Thomas RUTLEDGE, Petitioner, v. Honorable Harvey W. FORT, Respondent.
No. 16129.
Supreme Court of New Mexico.
March 4, 1986.
715 P.2d 455
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Each of the parties shall bear his own attorney fees.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
RIORDAN, C.J., and WALTERS, J., concur.
A.J. Olsen, Roswell, Wendy York, Asst. Public Defender, Santa Fe, for real party in interest.
OPINION
STOWERS, Justice.
On December 4, 1985, this Court issued an alternative writ of superintending control restraining and prohibiting the respondent, the district court, from giving a jury instruction that does not conform to the uniform jury instructions applicable to this criminal prosecution. The petitioner, the State, and the real party in interest, the defendant, have filed briefs and presented oral arguments, and the petitioner now seeks to have the alternative writ made permanent.
We determine two questions. First, is this an appropriate circumstance for the issuance of an extraordinary writ? Second, assuming that an extraordinary writ is an appropriate remedy in this case, may the district court give, in addition to the uniform jury instructions approved for aggravated assault upon a peace officer and for battery upon a peace officer,
We conclude, first, that this is an appropriate case for the issuance of an extraordinary writ. We conclude, second, that the district court would exceed its authority if it gave the additional instruction in issue, and would violate its duty to instruct the jury correctly on the law. Accordingly, we order that the alternative writ of superintending control be made permanent.
The defendant was charged with aggravated assault upon a peace officer under
At the defendant‘s first trial, which resulted in a mistrial, conflicting evidence was offered regarding whether the victim had identified himself as a police officer before the defendant grabbed him, opened a knife, and displayed it. The district court instructed the jury on the elements of the crimes charged by giving UJI Crim. 22.01 and 22.10. In response to a question from the jury during deliberations, however, the district court, over the State‘s objection, instructed the jury that they must find that the defendant had been on notice that the victim was a police officer in order to convict. The jury was unable to reach a verdict, and the mistrial was declared.
Prior to retrial, the district court denied the State‘s motion to conform instructions to the uniform jury instructions, and stated its intention to give the additional element instruction requiring a finding of knowledge to the second jury. The State then filed its petition for an extraordinary writ.
This Court is vested with a superintending control over all inferior courts.
The elements of aggravated assault upon a peace officer and of battery upon a peace officer are described in UJI Crim. 22.02 and 22.10, respectively. When a uniform instruction is provided for the elements of a crime, this Court has ordered all inferior courts to use the uniform instruction without substantive modification or substitution, and has further ordered that “[i]n no event may an elements instruction be altered * * *”
The Legislature has proscribed aggravated assault upon a peace officer, which consists of “unlawfully assaulting or striking at a peace officer with a deadly weapon while he is in the lawful discharge of his duties.”
In interpreting statutes, we seek to give effect to the intention of the Legislature, which is to be determined primarily by the language of the statute itself. State v. Pedroncelli, 100 N.M. 678, 681, 675 P.2d 127, 130 (1984). In neither of these statutes did the Legislature choose to use the words “knowingly,” “with knowledge,” or “knowing” to indicate the requisite mental state of the defendant. It did, however, use those words to make knowledge an element of the crimes of resisting an officer, harboring a felon, and compounding a crime. See
Our conclusion is strengthened by the fact that the United States Supreme Court, analyzing a similar federal statute proscribing assaults upon federal officers,
In short, we conclude that the language and the purpose of Sections 30-22-22 and -24, clearly indicate that the Legislature did not intend to make knowledge of the victim‘s status an element of the criminal offenses of aggravated assault
For the foregoing reasons, the writ of superintending control is made permanent.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
RIORDAN, C.J., and FEDERICI, J., concur.
WALTERS, J., and SOSA, Senior Justice, dissent.
WALTERS, Justice (dissenting).
I categorically dissent for all the reasons of inequality and arbitrariness stated by Justice Sosa and by me in our specially concurring opinions in State v. Compton, 104 N.M. 683, 726 P.2d 837 (1986). Compton and this case have blurred beyond discernment any distinction between culpability and degree of punishment.
I have no quarrel with the legislature‘s provision for a more severe sentence for attacking or murdering a police officer. I have an adamant aversion to providing for a more severe sentence for commission of a crime against a specific kind of victim that, because of frequently deliberately concealed and disguised activity of undercover police officers or for any other reasons, the accused has absolutely no awareness that he is committing. Comparison is invited between this and the Compton cases and the pronouncements of this Court for a hundred years concerning the doctrine of sentencing according to heinousness of the crime and the depravity of the actor‘s mind. See, e.g., the discussion in Territory v. Pridemore, 4 N.M. (Gild.) 275, 13 P. 96 (1887).
So dies in New Mexico in February 1986 another basic and, heretofore, solemn principle of American jurisprudence. See
SOSA, Senior Justice, concurs with Justice WALTERS and joins in her dissent.
