Lead Opinion
Defendant-appellant, Dale W. Buescher, was charged in the county court with violating various ordinances of the city of Lincoln by operating a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcoholic liquor, by operating a motor vehicle under a suspended license, by driving an improperly registered motor vehicle, and by resisting arrest. Following a bench trial, the trial court dismissed the driving while under the influence and improper registration charges and found Buescher guilty of driving a motor vehicle under a suspended license and of resisting arrest. He was then fined $150 and had his operator’s license suspended for a year on the driving conviction, and he was fined $100 and ordered to spend 14 days in jail on the resisting arrest conviction. The district court affirmed, whereupon the appeal to this court ensued. Buescher asserts that the district court erred in failing to find that the county court erred in (1) denying him a jury trial, (2) finding the evidence sufficient to support the charges, and (3) imposing excessive sentences. We affirm.
No useful purpose would be served by detailing the circumstances leading to Buescher’s arrest and convictions, for the ordinances under which he was charged are not in the record. We recently, in State v. King,
Without benefit of the ordinances in question, neither can we determine whether the trial court should have granted a jury trial. As noted in Hawkins Constr. Co. v. Director, ante p. 1,
What ought to be more than abundantly clear by this time is that a party charged under a municipal ordinance who seriously contemplates an appeal in the event of an adverse result needs to see to it that the trial record properly contains a copy of the ordinance under which the proceedings are conducted. In the absence of such a record, an appeal only wastes time and money — in this instance, as this appeal was taken in forma pauperis, the public’s time and money.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I remain of the view expressed in my dissent in State v. Lewis, ante p. 642,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Constitutional considerations compel comment on the majority’s creation of presumptions to dispose of appeals involving violations of municipal ordinances that are omitted from records presented for appellate review.
As an evidential matter in Buescher’s case, the State failed to prove existence of the drunk driving ordinance and, consequently, failed to prove Buescher’s violation of the ordinance. One does not have to delve into the depths of metaphysics to conclude that a person cannot violate a nonexistent ordinance. Moreover, criminal defendants, even those charged with traffic offenses, are afforded several constitutional and procedural safeguards, including the due process requirement that every factual element of an offense charged must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. See, State v. Lomack, 239 Neb. 368,
Since the ordinance under which Buescher was convicted is not established in the record, there is a devastating and destructive deficiency, a fundamental failure of proof, in the State’s case against Buescher. As a matter of law, that absence of proof in reference to the drunk driving ordinance prevents a conviction of Buescher, since the State has failed to present any evidence concerning existence of the ordinance or its provisions, proof which is required for a prima facie case against Buescher and, moreover, is required as a basis for finding Buescher’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Courts in several jurisdictions have concluded that the State’s failure to establish the ordinance on which a prosecution is based requires reversal of the conviction and dismissal of the proceeding; for instance, see, State v. Berberian,
Furthermore, by applying dissimilar rules for appellate review of convictions of ordinance violations and review in a civil case involving an ordinance, this court denies equal protection to Buescher and every other criminal defendant convicted of violating a municipal ordinance which is not pleaded and proved by the State. The U.S. Supreme Court has held that equal protection rights attach in proceedings before appellate courts. In Griffin v. Illinois,
Nebraska’s disparate treatment of litigants in cases involving municipal ordinances, depending on whether the litigation involves a civil case or a criminal case, results in a violation of equal protection of the law. For this reason and for the reason that Buescher’s due process rights under the 14th Amendment have also been violated, Buescher’s conviction should have been reversed.
The presumptions used by this court in reviewing convictions of violations of ordinances rank with Nebraska’s other pseudo-presumptions noted in an article by Prof. G. Michael Fenner. See G. Michael Fenner, Presumptions: 350 Years of Confusion and It Has Come to This, 25 Creighton L. Rev. 383 (1992). In the meantime, the cardinal rule in this court appears to be: If a decision becomes difficult to explain, create a presumption as rationalization for an expedient result.
