State v. Emerson

129 P.3d 1167, 110 Haw. 139
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 10, 2006
Docket26097
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 P.3d 1167 (State v. Emerson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Emerson, 129 P.3d 1167, 110 Haw. 139 (hawapp 2006).

Opinion

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) 1 that convicted him of refusing to provide *140 ingress or egress 2 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 3 on appellate review of the October 25, 2002 order of the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (circuit court) 4 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 5 and statutory 6 arguments for or against a jury trial right based upon the *141 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 *142 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, 7 or both. HRS §§ 701-107(4) (1993); 701-107(7); 706-663. 8

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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Related

State v. Fetelee
175 P.3d 709 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 P.3d 1167, 110 Haw. 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-emerson-hawapp-2006.