JONATHAN WOLFGRAM v. NEW HAMPSHIRE DEPARTMENT OF SAFETY
No. 2015-0256
Merrimack
April 29, 2016
32
Argued: November 10, 2015
Joseph A. Foster, attorney general (Matthew T. Broadhead, attorney, by memorandum of law and orally), for the respondent.
BASSETT, J. The petitioner, Jonathan Wolfgram, appeals an order of the Superior Court (McNamara, J.) affirming a decision by the respondent, the New Hampshire Department of Safety (DOS), to retain notations on the petitioner‘s motor vehicle record referring to his certification and decertification as a habitual offender, despite the fact that the convictions that led to his habitual offender certification had been annulled. The petitioner argues that, because the habitual offender notations reveal the fact of his annulled criminal convictions, allowing DOS to retain the notations on his motor vehicle record defeats the purpose of the annulment statute,
The parties stipulated to the following facts in the trial court. Between 2002 and 2007, the petitioner was convicted of multiple motor vehicle offenses. Based upon these convictions, DOS certified the petitioner as a habitual offender and revoked his license and operating privileges for four years. See
Between 2012 and 2013, the petitioner obtained “approximately seventeen” annulments of various motor vehicle convictions, including those that had resulted in his habitual offender certification. DOS removed these annulled convictions from the petitioner‘s motor vehicle record. In 2014, the petitioner requested a hearing at DOS, seeking to have “all notations regarding [his] past Habitual Offender Certification and Decertification” removed from his motor vehicle record. He argued that, given
While each court has acted formally to invalidate each of its subject convictions, the State Department of Safety has never formally acted to invalidate its [habitual offender] certification action. As a result, as that action and its related actions were valid at the time and have not been annulled, notations of those actions are not in error, and they must remain on the [petitioner‘s] record.
The petitioner‘s request for reconsideration was denied, and he appealed to the superior court.
The trial court affirmed the decision by DOS to retain the habitual offender notations on the petitioner‘s motor vehicle record, concluding that it was “consistent with the plain language” of
On appeal, the petitioner argues that, because the habitual offender notations reveal the fact of criminal convictions that have been annulled, the trial court erred by allowing DOS to retain the notations on his motor vehicle record. He asserts that the habitual offender notations must be removed in order to be consistent with the plain language and the purpose of the annulment statute. Although the petitioner acknowledges that DOS “has legitimate business and record keeping purposes” for maintaining a record of his annulled convictions and his prior certification as a habitual offender, he argues that this should not be done on his “official” motor vehicle record, which is “used by many landlords [and] employers” and “may be used in court proceedings and introduced as evidence in court matters.” The petitioner also raises a constitutional challenge to the trial court‘s order. DOS counters that, because “the habitual offender designa-tion is not a record of a criminal proceeding that is subject to annulment,” DOS is not required to remove the notations from the petitioner‘s record. DOS further asserts that the plain language of the annulment statute “expressly exempt[s] habitual offenders of the motor vehicle laws from receiving [the] privilege[s]” provided to persons with annulled convictions. Finally, DOS argues that removing the notations from the petitioner‘s official motor vehicle record would prevent DOS from upholding its statutory obligation to keep a record of habitual offender certifications. See
The issue on appeal presents a question of statutory interpretation. We review matters of statutory interpretation de novo. JMJ Properties, LLC v. Town of Auburn, 168 N.H. 127, 130 (2015). “We are the final arbiter of the
The purpose of the annulment statute is to reduce the collateral consequences of a criminal conviction and “to afford an offender ... a chance to start anew without this stigma in his records.” State v. Roe, 118 N.H. 690, 692-93 (1978) (quotation omitted). The “record of arrest, conviction and sentence of any person” that fits within the specific categories set forth in the statute “may be annulled by the sentencing court at any time in response to a petition for annulment ... if in the opinion of the court, the annulment will assist in the petitioner‘s rehabilitation and will be consistent with the public welfare.”
The habitual offender law seeks to “provide maximum safety for all persons who travel or otherwise use the ways of the state” and to “discourage repetition of criminal acts.”
Because the two statutes at issue in this case impact the treatment of persons designated as habitual offenders, we construe
By definition, a “[h]abitual offender” has “accumulated convictions.”
DOS next argues that, because
Our interpretation is consistent with the other exception in
Nonetheless, DOS argues that, because it has a statutory obligation to maintain a record of the certification of habitual offenders as “part of the record of the division of motor vehicles,”
Although
Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court erred when it upheld the decision by DOS to maintain notations referring to the petitioner‘s habitual offender certification and decertification on his publicly accessible motor vehicle record. To the extent that the petitioner argues that the trial court erred by not ordering DOS to remove from his motor vehicle record what he characterizes as references to annulled criminal convictions — but as to which there is no evidence that the references are, in fact, to annulled convictions — we decline to address this argument because the petitioner
Reversed and remanded.
DALIANIS, C.J., and HICKS, CONBOY, and LYNN, JJ., concurred.
