[¶ 1] David Cook appeals from a judgment entered in the Superior Court (Cumberland County, Cole, J.) convicting him of operating an automobile under the influence of intoxicating liquors (OUI), second offense, in violation of 29-A M.R.S.A. § 2411 (1996 & Supp.1997). Cook contends that the use of his prior uncounseled OUI conviction to obtain the mandatory minimum imprisonment provided in section 2411(5)(B)(2) 1 violates his right to due process of law. 2 We affirm the judgment.
[¶ 2] In May 1993 Cook was convicted in the District Court (Portland,
MacNichol, J.)
of OUI, first offense, in violation of 29 M.R.S.A. § 1312-B (Pamph.1993)
repealed by
P.L.1993, ch. 683, § A-l (effective, Jan. 1, 1995) without counsel and without a waiver of counsel. Cook’s uncounseled conviction resulted in the imposition of a $350 fine and a 90-day suspension of his driver’s license. In September 1995 Cook was arrested and charged with OUI, second offense, in viola-' tion of 29-A M.R.S.A. § 2411. Cook objected to the mandatory minimum imprisonment which accompanies OUI, second offense, citing our decision in
State v. Dowd,
I.
[¶ 3] In order to decide the appeal now before us, we must first determine whether Cook’s prior uneounseled OUI conviction was constitutionally obtained. In
Newell v. State,
[¶ 4] These standards, however, are incompatible, and this incompatibility arises in two instances: (1) when an indigent defendant is charged with a serious misdemeanor as defined in Newell but is not sentenced to any imprisonment and (2) when an indigent defendant is not charged with a serious misdemeanor but is sentenced to a term of actual imprisonment. In the first instance, an indigent defendant is entitled to appointed counsel under the Maine Constitution but not under the U.S. Constitution. In the second instance, the entitlement is reversed: an indigent defendant is entitled to appointed counsel under the U.S. Constitution but not under the Maine Constitution.
[¶ 5] The simultaneous application of these two standards demonstrates their incompatibility. The District Court cannot apply the Maine standard alone, because such application would deprive some indigent defendants of their federal right to counsel under the Sixth Amendment. Nor can the District Court apply the federal standard alone, because that would deprive some indigent defendants of their state right to counsel under article I, section 6-A. In order to meet both standards, the District Court is forced to apply them simultaneously, which has the unintended effect of providing indigent defendants with a greater right to counsel than that to which they are entitled under either the state or federal standard alone.
[¶ 6] The present incompatibility of these two standards compels us to clarify the law of Maine regarding right to counsel. In so doing, we overrule
Newell
and hold, consistent with the reasoning in
Scott,
that an indigent misdemeanor defendant has a right to counsel under article I, section 6-A of the Maine Constitution when imprisonment will actually be imposed. This “bright line” rule provides defendants, prosecutors, and criminal courts in Maine with the clarity they deserve, while adhering to the principle that actual imprisonment is a penalty different in kind from fines or the mere threat of imprisonment.
See Scott v. Illinois,
II.
[¶7] In
Baldasar v. Illinois,
[¶ 8] We addressed the
Baldasar
decision in
State v. Dowd,
[¶ 9] In
Nichols v. United States,
[¶ 10] The Supreme Court offered two substantive reasons for its decision to overrule
Baldasar
and allow the use of uncoun-seled misdemeanor convictions for collateral imprisonment purposes. First, the Court asserted that enhanced penalty statutes,
4
regardless of their form, penalize only the subsequent conviction and do not change the penalty for the prior conviction.
Id.
at 747,
[¶ 11] We find the Court’s reasoning in
Nichols
to. be persuasive under article I, section 6-A of the Maine Constitution. In the case at bar, Cook would face no imprisonment
at all
had he not reoffended. The seven days of incarceration he now faces punishes him solely for his second OUI offense, and in no way adds to or alters the penalty he received for his initial OUI conviction. Further, in Maine a sentencing court
[¶ 12] We therefore overrule Dowd, concluding that article I, section 6-A of the Maine Constitution does not prevent the State’s reliance on a prior uncounseled but constitutional misdemeanor conviction to obtain a mandatory minimum term of imprisonment in a subsequent proceeding. 5
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. 29-A M.R.S.A. § 2411(5)(B)(2) provides, inter alia, a mandatory minimum imprisonment of 7 days for convicted OUI offenders having one previous OUI offense within a 10-year period.
. This issue arises in a somewhat unusual procedural posture, but the State has not objected and both parties have addressed in their briefs the merits of Cook’s contentions.
. Article I, section 6-A of the Maine Constitution provides, in pertinent part, "No person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.”
The defendant in
State
v.
Dowd,
. In his concurring opinion, Souter, J., stated that the case did not involve a mandatory enhancement of Nichols's sentence.
Nichols v. United States,
. Dowd presents an unusual circumstance where we treated an uncounseled OUI civil adjudication as if it were the equivalent of an uncoun-seled misdemeanor conviction. For the purposes of our analysis in this case, however, this is a distinction without a difference.
