State v. Sung

2000 NMCA 031, 999 P.2d 430, 128 N.M. 786
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 13, 2000
Docket20,066
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2000 NMCA 031 (State v. Sung) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Sung, 2000 NMCA 031, 999 P.2d 430, 128 N.M. 786 (N.M. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION

BOSSON, Judge.

{1} In this matter of first impression, we are asked to construe New Mexico’s criminal custodial interference statute, NMSA 1978, § 30-4-4 (1989), and determine whether the child must be present in New Mexico when criminal acts of custodial interference are committed for New Mexico to have criminal jurisdiction. The district court ruled in the affirmative, and for the following reasons, we agree.

BACKGROUND

{2} Mother and Father were divorced in 1991 in New Mexico. The parenting plan entered by the First Judicial District Court awarded Father primary physical custody over their child, Hunter, subject to Mother’s reasonable visitation. Mother subsequently moved away from New Mexico. In the spring of 1997, the parties agreed that Hunter would stay with Mother for the summer, first at her home in Kentucky and later when Mother took Hunter to Hawaii for a vacation. As part of the agreement, Mother promised to return Hunter to New Mexico on August 4,1997.

{3} On the appointed day Father took his son to Chicago, and from there Mother took Hunter with her to Kentucky. In due time Mother and Hunter went to Hawaii. However, August 4 came and went without Hunter’s return. Mother failed to return Hunter to Father as agreed, and approximately three weeks later Father was forced to go to Hawaii to retrieve his son. Eventually, Mother was held in contempt of court by the First Judicial District Court for violating the parenting plan and the court’s order, and Mother was ordered to reimburse Father for his attorney fees and expenses associated with going to Hawaii.

{4} In a separate proceeding, the District Attorney caused Mother to be indicted on one count of custodial interference contrary to Section 30-4^4. The indictment charged that between August 4, 1997, and August 26, 1997, Mother maliciously detained and failed to return Hunter with the intent to deprive Father of his right to custody. Custodial interference is a fourth degree felony. See § 30-4-4(B).

{5} Shortly before trial, defense counsel moved to dismiss the indictment for lack of subject matter jurisdiction on the basis of language in the custodial interference statute that limits New Mexico’s criminal jurisdiction to instances in which the child is “present in New Mexico at the time of the taking.” Section 30-4-4(J). Because Mother did not “take” the child until she assumed possession of him in Chicago, counsel argued that New Mexico did not have jurisdiction over an unlawful detention that occurred wholly outside the state. The district court agreed, dismissing the indictment. The State appeals, seeking to have the indictment reinstated and Mother prosecuted in New Mexico for custodial interference.

DISCUSSION

{6} Custodial interference is defined as

any person, having a right to custody of a child, maliciously taking, detaining, concealing or enticing away or failing to return that child without good cause and with the intent to deprive permanently or for a protracted time another person also having a right to custody of that child of his right to custody.

Section 3(M-4(B). We assume for purposes of our discussion that a reasonable jury could find that Mother’s actions constituted “detaining” and “failing to return” Hunter in violation of this subsection. A different subsection of the same statute imposes a territorial limitation on New Mexico’s ability to prosecute: ‘Violation of the provisions of this section is punishable in New Mexico, whether the intent to commit the offense is formed within or outside the state, if the child was present in New Mexico at the time of the taking.” Section 30-4-4(J). This is the paragraph that Mother argued; and the district court agreed, barred New Mexico from prosecuting in this instance.

{7} We turn now to the multiple arguments for reversal that the State raises on appeal. Initially, the State contends that the text of Subsection J, on its face, does not apply to this prosecution. Subsection J imposes a territorial limitation on a “taking.” The child must be present in New Mexico “at the time of the taking” to be prosecuted in New Mexico. The State correctly points out that Subsection B includes within its definition of criminal acts not just “taking,” but also “detaining,” “enticing,” “concealing,” and “failing to return.” The State contends that the territorial limitation is imposed solely on a “taking,” and therefore the alternative ways to commit the crime of custodial interference have no such territorial restriction on the State’s ability to enforce the statute in the courts of this state. Thus, the State contends that Subsection J quite simply does not apply to prosecutions for “detaining” or “failing to return,” as occurred in this instance.

{8} The State’s argument is textually sound, but so is Mother’s response. She points out that the text of Subsection J begins, “Violation of the provisions of this section____” (Emphasis added.) Use of the plural “provisions” would seem to include Section 30-4-4 in its entirety, as in all “provisions” of the statute. It would follow, then, that the territorial limitations would apply to all “provisions” of Subsection B. With regard to the word “taking” in Subsection J, Mother rejects the notion that this refers only to “taking” as used in Subsection B. The criminal act defined in Subsection B is a “malicious taking.” If the legislature had wanted to impose a jurisdictional limitation on only that form of custodial interference, Mother suggests it would have used the terminology of Subsection B, making custodial interference punishable in New Mexico only “if the child was present in New Mexico at the time of the [malicious] taking.” Instead, Mother opines that “taking” in Subsection J is used in its generic sense to refer to all the different forms of custodial interference outlined in Subsection B: detaining, enticing, concealing, failing to return. In Mother’s view, these are all merely different forms of “malicious taking.” For example, “failing to return” is just a “taking” at the time the child is not returned. Mother’s textual argument makes good sense as well.

{9} The State also directs our attention to the legislative history of the custodial interference statute. In its earlier form, promulgated in 1977', custodial interference was defined simply as “the taking from this state” or “enticing to leave this state.” 1977 N.M.Laws, ch. 58, § 1. When the present statute was passed in 1989, it removed the phrase “from this state” from the definition section (Subsection B), and added all the other forms of custodial interference such as “detaining” and “failing to return.” The new statute then reimposed the same territorial limitation, but in a separate part of the statute, Subsection J, and only on “taking,” exactly as it had been in 1977. Thus, the argument goes, the additional forms of custodial interference were not designed with a territorial limitation in mind; otherwise the legislature would have said so. The State’s position has a certain logic, but legislative silence is a ‘“tenuous guide to determining legislative intent.’ ” State v. Henderson, 116 N.M. 537, 541, 865 P.2d 1181, 1185 (1993) (quoting Swink v. Fingado, 115 N.M. 275, 283, 850 P.2d 978

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Bluebook (online)
2000 NMCA 031, 999 P.2d 430, 128 N.M. 786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-sung-nmctapp-2000.