OPINION OF THE
Aftеr a bench trial, defendant-appellant Boyflorence Ibuos (Ibuos) was convicted of the offense of Abuse of a Family and Household Member in violation of Hawai'i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 709-906 (1985 and Supp. 1991). Ibuos’s timely appeal asserts that the District Family Court of the Second Circuit improрerly accepted his counsel’s waiver of his right to a jury trial at the arraignment and plea hearing. The subsequent bench trial and conviction stemming from such an invalid waiver, Ibuos argues, violates his sixth amendment right to trial byjuiy. In addition, notwithstanding the alleged constitutional violation, Ibuos argues that insufficient evidence was presented at the bench trial to convict him of the offense, thereby precluding a second trial as a result of the double jeopardy provisions of the Hawai‘i and United States Constitutions. For the reasons set forth below, we vacate the trial court’s judgment and rеmand for a new trial.
The incident prompting the charge arose out of an altercation between Ibuos and his live-in girlfriend (friend). During the course of the argument, Ibuos unplugged the house telephone in order to prevent the friend’s use of the same. The friend attempted to re-plug the telephone line into the wall. In order to reach the phone jack, she apparently needed to crawl underneath a desk. While she was under the desk, Ibuos allegedly shoved the desk, causing it to impact with the friend’s cheek. It was this “physical abuse” upon which the court fоund Ibuos guilty.
Ibuos’s June 16, 1992 arraignment and plea hearing proceeded as follows:
THE CLERK: Calling FC-CR 92-0328, State of Hawai‘i versus Boyflorence Ibuos, arraignment аnd plea.
[Deputy Public Defender]: Vicky Russell on behalf of Mr. Ibuos, who is present. Record may reflect service of the complaint. He’ll wаive a formal reading of the charge, enter a plea of not guilty, waive jury trial[,] and request trial and pretrial date.
THE COURT: Okay, just a minute here. I better do this here on my calendar somewhere. How about Thursday, July 23rd at 8:30, courtroom 3A? [Deputy Public Defender]: Is that Trial?
THE COURT: Yeah.
[Prosecutor]: July —
THE COURT: 23rd, 3A. And pretrial on that one
would be July 14th at 8:30, 3B.
[Deputy Public Defender]: Thank you, your Honor.
Hawai‘i Rules of Penal Proсedure (HRPP) Rule 5(b)(1) requires that “the court shall in appropriate cases inform the defendant that he has a right to jury trial in the circuit court or may elect to be tried without a jury in the district court.” “Appropriate cases” arise whenever the accused has a constitutional right tо a jury trial.
See Duncan v. Louisiana,
The prosecution’s first argument is that
Young
is inapposite. In
Young,
defendant’s counsel reserved defendant’s right to request jury trial, as opposed to unambiguously waiving such right. We held, “[w]here the record is unclear if defendant is waiving his right to trial by jury at the time of arraignment and plea, the court should conclude that defendant is not waiving that right.”
The prosecution next argues that the provisions of HRS § 604-8 (1985), requiring an accused to “demand a trial by jury on the date of the arraignment or within ten days thereafter” in order to divest the district court of jurisdiction, takes precedence over HRPP Rule 5(b)(1)’s waiver requirement. We simply hold that nothing in HRS § 604-8 obviates the court’s constitutional duty to inform a defendant of his or her right to a jury trial and that the court should not presume a “knowing and voluntаry waiver” from a defendant’s silence. Swain, supra; Young, supra.
Finally, the prosecution argues that Ibuos’s counsel “invited” judicial error when she failed to object tо the district family court’s jurisdiction prior to trial, thereby rendering any violations harmless. In support of the “invited error doctrine,” the prosecution cites
State v. Smith,
Ibuos’s second point of error urges that, notwithstanding his invalid bench trial, the prosecution failed to produce sufficient evidence to support the conviction and is, therefore, barred by principles of double jeopardy from re-trying him. A reviewing court, considering the evidence in the light most favorable to the рrosecution, determines whether substantial evidence exists to support the conclusion of the trier of fact on every element оf the offense charged, not whether guilt was established beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Batson,
Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of the family court and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
The court is also required to assure itself of a voluntary and knowing waiver any time a defendant waives the right to counsel or enters a guilty plea.
State v. Vaitogi,
