OPINION
T1 Defendant Sean G. Thompson appeals from a bench trial conviction of telephone harassment, a class B misdemeanor, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201 (1999), as adopted by Provo City. Defendant argues that section 76-9-201 is both unconstitutionally overbroad and unconstitutionally vague. He also argues that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. We conclude that portions of section 76-9-201 are indeed facially overbroad. However, we affirm defendant's conviction because we conclude that the portion of subsection 76-9-201(1)(b) most applicable to defendant's actions is neither facially overbroad nor void for vagueness, and because we find no merit in defendant's ineffective assistance claim.
BACKGROUND
12 "When reviewing a bench trial, '[wle recite the facts from the record most favorable to the findings of the trial court.'" State v. Layman,
{ 3 In early May 1999, defendant's ex-wife, Carolyn, and their five-month-old daughter lived alone in an apartment in Provo City. During the late evening of May 1, and the
Officer Bastian arrived at Carolyn's apartment at 12:47 a.m. and observed that Carolyn was "nervous, emotional, [and] appeared kind of scared." She told Officer Bastian that defendant "had been calling her and upsetting her by his frequent phone calls and [that] she just wanted him to stop." As Officer Bastian spoke with Carolyn, the phone in her apartment rang again. The phone's caller identification function indicated that the call was from defendant, bringing his total calls to eleven within the hour.
T5 Officer Bastian answered the phone and asked who was calling. Defendant identified himself. Officer Bastian told defendant not to leave his apartment because he, Officer Bastian, would soon be arriving. Officer Bastian then went to defendant's apartment and cited defendant for telephone harassment.
1 6 Defendant claimed at trial that Carolyn initiated the first telephone call and expressed suicidal intentions. Defendant said he had "learned in school and from counselors and therapists" that "whenever you're faced with a situation where you're talking with somebody who ... is threatening to commit suicide ..., as soon as they hang up you immediately call them back to get them on the line ... and keep talking to them, and if they hang up, call back." Thus, he claimed, he did not call Carolyn repeatedly with any intent to annoy her, but only out of concern for her safety.
T7 Defendant failed, however, to mention any of his concerns for Carolyn's safety to Officer Bastian either when Officer Bastian first spoke to defendant on the telephone 1 or when Officer Bastian arrived at defendant's apartment. Instead, Officer Bastian testified that defendant admitted he had been drinking and that he had also taken antidepressant medication. Defendant testified that when Officer Bastian scolded him for drinking too much, he became concerned because Officer Bastian threatened to arrest him and simply forgot to mention his concerns for Carolyn.
T8 Following a bench trial, defendant was found guilty of telephone harassment. Specifically, the trial court found that defendant made "a large number of telephone calls" to Carolyn; that "she asked the defendant not to make additional calls and yet he continued to do so"; and that defendant's "clear ... intent [was] to annoy." Defendant now appeals.
ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
19 Defendant claims he received ineffective assistance of counsel. We generally will not review a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel on direct appeal unless the defendant is represented by new counsel on appeal and the record is adequate to review the defendant's claims. See State v. Maestas,
110 Defendant also argues that Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201 (1999) violates the First Amendment of the United States Constitution
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because it is unconstitutionally
I. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
{11 We only briefly address defendant's ineffective assistance of counsel claims, which are unavailing. - Defendant claims two deficiencies in his counsel's performance. First, he alleges that had counsel properly investigated, counsel would have found evidence that Carolyn had previously shown suicidal tendencies. Such evidence, he claims, would have bolstered defendant's testimony that he did not call repeatedly with intent to annoy but rather to prevent Carolyn from harming herself. However, there is nothing in the record identifying what evidence counsel may have found had he investigated further. Defendant states only in his brief that he "had evidence of a prior occasion in which [Carolyn] threatened to kill herself and all passengers ... who were with her while she was driving a car." However, defendant did not request a remand under Rule 23B of the Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure to substantiate the assertion he now argues would support his claim of ineffective assistance. Without a proper record before us, we are unable to say whether counsel's alleged deficiency in failing to investigate prejudiced defendant. See State v. Vessey,
$12 Defendant also claims counsel's performance was deficient in not drawing more attention to two contradictory statements made by Carolyn. On direct examination, Carolyn said she could not remember whether she had called defendant on the day of the incident, but she said if she had, it was to ask him whether he wanted to come visit their daughter. On eross-exami-nation, Carolyn admitted she had called defendant on the day of the incident, but again said her call was only to ask if he wanted to visit their daughter and that she had not expressed- any intent to harm herself. "[In reviewing counsel's performance, we give trial counsel wide latitude in making tactical decisions and [do] not question. those tactical decisions unless there is no reasonable basis supporting them." State v. Maestas,
II. Constitutionality of Section 76-9-201
{13 Defendant argues that Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201 (1999) is unconstitutionally overbroad on its face and void for vagueness.
