AMENDED OPINION
On Certification from the Utah Court of Appeals
opinion of the Court:
INTRODUCTION
T1 This case requires us to determine whether article I, section 13 of the Utah Constitution entitles a defendant charged with Class A misdemeanors to a preliminary hearing. The district court denied Victor Hernandez's request for a preliminary hearing because it concluded that the right to a preliminary hearing guaranteed under article I, section 18 does not apply to Class A misdemeanors. We hold that it does and accordingly reverse the decision of the district court.
BACKGROUND
T2 On November 30, 2007, an information was filed charging Mr. Hernandez with four Class A misdemeanor offenses: negligent homicide, obstruction of justice, unlawful sale/supply of aleohol to minors, and possession of drug paraphernalia. On June 6, 2008, Mr. Hernandez filed a request for a preliminary hearing. He argued that article I, seetion 13 of the Utah Constitution guarantees the right to a preliminary hearing for defendants charged with felony or Class A misdemeanor offenses. The district court originally granted Mr. Hernandez's request for a preliminary hearing, but later, on a motion to reconsider, denied it. The district court found that the offenses with which Mr. Hernandez was charged did not exist and were not indictable offenses under Utah territorial law. Accordingly, it held that he was not
STANDARD OF REVIEW
$3 Interpretation of the Utah Constitution is a question of law. State v. Timmerman,
ANALYSIS
I. THE DISTRICT COURT ERRED WHEN IT DETERMINED THAT ARTICLE I, SECTION 13 OF THE UTAH CONSTITUTION DOES NOT APPLY TO CLASS A MISDEMEANORS
14 Article I, section 18 of the Utah Constitution provides that "/o/ffenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment, shall be prosecuted by information after ex-amimation and commitment by a magistrate, unless the examination be waived by the accused with the consent of the State, or by indictment, with or without such examination and commitment." Utax Const. art. I, § 18 (emphases added).
15 Relying on article I, section 13, Mr. Hernandez argues that defendants charged with Class A misdemeanors are entitled to a preliminary hearing. Specifically, he argues that the phrase "offenses heretofore" refers to a class of offenses over which district courts had original jurisdiction under Utah territorial law and that, under Utah territorial law, district courts had original jurisdiction over "indictable offenses." Under territorial law, "indictable offenses" were crimes punishable by imprisonment of more than six months. Because Class A misdemeanors are punishable by imprisonment of more than six months, Mr. Hernandez argues that they constitute "indictable offenses" that must be prosecuted by information after "examination and commitment" by a magistrate. Mr. Hernandez further contends that the "examination and commitment" referred to in article I, section 13 means a preliminary hearing.
16 The State disagrees that the phrase "offenses heretofore" refers to "indictable offenses" under Utah territorial law. Rather, it argues that the phrase refers only to felony offenses for which an accused was entitled to a grand jury indictment under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The State also disagrees that "examination and commitment" means a preliminary hearing.
17 We first consider what offenses are entitled to the protections afforded by article I, section 13 of the Utah Constitution. Because we determine that article I, section 13 refers to offenses that were considered "indictable" under Utah territorial law, we then consider what constituted an "indictable offense" in the Utah Territory. We finally consider what type of proceeding is contemplated by the "examination and commitment" requirement.
A. Article I, Section 13 Refers to Utah Territorial Law
18 We first consider which offenses were "heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment" as that phrase is used in article I, section 183 of the Utah Constitution. In interpreting our constitution, our goal is to ascertain the drafters' intent. Am. Bush v. City of S. Salt Lake,
19 We therefore begin with the text of article I, section 18. This provision specifies the procedure for prosecuting "[olffenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment." Urau Const. art. I, § 18. The drafters' choice of the phrase "offenses heretofore" is revealing. The word "offense" means "[a]) violation of the law; a crime, often a minor one." Brack's Law DictioNARY 1110 (8th ed. 2004). This word "comprehend[s] every crime and misdemeanor, or may be used in a specific sense as synonymous with 'felony' or with 'misdemeanor,' as the case may be." 22 C.J.S. Criminal Law § 3 (1989). As for the term "heretofore," it means "[ulp to now; before this time." Brack's Law Dictionary 745. Thus, the plain meaning of the phrase "offenses heretofore" is any crime-felony or misdemeanor-that up to now has been required to be prosecuted by indictment. Our next task therefore is to determine which crimes were required to be prosecuted by indictment up to the adoption of the Utah Constitution.
