Case Title: State v. Barr

Citation: 

Docket Number: 49376

State: idaho

Court: Idaho Supreme Court (criminal)

Date: 2024-06-06T00:00:00Z

Document:
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO 
 
Docket No. 49376-2021 
 
STATE OF IDAHO, 
 
      Plaintiff-Respondent, 
 
v. 
 
BRITIAN LEE BARR, 
 
     Defendant-Appellant. 
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Boise, January 2024 Term 
 
Opinion filed:  June 6, 2024 
 
Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk 
 
Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, 
Ada County. Samuel A. Hoagland, District Judge.   
 
The decision of the district court is affirmed.  
 
Erik R. Lehtinen, State Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for Appellant. Kimberly 
A. Coster argued. 
 
Raúl R. Labrador, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for Respondent. Kale D. Gans 
argued. 
 
ZAHN, Justice. 
 
Britian Lee Barr appeals from his judgment of conviction for five counts of sexual 
exploitation of a child. The district court sentenced Barr to five, fifteen-year fixed sentences to run 
consecutively, resulting in an aggregate seventy-five-year fixed sentence. The consecutive nature 
of the sentences was mandated by Idaho Code section 19-2520G(3). Barr argues that the 
mandatory consecutive sentence requirement in Idaho Code section 19-2520G(3) violates the 
Idaho Constitution’s separation of powers provision by usurping the judiciary’s authority to 
determine whether a sentence runs consecutively or concurrently. We hold that determining 
whether a sentence is to be served consecutively or concurrently is not a power reserved 
exclusively to the judiciary. As a result, section 19-2520G(3) does not violate the separation of 
powers provision of the Idaho Constitution.  
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I. 
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND 
 
Britian Lee Barr was charged with eleven counts of sexual exploitation of a child for 
possessing child pornography. Barr had been previously convicted of felony possession of sexually 
exploitative material in 2011. On the second day of trial, Barr pleaded guilty to five counts of 
sexual exploitation of a child for possessing child pornography and admitted to being a repeat 
offender for purposes of Idaho Code section 19-2520G. In exchange for his guilty pleas, the other 
counts were dismissed.  
 
 Because Barr had pleaded guilty to offenses requiring sex offender registration, and 
because he had previously been convicted of a crime requiring sex offender registration, Barr was 
subject to a mandatory minimum term of confinement of fifteen years for each of the five counts 
to which he pleaded guilty, pursuant to Idaho Code section 19-2520G. The statute also mandated 
that the sentences run consecutively. The district court therefore sentenced Barr to five, fifteen-
year fixed sentences to run consecutively, resulting in an aggregate seventy-five-year fixed 
sentence. The district court commented during sentencing that “I do think it would be possible for 
me to fashion a sentence that was not as severe if I had the discretion to do so, but I don’t have 
that discretion . . . .” 
 
Barr appealed the sentence, arguing that the district court abused its discretion by failing 
to perceive that it had discretion to designate indeterminate portions for the mandatory fifteen-year 
sentences and that it had discretion to order the sentences be served concurrently. We affirmed the 
decision of the district court because Barr had not preserved his arguments for appeal. State v. 
Barr, 166 Idaho 783, 787, 463 P.3d 1286, 1290 (2020). However, we also noted that “[n]othing in 
this opinion should be construed to limit Barr’s right to challenge the legality of his sentence under 
I.C.R. 35(a).” Id. at 787 n.1, 463 P.3d at 1290 n.1. 
 
