Opinion of the Court by
LIM, J.
Erie Emerson (Emerson) appeals the November 6, 2003 judgment of the District Court of the First Circuit (district court)
that convicted him of refusing to provide
ingress or egress
while walking a labor picket line at the Hilton Hawaiian Village on July 17, 2002. The district court entered its judgment upon Emerson’s plea of guilty, which he conditioned
on appellate review of the October 25, 2002 order of the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (circuit court)
that granted the State’s motion to remand the case to the district court for trial on the merits, and thus denied his demand for trial by jury.
We affirm, because the Hawaii Penal Code (the Code) overrode the non-Code statute defining the obstruction offense and imposed a thirty-day rather than a six-month maximum jail term. Hence, Emerson was not entitled to a jury trial.
I. Discussion.
On appeal, the parties advance constitutional
and statutory
arguments for or against a jury trial right based upon the
punishment prescribed in Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 852-2 (1993)—“shall be fined not more than $200 or imprisoned not more than six months, or both.” That was not, however, the punishment provided by law.
At the time of the alleged offense, HRS § 701-107 (1993) read:
(1) An offense defined by this Code or by any other statute of this State for which a sentence of imprisonment is authorized constitutes a crime. Crimes are of three grades: felonies, misdemeanors, and petty misdemeanors. Felonies include murder in the first and second degrees, attempted murder in the first and second degrees, and the following three classes: class A, class B, and class C.
(2) A crime is a felony if it is so designated in this Code or if persons convicted thereof may be sentenced to imprisonment for a term which is in excess of one year.
(3) A crime is a misdemeanor if it is so designated in this Code or in a statute other than this Code enacted subsequent thereto, or if it is defined in a statute other than this Code which provides for a term of imprisonment the maximum of which is one year.
(4) A crime is a petty misdemeanor if it is so designated in this Code or in a statute other than this Code enacted subsequent thereto, or if it is defined by a statute other than this Code which provides that persons convicted thereof may be sentenced to imprisonment for a term of which the maximum is less than one year.
(5) An offense defined by this Code or by any other statute of this State constitutes a violation if it is so designated in this Code or in the law defining the offense or if no other sentence than a fine, or fine and forfeiture or other civil penalty, is authorized upon conviction or if it is defined by a statute other than this Code which provides that the offense shall not constitute a crime. A violation does not constitute a crime, and conviction of a violation shall not give rise to any civil disability based on conviction of a criminal offense.
(6) Any offense declared by law to constitute a crime, without specification of the grade thereof or of the sentence authorized upon conviction, is a misdemeanor.
(7) An offense defined by any statute of this State other than this Code shall be classified as provided in this section and the sentence that may be imposed upon conviction thereof shall hereafter be governed by this Code.
Promulgated in 1972, the Code comprises HRS title 37, HRS § 701-100 (1993) (“Title 37 shall be known as the Hawaii Penal Code”), which, in turn, comprised at all relevant times HRS ch. 701 through HRS ch. 712A (1993 & Supp.2002, 2004).
Accordingly, refusal to provide ingress or egress, under HRS ch. 852 (1993 & Supp. 2004), was a petty misdemeanor because “defined by a statute other than this Code which provides that persons convicted thereof may be sentenced to imprisonment for a term of which the maximum is less than one year.” HRS § 701-107(4) (1993). Not only was its classification thus extrinsically controlled by the Code but its punishment, as well: “An offense defined by any statute of this State other than this Code shall be classified as provided in this section and the sentence that may be imposed upon conviction thereof shall hereafter be governed by this Code.” HRS § 701-107(7).
The Code limits jail time for a petty misdemeanor to a maximum of thirty days:
After consideration of the factors set forth in sections 706-606 and 706-621, the court may sentence a person who has been
convicted of a misdemeanor or a petty misdemeanor to imprisonment for a definite term to be fixed by the court and not to exceed one year in the case of a misdemeanor or thirty days in the case of a petty misdemeanor.
