On July 29, 1976, Properties, Inc., and Public Service Company of New Hampshire petitioned the Rockingham County Superior Court for an injunction. The plaintiffs who are in the process of constructing a nuclear power plant in Seabrook were thereby attempting to prevent a demonstration against the power plant from occurring on the construction site. The superior court denied the petition without prejudice on July 30, 1976.
On August 20, 1976, the above plaintiffs joined by certain labor unions, -whose members are employed in the construction of the plant, filed a motion to amend and bring forward the July 29, 1976 petition. In that petition, рlaintiffs Properties and Public Service had alleged that certain groups were planning to enter and occupy the described nuclear plant site on August 1, 1976, in sufficient numbers to stop its construction. The amended petition of August 20, 1976, additionally alleged in part that since June 1976, numerous Public Service offices and substation sites in the area of the nuclear plant had been victimized and vandalized and no-trespassing signs on the plant site had been torn down and destroyed. On August 1, 1976, approximately fifty persons, among whom were the defendants, had aproaehed the site via a B & M Railroad right-of-way and conducted themselvеs in such a manner “as to hinder and impede the criminal justice system.”
The amended petition also alleged that on August 5, 1976, at a ground-breaking ceremony on the site, a large group of demonstrators had blocked traffic upon a public way creating a danger to themselves and to persons traveling to and from the site. It was also alleged that the defendants were planning a large rally at about 1:00 p.m. on August 22, 1976, at Hampton Falls Common, and thereafter planned to occupy the site with 200 to 400 people. The goal of all these incidents was to impede the construction of the plant by acts of civil disоbedience, see RSA 635:2, and to clog the court dockets to render the criminal justice system ineffective.
On August 20, 1976, the Superior Court {Bois, J.) granted plaintiffs’ motion to amend and bring forward the prior petition. On the *872 same date the court also granted ex parte plaintiffs’ prayer for a temporary injunction enjoining and restraining the defendants from entering upon the site of the plant without the express permission of the Public Service Company; occupying the site; obstructing the entrance or exit of any person to or from the site; destroying or damaging any property of plaintiffs or of any other person lawfully upon the site; and committing any other act that will obstruct the activities on the site. However, on August 22, 1976, about 200 demonstrators entered the site and were arrested.
On the same day the court was presented affidavits alleging that the defendants, without the express permission of Public Service, intentionally and with knowledge of the above injunction went upon the nuclear plant site and engaged in conduct in violation of the injunction, which constituted a contempt of the court. The defendants were arrested and pleaded not guilty to the charge of contempt when arraigned on August 23,1976.
Between the latter date and the trial, which took place from August 31 to September 3, 1976, defendants made several mоtions, among which were motions for a jury trial, for continuance, for the Trial Justice (Bois, J.) to recuse and disqualify himself, for discovery, and motions by Thomas Lesser, Esq., and Jim Starr, Esq., both from Massachusetts, to withdraw as counsel. All of these motions were denied and defendants excepted. After a hearing all defendants were found guilty. Each was sentenced to the county house of correction for a period of 6 months, of which 3 months was suspended. All exceptions taken by the defendants before, during, or after the trial were reserved and transferred.
I. Evidence That the Injunction Was Violated.
This is a criminal contempt proceeding.
State v. Towle,
The defendants contend that even though they entered the premises, the terms of the injunction were not violated, and therefore the state has not proven its case beyond a reasonable' doubt. The terms of the injunction that are relevant here are those which specifically restrained the defendants from entering the described premises “without the express permission of Properties, Inc. and Public Service Company of New Hampshire,” or occupying the site. The defendants claim that they were given permission to enter the site, the ban on entry was thus waived, and they did not occupy the site as that term was used in the injunction.
The evidence shows that the defendants were among 200 demonstrators who approached the construction sitе by a railroad right-of-way which passed through the enjoined premises. The demonstrators planned to continue walking on the railroad tracks through the construction site until they were arrested for trespass. Before their arrival, a chain was placed by Public Service across the railroad tracks at the point where the tracks entered the construction site. The Boston & Maine Railroad had granted permission to Public Service to exclude people from the railroad tracks on the day of the demonstration. To the left of the demonstrators as they approached the chain was а snow fence running along the boundary of the enjoined premises. Where the snow fence and the chain joined there was an open space large enough for people to move through. The demonstrators were therefore thwarted in their plan to walk along the railroad tracks through the site. Rather than step over the chain and be confronted with police officers who were positioned beyond the chain, the demonstrators, after some discussion, decided to go through the opening between the snow fence and the chain. They entered the enjoined premises, sat down, and wеre later arrested.
