reasonable
    Interpretation
    {22} The State concedes that the plea agreement was not “artfully crafted.” However, it
    argues that even if the plea agreement was ambiguous, the district court resolved the
    ambiguity prior to sentencing by making its interpretation known to Defendant. The State
    compares this case to our decision in Mares to support its conclusion that the district court
    in this case resolved any ambiguity in the sentencing terms of the plea agreement. Mares
    involved a similar dispute over a plea agreement that contained a sentencing provision of
    nine years’ imprisonment with the requirement that the sentence “be suspended such that
    there shall be no more than 24 months of potential actual incarceration ordered.” 1994-
    NMSC-123, ¶ 2. This Court determined that the language in the agreement was ambiguous
    as to whether the maximum of twenty-four months’ incarceration was limited to the initial
    sentencing or if it covered post-sentencing procedures as well. Id. ¶ 13. However, this Court
    observed that the district court resolved this facial ambiguity several times when it expressly
    warned Mares that the cap applied only to the initial period of incarceration and that he
    would face nine years’ incarceration total if he ever violated any conditions of probation. Id.
    Mares appealed his sentence when the court subsequently sentenced him to the full nine-year
    term of incarceration for violating his probation, arguing that his sentence should have been
    capped at twenty-four months. This Court rejected his argument since the district court’s
    warnings rendered Mares’ understanding unreasonable. Id. ¶ 19.
    {23} The State’s reliance on Mares is misplaced. In this case, Defendant’s plea agreement
    contained similarly ambiguous language as in Mares regarding the period of incarceration.
    However, unlike in Mares, here the district court never clarified the actual number of years
    Defendant faced if he violated probation. The State argues that the agreement’s warning that
    Defendant could be incarcerated for the balance of the sentence if he ever violated probation
    and the court’s warning that he could “face additional consequences in the future” resolved
    the ambiguity. We disagree. These warnings lack the specificity that was present in Mares.
    They did not resolve the ambiguity regarding whether the sentence cap was forty or forty-
    7
    two years. Since Defendant reasonably understood that he faced no more than forty years
    even if he violated probation, to him the “additional consequences” were limited to the
    amount of time suspended between ten and forty years.
    {24} The State also implies that the district court made Defendant aware he faced a forty-
    two-year basic sentence when it advised Defendant of the basic sentences for each count,
    arguing that the district court advised Defendant “of all the direct sentencing consequences.”
    However, the record reflects that when the court discussed the sentence for each count, it
    stated that for the second-degree felony offenses: “each of those counts carry with them a
    basic sentence of up to [9] years in prison” and that “the third-degree felony offenses carry
    basic sentences of up to three years in prison.” (Emphasis added). Informing Defendant that
    he could face “up to” the basic sentence does not equate to informing him that he would be
    receiving the basic sentence.
    {25} Similarly, the district court never clarified the forty-two-year exposure language.
    Defendant thought that the language was assuring that he would not be sentenced to the basic
    sentence. The court never explained its contrary interpretation of this language; it merely
    read it aloud. Later, at the presentment hearing on February 10, 2010, the district court
    ultimately determined after reviewing the plea agreement that it contemplated that Defendant
    would be sentenced to “40 years and two years parole” but that the court actually had given
    Defendant a better deal by suspending nine years. However, since the court never explained
    these contrary interpretations of this facially ambiguous clause prior to sentencing
    Defendant, the court failed to resolve the ambiguity in the agreement.
    {26} It remains unclear to us exactly what the parties intended the ambiguous handwritten
    language in the plea agreement to require. After all, the parties and the court were still in
    disagreement over the intended meaning of the language even at the February 10th
    presentment hearing ordered by the Court of Appeals. It is clear, however, that the parties’
    conflicting interpretations were not resolved before Defendant was sentenced. The State
    asserted at oral argument that the “at initial sentencing” language in the plea agreement is
    “a term of art” and “everyone basically agrees” that it refers to the initial period of
    incarceration that would be ordered on an imposed sentence. However, Defendant clearly
    was not in agreement with this purported understanding, and we will not impute this
    understanding onto Defendant unless it was explained to him. Having never received a
    contrary explanation, it was reasonable for him to conclude that the maximum forty-year
    “sentence” indicated that the most time he could ever spend incarcerated for the pleaded
    charges was forty years. Consequently, we resolve the ambiguity in favor of Defendant’s
    reasonable interpretation.