Faced with overbreadth and vagueness attacks on a statute or ordinance, our first task is to determine whether the enactment makes unlawful a substantial amount of constitutionally protected conduct. If it does not, then the overbreadth challenge must fail and we should then examine the facial vagueness challenge. If it does, it may be held facially invalid even if it also has legitimate application.
Logan City v. Huber,
'I 14 At the time of the incident giving rise to this case, section 76-9-201 read:
(1) A person is guilty of telephone harassment and subject to prosecution in the jurisdiction where the telephone call originated or was received if with intent to annoy, alarm another, intimidate, offend, abuse, threaten, harass, or frighten any person at the called number or recklessly creating a risk thereof, the person:
(a) makes a telephone call, whether or not a conversation ensues;
(b) makes repeated telephone calls, whether or not a conversation ensues, or after having been told not to call back, causes the telephone of another to ring repeatedly or continuously;
(c) makes a telephone call and insults, taunts, or challenges the recipient of the telephone call or any person at the called number in a manner likely to provoke a violent or disorderly response;
(d) makes a telephone call and uses any lewd or profane language or suggests any lewd or lascivious act; or
(e) makes a telephone call and threatens to inflict injury, physical harm, or damage to any person or the property of any person.
(2) Telephone harassment is a class B misdemeanor.
Utah Code Aun. $ 76-9-201 (1999. 4
{15 The information charging defendant with telephone harassment did not indicate under which subsection of Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201 (1999) he was charged. The trial court's findings, however, support a guilty verdict only under subsections (a) and (b) of section 76-9-201. We therefore confine our analysis of section 76-9-201 to subsections (a) and (b); we do not address the constitutionality of the remaining subsections. See Provo City v. Whatcott,
A. Subsection (a)
1 16 In Provo City v. Whatcott, which was decided while this case was pending on appeal, we analyzed subsections (a) and (d) of section 76-9-201, concluding that each was unconstitutionally overbroad. See id. at 119 n. 2; 16. Whatcott's analysis of subsection (a) forecloses the need to revisit here the question of subsection (a)'s constitutionality. See State v. Belgard,
1 17 An enactment which is unconstitutionally overbroad "is one 'which does not aim specifically at evils within the allowable area of state control but, on the contrary, sweeps within its ambit other activities that in ordinary cireumstances constitute an exercise of freedom of speech or the press'" Logan City v. Huber,
Presumably, the Legislature intended to prohibit threatening and menacing calls, and calls that would provoke a breach of the peace. This is certainly within the Legislature's power, and does not offend the First Amendment.
But section 76-9-201 sweeps even more broadly. Under subsection (a), the statute prohibits any "telephone call, whether or not a conversation ensues," where the caller has "recklessly creat[ed] a risk" of "annoy[ing], alarm[ing] ..., intimidat{[ing], offend[ing], abus[ing], threaten{ing], ha-rasslingl, or frighten{ing]" the recipient. Id. Read thus, the statute would prohibit a potentially huge universe of otherwise legitimate telephone calls.
1 18 We then gave five example categories of legitimate calls prohibited under subsec
B. Subsection (b)
1 19 We now turn to an analysis of subsection (b). Subsection (b) contains two parts. The first prohibits the "mak[ing of] repeated telephone calls, whether or not a conversation ensues," if the caller acts with the requisite intent, i.e., "with intent to annoy, alarm another, intimidate, offend, abuse, threaten, harass, or frighten any person at the called number or recklessly creat{es] a risk thereof." Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201(1)(b) (1999). The second prohibits the "causfing of] the telephone of another to ring repeatedly or continuously" if the caller "ha[s] been told not to call back," and if the caller acts with the requisite intent. Id. We discuss each of subsection (b)'s prohibitions separately.