The state’s evidence concerning whether permission had been granted came from John Herrin, the construction site manager for Public Service Company of New Hampshire. Herrin was the representative of his company that day and therefore he was the one individual who could grant or deny permission to enter. Herrin testified that he never gave permission to any of the defendants to enter the premises, and told the group of demonstrators over a loud speaker that they were not allowed on the premises. When the demonstrators entered the premises, the police did not
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resist, but instead allowed the demonstrators to enter in order to prevent a confrontation, and kept them in a confined area to facilitate the arrests. We hold that on the evidence before the court, viewed in its entirety, it could be found that the defendants entered the premises without permission.
State v. Breest,
II. Notice and Intent.
In order to find a person guilty of criminal contempt for violating an injunction, that person must have knowledge or notice of the injunction, 43 C.J.S.
Injunctions
§ 261 (1945); F. Wharton, Criminal Law and Procedure § 1348 (R. A. Anderson ed. 1957), and the violation must have been intentional. These two elements are interrelated since it is inconceivable that a person could intentionally violate an injunction without having knowledge or notice of the injunction. Being necessary elements for criminal contempt, they must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.
In re Winship,
The defendants contend that they were nоt given the type of notice demanded by due process.
See Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank and Trust Co.,
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The evidence presented at trial shows that defendants Linsky and Roth had in-hand service, and defendant Robert Cushing, although not in-hand, read a copy of the injunction before the demonstration. Whether the other defendants had knowledge of the injunction is a question of fact, proof of which may be circumstantial.
Walker v. City of Birmingham,
The defendants also press a factual argument upon us that they did not intend to violate the injunction. Whether a defendant has the requisite intent for a crime may be established by circumstantial evidence.
State v. Nelson,
III. The Injunction.
The defendants attempt to attack the validity of the injunction by claiming that the court below had no power and jurisdiction to issue it because it was not shown that there was imminent danger of great and irreparable injury, furthermore that there was an adequate remedy at law, and that equity does not enjoin criminal acts. It is their conclusion that they cannot be found in contempt of an *876 injunction which should not have been issued due to one of these equitable principles.
It is the rule in this state, as it is in most jurisdictions,
see
Plaintiffs’ amended petition states adequate facts for the court’s equity jurisdiction to be invoked. The amended petition alleges a prior instance of trespass on the construction site by the defendants and an intention by the defendants to trespass in the near future. Repetition of trespasses is a common ground for finding the legal remedy to be inadequate. 4 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence § 1357 (5th ed. 1941); 42 Am. Jur. 2d
Injunctions
§§ 143, 149 (1969). “Although equity will not interfere in the case of a trespass which is temporary in its nature and effect, and for which
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the legal remedy of an action at law is adequate, yet if the trespass is a continuous one or if repeated acts of wrong are done or threatened, although each act by itself may not be destructive or cause irreparable injury, and for which if it stood alone an action at law might be an adequate remedy, the entire wrong may be prevented or stopped by injunction, on the ground of preventing a multiplicity of suits and the inadequateness of the legal remedy.”
Ellis v. Blue Mountain Forest Assoc.,
IV. The First Amendment.
The defendants base two issues on the premise that their activity was protected by the first amendment. First, it is their contention that the order in this case was broader than necessary for the protection of interests jeopardized by their trespass. They base this argument on the language in
Carroll v. Princess Anne,
The defendants’ reliance on the first amendment to find protection for their activity is misplaced. The act involved in this case is a trespass on private property. The Supreme Court of the United States at one time held that the first amendment would protect peaceful picketing, which involves elements of both speech and conduct, on privately owned property that was being used as the functional equivalent of a business district.
Amalgamated Food Employees Union Local 590 v. Logan Valley Plaza, Inc.,
V. Continuance and Counsel.
On August 23, 1976, the ten defendants were brought into the Rockingham County Superior Court (Bois, J.) and informed of the charges against them for violating the injunction. The court informed each defendant of his right to counsel. Two Massachusetts attorneys, Starr and Lesser, were present in the courtroom along with two New Hampshire attorneys, Robbins and Kearns. The court allowed the defendants to consult with the attorneys. After the consultation, the court was informed that defendant Ann Carol Riley would be represented by Mr. Kearns. Mr. Kearns also filed an appearance for Brian Cullen on August 30, 1976, the day before the trial was to begin. The other defendants would be represented by the two Massachusetts attorneys, who filed general appearances, and Mr. Robbins, who agreed to represent the nine defendants only at the bail hearing on August 23, 1976. All parties were in *879 formed that another New Hampshire attorney should be retained for the trial if Mr. Robbins decided not to continue his appearance beyond the bail hearing. Just prior to the adjournment that day, Mr. Lesser suggested that an appropriate date for the trial would be August 31, 1976.