HRS § 706-663 (1993). Ergo, at the time of the alleged offense, the maximum punishment provided by law for refusal to provide ingress or egress under HRS ch. 852 was thirty days in jail or a $200 fine,
or both. HRS §§ 701-107(4) (1993); 701-107(7); 706-663.
We are encouraged in this conclusion by the Code commentary on HRS § 701-107, presented here in pertinent part:
This section makes it clear that the Code retains the ancient distinction between felonies and misdemeanors, which is important for many procedural purposes. Its main thrust, however, is to govern the classification of offenses defined outside the Code. Subsection (7) declares that all offenses are hereafter to be classified according to this section and punished in accordance with this Code. The purpose is to rationalize the often anomalous classification and punishment of offenses that appear in many parts of the statutory laws.
Hereafter an offense is a felony if it is so designated or if imprisonment for a term in excess of one year is possible.
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Opinion of the Court by
LIM, J.
Erie Emerson (Emerson) appeals the November 6, 2003 judgment of the District Court of the First Circuit (district court)
that convicted him of refusing to provide
ingress or egress
while walking a labor picket line at the Hilton Hawaiian Village on July 17, 2002. The district court entered its judgment upon Emerson’s plea of guilty, which he conditioned
on appellate review of the October 25, 2002 order of the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (circuit court)
that granted the State’s motion to remand the case to the district court for trial on the merits, and thus denied his demand for trial by jury.
We affirm, because the Hawaii Penal Code (the Code) overrode the non-Code statute defining the obstruction offense and imposed a thirty-day rather than a six-month maximum jail term. Hence, Emerson was not entitled to a jury trial.
I. Discussion.
On appeal, the parties advance constitutional
and statutory
arguments for or against a jury trial right based upon the
punishment prescribed in Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 852-2 (1993)—“shall be fined not more than $200 or imprisoned not more than six months, or both.” That was not, however, the punishment provided by law.
At the time of the alleged offense, HRS § 701-107 (1993) read:
(1) An offense defined by this Code or by any other statute of this State for which a sentence of imprisonment is authorized constitutes a crime. Crimes are of three grades: felonies, misdemeanors, and petty misdemeanors. Felonies include murder in the first and second degrees, attempted murder in the first and second degrees, and the following three classes: class A, class B, and class C.
(2) A crime is a felony if it is so designated in this Code or if persons convicted thereof may be sentenced to imprisonment for a term which is in excess of one year.
(3) A crime is a misdemeanor if it is so designated in this Code or in a statute other than this Code enacted subsequent thereto, or if it is defined in a statute other than this Code which provides for a term of imprisonment the maximum of which is one year.
(4) A crime is a petty misdemeanor if it is so designated in this Code or in a statute other than this Code enacted subsequent thereto, or if it is defined by a statute other than this Code which provides that persons convicted thereof may be sentenced to imprisonment for a term of which the maximum is less than one year.
(5) An offense defined by this Code or by any other statute of this State constitutes a violation if it is so designated in this Code or in the law defining the offense or if no other sentence than a fine, or fine and forfeiture or other civil penalty, is authorized upon conviction or if it is defined by a statute other than this Code which provides that the offense shall not constitute a crime. A violation does not constitute a crime, and conviction of a violation shall not give rise to any civil disability based on conviction of a criminal offense.
(6) Any offense declared by law to constitute a crime, without specification of the grade thereof or of the sentence authorized upon conviction, is a misdemeanor.
(7) An offense defined by any statute of this State other than this Code shall be classified as provided in this section and the sentence that may be imposed upon conviction thereof shall hereafter be governed by this Code.
Promulgated in 1972, the Code comprises HRS title 37, HRS § 701-100 (1993) (“Title 37 shall be known as the Hawaii Penal Code”), which, in turn, comprised at all relevant times HRS ch. 701 through HRS ch. 712A (1993 & Supp.2002, 2004).
Accordingly, refusal to provide ingress or egress, under HRS ch. 852 (1993 & Supp. 2004), was a petty misdemeanor because “defined by a statute other than this Code which provides that persons convicted thereof may be sentenced to imprisonment for a term of which the maximum is less than one year.” HRS § 701-107(4) (1993). Not only was its classification thus extrinsically controlled by the Code but its punishment, as well: “An offense defined by any statute of this State other than this Code shall be classified as provided in this section and the sentence that may be imposed upon conviction thereof shall hereafter be governed by this Code.” HRS § 701-107(7).
