{1} This case permits us to reconsider a long-standing procedural requirement that has lost its usefulness in the twenty-first century. We hold that municipal ordinances are properly considered law, and thus need no longer be proven as facts necessary for a prima facie case, and we apply this rule to affirm Anthony Gurule’s (“Defendant”) сonviction of aggravated driving while intoxicated (“DWI”), contrary to the City Code of Aztec, New Mexico. Aztec, N.M., City Code § 24-21.1 (2007) (“Except as otherwise provided in this article, the following sections of the New Mexico Motor Vehicle Code ... are adopted by reference^] ... Sections 66-8-1 to 66-8-140[.]”), http://www.aztecnm.gov/ citycode/chapter24-traffic.pdf. 1
I. Procedural History
{2} Defendant was found guilty of aggravated DWI in the City of Aztec Municipal Court. He appealed to the Eleventh Judicial District Court, and again was found guilty after a trial de novo. At the close of evidenee
{3} The Court of Appeals upheld the conviction in a Memorandum Opinion by concluding that the district court took judicial notice of the city ordinance under which Defendant was convicted, thereby finding the City proved the prima facie elements of its case. City of Aztec v. Gurule, No. 28,705, slip op. at 4 (N.M.Ct.App. Dec. 2, 2008). We now affirm the opinion of the Court of Appeals on grounds other than those set forth in the Memorandum Opinion and write to clarify the purpose and method of taking judicial notice of a municipal ordinance, which we now recognize as law.
II. Discussion
{4} Judicial notice is familiar to the legal community as a tool оf evidence. We often neglect to recognize, however, that courts take notice of law on a daily basis; indeed, we could not succeed in our work if we were not free to consult the great body of local, state, national, and international law that exists and, thanks to modern research techniques, is accessible to legal researchers in any locale. We take this opportunity first to review judicial notice of adjudicative facts, then to discuss judicial notice of law and why municipal ordinances henceforth will be treated as law.
A. Standard of Review
{5} This case requires us to rule on an issue of law, and therefore our review is de novo. See Boradiansky v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
B. Judicial Notice of Facts
{6} Our rules of evidence permit trial courts to take judicial notice of “adjudicative facts,” Rule 11-201(A) NMRA, which are “simply the facts of the particular case.” Fed.R.Evid. 201 (1972 Advisory Committee note to subdivision (a)). Judicial notice of fact alleviates the evidentiary burden on a party and is taken pursuant to the rules of evidence. See Personnel Dep’t, Inc. v. Prof l Staff Leasing Corp.,
{7} When a court takes judicial notice of a fact, it must be dоne on the record. There are two main reasons trial courts should make a clear record when taking judicial notice of a fact: (1) to facilitate appellate review, see Frost v. Markham,
{8} At the time of Defendant’s trial de novo, our law treated a municipal ordinance that was the applicable law as a fact which had to be pled and proven as part of a party’s prima facie case. Muller v. City оf Albuquerque,
{9} A magistrаte judge may take judicial notice of an ordinance from the same municipality in which the magistrate sits. See 9A Eugene McQuillan, McQuillan: The Law of Municipal Corporations § 27:51 (3d ed.2007). This is for the same reason that our state courts may take judicial notice of state statutes: it is presumed magistrate courts have ready access to a current copy of the local ordinances. See Town of Forks v. Fletcher,
{10} Likewise, we permit a district court conducting a trial de novo to take judicial notice of a municipal оrdinance that controls the case. City of Albuquerque v. Leatherman,
{11} Our appellate courts do not take judicial notice of municipal ordinances. See Muller,
C. Judicial Notice of Law
{12} “Judicial notice of fact is distinct from judicial notice of law.” Personnel Dep’t,
D. Municipal Ordinances are Law
{13} The rule requiring proof of municipal ordinances as fаct is not consistent with the role of courts with respect to law and fact. “[Determination of the applicable law is an issue of law, not of fact.” City of Cedar Rapids v. Cach,
[a]s all law has become increasingly accessible and judges have tended to assume the duty to rule on the tenor of all law, the notion that [the proсess of treating law as fact and] part of judicial notice has become increasingly an anachronism. Evidence, after all, involves the proof of facts. How the law is fed into the judicial machine is more appropriately an aspect of the law pertaining to procedure.
Dix, supra, § 335.
{14} The reasons for distinguishing municipal оrdinances as adjudicative facts, not law, are no longer compelling. See, e.g., id. (“[A]s these [ordinances] become more accessible, the tendency is toward permitting the judges to do what perhaps they should have done in the beginning, that is, to rely on the diligence of counsel to provide the necessary materials, and accordingly to take notice of all law.”); Fishman, supra, § 2.72 (stating that not judicially noticing municipal ordinances “was understandable when trustworthy copies of such laws were hard to come by, but is difficult to justify today”). The Hawaii Supreme Court sueeinetly stated the two main reasons for the trend towards permitting judicial notice of foreign law, including muniсipal ordinances: accessibility and verifiability. State v. West,
{15} These exact reasons have eroded the justification in our precedent for treating municipal ordinances as adjudicative facts which may not be judicially noticed by our courts on appeal. Municipаl ordinances are no longer impossible to find outside of the municipality. It is true that they are not gathered in one uniform compilation, as are our state statutes. However, learning the contents of an ordinance no longer requires a trip to the government offices of a far-off town. The City of Aztec, for example, publishеs its City Code online. Municipalities that do not publish their ordinances online still have easy means of complying with a request by court or counsel for a copy of an ordinance, and can send the same by fax or email in a reasonably brief time. See Getty Petroleum,
{16} We hold that municipal ordinances are law and may be judicially noticed as such, and thus lay to rest the practice of treating municipal ordinances as facts. Municipal ordinances should be treated as law, and “be placed intо a case via the mechanism of judicial notice of law, not proof to the jury.” Id. at 330. We agree with the Court of Appeals in Apodaca v. AAA Gas Co.,
{17} This conclusion requires us to overrule certain eases to the extent that they hold a municipal ordinance must be pled and proven as any other fact, including Muller,
1) whether the precedent is so unworkable as to be intolerable; 2) whеther parties justifiably relied on the precedent so that reversing it would create an undue hardship; 3) whether the principles of law have developed to such an extent as to leave the old rule no more than a remnant of abandoned doctrine; and 4) whether the facts have changed in the interval from the old rule to rеconsideration so as to have robbed the old rule of justification.
Padilla v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co.,
{18} The important reasons why we require judicial notice on the record are not harmed by this change. Appellate review will be enhanced, not hindered, by treating municipal ordinances as laws which may be judicially noticed. In this case, the due process rights of Defendant are not implicated because Defendant had notice of the ordinance under which he was being tried, as this was a trial de novo. See United States v. Garcia,
{19} Although we are holding that the parties no longer must plead and prove a municipal ordinance as a fact, if counsel knows the particular ordinance at issue is difficult to obtain, or an old version of the ordinance is at issue, counsеl should take reasonable steps to ensure the court has a copy of the correct law. See Novak v. Craven,
{20} We affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals by applying the rule announced today, and Defendant’s conviction for DWI contrary to the Aztec City Code is affirmed. This new rule applies to pending and future cases only. See State v. Frawley,
III. CONCLUSION
{21} We hold that municipal ordinances are prоperly categorized as law which may be judicially noticed by all courts in New Mexico. Defendant’s conviction is affirmed.
{22} IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. We note that the record in this case indicates Defendant was charged under Section 12-1/66-8-102 of the Aztec City Code. However, we located the municipal ordinance under the citatiоn stated in the text.
. A district court may take judicial notice, sua sponte, of its own records in the case, see In re Bruno R„