Barr returned to the district court and filed a Rule 35(a) motion to correct an illegal 
sentence. Barr argued that the consecutive sentence requirement in Idaho Code section 19-
2520G(3) is unconstitutional because it violates the doctrine of separation of powers by usurping 
the judiciary’s inherent power to determine whether a sentence runs consecutively or concurrently. 
The district court denied the motion, concluding that the legislature is empowered to designate 
mandatory consecutive sentences under the plain language of Article V, section 13 of the Idaho 
Constitution. Barr timely appealed.  
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II. 
STANDARD OF REVIEW 
 
“Issues of constitutional and statutory interpretation are questions of law and are reviewed 
by this Court de novo.” State v. Winkler, 167 Idaho 527, 529, 473 P.3d 796, 798 (2020). “The party 
challenging a statute on constitutional grounds bears the burden of establishing that the statute is 
unconstitutional and must overcome a strong presumption of validity.” Planned Parenthood Great 
Nw. v. State, 171 Idaho 374, 397, 522 P.3d 1132, 1155 (2023) (internal quotation marks omitted) 
(quoting CDA Dairy Queen, Inc. v. State Ins. Fund, 154 Idaho 379, 382, 299 P.3d 186, 189 (2013)). 
“When possible, the Court is obligated to seek an interpretation of a statute that upholds its 
constitutionality.” Id. at 397–98, 522 P.3d at 1155–56 (alteration omitted) (internal quotation 
marks omitted) (quoting Am. Falls Reservoir Dist. No. 2 v. Idaho Dep’t of Water Res., 143 Idaho 
862, 869, 154 P.3d 433, 440 (2007)). “The Court’s power to declare legislative action 
unconstitutional should be exercised only in clear cases.” Id. at 398, 522 P.3d at 1156 (internal 
quotation marks omitted) (quoting Am. Falls Reservoir Dist. No. 2, 143 Idaho at 869, 154 P.3d at 
440).  
III. 
ANALYSIS 
Barr’s argument on appeal is that the district court erred because at common law it was 
exclusively the province of the court to determine whether a sentence ran consecutively or 
concurrently. He argues that Article V, section 13 of the Idaho Constitution expressly prohibits the 
legislature from depriving the judiciary of any of its powers and that Article II, section 1 of the 
Idaho Constitution specifically prohibits the legislature from exercising any power belonging to 
the judicial branch. Putting all of this together, Barr argues that Idaho Code section 19-2520G(3) 
violates the separation of powers doctrine of the Idaho Constitution by impermissibly encroaching 
on the inherent power of the judiciary to determine whether a sentence runs consecutively or 
concurrently. Barr cites to prior decisions of this Court as recognizing that this power is an inherent 
one reserved exclusively to the judiciary. He also argues that the district court erred in interpreting 
the Idaho Constitution because the plain meaning of the phrase “mandatory minimum sentence” 
as used in Article V, section 13 does not encompass designating whether a sentence be served 
consecutively or concurrently. 
 
In response, the State contends that the plain meaning of the phrase “mandatory minimum 
sentence” necessarily includes the ability to mandate that sentences be served consecutively. In 
the State’s view, mandating that a sentence runs consecutively establishes the “mandatory 
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minimum sentence” that a defendant must serve. The State also argues that, at common law, the 
judicial authority to impose consecutive sentences was subject to statutory limitation. Therefore, 
the common law did not establish that the power to designate whether a sentence be served 
consecutively or concurrently was one reserved exclusively to the judiciary. The State contends 
that, because this power was not reserved exclusively to the judiciary, section 19-2520G(3) does 
not violate the separation of powers provision of the Idaho Constitution. 
Although we agree with Barr that the district court erred in its interpretation of Article V, 
section 13, we agree with the State that, at common law, both the judiciary and the legislature had 
the authority to designate whether criminal sentences be served concurrently or consecutively. We 
therefore affirm the district court under the “right result, wrong theory” doctrine. 
A.  Article V, section 13 of the Idaho Constitution does not empower the legislature to 
mandate that criminal sentences run concurrently or consecutively.  
 
