The defendant, John Bousquet, appeals the denial by the Superior Court {Dunn, J.) of his motion to reinstate, in that forum, his appeal from the Concord District Court requesting a trial de novo by jury. We affirm.
On May 21, 1987, the defendant was tried and convicted in Concord District Court {Sullivan, J.) on charges of misdemeanor assault, RSA 631:2-a, and criminal threatening, RSA 631:4. He was sentenced to two consecutive twelve-month terms in the house of correction. Pursuant to RSA 599:1, that same day he appealed both convictions to the superior court for a trial de novo and requested a jury.
The defendant’s appeal was scheduled for trial in superior court on December 7,1987, but after he failed to appear, his bail was forfeited and his cases were remanded by the Superior Court {Manias, J.) to the Concord District Court for imposition of the two sentences. See RSA 599:3, :4. The superior court’s notice of decision was sent to counsel and the defendant, but the defendant’s copy was returned undelivered with the envelope annotated to indicate that the defendant did not live at the stated address. The envelope was also stamped “Moved — Left No Address.” According to defense counsel, the failure to appear in superior court was attributable to “some sort of confusion about the Court’s dates.”
Defendant’s counsel then filed a written motion, uncontested by the State, to vacate the remand order, reinstate the appeals and consolidate the appeals for trial. The Superior Court {Manias, J.) granted the motion and set the consolidated cases for trial on April 4, 1988. Notice of the granting of the motion and the new trial date was sent to counsel and the defendant. For reasons not appearing in the record before us, the defendant’s notice was returned, apparently undeliverable to the address stated on it, and a new notice was sent to another address.
The April 4 trial date was continued until July 11, 1988, and the defendant and counsel were notified accordingly. The defendant again failed to appear for trial on July 11, and on the following day
Ten months later, on May 17, 1989, the defendant was arrested on bench warrants from Concord District Court, and without a hearing in either district or superior court, was taken to the house of correction to begin serving the two sentences. On May 26,1989, the defendant filed a motion to reinstate his appeal, asking once again for a jury trial. On July 17,1989, after a hearing, the Superior Court {Dunn, J.) denied the defendant’s motion. This appeal followed.
Defendant argues that the court’s denial of his motion to reinstate his appeal violated his right protected under part I, article 15 of the New Hampshire Constitution, and under the sixth and fourteenth amendments to the Constitution of the United States, to a trial by jury. He asserts that under our holding in State v. Hewitt,
The State contends that in the New Hampshire two-tier system for the adjudication of lesser criminal offenses, a defendant is required to enter an appeal from district court, requesting a trial de novo by jury in superior court, and to prosecute it there. See RSA 599:3. This latter requirement, the State argues, implies a mandate that the defendant appear for trial. Such a requirement, the State continues, is a reasonable regulation on the exercise of the right to a jury trial, and an inexcusable failure to fulfill this requirement and appear for trial in the superior court constitutes a waiver of the right under both the State and Federal Constitutions. In support of its argument, the State relies on Preston v. Seay,
Having properly preserved both his State and federal constitutional claims, see State v. Fowler,
Part II, article 77 of the New Hampshire Constitution and RSA chapter 599 provide for appeals from convictions in municipal or district court. N.H. CONST. pt. II, art. 77; RSA ch. 599 (1986 & Supp. 1989). A person sentenced by a district or municipal court may appeal, at the time the sentence is declared, to the superior court for a de novo trial and request a jury, but the defendant must enter the appeal at the next return day unless the superior court extends the time for good cause shown. RSA 599:1 (Supp. 1989). If the defendant fails to appeal at the time the sentence is declared, the defendant may petition the district or municipal court, within three days from the date sentence is declared, to enter a late appeal, RSA 599:l-a, or if the defendant fails to appeal within the three-day time limit, whether through mistake, accident, or misfortune, the defendant may, within thirty days from the time the sentence is declared, petition the superior court to be allowed an appeal. RSA 599:l-b. Before the appeal is allowed, the defendant shall post bail or surrender to the proper authority for commitment to the county jail or house of correction, pending appeal. RSA 599:2. If the defendant fails to enter the appeal within the time allowed and to prosecute the appeal, bail shall be forfeited and the district or municipal court shall enforce the original sentence. RSA 599:3, :4.
The New Hampshire two-tier system is similar to the Massachusetts two-tier system. In Massachusetts one can appeal for a trial de novo from the district court sitting without a jury to the jury division of the district court where a jury of six is available, MASS. Gen. Laws Ann. ch. 278, § 18 (1981); id. ch. 218, § 27A (1990), and if the defendant fails to enter and prosecute the appeal, bail is forfeited
The defendant contends that under State v. Hewitt,
In Ludwig v. Massachusetts,
In Commonwealth v. Francis,
Similarly, in Commonwealth v. O’Clair,
In Preston v. Seay,
“‘unless and until the Supreme Court should instruct otherwise, inferior federal courts had best adhere to the view that*491 if the Court has branded a question as unsubstantial, it remains so except when doctrinal developments indicate otherwise.’”
Id. (quoting Hicks v. Miranda,
The court then considered whether Edwards v. Arizona,
We are guided by the reasoning of Preston v. Seay in our interpretation of part I, article 15; consequently, Francis and O’Clair, and the dismissal of their appeals by the Supreme Court, will control the decision here unless a new doctrinal development has arisen since these dismissals that mandates a different result. The defendant invites us to adopt Patterson v. Illinois,
In Patterson v. Illinois,
Defendant asserts that this latter language in Patterson supports his argument that a waiver of rights that are exercised at trial, including the right to a jury, is subject to the most rigorous restrictions and that the simple voluntariness standard relied upon in Preston for a waiver of the right to trial by jury is insufficient. We do not agree.
Patterson deals with waiver of the sixth amendment right to counsel rather than the right to trial by jury. In this regard Patterson’s spectrum analogy is inapposite here. The right to jury trial being exercisable only at trial, the jury is not more useful to a defendant at one point along Patterson’s spectrum than at another. Also, the Patterson spectrum does not easily adapt itself to other constitutional rights. For example, a waiver of the right not to incriminate one’s self must conform to a rigorous standard, see Miranda v. Arizona,
Patterson not representing a new doctrinal development relevant to the question before us, we are guided by Francis, O’Clair and Preston. As in Francis and O’Clair, the defendant here defaulted not because of a mistake on the part of the clerk’s office in mailing notice to him, but because of his own inexcusable failure to appear. In these circumstances, we hold that the defendant failed to prosecute his appeal within the meaning of RSA 599:3, and can reasonably be deemed to have waived his right to a trial by jury. Thus it was appropriate for the superior court to dispose of his appeals under RSA 599:4 by remanding his cases to the district court for the imposition of the two twelve-month sentences. RSA 599:3 acts as a reasonable regulation on the exercise of the right to a jury trial, and the superior court’s denial of the defendant’s motion to reinstate his appeals did not unconstitutionally infringe upon this right under part I, article 15 of the State Constitution.
Affirmed.