1. Repeated Calling
120 Subsection (a) prohibits "a [single] telephone call, whether or not a conversation ensues," if made with the requisite intent. Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201(1)(a) (1999). The first part of subsection (b) criminalizes "repeated telephone calls, whether or not a conversation ensues," if made with the requisite intent. Id. § 76-9-201(1)(b) (emphasis added). Prohibiting repeated calls rather than only single calls does little to narrow the field of otherwise legitimate communications that subsection (a) unconstitutionally " 'sweeps within its ambit." Huber,
([ 21 In other words, tracking the examples set out in Whatcott, the telephone solicitor who attempts to call again "at a more convenient time"; the overly anxious mother who calls her grown son repeatedly despite his expressed exasperation; the consumer who calls customer service the first, second, third, and fourth times her computer crashes; the businessman who leaves a voice mail message for his counterpart at another company regarding an unperformed contractual term, then calls again later to speak in person, and then calls a third time-or twenty times-to "keep the pressure on"; and the concerned citizen who calls on different occasions to chastize his legislator for her stance on varied issues might all be subject to prosecution under the first part of subsection (b), as well as under subsection (a). Again, it is the callers' "conscious disregard of the substantial likelihood that the [repeated] call{s] would annoy [the recipient that] bring[s] the call within the statute's ambit." Whatcott,
2. Repeatedly Calling After a Request to Discontinue
122 The trial court's findings, however, clearly support defendant's conviction for telephone harassment under the second part of subsection (b). The second part of subsection (b) prohibits "caus[ing] the telephone of another to ring repeatedly or continuously" when one has "been told not to call back,"
123 In order to conclude that a statute is unconstitutionally overbroad "where conduct and not merely speech is involved ... the overbreadth of a statute must not only be real, but substantial as well, judged in relation to the statute's plainly legitimate sweep." Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
% 24 The distinguishing feature of the second part of subsection (b) is that to be prosecuted under it, one must "have} been told not to call back" and yet, with the requisite intent, nevertheless then "causes the telephone of another to ring repeatedly or continuously." Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201(1)(b) (1999) (emphasis added). "The right of free speech is guaranteed every citizen that he may reach the minds of willing listeners and to do so there must be opportunity to win their attention." Kovacs v. Cooper,
125 Defendant also argues that the intent requirement of section 76-9-201 is unconstitutionally vague. A statute is unconstitutionally vague if persons " 'of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application.'" United States v. Lanier,
126 Because the undisputed findings of the trial court place defendant's conduct squarely within the prohibitions of the see-ond part of Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201(1)(b), which we hold to be constitutional, we affirm defendant's conviction under that portion of the subsection.
CONCLUSION
127 We follow our decision in Whatcoft that Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201(1)(a) (1999) is unconstitutionally overbroad on its face. We also conclude that the first part of section 76-9-201(1)(b) is also unconstitutionally over-broad on its face. However, we determine that the second part of subsection 76-9-201(1)(b),
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prohibiting one from, "after hav
{28 As defendant's ineffective assistance claim fails, and because his conduct fits squarely within the prohibition contained in the second part of subsection (b), we affirm his conviction for telephone harassment.
129 WE CONCUR: NORMAN H. JACKSON, Presiding Judge, and PAMELA T. GREENWOOD, Judge.
Notes
. - It is inconceivable that if defendant were truly concerned for Carolyn's safety, his response to Officer Bastian's indication he was on his way to defendant's apartment would not have been something like: "No! You've got to stay with Carolyn. She may try to kill herself."
. "[Defendant] also cites the free speech guarantees of the Utah Constitution, Utah Const. art. I, § 15. However, he makes no argument that the state provision should be interpreted any differently than the federal provision.... Therefore, we choose to confine our analysis to his arguments based on the first amendment."
. Defendant makes only a facial overbreadth challenge to section 76-9-201 and does not argue that it is overly broad as applied to him. "In the First Amendment area, the overbreadth doctrine gives a defendant standing to challenge a statute on behalf of others not before the court even if the law could be constitutionally applied to the defendant." Salt Lake City v. Lopez,
. Section 76-9-201 has since been amended to delete subsections (a) and (d), which were invalidated in Provo City v. Whatcott,
. Because of our previous reliance on several examples, we must recognize that the examples of consumers calling customer service, businessmen calling each other regarding contractual terms, and constituents seeking redress of grievances by calling their legislators pose the closer question as to the possible overbreadth of the second part of subsection (b). However, (1) because consumers, businessmen, and constituents each may make initial contact by telephone with producers, fellow businessmen, and legislators, respectively and (2) because further recourse may be pursued through correspondence if the caller is told not to call again, we conclude that the prohibitions in the second part of subsection (b) are not beyond the bounds of constitutionality.
. - As previously indicated, Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201(1)(b) (1999) is now codified as Utah Code Ann. § 76-9-201(1)(a) (Supp.2001).
