delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Defendant Ronald Clark appeals the District Court’s dismissal of *40 his appeal from justice court for failure tо personally appear. We reverse and remand for a trial de novo on the merits.
¶2 We restate the issue as follows:
¶3 Does § 46-17-311(5), MCA, permit a district court to dismiss an appeal for failure to appear if the defendant’s counsel is present and ready to proceed on a misdemeanor charge?
BACKGROUND
¶4 On January 27, 2004, Clark was charged with the offense of issuing a bad check in violation of § 45-6-316(1), MCA. A jury trial was held in the Justice Court of Gallatin County on August 25, 2005. Clark was found guilty. Clark then filed a timely notice of appeal to the Eighteenth Judicial District Court of Gallatin County.
¶5 A jury trial de novo was set by the District Court for December 20, 2005. Clark fаiled to personally appear, but his counsel was present and expressed his readiness to proceed. The District Court dismissed Clark’s appeal and reinstated the Justice Court’s judgment.
¶6 The District Court concludеd it had authority to dismiss the appeal under § 46-17-311(5), MCA, because Clark had failed to personally appeаr. The court also reasoned that the circumstances, such as the nature of the appeal, thе impending Christmas holiday, and the fact that Clark had “already been given his right to a trial in Justice Court,” along with the faсt that Clark’s counsel failed, in the court’s view, to present sufficient good cause for Clark’s absence, wаrranted dismissal of Clark’s appeal.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶7 A district court’s interpretation and application of statute is rеviewed for correctness.
In re
T.H.,
DISCUSSION
¶8 Does § 46-17-311(5), MCA, permit a district court to dismiss an appeal for failure to appear if the defendant’s counsel is present and ready to proceed on a misdemeanor сharge?
¶9 Section 46-17-311(5), MCA, simply says that if the defendant does not appear, then the judge may dismiss the appeal:
If, on appeal to the district court, the defendant fails to appear for a scheduled court date or meet a court deadline, the court may, except for good cause shown, dismiss the appeal on the court’s own initiative or on motion by the prosecution and the right to a jury trial is considered waived by the defendant. Upon *41 dismissal, the appealed judgment is reinstated and becomes the operative judgment.
The section does not specifically define “appear,” nor is “appear” defined elsewhere in Chapter 17. However, “appear” is defined, in the context of a misdemeanor charge, at § 46-16-120, MCA: “In all cases in which the defendant is charged with a misdemeanor offense, the defendant may appear by counsel only, although the court may require the personal attendance of the defendant at any time” (emphasis added). Also, § 46-16-122, MCA, exрressly provides for a trial in absentia if the defendant fails to appear personally in a misdemeаnor case and counsel is authorized to act on the defendant’s behalf. In fact, § 46-16-122, MCA, requires the court to proceed with the trial “unless good cause for continuance exists.”
¶10 Section 46-16-120, MCA, necessarily applies to § 46-17-311(5), MCA, in the context of a misdemeanor charge, because § 46-16-120, MCA, applies to “all [misdemeanor] cases.” A defendant, therefore, only “fails to appear” under § 46-17-311(5), MCA, if both the defendant and defendant’s counsel fail to appear, unless the court had previously informed the defendant that his personаl attendance was required. We see no reason why the statute that allows a defendant to appear through counsel only at the justice court trial should not also apply in the district court trial de novo.
¶11 The State, however, disagrees with the above statutory layout, and claims that “fails to appear” under § 46-17-311(5), MCA, translates to fails to appear personally. The State claims that § 46-17-311(5), MCA, is a more specific statute than § 46-16-122, MCA, because it expressly applies to appeals from justice court, and, as the more specific statute, it should control. However, the State fails to provide authority for its underlying proposition that “fails to appear,” as used in § 46-17-311(5), MCA, refers to the defendant’s personal appearance. The District Court, nonetheless, agreed with the State, and concluded that because the specific language found in § 46-16-122, MCA, providing for trial in absentia at the justice court level, is missing from § 46-17-311(5), MCA, “fails to appear,” must be read to mean “fails to рersonally appear.”
¶12 While we agree that Chapter 17 of Title 46 governs criminal procedure in justiсe and city courts, including appeals from justice court (see
State v. Tweedy,
¶13 Consequently, we reverse and remand for a trial de novo in District Court.
