¶ 1. Pursuant to Vermont Rule of Appellate Procedure 5(a), the district court has, with the parties’ consent, certified two questions for our review in connection with the prosecution of defendants Boots Wardinski and Michael Colby for disorderly conduct. The certified questions are: “[c]an the State obtain a conviction under 13 V.S.A. § 1026(4) without proving that uninvited political speech actually caused a substantial disruption of a lawful assemblyt,]” and “[c]an the State obtain a conviction under 13 V.S.A. § 1026(4) for attempting to recklessly create a public inconvenience by disturbing a lawful assembly?” We agree with defendants that the prosecutions must be dismissed. The State must — but cannot — prove that dеfendants’ speech caused a substantial disruption of a lawful assembly. Because our answer to the first certified question is dispositive of the case, we do not address the second question.
¶2. For purposes of this appeal, the parties have stipulated to the following facts. On June 5, 2006, defendants Boots Wardinski and Michael Colby аttended the St. Johnsbury Academy commencement ceremony. Both defendants had tickets to the invitation-only ceremony at which John Negroponte, then the United States Director of National Intelligence, delivered a speech. 1 Approximately two minutes into Negroponte’s address, defendant Wardinski stood from his seat and shоuted that Negroponte “had blood on his hands” and invited the audience to join him in *467 walking out on the commencement address. At some point prior to defendant Wardinski’s remarks, defendant Colby also stood and shouted at Negroponte. Academy staff and police officers promptly asked both defendants to leave and escorted them from the premises without resistance or further incident. Despite these interruptions, which lasted no more than thirty seconds, Negroponte delivered his speech in its entirety. 2
¶ 3. The record of the hearing on defendants’ motion to dismiss in the district court showed that both the Academy and the police anticipated that some attendees at the graduation ceremony would attempt to interrupt Negroponte’s speech. The planned response was to immediately remove and arrest anyone interrupting the speech. There was also evidence to suggest that defendant Wardinski was voluntarily leaving the assembly when the police officer rеached him to escort him from the premises.
¶ 4. The State’s information charged that both defendants “recklessly created a risk of public inconvenience or annoyance when [they], without lawful authority, attempted to disturb a lawful assembly or meeting of persons, in violation of 13 V.S.A. § 1026(4).” 3 Defendants contend that the statute must be read to protect defendants’ right to freedom of speech under the First Amendment. 4 To do so, defendants argue that the State must prove an additional element not specified in the statute — namely, that their actions substantially impaired the effective conduct of a lawful assembly. According to defendants, because the State cannot рrove this element, the prosecution must be dismissed. *468 Defendants further argue that charging this crime as an “attempt” crime does not remove the constitutional problem.
¶ 5. One of the legal dilemmas raised by disorderly conduct statutes is the breadth of the conduct and speech that they prohibit when considered against the First Amendment guarantеe of freedom of speech. Such statutes have often been challenged on grounds of vagueness and overbreadth. In this case, defendants do not claim that the statute is too vague to give adequate notice of what conduct is prohibited. See, e.g.,
Connally v. Gen. Constr. Co.,
¶ 6. We have not previously considered whether § 1026(4) impermissibly burdens speеch; however, in
State v. Read,
we narrowed another section of the disorderly conduct statute proscribing the use of abusive speech, § 1026(3), in response to a facial challenge to its constitutionality.
¶ 7. Our decision in
Read
provides a framework for analyzing our disorderly conduct statute in light of defendants’ overbreadth challenge. Assuming that we find the statute subject to overbroad аpplication, we must first seek to construe it in a manner that is constitutional. See
id.
at 146,
¶ 8. We turn first to whether § 1026(4) is overbroad on its face, meaning that it is drafted in such a manner that it proscribes a substantial amount of constitutionally protected speech when compared to the law’s legitimate applications. See
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
¶ 9. A narrowing interpretation may, nevertheless, render § 1026(4) constitutional. The central constitutional tension presented by § 1026(4) arises from a clash of two fundamental First
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Amendment rights — freedom of speech and freedom of assembly. In construing the stаtute, we must ensure that neither fundamental right is unnecessarily sacrificed for the sake of the other. We are not without guidance in our endeavor. The Supreme Court of California declared a substantially similar statute susceptible to overbroad application. See
Kay,
¶ 10. We are persuaded to construe our statute similarly. Thus, to show that a defendant violated § 1026(4), the State must рrove that a defendant’s conduct — “and not the content of the activity’s expression — substantially impairfed] the effective conduct of a meeting.” Id. Narrowing the reach of § 1026(4) in such a fashion strikes the proper balance between the two fundamental rights implicated by the statute.