The district court denied Barr’s Rule 35(a) motion on the basis that the plain language of 
Article V, section 13 of the Idaho Constitution empowered the legislature to designate mandatory 
consecutive sentences. Specifically, the district court concluded that the effect of running a 
sentence concurrently or consecutively impacts the length of time a defendant is incarcerated and 
therefore is encompassed within the “mandatory minimum sentence” provision of Article V, 
section 13. We do not agree that the plain language of Article V, section 13 extends that far.  
“The general rules of statutory construction apply to constitutional provisions . . . .” 
Westerberg v. Andrus, 114 Idaho 401, 403 n.2, 757 P.2d 664, 666 n.2 (1988). “[S]tatutory 
interpretation begins with the literal language of the statute. If the statutory language is 
unambiguous, we need not engage in statutory construction and are free to apply the statute’s plain 
meaning.” Nordgaarden v. Kiebert, 171 Idaho 883, 890, 527 P.3d 486, 493 (2023) (alteration in 
original) (quoting Callies v. O’Neal, 147 Idaho 841, 847, 216 P.3d 130, 136 (2009)). “The 
fundamental object in construing constitutional provisions is to ascertain the intent of the drafters 
by reading the words as written, employing their natural and ordinary meaning, and construing 
them to fulfill the intent of the drafters.” Sweeney v. Otter, 119 Idaho 135, 139, 804 P.2d 308, 312 
(1990).  
 
In 1978, voters ratified an amendment to Article V, section 13 of the Idaho Constitution to 
permit the legislature to provide mandatory minimum sentences for crimes:  
POWER OF LEGISLATURE RESPECTING COURTS.  The legislature shall have 
no power to deprive the judicial department of any power or jurisdiction which 
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rightly pertains to it as a coordinate department of the government; but the 
legislature shall provide a proper system of appeals, and regulate by law, when 
necessary, the methods of proceeding in the exercise of their powers of all the courts 
below the Supreme Court, so far as the same may be done without conflict with this 
Constitution, provided, however, that the legislature can provide mandatory 
minimum sentences for any crimes, and any sentence imposed shall not be less than 
the mandatory minimum sentence so provided. Any mandatory minimum sentence 
so imposed shall not be reduced. 
Idaho Const. art. V, § 13 (emphasis added); see H.J.R. 6, 44th Leg., 2d Reg. Sess., 1978 Idaho 
Sess. Laws 1032–33 (ratified Nov. 7, 1978). 
Following the adoption of this amendment, the Idaho Legislature passed Idaho Code 
section 19-2520G to provide that, “[p]ursuant to section 13, article V of the Idaho [C]onstitution, 
the legislature intends to provide mandatory minimum sentences for repeat offenders who have 
previously been found guilty of or pleaded guilty to child sexual abuse.” I.C. § 19-2520G(1). The 
section also provides that any repeat child sex offender found guilty of a crime that requires sex 
offender registration “shall be sentenced to a mandatory minimum term of confinement . . . for a 
period of not less than fifteen (15) years . . . .” I.C. § 19-2520G(2). Subsection (3), the subsection 
at issue in this case, mandates that any sentences imposed under section 19-2520G run 
consecutively to any other sentence.  I.C. § 19-2520G(3).  
 
We have previously held that the language of Article V, section 13 “provides a narrow 
exception for the legislature to exercise powers traditionally granted to the judicial branch: the 
legislature may encroach on the court’s sentencing powers only with the enactment of an express 
mandatory minimum sentence pursuant to Article V, [s]ection 13.” State v. Olivas, 158 Idaho 375, 
380, 347 P.3d 1189, 1194 (2015) (emphasis added). We conclude that the language of Article V, 
section 13 is unambiguous. The plain meaning of the phrase “mandatory minimum sentences” 
includes the authority to mandate the length of a criminal sentence but does not include the 
authority to mandate the timing of when several criminal sentences are served.   
Our interpretation of the constitutional language is also supported by the legislative history 
and voter materials concerning the amendment. The “Statement of Purpose” for House Joint 
Resolution 6, which resulted in the amendment to Article V, section 13 being placed on the ballot 
for voters, provided: 
Legislatures in other states are able to set mandatory minimum sentences. Such a 
power goes hand in hand with the power of the Legislature to enact laws defining 
what shall constitute criminal acts. Since the Legislature can say what is a crime, 
so should it say how the crime shall be punished.  
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Statement of Purpose, H.J.R. 6, 44th Leg., 2d Reg. Sess. (Idaho 1978) (emphasis added). The ballot 
description for the proposed amendment to Article V, section 13 explained that the amendment 
would “empower the Legislature to pass criminal laws containing provisions that would require 
that a person convicted of a specific crime serve a minimum period of incarceration . . . .” 
Legislative Council’s Statement of Meaning and Purpose, H.J.R. 6 (1978) (emphasis added), 
reprinted in The Idaho Statesman, Nov. 5, 1978, at 18. Thus, consistent with our interpretation of 
the plain meaning of the “mandatory minimum sentence,” neither the legislative nor the ballot 
materials described the amendment as granting the legislature authority to mandate whether 
criminal sentences be served concurrently or consecutively.  
 
