OPINION
¶ 1 Stеve Le Noble (“Defendant”) challenges his conviction and sentence for misdemeanor resisting arrest and contends that he was entitled to a trial by jury. We agree.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶ 2 We review the facts in the light most favorable to sustaining the verdict.
See State v. Guerra,
¶ 3 Phoenix police officers loсated a vehicle in the parking lot they believed was owned by Defendant and performed an inventory search, during which alleged drug paraphernalia was discovered. Defendant was indicted for resisting arrest and possession of drug paraphernalia, both class six felonies. Subsequently, the State reduced each felony charge to a misdemeanor.
¶ 4 At a bench trial, Defendant was acquitted of possession of drug paraphernalia, but was found guilty of resisting arrest. Defendant’s sentence was suspended, and he was placed on one year of probation.
¶5 Defendant’s counsel filed a brief in accordance with
Anders v. California,
¶ 6 We have jurisdiction pursuant to Arizona Revised Statutes sections 12-120.21(A)(1) (1992), 13-4031 (2001), and 13-4033(A) (2001).
DISCUSSION
¶ 7 The issue in this case is whether Defendant had a right to a jury trial for the resisting arrest charge, and if so, whether Defendant knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily waived that right.
¶ 8 Whether a particular crime is jury eligible is a question of law we review de novo.
Stoudamire v. Simon,
¶ 9 “[T]he right to [a] jury trial in criminal eases [is] fundamental to our system of justice____”
Duncan v. Louisiana,
¶ 10 Article 2, Section 23 has been consistently interpreted as preserving the right to a jury trial for those crimes that were afforded a jury trial prior the adoption of the Arizona Constitution.
Derendal,
¶
11 We look to English
common law
to
determine whether resisting arrest was a common law crime.
See Patterson v. Connolly,
¶ 12 This issue was thoroughly addressed by the Maryland Court of Appeals in
Purnell v. State,
The prisoner was indicted for cutting and wounding with intent to resist his lawful apprehension: the evidence showed that the prosecutor, a police constable, went with a brother officer, both being in plain clothes and with two other рolicemen in uniform, to a public house, and told the prisoner that he wanted him on a charge of highway robbery. He had no warrant, but from information he had received, he thought it was his duty to apprehend the prisoner. The latter asked him for further information relative to the charge, which he refused to give and the prisoner then told him that he would not go to the station-house, unless he was told why, or by what authority, he was apprehended. On the witness immediately proceeding to arrest him, the prisoner violently assaultеd and seriously injured him.
Busch,
¶ 13 Likewise, Arizona recognized the common law crime of resisting arrest. In
Stokes v. Territory,
our supreme court addressed a jury instruction on resisting arrest, given prior to statehood, for error.
If you find, under the instructions given, that Woods was a peace officer, lawfully endeavoring to arrest, or had lawfully arrested, Stokes, and that Stokes was willfully resisting such arrest, knowing Woods to be an officer, then I charge you, as a matter of law, that suсh resistance was a felony.
Id.
at 248,
¶ 14 The jury instruction illustrates that the crime of resisting arrest existed in the Arizona common law, it was considered a felony, and was afforded a trial by jury.
See id.
at 248,
¶ 15 In
Spronken v. City Court of the City of Tucson,
we reviewed whether the city court had jurisdiction over a defendant charged with resisting arrest, assault, and tampering with a motor vehicle.
¶ 16 Because we find that resisting arrest was a common law crime afforded a jury trial prior to statehood, we hold that Defendant was entitled to а jury trial, regardless of whether the crime is a misdemeanor or felony.
5
As a result, we turn to the question of whether Defendant waived his right to a jury
*184
trial by agreeing to the misdemeanor amendment or not otherwise objecting. Arizona Rule of Criminal Procedure 18.1 provides thаt where a defendant is entitled to a jury trial, the defendant may choose to proceed with a bench trial only upon waiver. “Before accepting a waiver the court shall address the defendant
personally,
advise the defendant of the right to a jury trial and ascertain that the waiver is knowing, voluntary, and intelligent” Ariz. R.Crim. P. 18.1(b)(1) (emphasis added); see
also State v. Ward,
¶ 17 Here, both the transcript and the court’s minute entries are silent about waiver.
See Ward,
¶ 18 Because there was no waiver, we have to determine whether the error was trial error or structural error.
See State v. Henderson,
¶ 19 Structural errors, however, are subject to automatic reversal.
See Fulminante,
CONCLUSION
¶20 For the aforementioned reasons, we vacate Defendant’s conviction and sentence for resisting arrest, and remand for the purpose of determining whether he made a voluntary, knowing, and intelligent waiver of his right to jury trial and proceedings consistent with that determinаtion.
Notes
. A drug-sniffing dog was used, but no drugs were detected nor were any drugs discovered in subsequent x-rays taken of Defendant's stomach.
. Arizona Constitution, Article 2, Section 24 states:
In criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have the right to appear and defend in person, and by counsel, to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him, to have a copy thereof, to testify in his own behalf, to meet the witnesses against him face to face, to have compulsory process to compel the attendance of witnesses in his оwn behalf, to have a speedy public trial by an impartial jury of the county in which the offense is alleged to have been committed, and the right to appeal in all cases; and in no instance shall any accused person before final judgment be compelled to advance money or fees to secure the rights herein guaranteed.
. Arizona Constitution, Article 2, Section 23 states:
The right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate. Juries in criminal cases in which a sentence of death or imprisonment for thirty years or more is authorized by law shall consist of twelve persons. In all criminal cases the unanimous consent of the jurors shall be necessary to render a verdict. In all other cases, the number of jurors, not less than six, and the number required to render a verdict, shall be specified by law.
. Crimes that are of the samе "character or grade" include those common law crimes that may be equated to a statutory offense, although the elements of the crime are not precise matches.
Derendal
suggests that “many newly minted statutory criminal offenses have no precise analog in the common law.... We regard a jury-eligible, common law offense as an antecedent of a modern statutory offense when the modem offense contains elements comparable to those found in the common law offensе.”
Id.
at 419, ¶ 10,
. Defendant was acquitted on his second charge, possession of drug paraphernalia, and therefore we need not address that charge.
See Lemke v. Rayes,
.
Ring
included a list of those errors that the United States Supreme Court has noted to be structural, including a biased trial judge, complete denial of defense counsel, denial оf access to defense counsel during an overnight trial recess, denial of self-representation in criminal cases, defective reasonable doubt jury instructions, exclusion of jurors of the defendant's race from grand jury selection, excusing a juror bеcause of his views on capital punishment and denial of a public criminal trial.
See
. We note that in Conroy, the Arizona Supreme Court addressed the trial court's failure to obtain a jury trial waiver. The court noted that
the [trial] court carefully explained to defendant that he had a right to a jury trial, that by waiving the right he was abandoning the privilege of allowing a juiy to determine the facts of his case and agreeing to let the trial court determine the facts and determine his guilt or innocence. We believe this is all that is required to accomplish the intentional waiver of a known right.