{10 To answer this question, we turn to the historical context in which article I, seetion 13 was adopted. The State argues that this provision refers only to felony offenses because only felony offenses were required to be prosecuted by indictment under the federal constitution. Before statehood, the Utah Territory was required to abide by the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, which required that felonies be prosecuted by indictment. The State therefore reasons that the phrase "offenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment" applies only to those crimes that were required to be prosecuted by indictment under federal law. The State further reasons that because the Fifth Amendment did not apply to the states, upon achieving statehood, Utah was free to adopt a different procedure for prosecuting felony offenses and that article I, section 13 reflects the framers' intent that felony offenses could be prosecuted either by way of information or indictment. We are unpersuaded by the State's reasoning.
T11 While the State correctly notes that the Fifth Amendment applied to the territories of the United States, see State v. Rock,
{12 The conclusion that article I, section 13 refers to "offenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment" under Utah territorial law as a whole and not just to those offenses indictable under the Fifth Amendment is also supported by other provisions in the Utah Constitution. These provisions recognize that previously applicable laws included Utah territorial law. See West v. Thomson Newspapers,
13 The debates from Utah's Constitutional Convention support our conclusion that article I, section 18 refers to Utah territorial law as a whole-not just to federal constitutional requirements. See, eg., Am. Bush,
Mr. WELLS. Mr. Chairman, I only wish to say before the committee begin{s] firing at this section that it is almost the same as in the states of Michigan, Wisconsin, Washington, Colorado and California, and in all those states I am informed that this system has worked extremely well.
Mr. BOWDLE offered the following as a substitute for section 18:
No person shall be held to answer in a criminal case except on information after examination and commitment by a magistrate or on an indictment with or without examination and commitment.
Mr. EVANS (Weber). I think the only difference is in the number of grand jurors.
Mr. BOWDLE. Practically that is true. The only objection that I have to the first part of the section is "offenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment," that is taken from the California revised or new constitution, and undoubtedly they had in mind their old constitution. Now, we have no organic existence as a State until this Constitution is adopted and we are admitted, and we are not looking back to a time when, as a State, we were prosecuting crimes in a different way, and it seems to me that it is preferable in that respect. It does not change the substance a particle, but it reads here, "offenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment." Heretofore prosecuted where? Not in the State of Utah.
Mr. EICHNOR. In the Territory.
Mr. BOWDLE. That is the only point I have.
Mr. MALONEY. Mr. Chairman, the provision as contained here is in the constitution of the state of Washington. They meant under the territorial system. Section 25 of the Washington constitution provided that offenses heretofore required to be prosecuted by indictment, and so on-so that the committee is right and this ought to be adopted as is.
1 Orrictat REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE CONVENTION AsssmBLED To Abpopr a Consttrurion FoR THE Stars or UTaH 313 (1898) (emphases added).
1 14 In this discussion, the framers specifically indicated that the phrase "heretofore"
{15 Finally, although we have never addressed the issue of whether article I, section 13 refers to Utah territorial law, we have repeatedly stated that this section applies to "indictable misdemeanors." For example, in State v. Nelson, we noted that the language of article I, section 18 of the Utah Constitution is
plain and unequivocal. Its meaning cannot be misunderstood by any[one] who reads it with ordinary care. It means that a felony or an indictable misdemeamor, after the adoption of the Constitution, could only be prosecuted in one of two ways: (M[bly information after examination and commitment by a magistrate ...; and (2) by indictment with or without such examination and commitment."