The district court’s contrary interpretation relied on several decisions from Idaho’s 
appellate courts, including State v. Alexander, in which our Court of Appeals held that the term 
“sentence” includes the mandatory fines imposed as part of the sentence. See State v. Alexander, 
138 Idaho 18, 26, 56 P.3d 780, 788 (Ct. App. 2002). We decline to extend the holding in Alexander 
to include consecutive sentences. While a mandatory fine can be part of a mandatory sentence 
because they are part of the punishment given for an offense, a mandatory consecutive sentence is 
something different. Designating whether a sentence be served concurrently or consecutively 
determines when a defendant begins serving each of several sentences. In contrast, a fine is part of 
a punishment given for an offense. Therefore, Alexander is inapplicable.  
The district court also relied on State v. Cardona, 102 Idaho 668, 637 P.2d 1164 (1981). In 
Cardona, this Court held that a statute enhancing the period of incarceration for a felony committed 
using a firearm did not violate the separation of powers clause in our constitution because the 
statute was simply a sentence enhancement that rendered a person convicted of certain felonies 
liable to punishment in excess of that which might have been imposed had they not used or 
possessed a firearm in the commission of the crime. Id. at 670–71, 637 P.2d at 1166–67. The 
district court concluded that section 19-2520G(3) is also a sentencing enhancement statute because 
it increases the length of the offender’s time incarcerated if the defendant had previously been 
found guilty of a crime that would require registration as a sex offender. We disagree. The statute 
at issue in Cardona did not mandate consecutive sentences, but instead was a sentence 
enhancement that increased the punishment for a single underlying felony. Id. at 670, 637 P.2d at 
1166 (“[Idaho Code section] 19-2520 does not by its terms make the carrying of a firearm during 
a felony a separate felony nor fix a mandatory sentence for such additional crime[.]”). In contrast, 
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section 19-2520G(3) mandates when the sentence commences for each individual conviction. For 
this reason, Cardona is distinguishable from the circumstance here. 
Finally, the district court relied on the Court of Appeals’ decision in State v. Ewell, 147 
Idaho 31, 205 P.3d 680 (Ct. App. 2009). In Ewell, the Court of Appeals held that Idaho Code 
section 19-2520G(2), requiring repeat offenders to be sentenced to a mandatory minimum of 
fifteen years, was constitutional. Id. at 36, 205 P.3d at 685. However, a close review of the Ewell 
decision reveals that its reasoning was limited to section 19–2520G(2), which mandates a 
minimum period of confinement of not less than fifteen years. In fact, the decision warns of the 
danger of referring to sentence enhancements as “consecutive” sentences, thus indicating that 
consecutive sentences are different than sentence enhancements. Id. at 37, 205 P.3d at 686 (“The 
term ‘consecutive’ is inappropriate when referring to a sentence enhancement for use of a firearm. 
It may connote, inaccurately, the existence of two separate sentences. (quoting State v. Camarillo, 
116 Idaho 413, 414, 775 P.2d 1255, 1256 (Ct. App. 1989)).” As discussed above, a sentence 
enhancement statute determines the length of a sentence imposed, while consecutive mandatory 
sentences determine when a sentence commences. The decision in Ewell is therefore inapplicable 
to the issue presented here.  
 
