Robert E. Lee was convicted in the district court for driving while his operator’s license was suspended, in violation of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 60-6,196(6) (Reissue 1993). On appeal, the Nebraska Court of Appeals reversed the conviction,
State
v.
Lee, 4
Neb. App. 757,
SCOPE OF REVIEW
When reviewing a question of law, an appellate court reaches a conclusion independent of the lower court’s ruling. See,
Smith
v.
State,
FACTS
On December 16,1994, Lee was stopped by a Lincoln police officer after the officer observed that Lee’s car had an expired in-transit tag. When Lee was asked for his operator’s license, he responded that he did not have one because it had been suspended. Lee was arrested and charged under § 60-6,196(6) for operating a motor vehicle on the highways or streets of this state while his operator’s license was suspended pursuant to § 60-6,196(2)(c).
Lee entered a plea of not guilty. Prior to trial, Lee filed a petition in Lancaster County Court seeking to set aside his third-offense driving while under the influence of alcohol (DUI) conviction on the grounds that it was constitutionally infirm because he had not been advised of his right to a trial by jury. Lee had not previously appealed or otherwise challenged this *663 third-offense DUI conviction. On March 15, 1995, Judge Gale Pokomy entered an order stating:
The record of the Court’s plea taking on May 17, 1991 clearly does not inform Mr. Lee of his right to a trial by jury.
As such the Court does not believe the May 17[,] 1991 plea may be used for purposes of enhancement.
So Ordered.
/s/ Gale Pokomy
Lancaster County Judge
At trial, Lee made a motion in limine asking the district court to preclude the State from presenting any evidence of Lee’s prior conviction for third-offense DUI. In support of his motion, Lee offered Judge Pokorny’s March 15, 1995, order, and the State made no objection. Lee’s motion in limine was overruled. The State then offered a copy of Lee’s prior plea of guilty to the third-offense DUI charge, as well as Judge Pokomy’s order suspending Lee’s privilege to operate a motor vehicle for a period of 15 years. The court admitted this evidence. Lee was found guilty of driving with a suspended license and sentenced to a period of imprisonment of not less than 2 nor more than 4 years.
Lee appealed, assigning as error the district court’s admission of evidence of his allegedly invalid prior conviction to support a conviction for driving during a 15-year suspension. The Court of Appeals reversed the order, concluding that because the prior conviction had been voided in a separate proceeding, it should not have been received into evidence against Lee to support a conviction for driving during a 15-year suspension. We granted the State’s petition for further review.
ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
In summary, the State’s petition for further review asserts that the Court of Appeals erred in finding that Lee’s third-offense DUI conviction had been set aside and voided in a separate proceeding and in subsequently reversing Lee’s conviction for driving during a 15-year suspension.
ANALYSIS
The issue is whether Lee’s third-offense DUI conviction may be used to support his conviction for driving during a 15-year *664 suspension. Lee alleges that the district court erred in admitting evidence of his prior conviction for third-offense DUI to support a conviction for driving during a 15-year suspension, because the prior conviction had been held, in a separate proceeding, to be constitutionally infirm.
Section 60-6,196(6) provides: “Any person operating a motor vehicle on the highways or streets of this state while his or her operator’s license has been revoked pursuant to subdivision (2)(c) of this section shall be guilty of a Class IV felony.” Section 60-6,196(2)(c) declares that if a person who operates a motor vehicle under the influence
(i) has had two or more convictions under this section in the eight years prior to the date of the current conviction . . . such person shall be guilty of a Class W misdemeanor, and the court shall, as part of the judgment of conviction, order such person not to drive any motor vehicle in the State of Nebraska for any purpose for a period of fifteen years ....
In a prosecution for driving when one’s operator’s license has been suspended under § 60-6,196(6), proof of the prior conviction under § 60-6,196(2)(c) is an essential element of the offense. See
State
v.
Watkins,
In this case, the evidence offered by the State to prove the third-offense DUI conviction reflected that Lee was represented by counsel. Lee alleged, however, that the third-offense DUI conviction was void because he was not advised, as mandated by
Boykin
v.
Alabama,
The challenge of a prior plea-based conviction based on the lack of a Boykin-type colloquy constitutes a collateral attack on the judgment. See
State
v.
Crane,
In the present case, Lee could have sought a direct review of his third-offense DUI conviction. Avenues of relief outside a direct review are necessarily limited because of the State’s interest in the finality of convictions. The U.S. Supreme Court has stated: “ ‘ “[A]n error that may justify reversal on direct appeal will not necessarily support a collateral attack on a final judgment.” ’ ”
Brecht
v.