¶ 11. The State argues, however, that a narrowing of the statute to require substantial impairment gives inadequate consideration to the context of the event in which the disruption occurs. Indeed, in interpreting 1906 P.S. § 5871, a precursor to § 1026(4), we have held that factors relevant to a determination of whether a defendant’s conduct substantially impairs the effective conduct of a meeting include “the nature and character of each particular kind of meeting, . . . the purposes for which it is held, and . . . the usage and practice governing such meetings.”
State v. Mancini,
¶ 12. Accordingly, substantial impairment of the effective conduct of a meeting includes conduct that causes a lawful meeting to terminate prematurely. Cf.
State v. Schwing,
¶ 13. Applying these standards to the case at bаr, we hold that, as a matter of law, defendants’ actions did not substantially impair the effective conduct of the St. Johnsbury Academy’s commencement ceremony. Indeed, the State conceded as much by charging this as an “attempt” crime. As part of the approximately
*472
three-hour-long graduation ceremony, Negroponte delivered a speech, which lasted for over eight minutes and was delivered in its entirety. This speech was interrupted for less than thirty seconds by defendants’ remarks. Moreover, the record indicates that defendant Wardinski urged the audience to join him in walking out of the ceremony in protest of Negroponte’s presence and was in thе process of leaving the ceremony voluntarily when he was apprehended.
6
Both defendants left the site of the graduation ceremony upon being asked and without further incident, whereupon they were arrested. Such de minimis disturbances, even if rude and out of place in the context of a commencement ceremony, сannot serve as the basis for criminal liability without running afoul of the First Amendment. Cf.
Terminiello v. City of Chicago,
¶ 14. We note that the State contends that the substantial-impairment prong of Kay is satisfied by virtue of the fact that defendants are charged with attempted disorderly conduct — a contention we find unavailing. The State merely speculates that defendants would have continued, or escalated, their protest to such an extent as to create a substantial impairment of the commencement ceremony. To satisfy constitutional concerns, we have held here that a fact finder, in assessing whether a defendant’s conduct substantially impaired the effective conduct of a meeting, must consider the actual impact of the conduct on the meeting — conjecture will not suffice. There was no substantial impairment based on the agreed upon facts. The State cannot even charge that there was a disturbance. The interruption was minor. Negroponte’s speech was hardly stopped, and the speakers were quickly, and without resistance, removed from the location. If we use thе disorderly conduct statute to punish defendants by not requiring that the disturbance be substantial, we would be punishing them for speech in violation of the First Amendment.
¶ 15. Finally, and contrary to the State’s assertions, our holding does not “imperil other citizens’ rights of free association and
*473
discussion.” The Academy acted within its rights when it ejected defendants from the graduаtion ceremony once they began heckling Negroponte. Cf.
Adderley v. Florida,
The charges are dismissed.
Notes
Negroponte’s son was a member of the graduating class of 2006 at St. Johnsbury Academy.
The parties have stipulated that Negroponte’s speech “was standard inspirational fare and not overtly political.”
Section 1026(4) provides, in pertinent part: “[a] person who, with intent to cause public inconvenience, or annoyance or recklessly creating a risk thereof . . . [w]ithout lawful authority, disturbs any lawful assembly or meeting of persons . . . shall be imprisoned for not more than 60 days or fined not more than $500.00 or both.”
The First Amendment provides: “Congress shall make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech ...” U.S. Const, amend. I. The First Amendment limits not only the law-making authority of the federal government but also, pursuant to the Fourteenth Amenmdent, that of the states. See, e.g.,
Thornhill v. Alabama,
We note that “[t]he right of peaceable assembly is a right cognate to . . . free speech . . . and is equally fundamental.”
De Jonge v. Oregon,
It is questionable whether the statute, literally applied, even reaches defendant Wardinski’s conduct.