In sum, we hold that the plain language of Article V, section 13 of the Idaho Constitution 
does not grant the legislature the authority to mandate whether criminal sentences be served 
concurrently or consecutively. 
B. Because at common law the power to mandate a consecutive sentence was not reserved 
exclusively to the judiciary, the consecutive sentence mandate in Idaho Code section 19-
2520G(3) does not violate the separation of powers provision of the Idaho Constitution. 
 
We next address Barr’s argument that the common law and this Court’s prior caselaw 
establish that determining whether sentences run consecutively or concurrently is a power reserved 
exclusively to the judiciary. The State counters that the judiciary’s common law discretion to 
choose between consecutive and concurrent sentences historically, including at the time of the 
writing of Idaho’s Constitution, could be constrained by statute. Therefore, the State argues that 
Idaho Code section 19-2520G(3) is proper under any common law authority reflected in the Idaho 
Constitution.  
In support of his argument, Barr relies heavily on our decision in State v. McCoy, where 
we struck down a statute establishing a mandatory sentencing scheme. 94 Idaho 236, 240–41, 486 
P.2d 247, 251–52 (1971), superseded by constitutional amendment, Idaho Const. art. V, § 13. We 
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held that the judiciary possesses inherent power to suspend a sentence, and a mandatory minimum 
sentence interferes with this power, therefore violating the separation of powers doctrine of the 
Idaho Constitution. Id. at 240, 486 P.2d at 251. In striking down the legislature’s attempt to 
mandate minimum sentences absent a constitutional provision, we held that, at common law, the 
power to sentence is “an inherent right of the judicial department and one which the separation of 
powers concept in our system of government places above and beyond the rule of mandatory action 
imposed by legislative fiat.” Id. (emphasis added).  
Seven years after McCoy was decided, Article V, section 13 was amended to grant the 
legislature the authority to impose mandatory minimum sentences. H.J.R. 6, 44th Leg., 2d Reg. 
Sess., 1978 Idaho Sess. Laws 1032–33 (ratified Nov. 7, 1978); Idaho Const. art. V, § 13; Olivas, 
158 Idaho at 380, 347 P.3d at 1194. In State v. Pena-Reyes, we recognized that the amendment 
was in response to our decision in McCoy and held that the amendment effectively circumscribed 
the power of our trial courts to suspend a mandatory minimum sentence contained in a statute. 131 
Idaho 656, 657, 962 P.2d 1040, 1041 (1998).  
Barr correctly notes that we have held that our trial courts have inherent common law 
authority to determine whether a sentence runs consecutively or concurrently. See State v. 
Lawrence, 98 Idaho 399, 400, 565 P.2d 989, 990 (1977) (“At common law the courts had 
discretionary power to impose a consecutive sentence and permissive legislation was not 
necessary.”); see State v. Cisneros-Gonzalez, 141 Idaho 494, 496, 112 P.3d 782, 784 (2004) 
(“Under the common law, the courts in Idaho have discretionary power to impose cumulative 
sentences.”). However, we have not previously addressed whether that power is one reserved 
exclusively to the judiciary.  
 