Abrahamson,
The U.S. Supreme Court, while holding that
uncounseled
convictions cannot be used against a person to either support guilt or enhance punishment for another offense, has expressed “a willingness to uphold, under the Due Process Clause, a variety of state procedures for implementing otherwise valid recidivism statutes.”
Parke
v.
Raley,
Boykin involved direct review of a conviction allegedly based upon an uninformed guilty plea. Respondent, however, never appealed his earlier convictions. They became final years ago, and he now seeks to revisit the question of their validity in a separate recidivism proceeding. To import Boykin’s presumption of invalidity into this very different context would, in our view, improperly ignore another presumption deeply rooted in our jurisprudence: the “presumption of regularity” that attaches to final judg *666 ments, even when the question is waiver of constitutional rights.
Parke,
Parke
indicates that the Due Process Clause may not demand a right to mount a Boykin-type collateral attack on a prior conviction. However, states are free to afford their citizens greater due process protection under their state constitutions than is granted by the federal Constitution. See
Michigan
v.
Long,
In
State
v.
LeGrand,
We have not previously addressed a defendant’s right to present a
Boykin
challenge in a special proceeding in order to invalidate the prior conviction for purposes of its use as an element of a subsequent offense. Clearly, an important distinction lies between recidivist proceedings and crimes where a prior conviction is an essential element. A charge under a recidivist statute, such as those used in enhancement proceedings, does not state a separate offense, but goes to punishment only. See,
Parke
v.
Raley,
supra;
State
v.
Oliver, supra.
See, also,
Oyler
v.
Boles,
*667 While we chose to grant defendants a limited right to collaterally mount a Boykin attack on a prior conviction used for purposes of enhancing their punishment because of the repetitive nature of their conduct, we decline to extend such a right further. We do not grant defendants a right to collaterally attack a prior conviction used as an element of a subsequent offense where such attack is based on the lack of a Boykin-type colloquy.
In addition, we note that recidivist statutes are different from statutes which include as a necessary element of the crime a prior offense, insofar as the Legislature, in creating the offense, may have legitimate objectives other than simply punishing a repeated pattern of behavior. Thus, in
State
v. Greaser,
In
Lewis
v.
United States,
The statutory language is sweeping, and its plain meaning is that the fact of a felony conviction imposes a firearm *668 disability until the conviction is vacated or the felon is relieved of his disability by some affirmative action, such as a qualifying pardon or a consent from the Secretary of the Treasury.
Lewis,
Recognizing the apparent inconsistency with its prior holdings in
Burgett
v.
Texas,
In each of those cases, this Court found that the subsequent conviction or sentence violated the Sixth Amendment because it depended upon the reliability of a past uncounseled conviction. The federal gun laws, however, focus not on reliability, but on the mere fact of conviction, or even indictment, in order to keep firearms away from potentially dangerous persons. Congress’ judgment that a convicted felon, even one whose conviction was allegedly uncounseled, is among the class of persons who should be disabled from dealing in or possessing firearms because of potential dangerousness is rational. Enforcement of that essentially civil disability through a criminal sanction does not “support guilt or enhance punishment,” ... on the basis of a conviction that is unreliable when one considers Congress’ broad purpose.
Likewise, the language of § 60-6,196, under which Lee was convicted, does not limit the use of the prior third-offense DUI conviction as an element of driving with a suspended license. At the time Lee chose to drive with a suspended operator’s license, his third-offense DUI conviction had stood as a final order for over 3 years. Lee, knowing that his license was suspended, bought a car and proceeded to drive it. The fact that the suspension of Lee’s license may have been in violation of his Boykin *669 rights does not change the fact that he voluntarily proceeded to defy the order of suspension, in violation of § 60-6,196(6).
The case before us is not an enhancement proceeding. Therefore, the district court had no jurisdiction to consider the merits of the alleged invalidity of the third-offense DUI conviction, and the court was correct to rely on it for purposes of a conviction under § 60-6,196(6). Lee’s attempted collateral attack was impermissible.
CONCLUSION
We decline to extend our holdings in
State
v.
LeGrand,
Therefore, we reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals, and we remand the cause to that court with directions to affirm the district court’s judgment finding Lee guilty of driving with a suspended license.
Reversed and remanded with directions.