The Code limits jail time for a petty misdemeanor to a maximum of thirty days:
After consideration of the factors set forth in sections 706-606 and 706-621, the court may sentence a person who has been
convicted of a misdemeanor or a petty misdemeanor to imprisonment for a definite term to be fixed by the court and not to exceed one year in the case of a misdemeanor or thirty days in the case of a petty misdemeanor.
HRS § 706-663 (1993). Ergo, at the time of the alleged offense, the maximum punishment provided by law for refusal to provide ingress or egress under HRS ch. 852 was thirty days in jail or a $200 fine,
or both. HRS §§ 701-107(4) (1993); 701-107(7); 706-663.
We are encouraged in this conclusion by the Code commentary on HRS § 701-107, presented here in pertinent part:
This section makes it clear that the Code retains the ancient distinction between felonies and misdemeanors, which is important for many procedural purposes. Its main thrust, however, is to govern the classification of offenses defined outside the Code. Subsection (7) declares that all offenses are hereafter to be classified according to this section and punished in accordance with this Code. The purpose is to rationalize the often anomalous classification and punishment of offenses that appear in many parts of the statutory laws.
Hereafter an offense is a felony if it is so designated or if imprisonment for a term in excess of one year is possible. A crime is a misdemeanor if it is so designated in the Code or in a statute enacted after the Code or if it is defined in another statute which sets the maximum term of imprisonment at exactly one year. Other crimes are petty misdemeanors. This will have the effect of reducing the possible sentence for crimes defined in other statutes which provide now for imprisonment for periods ranging from 31 days to just under one year, because the maximum permissible period of imprisonment for a petty misdemeanor is 30 days. The alternative of making such offenses misdemeanors was rejected, because such a classification would in many cases have the undesirable effect of increasing the permissible punishment to one year, the Code’s maximum for misdemeanors. However, subsection (6) makes it clear that where no specification of grade or punishment is made, but the offense is declared to be a crime, classification will be as a misdemeanor for purposes of sentencing under this Code.
Commentary on § 701-107.
The prefatory provision that adumbrates the preemptive scope of the Code, HRS § 701-102 (1993), is also instructive:
(1) No behavior constitutes an offense unless it is a crime or violation under this Code or another statute of this State.
(2) The provisions of this Code govern the construction of and punishment for any offense set forth herein committed after the effective date, as well as the construction and application of any defense to a prosecution for such an offense.
(3) The provisions of chapters 701 through 706 of the Code are applicable to offenses defined by other statutes, unless the Code otherwise provides.
As is the Code commentary on HRS § 701-102, for its exposition of the relevant
raison d’etre
of the Code:
There are no common-law offenses in Hawaii, although Hawaii has to some extent adopted the common law of England.
The common law of England, as ascertained by English and American decisions, is declared to be the common law of the State of Hawaii in all cases, except as otherwise expressly provided by the Constitution or laws of the United States, or by the laws of the State, or fixed by Hawaiian judicial precedent, or established by Hawaiian usage;
provided, that no person shall be subject to criminal proceedings except as provided by the written laws of the United States or of the State.
[HRS § 1-1 (1993) (emphasis supplied).]
In
Territory v. Rogers,
[37 Haw. 566
(1947),] the court
noted in passing that
there
are no common-law offenses in Hawaii.
Despite these clear rules, it appears wise to enact specifically that no behavior is penal unless it is made so by this Code or by another statute. That all offenses should be adequately proscribed by statute seems at this point of legal development a dictate of fundamental fairness.
Subsection (2) makes it clear that on the effective date this Code shall become the penal law of this State, and thereafter shall govern both the definitions (construction) and punishment of all offenses defined in the Code, and the defenses to those offenses.