To answer this question, the State argues that we need look no further than In re Esmond, 
42 F. 827 (D.S.D. 1890), a federal case involving a question of whether a territorial statute 
requiring the imposition of mandatory consecutive sentences gave the territorial court the authority 
to impose a consecutive sentence. The State asserts that the Esmond court’s survey of nineteenth 
century caselaw relating to consecutive sentences shows that, in 1890, judges had the discretion to 
impose a consecutive sentence unless a statute provided otherwise, and therefore, establishes that 
the power to impose a consecutive sentence was not the sole province of the judiciary. Esmond 
was convicted of four counts of robbing the United States mail, and was sentenced, in the Territory 
of Idaho, to four consecutive terms of imprisonment of three years each. Esmond, 42 F. at 827. 
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Because there was no federal prison in the Territory of Idaho at the time, Esmond was imprisoned 
in South Dakota. Id. Esmond brought a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal court in South 
Dakota, challenging the consecutive sentences as illegal and void because the territorial court in 
Idaho had no power to impose a consecutive sentence. Id.  
In determining “whether cumulative sentences, in the absence of any statute, are valid,” 
the court discussed conflicting caselaw and ultimately concluded that “the great weight of authority 
is in favor of the legality of consecutive sentences.” Id. at 828–29. While Esmond is informative, 
it did not specifically address whether the authority to authorize consecutive sentences is one 
reserved exclusively to the judiciary. 
The State also argues that evidence of the common law concerning this issue can be found 
in two Idaho territorial statutes that mandated consecutive sentences at the time the Idaho 
Constitution was adopted. See Idaho Rev. Stat. § 7237 (1887) (requiring consecutive sentences for 
convictions of multiple crimes if a sentence had not yet been pronounced for any of the crimes); 
Idaho Rev. Stat. § 6452 (1887) (providing that an escaped prisoner must serve their term for 
escaping from prison after their original sentence had been completely served). Although these 
statutes may be evidence of the common law, they are not the end of our analysis. See State v. 
Clarke, 165 Idaho 393, 397, 446 P.3d 451, 455 (2019). 
The common law authority to impose consecutive sentences is most often traced back to 
the English libel case of Rex v. Wilkes. In that case, a writ of error was brought to the House of 
Lords protesting the imposition of consecutive sentences. 19 Howell’s State Trials 1075, 1136, 4 
Burr. 2527, 98 Eng. Rep. 327 (K.B. 1770). The House of Lords determined that the consecutive 
sentences imposed by the judgment of imprisonment were “good in law.” Id. Many state courts 
have traced the common law authority for judges to impose consecutive sentences to this pre-
Revolutionary case. See In re Breton, 44 A. 125, 126 (Me. 1899); State v. Mahaney, 62 A. 265, 
265–66 (N.J. 1905); Duquette v. Warden, N.H. State Prison, 919 A.2d 767, 771 (N.H. 2007).  
At early common law, a distinction was drawn between the imposition of punishment for 
misdemeanors and punishment for felonies. The punishment for misdemeanors was left to the 
discretion of the judge, while punishment for felonies was often mandated by statute. 2 James 
Fitzjames Stephen, A History of the Criminal Law of England 87–88 (London, MacMillan & Co. 
1883). Over time, the common law evolved to grant judges sentencing discretion in felony cases 
as well. Id.  
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Although sentencing discretion afforded to judges increased during this time, early treatises 
suggest that power had always been constrained by statute. For example, early English statutes 
mandated that misdemeanors required the defendant to both serve jail time and pay a fine. 4 
William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 40 n.5, 50, 54 (London, A. Strahan 
1825). Nineteenth century legal scholar Joel Prentiss Bishop, in his commentaries on criminal law, 
acknowledged the judge’s authority to mandate consecutive sentences:  
When a prisoner, under an unexpired sentence of imprisonment, is convicted of a 
second offence; or when there are two or more convictions, on which sentence 
remains to be pronounced; the judgment may direct; that each succeeding period of 
imprisonment shall commence on the termination of the period next preceding.  
1 Joel Prentiss Bishop, Commentaries on the Criminal Law 649–50 § 636 (Boston, Little, Brown 
