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State v. Sanchez - Montana Supreme Court Ruling

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Filed March 24th, 2026
Detected March 24th, 2026
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Summary

The Montana Supreme Court reversed in part and remanded a ruling in State v. Sanchez. The court found that the District Court's disposition illegally extended the defendant's sentence by including the probationary period in the revocation of the suspended portion. The case is remanded for correction of the disposition.

What changed

The Montana Supreme Court has reversed in part and remanded the disposition of State v. Sanchez, concerning a felony DUI conviction. The appellate court determined that the District Court erred by illegally extending the defendant's sentence when it included the probationary period within the revocation of the suspended portion of his sentence. The specific issue addressed was whether the disposition of January 3, 2024, improperly calculated the sentence upon revocation.

This ruling necessitates a review and correction of the District Court's disposition by the lower court. For legal professionals involved in criminal sentencing and appeals, this case highlights the importance of precise calculation of sentence terms, particularly when dealing with revocations of suspended sentences and probationary periods. Failure to adhere to statutory and judicial guidelines for sentence calculation can lead to illegal extensions, requiring appellate intervention and remand for correction.

What to do next

  1. Review and correct the District Court's disposition in State v. Sanchez to accurately reflect sentencing terms.
  2. Ensure all future sentence revocations accurately distinguish between custodial and probationary periods.

Source document (simplified)

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Top Caption Disposition [Combined Opinion

                  by Gustafson](https://www.courtlistener.com/opinion/10814410/state-v-sanchez/#o1)

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March 24, 2026 Get Citation Alerts Download PDF Add Note

State v. Sanchez

Montana Supreme Court

Disposition

Reversed in part and Remanded

Combined Opinion

                        by Gustafson

03/24/2026

DA 24-0111
Case Number: DA 24-0111

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2026 MT 61

STATE OF MONTANA,

Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

CHRISTOPHER SANCHEZ,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Fifth Judicial District,
In and For the County of Jefferson, Cause No. DC-2019-25
Honorable Luke Berger, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

Abigail Mathews, Attorney at Law, Great Falls, Montana

For Appellee:

Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Selene Koepke,
Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

Steve Haddon, Jefferson County Attorney, Andrew Paul, Deputy
County Attorney, Boulder, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: March 11, 2026

Decided: March 24, 2026

Filed:


Clerk
Justice Ingrid Gustafson delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Appellant, Christopher Sanchez (Sanchez), appeals from the District Court’s second

revocation order issued by the Fifth Judicial District Court, Jefferson County, Montana on

January 3, 2024. We reverse in part and remand for correction of the disposition.

¶2 The issue on appeal is:

Whether the District Court’s disposition of January 3, 2024, illegally extended
Sanchez’s sentence when it included the probationary period of Sanchez’s
custodial sentence in its revocation of the suspended portion.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 Sanchez was arrested and charged with felony DUI on July 8, 2019. He was

originally sentenced on November 6, 2019, to 2 years DOC followed by 4 years additional

suspended time with 90 days credit for time served. On May 10, 2020, Sanchez completed

the WATCh residential treatment program. A little over a year later, as a probationary

sanction, Sanchez was ordered to complete 90 days in pre-release.

¶4 After completing his pre-release sanction, Sanchez continued to violate rules of

probation. As such, on September 22, 2021, the State filed a petition to revoke. Sanchez

admitted the alleged violations and on February 9, 2022, the District Court revoked the

prior sentence and re-imposed the remaining probationary and suspended portions—

5 years, 3 months—to DOC, all suspended, except for placement into a 9-month treatment

program, and a 76-day credit (which will be further discussed below).

¶5 Sanchez was placed in pre-release for 90 days, from June 9, 2022, to September 7,

2022, which is when he was released into the community. Sanchez remained in the

community without violation until May 29, 2023. Thereafter, he continued to exhibit

2
various violations of the rules of probation resulting in the State filing its second petition

to revoke on October 12, 2023. Following a hearing on December 13, 2023, the District

Court found Sanchez violated the terms of his probation, granted the petition to revoke,

and set a disposition hearing for January 3, 2024. At the disposition hearing, the State

presented evidence of the violations as well as evidence of violations that have been

ongoing since the revocation hearing. The District Court revoked his sentence, imposed a

5-year, 3-month disposition to DOC, and granted him 505 days of credit, for a net

disposition of 1,410 days to DOC.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶6 We review a district court’s revocation of sentence for an abuse of discretion and

its conclusions of law for correctness. State v. Torres, 2017 MT 177, ¶ 6, 388 Mont. 161,

398 P.3d 279. We review a criminal sentence for legality. State v. Toulouse, 2024 MT

184, ¶ 8, 418 Mont. 1, 554 P.3d 706.

