OPINION
Case Summary
Appellant-defendant Ruben Gonzalez ("Gonzalez") appeals his waiver of his right to a jury trial on a habitual offender charge. We affirm.
Issue
Gonzalez raises a single issue for review, which we restate as whether he knowingly waived his right to jury trial.
Facts and Procedural History
The facts most favorable to the judgment indicate that on the evening of January 21-22, 2000, Jose Germain was managing a bar in East Chicago, Indiana. That evening, Gonzalez fought at least once with two other bar patrons, and Germain asked him to leave the bar. After last call, Ger-main locked the front door and let customers out through the side door. When Gonzalez re-entered the bar through the side door, Germain told him that the bar was closed and that he had to leave. Gonzalez ignored Germain and began arguing with the two men he had fought with earlier. Germain approached Gonzales and again told him that he had to leave, whereupon Gonzalez drew a knife from his pocket and stabbed Germain under his chin, causing profuse bleeding. Germain was initially
The State charged Gonzalez with aggravated battery, 1 a Class B felony, with battery 2 as a Class C felony, and with being a habitual offender 3 On November 15, 2000, a jury found Gonzalez guilty of aggravated battery and battery. After polling the jury, the trial court entered judgment on the aggravated battery verdict and initiated the following sidebar:
THE COURT: We talked earlier about the Habitual Offender phase. 4 Is it your client's wish to proceed with the trial by a jury or is he willing to waive the jury and be tried by the Court?
BY MR. WOLOSHANSKY: He is willing to waive. And I ask the Court to bring him up here.
THE COURT: Mr. Gonzalez, will you come up here, please? You understand-can you hear me all right? On the habitual offender you have the right to be tried by the jury or you can waive the jury and submit that to the Court. Your attorney has indicated you wish to waive the jury and submit that to the Court. Is that what you want to do? You have to respond audibly so the court reporter can pick you up.
[GONZALEZ]: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: And you understand what I have told you?
[GONZALEZ]: Yes, siv.
THE COURT: Okay.
The trial court dismissed the jury, heard evidence that Gonzalez had accumulated two prior unrelated felony convictions, 5 and found him to be a habitual offender. On December 22, 2000, the court vacated the battery "verdict and judgment 6 and sentenced Gonzalez to twenty years on the aggravated battery charge, with an additional twenty years on the habitual offender charge, for a total of forty years.
Discussion and Decision
"The United States and Indiana Constitutions guaranty the right to trial by jury." Poore v. State,
Article I, Section 19 of the Indiana Constitution provides that "the jury shall have the right to determine the law and the facts" in all criminal cases
9
In Seay v. State,
The United States Supreme Court has stated that "[wlaivers of constitutional rights not only must be voluntary but must be knowing, intelligent acts done with sufficient awareness of the relevant circumstances and likely consequences." Brady v. U.S.,
The first Indiana decision to rely on Brady with respect to jury trial waivers, however, employed the following language: "The waiver of any constitutionally protected right at the time of trial must be voluntary, knowing and intelligently made with sufficient awareness of the relevant cireumstances surrounding its entry and its consequences." Williams v. State,
Given that the rights forfeited in guilty pleas and jury trial waivers are all constitutionally derived,
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and that our supreme court has not specifically enunciated a more stringent standard for reviewing the waiver of rights derived from our state constitution, we conclude that a defendant who considers waiving his right to jury trial need only be informed of the likely consequences of his decision. Our conclusion is supported not only by the specific language of Brady, but also by practical considerations; if courts were required to
Gonzalez argues that since he was not informed of the possibility of jury nullification, he was not "fully informed as to the consequences of electing not to have a Jury make [the habitual offender] determination." With respect to Article I, Section 19, our supreme court has stated that the jury's power to "sit along with the court as judges to honestly, justly, and impartially interpret and apply existing law ... does not include the right to create law or to reject law." Holmes v. State,
There are no cases or statutes specifically enumerating the "likely consequences" of which a defendant must be informed before waiving his right to jury trial, and we are not called upon to do so here. In Kelley v. State,
[The court] explained to appellant that if they proceeded with the jury trial a panel of impartial jurors would listen to the evidence and determine his guilt or innocence. He pointed out to appellant that even i#f one member of the jury believed he was not guilty, he would not be found guilty. He apprised appellant that if he waived a trial by jury, the judge, sitting alone, would listen to the evidence and determine his innocence or guilt. He also informed him that his trial on the theft charge and the question of his status as an habitual offender would be tried separately.
Although the trial court's "interrogation" in the instant case was not as extensive as that described in Kelley, Gonzalez does not claim that his waiver was unknowing with respect to the aforementioned consequences, including that "even if one member of the jury [found him not to be a habitual offender], he would not be found [to be a habitual offender]." See id. Whether one or all of the jury members might have found him not to be a habitual offender because of insufficient evidence or via exercise of their nullification power is ultimately irrelevant for purposes of our discussion. 15
In summary, we conclude that the trial court was not required to advise Gonzalez of the possibility of jury nullification and that he knowingly waived his right to jury trial on the habitual offender charge.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Inp.Cope § 35-42-2-1.5.
. Id. § 35-42-2-1.
. See id. § 35-50-2-8(d) ("A person is a habit ual offender if the jury (if the hearing is by jury) or the court (if the hearing is by the court alone) finds that the state has proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the person had accumulated two (2) prior unrelated felony convictions.").
. The discussion to which the trial court refers does not appear in the record.
. Gonzalez was convicted of criminal reck lessness as a Class D felony in 1992 and of burglary as a Class C felony in 1994.
. The record does not indicate that the trial court ever entered judgment on the battery verdict.
. As Judge Buchanan observed in Smith v. State,
. Cf. Inp.Cope § 35-37-1-2 ('The defendant and prosecuting attorney, with the assent of the court, may submit the trial to the court. All other trials must be by jury."); Ind.Crim. Rule 22 (requiring defendant charged with a misdemeanor to file written demand for jury trial "not later than ten (10) days before the first scheduled trial date" to avoid waiver of jury trial).
. In Beavers v. State,
. See also Parker v. State,
. See Seay,
. In his appellate brief, Gonzalez variously characterizes his waiver as not being "intelligently and voluntarily" or "knowingly and intelligently" made. In the context of waiver of the right to trial by jury, we have stated that " 'a) voluntary waiver occurs if the conduct constituting the waiver is the product of a free will; a knowing waiver is the product of an informed will; [and] an intelligent waiver is the product of a will that has the capacity to understand[.]' "' Reynolds,
. See Poore,
. In Beavers,
The jury, as well as the court, is limited and controlled in the determination of the law, not only by the constitution, but also by the legislative enactments. It goes without argument that the jury has no more right than a court has to nullify a legally enacted constitutional statute. Juries are not above the constitution or the law, and should not be told that they are. The courts, which include both judges and juries, must give full recognition to the legislative branch of the government and its constitutional acts. The jury under its constitutional right to determine the law is restricted, controlled, and should be influenced by the equally important constitutional right of the legislature to make the laws. It has an oath and duty, just as a judge does, to observe and respect such coordinate rights set forth in the constitution. To tell the jury that it is not limited, restricted, controlled, or influenced, or hampered by the court or legislature' gives a warped interpretation to one of the provisions of our constitution, thereby permitting such a provision to override all others in the constitution.
In Womack v. State,
. As for the "relevant circumstances" surrounding Gonzalez' waiver, which he does not address, we note that his previous felony convictions indicate more than a nodding acquaintance with the judicial process. Moreover, Gonzalez was represented by counsel and had just been convicted of aggravated battery by a jury that had been instructed regarding its role in determining the law and the facts.