& Co. 1856). However, Bishop also acknowledged that some state legislatures had begun 
mandating consecutive sentences:  
Yet by the common law of England, followed in most of our States, the sentence, 
at least in misdemeanors, may direct the imprisonment on one count or indictment 
to commence on the termination of that on another; and a court having the authority 
should give it this form. In some of the States, a statute declares that the periods of 
imprisonment shall be in this way; whereupon, it appears, there is no need for the 
sentence to repeat the provision, and a consolidated one will be good. 
1 Joel Prentiss Bishop, New Criminal Procedure or New Commentaries on the Law of Pleading 
and Evidence and the Practice in Criminal Cases 813 § 1327 (Chicago, T. H. Flood & Co. 1895) 
(emphasis added). Additionally, Bishop acknowledged that statutes could constrain a judge’s 
sentencing power:  
Yet we should here observe, that the jury does not at common law determine the 
sentence to be imposed; but this is left for the judge, who, within limits prescribed 
by law, exercises in the matter his discretion.  
Bishop, Commentaries on the Criminal Law, at 647 § 632 (emphasis added). 
In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, courts in the United States reached differing 
conclusions regarding whether judges had the inherent authority to impose consecutive sentences 
in felony cases absent legislation granting judges that authority. See In re Esmond, 42 F. at 828 
(noting that “to the general question whether cumulative sentences, in the absence of any statute, 
are valid, I find quite a conflict of authorities”). An early decision on this issue is Lamphere’s 
Case, which reached what became the minority position—that judges did not have the authority to 
mandate consecutive sentences in felony cases absent a statute:  
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[I]t has been held that consecutive sentences were valid on convictions of 
misdemeanors; and, inasmuch as, under the English law, the power of 
imprisonment for misdemeanors was largely discretionary . . . . There is, however, 
no authority to be found, so far as our examinations have gone, and so far as the 
criminal law citations are found in the best elementary books, which holds that such 
a practice exists at common law in felonies. In Reg. v. Cutbush, L.R. 2 Q.B. 379, it 
is said distinctly that a statute was necessary to apply to felonies the practice in 
misdemeanors. That case points out how the British statutes have provided for it. 
That is a recent, and, beyond question, a correct, statement of the law. 
Whatever elasticity there may be in civil matters, it is a safe and necessary 
rule that criminal law should not be tampered with except by legislation . . . . As 
we have no statutes on the subject, we must, in our opinion, wait until the legislature 
shall see fit to devise adequate means to avoid these difficulties. 
Lamphere’s Case, 27 N.W. 882, 883–84 (Mich. 1886); see also Bloom’s Case, 19 N.W. 200, 201 
(Mich. 1884).  
Despite the conclusion in Lamphere’s Case, the majority of courts eventually came to the 
opposite conclusion—determining that no statute was necessary to authorize a judge to impose 
consecutive sentences:  
As we have no statute authorizing cumulative sentences for crime, it would seem 
at first blush that such sentences should not be permitted in this state; but this court, 
with the courts of most of the other states, as well as England, has sustained 
cumulative sentences without the aid of a statute. . . . The great weight of authority 
is in favor of cumulative sentences, and they should be upheld on principle.  
Henderson v. James, 39 N.E. 805, 805–06 (Ohio 1895); In re Breton, 44 A. 125, 126 (Me. 1899); 
Ex parte Sargood, 83 A. 718, 719–20 (Vt. 1912); In re Walsh, 55 N.W. 1075, 1076–77 (Neb. 
1893); Kite v. Commonwealth, 52 Mass. 581, 585 (1846).  
While a majority of these decisions concluded that courts had the inherent power to impose 
consecutive sentences, none of the decisions we reviewed concluded that the power was one 
exclusively reserved to the judiciary. Instead, a majority of courts acknowledged that the authority 
to impose a consecutive sentence could be permitted or constrained by statute. Charles Hughes, 
Hughes’ Criminal Law: The Law of Crimes, Prosecutions, Defenses and Procedure as Determined 
by Decisions of the Courts of Last Resort in the United States and England 892 § 3340 (1901). 
(“Cumulative sentences in most of the states, as well as England, have been sustained without the 
