OPINION
This appeal arises from a magistrate’s plain error in failing to follow the Arizona Supreme Court opinion which holds that a person charged with driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor is entitled to a jury trial. The superior court reversed the magistrate and remanded for jury trial. The State appealed and we affirm the judgment of the superior court.
Myers was charged in Mesa City Court with the misdemeanor offenses of driving under the influence of intoxicating liquor (“DUI”) and having blood alcohol concentration of 0.10 or more within two hours of driving.
See
Ariz.Rev.Stat. Ann. (“A.R.S.”) § 28-692(A)(l) and (2) (Supp.1996). In Arizona, a person charged with DUI has the right to a jury trial.
Rothweiler v. Superior Court of Pima County,
The State filed a Motion to Reset to Bench Trial. The two-page motion cited Rothweiler and invited its rejection for reasons stated in a magazine article by Hon. B. Robert Dorfman and Hon. George T. Anagnost, Revisiting the Right to Trial by Jury, The Arizona Attorney, June 1996, at 28-33. The Honorable Harold H. Reeb granted the State’s motion. He issued a three-page minute entry expressing his personal frustration with DUI laws and other matters and setting this case (and nineteen other DUI cases) for trial to the court.
Myers filed a special action and the superior court reversed and remanded for jury trial, holding that “... until such time as the supreme court overrules Rothweiler, it is still the law in this jurisdiction.” The State appealed, and it petitioned the supreme court to transfer the appeal to itself pursuant to Rule 19, Arizona Rules of Civil Appellate Procedure. That petition was denied. We have jurisdiction of the appeal pursuant to A.R.S. section 12-2101(B) (1994) and Rule 8(a) of the Rules of Procedure for Special Actions.
We have no need to debate any right-to-jury-trial issues here, for
Rothweiler
settles the question as regards Arizona DUI eases. “[W]e are bound by decisions of the Arizona Supreme Court and have no authority to overrule, modify, or disregard them---- Whether prior decisions of the Arizona Supreme Court are to be disaffirmed is a question for that court.”
City of Phoenix v. Leroy’s Liquors, Inc.,
We will follow
Rothweiler
and will expect other Arizona courts to follow it until and unless the supreme court instructs otherwise. And the supreme court recently signaled approval of
Rothweiler. See State ex rel. McDougall v. Strohson,
We close with a discussion of
McKay v. Industrial Commission,
The magistrate’s failure to follow Rothweiler was a misfeasance for which special action relief was appropriate. The judgment of the superior court is affirmed.
