¶ 1 Petitioner Phoenix City Prosecutor’s Office challenges the decisions of two Phoenix Municipal Court magistrate judges granting jury trials to two defendants charged with misdemeanor assault. For the following reasons, we accept jurisdiction and grant relief.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 2 Stanley Douglas Buford and Raul Estrada (defendants) wеre charged with misdemeanor assault in separate cases. Defendants each requested a jury trial. The trial courts granted the requests. Pеtitioner then filed this special action. By previous order, we accepted jurisdiction and granted relief. We now set forth our reasons for doing so.
JURISDICTION
¶ 3 Our acceptance of jurisdiction in a special action is discretionary. King v. Superior Court,
DISCUSSION
¶4 Petitioner asserts that the city court magistrates erroneously accepted the defendants’ arguments that Derendal v. Griffith,
¶ 5 The Derendal court used a two-part test to determine whether misdemeanor offenses are jury eligible, replacing the three-part Rothweiler test and ehminating the moral quality prong. Id. at 425, ¶¶ 36-37,
¶ 6 Derendal did not change established precedent in Arizona thаt jury trials are not required in misdemeanor assault cases. In Goldman v. Kautz,
¶ 7 Bruce v. State,
¶ 8 More recently, in Cantrell,
¶ 9 Defendants argue that, prior to statehood, “for decades all persons charged with state misdemeanors received a jury trial ... on demand.” Defendants cite copies of territorial court dockets that indicate defendants received jury trials for аssaults and other misdemeanors. The fact that territorial courts granted jury trials in misdemeanor cases, in compliance with territorial statutes, does not change our analysis. See Arizona Penal Code, Title XXII, § 1318 (1913); Arizona Penal Cоde, Title XXI, § 1191 (1901); Arizona Penal Code, Title XXII, ch. 1, § 2217 (1887), Laws, ch. 11, § 583 (1871). We have previously invoked Felix Frankfurter in refusing to “crystallize” this statutory notion existent at a particular point in our territorial history, and we explicitly rejected the view that the Arizona Constitution perpetuates the statutory law in existencе at the time the Constitution was adopted, which provided for a jury trial on demand even for petty offenses. Rothweiler v. Superior
It is the view of the appellant that the meaning of thе ‘right to trial by jury’ should be gathered solely from the law of the territory of Arizona as it was at the time of the adoption of the Constitution; that the right referred to is the right which the people of the territory of Arizona enjoyed at that time; and that the declaration of the Constitution is not a broad stаtement of human right, but the perpetuation of a territorial law. That is not the standard of construction usually applied by the courts in determining the meaning and scope of this declaration. Even where the Constitution more pointedly refers to the period immediately preceding its adоption as the source from which this right is to be gathered, it has been construed as referring to the common-law right of trial by jury, and not to that right as limited and circumscribed by local laws.
¶ 10 We hold that jury trial rights provided by the territorial penal code prior to statehood were not preserved by thе Arizona Constitution. Accordingly, we reverse the city court magistrates’ decisions granting jury trials to the defendants.
CONCLUSION
¶ 11 For the foregoing reasons, we aсcept special action jurisdiction and grant relief.
Notes
. Article 2, Section 24 preserves the right to a jury trial only for serious crimеs, as opposed to petty crimes. Derendal,
In criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have the right to ... a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the county in which the offense is alleged to have been committed____
The right to a trial by jury is also guaranteed in Article 2, Section 23 of the Arizona Constitution.
