Scudero v. State

917 P.2d 683, 1996 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 1996 WL 285413
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMay 31, 1996
DocketNo. A-5854
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 917 P.2d 683 (Scudero v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scudero v. State, 917 P.2d 683, 1996 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 1996 WL 285413 (Ala. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

On July 17, 1994, John A. Scudero, Jr., deployed a gill net from his commercial fishing vessel and caught several salmon in state waters approximately 1.2 nautical miles from Annette Island. The area was outside the 3000-foot boundary of the Annette Island waters reserved for Metlakatlans and was closed to salmon fishing. Scudero did not have an entry permit to fish commercially for salmon in state waters. Scudero was charged with commercial fishing in closed waters in violation of AS 16.05.723(a) and 5 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 33.310(e)(1)(B), commercial fishing without a permit in violation of AS 16.43.140, and trailing a gill net in closed waters in violation of AS 16.05.723(a) and 5 AAC 39.250(a). A jury convicted Scudero of all three charges.

On appeal Scudero first argues that the district court erred in refusing to take “judicial notice” of pleadings from two other cases.

Five months after being arraigned on the current charges, Scudero filed a motion seeking to have the district court in Ketchikan take judicial notice of thirteen documents that he had filed in two Juneau cases in which he had previously been charged with fishing violations. While referring to his request as one for judicial notice, Scudero actually wanted the court to deem the Juneau pleadings filed in his Ketchikan case. However, Scudero did not submit copies of the [685]*685pleadings to the Ketchikan court, or explain his failure to do so. Nor did he otherwise state good cause for the Ketchikan court to take “judicial notice.” Furthermore, although Scudero’s motion for judicial notice was untimely under Alaska Criminal Rule 12(e) (generally requiring pretrial motions to be filed within twenty days of arraignment), Scudero failed to explain the late-filing of his request.

District Court Judge George L. Gueker denied Scudero’s request, ruling that the Juneau pleadings had not been properly submitted to the Ketchikan court and that Seudero’s request was in any event untimely. On appeal, Scudero claims error. But his motion for judicial notice plainly requested relief beyond that normally contemplated under Alaska’s rules governing judicial notice of fact and law. See A.R.E. 201, 202. Although Judge Gueker was vested with broad discretion to relax procedural rules and might con-' ceivably have been authorized to treat the Juneau pleadings as if they had also been filed in the Ketchikan case, absent a convincing showing of necessity for “judicial notice,” without copies of the pleadings themselves, and given no justification for the untimeliness of Scudero’s request, the judge certainly did not abuse his discretion in denying Scudero’s motion.

Scudero nevertheless alleges that the district court erred “in failing to permit counsel, in the alternative, the opportunity to amend the motion.” But the record provides no indication that Scudero ever requested or attempted to amend or refile his request for judicial notice, or that the district court did anything to thwart any such efforts. Nor does Scudero provide any meaningful argument or authority to support this allegation. We conclude that the argument is meritless.

Scudero next argues that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on Scudero’s primary theory of defense. The day before trial, Scudero notified the court that, as a defense to his charges, he intended to assert that the conduct for which he was arrested involved “political acts which are part of his exercise of his right to free speech,” as guaranteed under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article I, Section 5 of the Alaska Constitution. Scudero, who is a Metlakatlan, claimed that at the time of the alleged violations, he was engaged in an act of civil disobedience to protest the state’s enforcement of fishing regulations against Metlakatlans; he asserted that his intent was not to fish but to protest, and that this protest was protected under the constitutional right to freedom of speech. Scudero sought to have this defense heard by the jury and proposed jury instructions accordingly.1 Judge Gueker declined to instruct the jury on Seudero’s civil disobedience defense, ruling that Scudero’s actions had not amounted to speech. On appeal, Scudero contends that he was entitled to present his defense to the jury.

We reject Seudero’s argument. At the outset, we note that, to the extent Scudero had a potentially viable claim of First Amendment protection, the claim raised issues for resolution by the court as a matter of law, not by the jury as a matter of fact. See Paul H. Robinson, Criminal Law Defenses § 5(d) (1984). Scudero’s constitutional defense may well have included preliminary factual issues whose resolution was necessary before the ultimate legal issue of First Amendment protection could be passed on by the court. But Scudero had no right to insist on a jury resolution of these preliminary factual matters.

[686]*686The right to a jury trial entitles the accused to have a jury pass on all the essential elements of the offense but does not extend to the resolution of extrinsic factual issues that bear on legal defenses that are not directly tied to an essential element of the crime charged — defenses that apply regardless of whether all necessary elements of an offense have been established. Cf. Model Penal Code § 1.12(4)(b) (in applying the Code, any fact not an element of an offense can be tried to the court or jury); Alaska Criminal Rule 12(b) (“Any defense ... which is capable of determination without the trial of the general issue may be raised before trial by motion.”).

Thus, for example, it is settled that a claim of selective prosecution is a defense of law for the court, not one of fact for the jury. Woodward v. State, 855 P.2d 423, 429 (Alaska App.1993). And entrapment has been recognized as a legal defense tried by the court, not the jury. Yates v. State, 681 P.2d 1362 (Alaska App.1984). So too, we have held that mistake of law is a defense decided by the court. Cornwall v. State, 915 P.2d 640, 647 (Alaska App. 1996); Ostrosky v. State, 704 P.2d 786, 792 (Alaska App.1985).

Scudero’s political protest defense falls squarely within the same category as selective prosecution, entrapment, and mistake of law. None of these defenses are premised on proof of factual circumstances negating a necessary element of the alleged crime; all apply, as a matter of extrinsic legal policy, even when the elements of a crime have been proved beyond a reasonable doubt. To the extent that his political protest defense raised issues of fact beyond those necessarily included in the jury’s consideration of the necessary elements of the charged offenses, Scudero was required to seek resolution of those issues by the district court, not by the jury. Thus, the district court did not err in declining to instruct the jury on Seudero’s defense.

Of course, Scudero was entitled to present his defense to the jury insofar as it related to the existence of an essential element of any of the offenses with which he was charged.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
917 P.2d 683, 1996 Alas. App. LEXIS 21, 1996 WL 285413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scudero-v-state-alaskactapp-1996.