DISCUSSION

¶7 Whether the District Court’s disposition of January 3, 2024, illegally extended
Sanchez’s sentence when it included the probationary period of Sanchez’s custodial
sentence in its revocation of the suspended portion.

¶8 Sanchez asserts his revocation sentence of January 3, 2024, is illegal as it imposed

a commitment term of five years and three months to the DOC when there was only three

years and three months of suspended time left to revoke. He asserts this disposition violates

§ 46-18-203(7)(a)(iii), MCA, as it is a longer commitment term than the original sentence.

¶9 The State also asserts the District Court impermissibly added time from Sanchez’s

discharged custodial portion of his sentence to the revocation dispositions of February 9,

3
2022, and January 3, 2024. The State asserts this case should be remanded for correct

calculation of the suspended time available to revoke and for resentencing accordingly, but

advocates in doing so that Sanchez should not be given any additional incarceration or

street time credit.

¶10 From our review of the record, Sanchez and the State are correct as to the effect of

the District Court’s disposition orders of February 9, 2022, and January 3, 2024. The

manner in which the District Court pronounced the dispositions intermixed Sanchez’s

probationary time remaining on the initial custodial portion of his sentence with the

suspended four-year portion. With regard to the first revocation, the District Court

subtracted the pretrial, treatment, and sanction periods of incarceration from the original

6-year term (comprised of 2 years custodial time and 4 years suspended time) to conclude

there remained 5 years, 3 months of suspended time which could be revoked. At the second

disposition, the District Court switched gears and rather than subtracting additional periods

of incarceration and elapsed time to determine what remained of suspended time which

could be revoked, the District Court instead revoked the entire 5-year, 3-month suspended

time that remained at the time of the first revocation disposition, re-imposed it all

suspended, except for placement into a 9-month treatment program, and then credited back

custodial and street time accruing after the first revocation.

¶11 To determine if the District Court actually imposed an illegal disposition longer than

the original sentence in violation of § 46-18-203(7)(a)(iii), MCA, we must, at a minimum,

start with the original sentence, apply the sentencing provisions of § 61-8-731, MCA

(2019), and subtract periods of incarceration and periods of elapsed time without record or

4
recollection of violations pronounced by the District Court to determine the actual time

available for revocation on the original sentence.

¶12 Sanchez was arrested July 8, 2019. He pled guilty. He was originally sentenced on

November 6, 2019, to 2 years custodial time (730 days), during which he would attend the

WATCh treatment program, followed by an additional 4 years (1,460 days) suspended time

to DOC, for a total sentence of 6 years (2,190 days). The District Court then ordered

Sanchez be credited with 90 days for pretrial incarceration—leaving a remainder of 2,100

days on his sentence.1 Sanchez was incarcerated upon sentence and then placed in the

WATCh treatment program. He was discharged from WATCh to the community on

May 10, 2020.

¶13 Pursuant to § 61-8-731, MCA (2019), “if the person successfully completes a

residential alcohol treatment program approved by the department of corrections, the

remainder of the sentence must be served on probation.” Thus, upon his discharge from

the WATCh residential treatment program, the approximate 18 months (544 days)

remaining of his 2-year DOC custodial sentence was to be served on probation followed

by an additional 4 years of suspended time. Thus, upon credit for pretrial incarceration and

completion of the time in WATCh, Sanchez had 1,914 days (approximately 5 years,

3 months) remaining in probationary and suspended time.