Subsection (3) holds that all of the general provisions (Chapters 701 to 706) of the Code are applicable to all offenses defined by other statutes. The purpose is to bring uniformity to the area of non-Code statutory offenses. One result of this rule will be to make defenses defined by the Code generally available. The Code’s definitions of state of mind requirements will also be applicable, as will the general principles of construction, time limitations, and res judi-cata provisions.
Commentary on § 701-102 (footnotes omitted, but content bracketed).
As a result, Emerson was not entitled to a jury trial on the charge of refusal to provide ingress or egress under HRS ch. 852. The constitutional right to a jury trial does not accompany a crime carrying a maximum punishment of thirty days in jail and a $200 fine. Such a crime is presumptively petty, and a jury trial right does not attach:
Therefore, we now adopt a rule that if the maximum authorized term of imprisonment for a particular offense does not exceed thirty days, it is presumptively a petty offense to which the right to a jury trial does not attach. The presumption can be '' overcome only in extraordinary cases when consideration of the other
Nakata
factors, i.e., any possible additional statutory “mix of penalties,” the treatment of the offense at common law, and the gravity of the offense, unequivocally demonstrates that society demands that persons charged with the offense at issue be afforded the right to a jury trial.
State v. Lindsey,
77 Hawai'i 162, 165, 883 P.2d 83, 86 (1994) (footnote omitted).
Further, the tripartite
Nakata
analysis,
State v. Nakata,
76 Hawai'i 360, 366-67, 878 P.2d 699, 705-06 (1994), readily reveals that this is not the “extraordinary case[ ]” in which the presumption is overcome.
Lindsey,
77 Hawai'i at 165, 883 P.2d at 86.
First, there was no such offense at common law, as far as we can tell.
See State v. Basabe,
105 Hawai'i 342, 348, 97 P.3d 418, 424 (App.2004) (“first factor inapplicable to petty/serious inquiry where statutory DUI not shown to have a correlative precursor at common law” (citation and block quote format omitted)).
And although the enacting legislature expressed some concern about “public disorders and breaches of the peace” resulting from obstructions of ingress or egress, Sen. Comm, of the Whole Rep. No. 10, in 1949 Senate Journal, Special Session, at 101, these were secondary effects having little resonance in the
Nakata
analysis.
See State v. Ford,
84 Hawai'i 65, 71, 929 P.2d 78, 84 (1996) (“the legislature’s concern [was] over the serious threat to public health and safety posed by unlawful sewage disposal—not unlawful mooring”);
Lindsey,
77 Hawai'i at 167, 883 P.2d at 88 (“the legislature was concerned primarily not with prostitution itself but with the secondary effects of prostitution” (citation omitted)). We do not, in any event, here discern on the face of it an offense of salient gravity in the galaxy of crimes encompassed by the Code.
As for the additional penalty of a $200 fine, we consider that amount comparatively jejune.
Cf. Ford,
84 Hawai'i at 73, 929 P.2d at 86 (“maximum penalty of $10,000 ..., particularly when considering that the statute authorizes no term of imprisonment, does not tend to move a violation ... from the realm of a petty into that of a serious offense” (footnote omitted));
Lindsey,
77 Hawai'i at 166, 883 P.2d at 87 (in considering the penalty for prostitution, which includes a maximum thirty days in jail, “$500 fine is insufficient in and of itself to trigger the right to a jury trial” (citation omitted));
Basabe,
105
Hawai'i at 350, 97 P.3d at 426 (thirty days in jail and a fine of $18,000 does not entail a jury trial).
All in all and in sum, we cannot conclude the
Nakata
analysis “unequivocally demonstrates that society demands that persons charged with the offense at issue be afforded the right to a jury trial.”
Lindsey,
77 Hawai'i at 165, 883 P.2d at 86.
II. Conclusion.
The circuit court’s October 25, 2002 order granting the State’s motion to remand the case to the district court for trial on the merits was correct.
Basabe,
105 Hawai'i at 345, 97 P.3d at 421 (“whether there is a constitutional right to a jury trial .... is a question of constitutional law ....
de novo
under the ‘right/wrong’ standard” (citation and some internal quotation marks omitted)).Accordingly, the November 6, 2003 judgment of the district court is affirmed.