    {27} As the sentence stands, the court suspended nine years of a forty-two-year sentence.
    The suspended years are conditioned on Defendant not violating any part of the judgment.
    Although it is speculative whether he will violate any conditions, it is conceivable that a
    court could impose the entire nine years suspended portion of his sentence, resulting in a
    total prison term of forty-two years. This is two years more than Defendant reasonably
    8
    believed he was accepting. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision that this
    sentence must be vacated.
    C.     The Appropriate Remedy in This Case Is for Defendant to Be Resentenced by
    the District Court According to His Understanding of the Plea Agreement
    {28} Having determined that Defendant’s sentence was not in conformity with the plea
    agreement, we now determine the appropriate remedy. “[T]he type of plea agreement
    dictates whether the court is bound to impose the sentence disposition contained in the plea.”
    State v. Pieri, 
    2009-NMSC-019
    , ¶ 30, 
    146 N.M. 155
    , 
    207 P.3d 1132
    . When a district court
    accepts a plea agreement that merely contains a recommended sentence, “the court is not
    bound by the sentencing recommendations or requests of the parties” and it is the court’s
    responsibility to determine and impose the proper sentence. 
    Id.
     If, however, the district court
    has accepted a plea agreement for a guaranteed specific sentence, “the court is bound to
    impose the sentence disposition contained in the plea.” 
    Id.
     These principles are codified in
    our Rule 5-304(C) NMRA, which provides that:
    If the court accepts a plea agreement that was made in exchange for a
    guaranteed, specific sentence, the court shall inform the defendant that it will
    embody in the judgment and sentence the disposition provided for in the plea
    agreement. If the court accepts a plea agreement that was not made in
    exchange for a guaranteed, specific sentence, the court may inform the
    defendant that it will embody in the judgment and sentence the disposition
    recommended or requested in the plea agreement or that the court's judgment
    and sentence will embody a different disposition as authorized by law.
    {29} In Pieri we adopted the approach taken by the United States Supreme Court in
    Santobello v. New York, 
    404 U.S. 257
     (1971), when an accepted plea agreement has been
    violated. 
    2009-NMSC-019
    , ¶¶ 14-18. In Santobello, the state and the defendant entered into
    a plea agreement that required the state to refrain from recommending a sentence. 
    404 U.S. at 258
    . The state subsequently recommended the maximum sentence at the sentencing
    hearing. 
    Id. at 259
    . Over the defendant’s objection to the state’s violation, the court
    sentenced the defendant to the maximum sentence. 
    Id. at 259-60
    . In doing so, the court stated
    that it was uninfluenced by the state’s recommendation. 
    Id. at 259
    . The Supreme Court
    nonetheless reversed the sentence due to the state’s violation. 
    Id. at 263
    . While Santobello’s
    requested relief was the withdrawal of his guilty plea, the Court determined that the state
    district court was “in a better position to decide whether the circumstances” of the case
    required specific performance of the plea, which would require the defendant to be sentenced
    by a different judge, or whether the defendant should be given the opportunity to withdraw
    his plea. 
    Id.
    {30} In Pieri, the state and Pieri entered into a plea agreement in which the state promised
    not to oppose Pieri’s request for a suspended sentence. 
    2009-NMSC-019
    , ¶ 2. The state then
    subsequently opposed such a request at the sentencing hearing. Id. ¶ 3. This Court held “that
    9
    under Santobello Defendant should have been given the opportunity to withdraw her plea
    or receive specific performance of the plea agreement” and “remand[ed] to the district court
    to afford Defendant this opportunity.” Id. ¶ 5.
    {31} The primary distinction between those cases and this case is that they involved
    recommended sentences, whereas in this case, the sentence was specific and guaranteed.