¶14 Sanchez remained compliant with probation rules from his release from WATCh on

May 10, 2020, until sometime in April 2021, when he began relapsing with alcohol

1
Although the District Court credited Sanchez with 90 days credit for pretrial incarceration at the
time of his original sentence, it appears he had only served 76 days of pretrial incarceration.
5
consumption. Thereafter, Sanchez struggled to remain compliant with probation and was

sanctioned to 90 days in pre-release. After discharging back into the community from this

pre-release sanction, Sanchez continued to violate rules of probation leading to the State

filing a petition for revocation on September 22, 2021. Sanchez admitted the alleged

violations and on February 9, 2022, the District Court granted the revocation petition and

imposed a 5-year, 3-month DOC sentence (1,915 days), all suspended, except for

placement into a 9-month treatment program. It is clear that the District Court calculated

the 5 years, 3 months it determined to be available for revocation by deducting the

following periods of incarceration that Sanchez served on the initial 2-year custodial

portion of his sentence from his original 6-year sentence: (1) 90 days for pretrial

incarceration and (2) 186 days for the period from sentencing on November 6, 2019, to his

release from WATCh into the community on May 10, 2020. Sanchez also served a 90-day

pre-release sanction. However, in an apparent attempt to correct the initial over-crediting

of Sanchez for 90 days pretrial incarceration rather than the 76 days he actually served

pretrial, and to accurately reflect credit for all incarceration to the date of disposition, the

District Court provided Sanchez with 76 days of additional credit for time served in

association with the 90-day pre-release sanction. The District Court did not grant Sanchez

any street time credit.2 Thus, upon pronouncement of the first revocation disposition on

2
Although it appears Sanchez had remained in the community without record of violation from
May 11, 2020, to April 2021 (at least 326 days), the record does not reflect any objection with
regard to denial of street time credit—although in his briefing Sanchez notes that he did file an
application for sentence review on July 27, 2022, asserting entitlement to a period of compliance
from May 11, 2020, when released from WATCh into the community, to April 30, 2021, when a
case management response occurred.
6
February 9, 2022, after crediting Sanchez for all incarceration time credit, 1,838 days

remained on the original 6-year sentence.

¶15 Following the February 9, 2022 disposition, Sanchez was again placed in pre-release

for 90 days from June 9, 2022, to September 7, 2022, when he was released into the

community—leaving 1,748 days remaining on his original 6-year sentence. Sanchez

remained in the community without violation—264 days—until May 29, 2023. Thereafter,

he continued to exhibit various violations of the rules of probation resulting in the State

filing its second petition to revoke on October 12, 2023. Following the hearing on

December 13, 2023, the District Court found Sanchez violated terms of his probation,

granted the petition to revoke, and set a disposition hearing for January 3, 2024. At the

disposition hearing, the State presented evidence of ongoing violations since the revocation

hearing. The District Court revoked his sentence and imposed a net disposition of 1,410

days—5 years, 3 months to the DOC with 505 days of credit. Although the District Court

did not specifically parse out the 505 days of credit it gave in its disposition order on

Sanchez’s 2023 revocation, as the State notes, at the disposition hearing the District Court

“recognized that Sanchez was entitled to another 338 days of credit for the period between

the previous revocation and the new violations.” Sanchez made no objection to the 338-day

calculation of elapsed time advanced by his probation officer.

¶16 As indicated above, using incarceration and street time credit determined by the

District Court, at the time of the second disposition 1,748 days of combined probationary

(544 days remaining on the initial 2-year custodial portion) and suspended (1,204 days

suspended time) time remained on his original sentence. Crediting Sanchez with 338 days

7
of elapsed time left 1,410 days of combined probationary time (206 days3 remaining in the

initial 2-year custodial portion) and suspended time (1,204 days suspended time) remaining

on his original sentence. Thus, the amount of time imposed by the District Court in its

disposition of January 3, 2024, was not a longer commitment, in terms of days, than the

original sentence. However, while the amount of time the District Court imposed was not

longer than the original sentence, the way in which the District Court revoked Sanchez’s

remaining probationary and suspended time and then imposing it all as a DOC custodial

sentence was error. Although it is apparent the District Court was trying to remain within

the confines of the 6-year term of the original sentence, the District Court misapprehended

the effect of § 61-8-731, MCA (2019)’s requirement that “if the person successfully

completes a residential alcohol treatment program approved by the department of

corrections, the remainder of the sentence must be served on probation,” and treated the

remaining probation time of the custodial portion of the original sentence as suspended

time, adding it to the original 4 years of suspended time.

