State v. Deflorio

512 A.2d 1133, 128 N.H. 309, 1986 N.H. LEXIS 286
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 17, 1986
DocketNo. 85-165
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 512 A.2d 1133 (State v. Deflorio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Deflorio, 512 A.2d 1133, 128 N.H. 309, 1986 N.H. LEXIS 286 (N.H. 1986).

Opinion

Souter, J.

The Concord District Court (Sullivan, J.) has transferred two questions without ruling: whether a minor charged with a misdemeanor traffic offense may be prosecuted and, upon convic[311]*311tion, incarcerated as an adult under the authority of RSA 169-B:32 (Supp. 1985); and, if so, whether application of the statute in such a case would offend standards of equal protection or result in the imposition of cruel, unusual and disproportionate punishment. We answer that the statute constitutionally authorizes such prosecution and incarceration.

The statutory context in which these questions arise may be outlined briefly. Acts that would be misdemeanors or felonies if committed by an adult are treated as acts of delinquency if committed by a minor, RSA 169-B:1, :2, II (Supp. 1985). (Because the entire RSA chapter 169-B is printed in the supplement, further citation to Supp. 1985 will be omitted.) Charges of delinquency are litigated in the district courts independently of the adult criminal procedure, RSA 169-B:3, :6, :11, :12, :13, :14, and delinquents are normally isolated from the adult penal system. See RSA 169-B:15, :19,1 and III.

There are two general exceptions to these provisions, however. First, when the minor’s act would be a felony if committed by an adult, RSA 169-B:24 authorizes the district court to apply stated criteria in determining whether the minor should be treated as an adult; if the district court so concludes, it may certify its determination, and transfer the case to the superior court for prosecution as an adult felony. Second, RSA 169-B:32 provides that the statutory mandates of RSA chapter 169-B for special treatment of minors shall not be applied

“to persons 16 years of age or over who are charged with the violation of a motor vehicle law, an aeronautics law, a law relating to navigation or boats, a fish and game law, a law relating to Title XIII or any town or municipal ordinance which provides for a penalty not exceeding $100 plus the penalty assessment.”

The events in this case began when the defendant was sixteen. He was charged under Title XXI (Motor Vehicles) of the Revised Statutes Annotated with operating a motor vehicle after suspension of his license, RSA 263:64 (Supp. 1985), and with two instances of operating or controlling a motor vehicle in disobedience to a police officer. RSA 265:4, 1(c). Each charge was treated as an adult misdemeanor complaint under RSA 169-B:32 and therefore subject to adult penalties, including incarceration in the Merrimack County House of Correction for as long as one year. RSA 625:9, IV. The Merrimack County House of Correction does not contain segregated quarters for juveniles, see RSA 169-B:15, and is not equipped to offer rehabilitative services to juveniles who may be incarcerated there. See RSA 169-B:1; State v. Benoit, 126 N.H. 6, 490 A.2d 295 (1985).

[312]*312The trials on these charges did not occur until the defendant had turned seventeen, when he was convicted of each offense and sentenced to serve concurrent terms of thirty days at the county house of correction. The court suspended twenty-seven days of each sentence during good behavior and scheduled a later hearing to determine whether the defendant’s intervening conduct would justify continued suspension. The defendant served the three days. Before the later hearing, however, he was convicted of two additional offenses. In response to these convictions, the district court imposed a further portion of the original sentences, by ordering the defendant to serve four consecutive weekends in the house of correction, with service of the remainder of the original sentences again deferred.

When the defendant presented himself to serve the first weekend, the staff of the house of correction expressed concern, for the first time, that the defendant was a minor, and they refused to admit him. Communications followed, among the county commissioners, the administrator of the house of correction, the county attorney, the Office of the Attorney General and the district court, all culminating in a hearing at which the pending questions were raised and transferred.

The district court treated the county as an intervenor, and in the proceeding before us the county argues that RSA 169-B:32 either is inapplicable to motor vehicle misdemeanors or would be unconstitutional if so applied, positions with which the defendant naturally concurs. The State argues for the applicability and constitutionality of the statute.

Before reaching the merits, we note two issues that apparently were never raised before the district court. First, it is not self-evident that a county, or any other subsidiary governmental unit, has standing to oppose the State, represented by the attorney general, over the enforceability of a penal statute. See RSA 7:6. Second, we do not countenance the present amorphous process by which the defendant and the county challenge the legality and constitutionality of a sentence outside the procedures of appeal or petition for writ of habeas corpus. When we accepted the case, the procedural anomaly was not as apparent as it is now, and we caution future litigants not to follow the course exemplified here.

The first substantive issue before us involves the scope of RSA 169-B:32. The defendant and the county argue that the statute may be construed to permit the prosecution of a sixteen or seventeen-year-old for a non-penal motor vehicle offense, but should not be read as reflecting a legislative intent to subject such juveniles to a penalty potentially as serious as the one year incarceration possible [313]*313for a misdemeanor. They emphasize the underlying purposes of RSA chapter 169-B, to provide confidentiality and thus to promote the rehabilitation of juvenile offenders, who would otherwise be objects of the public opprobrium engendered by the adult criminal process. See State v. Smagula, 117 N.H. 663, 667, 377 A.2d 608, 610 (1977). The defendant and the county lay particular stress on the general legislative objective to segregate those minors who are entitled to the benefits of the statute from the adult offenders who form the population of jails and houses of correction. See RSA 169-B:15, :19,1 and III.

On the basis of such premises, the defendant and the county argue that the legislature must have intended minors over sixteen to be treated as adults in motor vehicle cases only when charged with a violation, which carries no possibility of incarceration. See RSA 651:2, III. There are, however, three dispositive hurdles standing in the way of this conclusion.

First, the language of section 32 conditions its application on the subject of the offense, not on the penalty that may be imposed, and refers to offenses in addition to the motor vehicle laws that are punishable by incarceration. See, e.g., RSA 422:35 (1983 & Supp. 1985) (penalties for violations of aeronautics act); RSA 207:46 (1977 & Supp. 1985) (penalties for violations of fish and game laws); RSA 182:1 (penalties for violation of alcoholic beverage laws). To construe section 32 as inapplicable whenever incarceration could result would therefore narrow the statute so radically as to violate the first principle of statutory interpretation, that of respect for the legislature’s language. See State Employees’ Ass’n of N.H. v. State, 127 N.H.

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Bluebook (online)
512 A.2d 1133, 128 N.H. 309, 1986 N.H. LEXIS 286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-deflorio-nh-1986.