{16 The State argues that the United States Supreme Court's decision in Thompson v. Utah,
117 The United States Supreme Court's decision in Thompson did not address the issue of whether article I, section 18 or any other provision of the Utah Constitution refers to federal or territorial law. Rather, Thompson addressed whether article I, seetion 10 of the Utah Constitution, which required conviction by a unanimous vote of eight jurors, applied ex post facto to deprive an individual charged with a felony while Utah was a territory of his federal constitutional right to twelve jurors.
T 18 The State also argues that the "heretofore" language in the state constitutions upon which article I, section 183 was patterned has been interpreted to apply to only felony offenses. But the cases on which the State relies do not even discuss whether the state constitutional provisions in question incorporate the protections of the Fifth Amendment or the protections provided by the prior laws in effect in those states. See Sekt,
B. "Indictable Offenses" Include Class A Misdemeanors
119 Having determined that the protections of article I, section 18 apply to those offenses that were indictable under territorial law, we next consider which offenses fall within this category. The district court determined that a misdemeanor is an "indict, able offense" if, at the time the Utah Constitution was drafted, the particular offense was required to be prosecuted by indictment. Because the specific offenses with which Mr. Hernandez was charged did not exist under Utah territorial law, the district court concluded he was not entitled to article I, section 13 protection. We disagree with the district court's approach because it would unduly limit article I, section 13 protection to the list of those particular crimes recognized at the time of statehood.
120 There is nothing to suggest that the framers of the Utah Constitution intended to forever restrict preliminary hearings to only those specific offenses addressed by Utah territorial law. Indeed, the question of which offenses were indictable under our territorial law was not determined by looking to a list of specific offenses. Rather, our territorial scheme classified those offenses that were required to be prosecuted by indictment based on the associated punishment. And categories of those offenses that warranted more serious punishment were entitled to a greater degree of protection. Our conclusion in this regard is supported by both Utah territorial law and the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, with which Utah territorial law was required to comply. See, eg., Am. Bush,
121 We conclude that the framers' reference to territorial law in article I, section 18 does not limit its applicability to those specific crimes that were classified as "indictable" when article I, section 18 was enacted. Rather, the drafters intended to provide article I, section 18 protection to all individuals who were facing imprisonment terms of more than six months. Because those offenses classified as Class A misdemeanors are punishable by imprisonment in excess of six months, see Utax CopE Ann. § 76-8-204(1) (2008), such offenses fall within the definition of "indictable offenses." The district court therefore erred in determining that article I, section 13 does not apply to Class A misdemeanors.
II. "EXAMINATION AND COMMITMENT" MEANS A PRELIMINARY HEARING
1 22 The State argues that even if article I, section 13 applies to Class A misdemeanors, it does not require a preliminary hearing. The State reasons that this section merely requires magistrate review of an affidavit "sworn to by a person having reason to believe that the offense has been committed." UTax R.Orim. P. 4(a) And it argues that rules 4(a) and 5(a) of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure satisfy this requirement by mandating that magistrates review an information and affidavit for probable cause before issuing an arrest warrant or summons.
T 23 The plain language of article I, section 13 is inconsistent with the State's position. It provides that "[olffenses ... shall be prosecuted by information after examination and commitment by a magistrate, unless the examination be waived by the accused with the consent of the State." Uran Const. art. I, § 13 (emphasis added). The term "examination" is defined as "[tlhe questioning of a witness under oath." Buack's Law Dictto-NARY 601. This term connotes an evidentiary hearing that is inconsistent with a magistrate review of an affidavit to determine whether it establishes probable cause for an arrest warrant. Additionally, article I, section 18 provides that the "examination" can be "waived by the accused with the consent of the State." Because a defendant is not involved in a magistrate's initial review of an arrest warrant or summons, there is no mechanism by which a defendant could waive this examination. We therefore conclude that the examination to which article I, section 13 refers must be an evidentiary hearing that takes place subsequent to the arrest of the defendant.