aid of a statute.”); In re Esmond, 42 F. at 828 (“Passing to the general question whether cumulative 
sentences, in the absence of any statute, are valid, I find quite a conflict of authorities.” (emphasis 
added)); Henderson, 39 N.E. at 805–06 (“As we have no statute authorizing cumulative sentences 
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for crime, it would seem at first blush that such sentences should not be permitted in this state; but 
this court, with the courts of most of the other states, as well as England, has sustained cumulative 
sentences without the aid of a statute.” (emphasis added)); Lamphere’s Case, 27 N.W. at 883–84 
(“[I]t is said distinctly that a statute was necessary to apply to felonies the practice in 
misdemeanors.” (emphasis added)); In re Breton, 44 A. at 126 (“[I]t was declared that a statute 
was necessary to give the court such power in cases of felony.” (emphasis added)); Mahaney, 62 
A. at 266) (“[T]he great weight of authority in this country is that, without any statutory provision 
for consecutive sentences, the power to impose them resides in the court.” (emphasis added)); Ex 
parte Turner, 45 Mo. 331, 332 (1870) (“[W]hen he is convicted and sentenced for two offenses, 
the law also expressly decides when the second term shall begin . . . .” (emphasis added)).  
Barr has cited no authority holding that this power is reserved exclusively to the judiciary. 
Nor has our review of the common law uncovered support for his position. Rather, the majority of 
courts have acknowledged, sometimes expressly and other times implicitly, that the legislative 
branch has the authority to mandate whether sentences run consecutively. In light of the foregoing, 
we conclude that, while courts have the inherent power to determine whether a sentence runs 
consecutively or concurrently, that power is not reserved exclusively to the judiciary. 
While the district court’s decision was premised on its erroneous interpretation of Article 
V, section 13, we affirm its decision denying Barr’s motion under the “right-result, wrong theory” 
rule. “Where an order of a lower court is correct, but based upon an erroneous theory, the order 
will be affirmed upon the correct theory.” State v. Hoskins, 165 Idaho 217, 222, 443 P.3d 231, 236 
(2019) (quoting Andre v. Morrow, 106 Idaho 455, 459, 680 P.2d 1355, 1359 (1984)). The right-
result, wrong-theory rule cannot “be invoked in situations where the alternative basis was not 
pressed before the trial court.” Id. at 223, 443 P.3d at 237. “[B]oth the issue and the party’s position 
on the issue must be raised before the trial court for it to be properly preserved for appeal.” Id. at 
225, 443 P.3d at 239 (quoting State v. Gonzalez, 165 Idaho 95, 99, 439 P.3d 1267, 1271 (2019)). 
A party is permitted to “fine-tune its argument” if the “the issue was properly raised below and its 
position on that issue had not changed.” Id. at 224, 443 P.3d at 238 (citing Ada Cnty. Highway 
Dist. v. Brooke View, Inc., 162 Idaho 138, 142 n.2, 395 P.3d 357, 362 n.2 (2017)).  
We are satisfied that the parties adequately preserved their arguments concerning the 
common law below. Before the district court, Barr maintained that the authority to impose a 
consecutive sentence is an inherent, exclusive authority of the judiciary and therefore Idaho Code 
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section 19-2520G(3) violates the separation of powers provision of the Idaho Constitution. At a 
hearing before the district court on his Rule 35(a) motion, Barr argued that the courts have a 
“common law authority to run sentences consecutively and concurrently” and discussed the court’s 
“traditional powers to decide whether the sentence is run consecutively or concurrently.” In 
contrast, the State argued below that the legislature has the authority to mandate consecutive 
sentences. While the State cited additional legal authority in support of its position on appeal, 
citation of additional legal authority does not preclude us from affirming under the right-result, 
wrong-theory rule in this instance.  
We therefore affirm the district court’s decision denying Barr’s Rule 35 motion because 
the power to designate whether a criminal sentence be served concurrently or consecutively is not 
one reserved exclusively to the judiciary at common law and therefore section 19-2520G(3) does 
not violate the separation of powers provisions of the Idaho Constitution.   
IV. 
CONCLUSION 
For the reasons discussed, we affirm the district court’s denial of Barr’s Rule 35(a) motion. 
Chief Justice BEVAN, and Justices BRODY, MOELLER, and MEYER CONCUR.