    Moreover, the ambiguity in the instant plea agreement, which we resolve in favor of
    Defendant’s reasonable understanding, led the district court to incorrectly impose a sentence
    that it mistakenly believed had been agreed to by the parties. In fact, it was actually
    sentencing beyond the forty year maximum period of incarceration that the Defendant
    understood he bargained for. We hold that because the district court thought it was imposing
    a guaranteed, specific sentence, when in fact the plea agreement was ambiguous on that
    point, specific performance of the now unambiguous agreement is the appropriate remedy.
    Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals’ remand order that gives Defendant the option
    to either withdraw his guilty and no contest pleas or to be sentenced according to his
    understanding of the terms if the State agrees. See Miller, 
    2012-NMCA-051
    , ¶ 28. We
    remand to the district court and order that it shall inform Defendant that it will embody in
    the judgment and sentence the disposition provided for in the now unambiguous plea
    agreement.
    D.     We Disavow Any Language in Pieri That Is Inconsistent With This Opinion
    {32} At oral argument, Defendant argued that denying him the opportunity to withdraw
    his pleas would conflict with our holding in Pieri. The State also conceded that under its
    understanding of Pieri Defendant had that right unless this Court changed the law. The Court
    of Appeals likewise interpreted Pieri to entitle Defendant to withdraw his pleas. Miller,
    
    2012-NMCA-051
    , ¶ 28. Thus, we now explain why Pieri does not afford Defendant the
    automatic right to withdraw his pleas.
    {33} In Pieri, we held “that a court is not required to afford a defendant the opportunity
    to withdraw his or her plea when it rejects a sentencing recommendation or a defendant’s
    unopposed sentencing request, so long as the defendant has been informed that the
    sentencing recommendation or request is not binding upon the court.” 
    2009-NMSC-019
    , ¶
    1, overruling Eller v. State, 
    1978-NMSC-064
    , 
    92 N.M. 52
    , 
    582 P.2d 824
    .
    {34} Defendant’s argument that he is entitled to withdraw his guilty plea because the
    district court did not impose the sentence contained in the plea agreement relies on dicta in
    Pieri that we hereby disavow. In Pieri, we intended to compare our holding regarding when
    a defendant does not get to withdraw his or her plea to when a defendant does get the
    opportunity to withdraw a plea under Rule 5-304(D). See Pieri, 
    2009-NMSC-019
    , ¶ 33 (“We
    adhere to the requirement of Rule 5-304(D) that if the court accepts a defendant’s plea in
    exchange for a guaranteed, specific sentence and that sentence is not imposed, the court must
    give the defendant an opportunity to withdraw his or her plea.”). However, since it was
    unnecessary to explain when a defendant does have the automatic right to withdraw a plea,
    10
    the reference to Rule 5-304(D) is dicta and cannot therefore be presently relied upon by
    Defendant. As we have explained, once a court has accepted a plea agreement, it is bound
    by the dictates of due process to enforce the agreement. It has no authority to later reject the
    agreement. Because the misstatement regarding Rule 5-304(D) is an inaccurate reflection
    of the requirement in the rule, it should not be relied upon in this or any future case.
    E.     Sentences Must Comply With Both Our Sentencing Laws and an Accepted Plea
    Agreement
    {35} Finally, the State argues that the Court of Appeals erred in declining to consider
    whether the court that approves a plea agreement must honor the plea agreement even if it
    contains an illegal sentence. The Court of Appeals refused to decide “whether the district
    court erred in determining that our sentencing laws require the imposition of a basic sentence
    of forty two years” because the parties did not raise the issue. Miller, 
    2012-NMCA-051
    , ¶
    16. Rather, it determined that “it was the plea agreement, not the sentencing statutes, which
    the district court was bound to enforce.” 
    Id.
     We agree with the State that a sentencing court
    must ensure that a sentence complies with both the terms of an accepted plea agreement and
    our sentencing laws.
    {36} The Court of Appeals correctly considered the ruling in Gomez that “[o]nce the plea
    is accepted, the court is bound by the dictates of due process to honor the agreement and is
    barred from imposing a sentence that is outside the parameters set by the plea agreement.”