¶17 The statutory language of § 46-10-203(7)(a)(iii), MCA, allows for a court to revoke

the suspension of a sentence, “but provides no mechanism for a court to revoke an ‘active’

custodial sentence upon petition by the State.” Toulouse, ¶ 14. “[T]he District Court’s

revocation authority is limited to revocation of suspended time” and “[t]he revocation

sentence shall begin to run upon discharge of [] custodial time.” Toulouse, ¶ 14. Here, at

the time of the January 3, 2024 disposition, Sanchez had 206 days (544 days minus the

3
544 probationary days remaining on the 2-year custodial portion of the sentence minus 338 days
street time credit applied by the District Court equals 206 days.
8
338 days without a record of violation) remaining on the original custodial portion of his

sentence which, pursuant to § 61-8-731, MCA (2019), “must be served on probation,” and

1,204 days of suspended time available to the District Court to revoke. The District Court

acted beyond its authority in revoking the 206 probationary days remaining on Sanchez’s

original custodial sentence and imposing them as a DOC commitment as the District Court

only had authority to revoke the remaining suspended time pursuant to

§ 46-18-203(7)(a)(iii), MCA.

¶18 Accordingly, we reverse the disposition of January 3, 2024, and remand to the

District Court to correct its disposition to revoke only the 1,204 days of suspended time

remaining as of January 3, 2024. The State further asserts that Sanchez should not be given

any additional incarceration or street time credit upon remand for correction of sentence.

From review of the record, it is less than clear how Sanchez’s probation officer and the

District Court determined the 338-day street time credit or why Sanchez did not object to

the calculations of street time credit at either of his revocation disposition proceedings.

This Court has held, however, that a district court’s failure to state the reason for the

discretionary decision to grant or deny credit for street time under § 46-18-203(7)(b),

MCA, “is a waivable statutory defect if the sentence imposed was facially legal and did

not exceed statutory mandates.” State v. Youpee, 2018 MT 102, ¶ 11, 391 Mont. 246,

416 P.3d 1050. As the State and Sanchez did not object to the District Court’s 338-day

street time credit, the parties’ waived any reconsideration of this credit. As to credit for

time served, this Court has held that “[c]alculating credit for time served is not a

discretionary act, but a legal mandate.” State v. Kortan, 2022 MT 204, ¶ 11, 410 Mont.

9
336, 518 P.3d 1283 (quoting State v. Tippet, 2022 MT 81, ¶ 10, 408 Mont. 249, 509 P.3d

1). Further, the language of § 46-18-203(7)(b), MCA, at issue here, is not discretionary

when it comes to the awarding of credit for time served—“[c]redit must be allowed for

time served in a detention center.” Thus, should the record show incarceration days

exceeding those already credited by the District Court, Sanchez is entitled to credit for

them as well as required by § 46-18-203(7)(b), MCA.

¶19 Consistent with district courts’ limited authority to revoke only suspended or

deferred time, the disposition order upon revocation only replaces the original sentence as

to the non-custodial portion of the original sentence pursuant to the parameters of

§ 46-18-203, MCA. Given a district court’s limited authority in a revocation action and to

avoid the type of confusion occasioned here, we caution prosecutors to only seek

revocation of specific periods of suspended or deferred time, district courts to revoke only

specific periods of suspended or deferred time, and defendants to diligently represent the

specific detention and street time credits they seek.

¶20 Reversed in part and remanded for correction of the disposition in accordance with

this Opinion.

/S/ INGRID GUSTAFSON

We Concur:

/S/ CORY J. SWANSON
/S/ BETH BAKER
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ KATHERINE M. BIDEGARAY
/S/ JIM RICE

10

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
MT Courts
Filed
March 24th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
2026 MT 61
Docket
DA 24-0111

Who this affects

Applies to
Legal professionals
Activity scope
Criminal Sentencing Probation Violations
Geographic scope
US-MT US-MT

Taxonomy

Primary area
Criminal Justice
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
DUI Sentencing Probation

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