Robert Edwards was charged and convicted in Seattle Municipal Court for knowingly violat *307 ing a protective order. He appealed to superior сourt, where the conviction was reversed. We granted discretionary review. The charged incident occurred more than one year after the issuance of the order. Because the order is ambiguous as to whether it is effective for more than a year, the constitutional guarantee of due process required reversal. We therefore affirm.
FACTS
Homer and Carla Quan obtained a protective order against Edwards that prohibited him from coming within 500 feet of their residence. The order stated it was effective until one year from issuance or until further order of the court. More than a year after this оrder was entered, Edwards was observed in a phone booth located approximately 75 feet from the Quans’ home. Based on this incident, Edwards was cоnvicted in Seattle Municipal Court of knowingly violating the order. The superior court reversed the conviction, stating that "[t]he court lacked the inherent authority to grant an Order for Protection 'until further [order] of the court..’ ” We granted discretionary review to decide whether the court had authority to enter such an order and whether Edwards’ challenge amounted to an impermissible collateral attack on the protective order.
DISCUSSION
Due process requires the government to prove every element of a charged offense.
State v. Lively,
The act charged here is the willful violation of a protective order. An implicit element of this crime is the existence of a valid order at the time of the alleged violation, a fact that the City must prove beyond а reasonable doubt.
See
SMC 12A.06.180;
United States v. Casciano,
When the protective order was entered, the superior court was, as it is now, authorized to enter permanent orders and orders for fixed terms. Compare RCW 26.50.060(2) (1992) and RCW 26.50.060(2) (1996). The problem here is that the order entered against Edwards is ambiguous as to its term. This ambiguity arises not so much from the chosen wording, but from the manner in which this wording appears in the order.
The order is a standard preprinted form, which states that it will be effective for one year, but then provides two other options for setting alternative termination dates. The first option provides a fixed termination date, while the second option provides that the order is effective until further court order. The order was formatted as follows, with the second option selected:
THIS ORDER FOR PROTECTION WILL BE EFFECTIVE UNTIL ONE YEAR FROM TODAY.
OR
[ ] until (date) or [ / ] until further order of the court.
Because the court did not strike the phrase "UNTIL ONE YEAR FROM TODAY[,]” and because that phrase ends in a period, the "OR” on the next line is easily overlooked. If read, it is confusing, making the order ambiguous as to whether "until further order of the court” was meant to provide a means for modifying the explicit one-year dura *309 tion of the order or was meant to extend the duration beyond one year and until another order was entered.
Ambiguities in court orders must be reasonably interpreted.
See State v. Williams,
If the order is interpreted to be permanent, as the City claims it was meant to be, the phrase "UNTIL ONE YEAR FROM TODAY” is rendered supеrfluous. If we give meaningful effect to "UNTIL ONE YEAR FROM TODAY” as part of the substance of the order, the phrase "or until further order of the court” can be reasonably interрreted only as notice of the possibility of modification of the one-year duration. This is the commonsense reading of the order as it was signed, and is cоnsistent with the rules for interpreting ambiguities. We therefore construe the order as being effective for one year, with the possibility that the duration could be changed by further court order. No such further order was entered, so the duration was one year. Because the act complained of occurred more than one year since the entry of the order, the alleged incident could not have constituted a crime.
See Rohrscheib,
The City argues that the court that entеred the order intended it to be permanent, which may be true. But the ambiguity in the language and format of the order prevents us, and Edwards, from reaching that conclusion with certainty. We cannot allow a conviction to stand where the State has not given fair notice of the proscribed conduct.
See Becker,
Fair notice of a permanent order could have been given by clearly delineating three options and clearly selecting the permanent option. Fоr example:
*310 THIS ORDER FOR PROTECTION WILL BE EFFECTIVE:
[ ] until one year from today.
[ ] until (date).
[ / ] until further order of the court.
We note that the superior court took the view that the conviction was unlawful because the court lacked inherent authority to issuе a protective order effective until "further order.” To the extent this ruling suggests that there is a jurisdictional defect in the order, we disagree. The statute authorizes the issuance of permanent orders and does not require any particular wording. See RCW 26.50.060. Because all protective orders may be modified, RCW 26.50.130, "until further order” connotes permanency. The order entered here did not exceed the jurisdiction of the court.
While the order did not exceed the cоurt’s authority, its language is nevertheless problematic for another reason. Use of the phrase "or until further order of the court” requires that upon prosecution for a violation, the government prove the order allegedly violated was the last order entered. Here, no evidence was offеred to establish the order as the last entered, and Edwards moved to dismiss the charge because the City had not proved that the order remained valid. The trial court rejected that argument, ruling that "this was more of an affirmative defense” and "that if in fact there was a modification of th[e] order, that common sеnse would dictate that the defendant would have it here.” This analysis was error.
An affirmative defense is generally one that is uniquely within the defendant’s knowledge and аbility to establish.
Lively,
We note that any ambiguity regarding duration can be avoided by providing an option that clearly makes the order permanent:
THIS ORDER FOR PROTECTION WILL BE EFFECTIVE:
[ ] until one year from today.
[ ] until (date).
[/] permanently.
We suggest patterning future orders using a clearly worded permanent option.
The City finally argues that the conviction must be reinstated because Edward’s appeal constitutes an impermissible collateral attack on the protective order.
See generally, Marley v. Department of Labor & Indus.,
Affirmed.
Becker and Cox, JJ., concur.