24 Our conclusion that the examination and commitment clause requires a more searching inquiry than simple review of an arrest warrant is also supported by historical context. The prosecution of "indictable offenses" in Utah has historically involved a two-step process. The first step involves securing the presence of the defendant before the magistrate; the second step involves binding the defendant over for trial.
125 Under Utah territorial law, the first step was satisfied by the issuance of an arrest warrant. To obtain an arrest warrant, an information alleging the commission of a public offense was filed with a magistrate. Urax Comp Laws § 4887 (1888). The magistrate then "examine[d] on oath the informant or prosecutor, and any witnesses he may produce, and [took] their depositions in writing." Id. If, based on these depositions, the magistrate was "satisfied ... that the of-fen[sle complained of [had] been committed, and that there [was] reasonable ground to believe that the defendant [had] committed it," he was required to issue an arrest warrant. Id. § 4889.
€ 27 The "examination" requirement under article I, section 13 is consistent with the territorial examination conducted subsequent to the arrest of a defendant. Indeed, this conclusion is supported by the Utah constitutional debates, where one of the framers proposed an amendment that would allow a defendant to waive the right to an article I, section 13 "examination" without the approval of the State. In response to the proposed amendment, Mr. Varian stated,
I trust that amendment will not prevail. There are many times when the defendant is very ready to waive examination. He does not want the examination to be had. He is willing to go right before the grand jury. He is willing to take his chances on the witnesses dying, being scattered, and getting out of the Territory; there are many times when the prosecutor in the interest of the State, feels it his duty to examine the evidence and have it opened up. This makes it one-sided. If the defendant chooses to waive it, no matter what the interests of the State might be, the examination could not be had.
1 Orriciat Report or THE PROCEEDINGS AND DEBATES OF THE CoNVENTION AssEmMBLED To Abopr a ConstrrurIon FoR THs STATE or UTAX 314 (emphasis added). Mr. Varian's statement indicates that the "examination" that the drafters intended was similar in purpose to the territorial procedure for holding a defendant over for an indictment, in that the "examination" would not merely involve a review of deposition testimony but would require an actual "examination of the evidence," where it could be "opened up."
128 The procedure for binding a defendant over for indictment under Utah territorial law is closely approximated by our current procedure for binding a felony defendant over for trial. Our rules of eriminal procedure contemplate preliminary hearings in felony offenses for the purpose of determining whether probable cause exists to hold a defendant for trial,. Urax R.Orm. P. 7D). The probable cause determination made during this hearing involves a distinctly separate and more searching examination than that required to issue an arrest warrant. Indeed, the preliminary hearing required under rule 7 is similar to the examination required under territorial law in that both procedures contemplate examination of witnesses and presentation of evidence. See State v. Virgin,
CONCLUSION
129 Article I, section 13 grants defendants the right to a preliminary hearing for indictable offenses, including Class A misdemeanors.
Notes
An addition was made by adding footnote 3.
. Consistent with its power to "make all needful Rules and Regulations respecting the [United States] Territory," in 1850, Congress enacted "An Act to Establish a Territorial Government for Utah" (the "Organic Act") and vested legislative power for the Utah Territory in a governor and a legislative assembly. U.S. Const. art. IV, § 3 cl. 2; An Act to Establish a Territorial Government for Utah, ch. 51, 9 Stat. 453 (1850). The Organic Act provided "[that the legislative powers of said Territory shall extend to all rightful subjects of legislation, consistent with the Constitution of the United States and the provisions of this act." Id.
. Thompson's ex post facto analysis has since been rejected by the United States Supreme Court in Collins v. Youngblood,
. Because the failure to hold a preliminary hearing is mooted by the entry of a guilty plea or