    See 
    id.
     (quoting Gomez, 
    2011-NMCA-120
    , ¶ 16). However, as the State argues, the court
    must also be mindful of our sentencing statutes and cannot impose an illegal sentence. See
    § 31-18-15(B) (“The appropriate basic sentence of imprisonment shall be imposed . . . unless
    the court alters the sentence pursuant to the provisions of the Criminal Sentencing Act.”
    (emphasis added)); Mares, 
    1994-NMSC-123
    , ¶ 10 (holding that a district court can only
    impose sentences authorized by law); see also Sneed v. Cox, 
    1964-NMSC-250
    , ¶ 8, 
    74 N.M. 659
    , 
    397 P.2d 308
     (“[S]entences which are unauthorized by law are null and void.”); State
    v. Lucero, 
    1944-NMSC-036
    , ¶¶ 17-18, 
    48 N.M. 294
    , 
    150 P.2d 119
     (determining that legal
    sentences must be supported by statutory authority; illegal sentences are void). If the
    sentence in an accepted plea agreement is illegal, and therefore cannot be imposed by a
    court, then the court must give the defendant the opportunity to withdraw the plea. Sisneros,
    
    1982-NMSC-068
    , ¶ 8 (reversing the Court of Appeals’ reinstatement of an illegal sentence
    and ordering that the correct remedy was to permit the defendant to withdraw his plea).
    {37} Thus, when Defendant is re-sentenced upon remand, the sentence must honor both
    Defendant’s understanding of the plea agreement and our sentencing laws. Although
    Defendant’s understanding that two years of the forty-two-year sentence be run concurrent
    with parole cannot be honored, there are several ways to ensure that the sentence adheres to
    his understanding that he would face no more than forty years of incarceration for the
    pleaded charges. Accordingly, we offer two sentencing options to the district court.
    {38}   First, the court can consider running concurrently any one of the sentences it must
    11
    impose. We recognize that the plea agreement dictates that the sentences be run
    consecutively, but this requirement conflicts with the handwritten language that
    contemplates running part of the sentence concurrent with parole. Since we are presented
    with two conflicting provisions, we conclude that to harmonize both provisions, the forty-
    year cap must be seen as a cap on what can be run consecutively. Alternatively, the court
    could adjust the statutorily required basic sentence by up to one-third upon the finding of
    mitigating factors justifying the reduction—perhaps Defendant’s willingness to plead guilty.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    {39} This case demonstrates why it is essential that a district court clarify any ambiguity
    in a plea agreement, including those related to sentencing provisions, before it decides
    whether to accept or reject the plea agreement. If the district court does not resolve the
    ambiguity, the language in the plea agreement will be construed in favor of a defendant’s
    reasonable understanding. Once a court has accepted a plea agreement, it must ensure that
    the promises contained in the agreement are fulfilled. If the agreement contains a guaranteed,
    specific sentence, the court is bound by the dictates of due process to impose that sentence.
    {40} Since the district court in this case failed to resolve the ambiguity in the plea
    agreement that it accepted, we construe the agreement in favor of Defendant’s reasonable
    understanding that he would spend no more than forty years incarcerated. We therefore
    affirm the Court of Appeals’ conclusion that Defendant’s sentence violates his plea
    agreement, but we reverse its remand order and remand this matter to the Court of Appeals
    for resolution of Defendant’s remaining issues.
    {41}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    BARBARA J. VIGIL, Justice
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Chief Justice
    ____________________________________
    RICHARD C. BOSSON, Justice
    ____________________________________
    EDWARD L. CHÁVEZ, Justice
    ____________________________________
    CHARLES W. DANIELS, Justice
    12
    Topic Index for State v. Miller, No. 33,571
    APPEAL AND ERROR
    Remand
    Standard of Review
    State’s Right to Appeal
    CONTRACTS
    Ambiguous Contracts
    CRIMINAL LAW
    Fraud
    CRIMNAL PROCEDURE
    Aggravating or Mitigating Circumstances
    Plea and Plea Bargaining
    Sentencing
    JUDGES
    Abuse of Discretion
    13