OPINION ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
In a published opinion, we upheld appellant’s conviction on four counts of lewdness with a minor. Hubbard v. State,
PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The district court convicted appellant pursuant to a guilty plea of four counts of lewdness with a minor. The district court sentenced appellant to serve four consecutive terms of ten years each in the Nevada State Prison. Appellant appealed from his conviction to this court. Appellant contended for the first time on appeal that the district court lacked jurisdiction to convict him of the crimes because the applicable three-year limitation period had run prior to his being charged with the crimes.
We ruled that the limitation period was tolled under NRS 171.095 because appellant had committed the crimes in secret.
Hubbard,
We stated in our Opinion that the waiver issue was a matter of “first impression” for this court. Appellant contends in his petition for rehearing that this statement is untrue and that our prior opinions establish that statutes of limitation are jurisdictional in criminal proceedings and cannot be waived.
See
*948
Walstrom v. State,
DISCUSSION
In prior decisions, we indicated that statutes of limitation are jurisdictional and that they may be raised as a bar to prosecution at any time.
See
Walstrom v. State,
After considering the merits of both approaches, we conclude that the best reasoned approach is to treat criminal statutes of limitation as non-jurisdictional, affirmative defenses. The failure to raise the statute of limitation in the trial court waives the defense. To the extent that our prior decisions are inconsistent with these conclusions, those decisions are overruled. 1 Because we have not altered the result of our prior Opinion in this matter, we deny appellant’s petition for rehearing and we uphold appellant’s convictions and sentences.
Notes
Because this matter overrules prior decisions, it establishes a new rule and thus applies prospectively only.
See
Franklin v. State,