Mr. Robbins subsequently withdrew from the case. The day before the trial was to begin, Mr. Starr moved for a continuance on the grounds that local counsel had not been retained and that he had prior commitments for the next two days and was therefore not prepared to proceed. The court waived the local counsel requirement and denied the motion. Mr. Starr objected to this because he was under the impression that local counsel would be required аnd he needed local counsel because he was not sufficiently familiar with New Hampshire law to adequately represent his clients. He then requested that he be allowed to withdraw, which the court denied. The court emphasized the fact that the two Massachusetts attorneys had filed a general appearance and the trial would begin the next morning as scheduled.
On the morning of the trial, Mr. Lesser filed a motion to withdraw' based on the ground that the eight defendants had discharged him the night before because they felt he could not adequately represent them. Mr. Lesser explained to the court that he was not familiar with New Hampshire law and was unprepared to proceed without local counsel. The eight defendants represented by Messrs. Starr and Lesser moved to dismiss them as counsel. The court denied both motions. These eight defendants then requested to proceed pro se. The court allowed them to proceed pro se, with Mr. Lesser as standby counsel.
See Mayberry v. Pennsylvania,
From these facts we must determine whether the defendants were denied due process by the trial court’s failure to grant a continuance. Reviewing the denial of a continuance places an appellate court in a difficult position. The trial judge is in a better position to determine whether there is an actual need for a continuance or if the defense is engaging in dilatory tactics. It is for this reason that the matter of a continuance is within the sound discretion of the trial judge.
Ungar v. Sarafite,
In the present case we do not find such an abuse of discretion by the trial court that the defendants were denied effective assistance of counsel. The trial date was not mandated by the court, but was selected by the attorneys. They had eight days before the trial to prepare the defense. This is not an inadequate period of time when the evidence is fresh and the issues for trial are limited. The action of the trial judge does not present “a myopic insistence upon expeditiousness in the face of a justifiable request for delay . . . .”
Ungar v. Sarafite,
We also do not find error in the cirсumstances surrounding the decision of the eight defendants represented by Mr. Lesser to proceed pro se. A criminal defendant has a right to proceed pro se,
Faretta v. California,
The defendants in this case voluntarily selected the two Massachusetts attorneys to represent them. The defendants did not attempt to dismiss their counsel until the day of the trial. The right to counsel of one’s choice is not unlimited, and a court can compel a defendant to go to trial with present counsel if the court determines, within its sound discretion, that the objections to counsel are dilatory tactics or otherwise unwarranted.
Maynard v. Meachum,
Both attorneys Lesser and Starr filed several motions before trial on behalf of their clients, none of which appears from the record to have been denied for failure to conform to New Hampshire procedural requirements. Most, if not all, the federal constitutional issues raised by the defendants would most likely be treated similarly under New Hampshire or Massachusetts practice. The principal issue of whether the ten defendants entered the site in violation of the court injunction was common to all of them. Attorney Kearns, New Hampshire counsel who represented two of the defendants, was interested in presenting in defense of his clients matters which would most likely benefit all ten defendants. All defendants were found guilty. Given the background of the defendants as revealed by the record, as well as the totality of all the circumstances, we cannot hold as a matter of law that the defendants were forced to proceed with attorneys who could not serve them competently. We further hold that under the circumstances the defendants were capable and intelligently and voluntarily did waive their right to counsel and were not denied due process.
VI. Jury Trial.
It is defendants’ contention that they were entitled tо a jury trial. The trial judge made it clear from the beginning of the case that he would not impose a sentence greater than six months if they were found guilty. The defendants were therefore not entitled to a jury trial either under the law of this state, State v. Matthews,
The defendants’ claim that by charging them with criminal contempt they were automatically “shorn of their jury trial right” and the state therefore has created “two classes of crimes,
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those where the right to a jury trial is guaranteed, and another comprised essentially of contempt cases, where the right is denied.” The defendants were not automatically “shorn” of their jury triаl right. A right to jury trial does not exist in New Hampshire criminal contempt cases, though it does in prosecutions for other crimes.
State v. Matthews, supra
at 456.
But see Bloom v. Illinois,
VII. Motion to Recuse.
Defendants maintain that the trial court erred in refusing to disqualify itself. They base their contention mainly on (1) N.H. Const, pt. I, art. 35 which provides in part as follows: “It is the right of every citizen to be tried by judges as impartial as the lot of humanity will admit;” (2) Canon 3 C(l) of the Code of Judicial Conduct (ABA 1972) adopted by this court as Rule 25, Canon 3 C(l), which provides that a “judge should disqualify himself in a proceeding in which his impartiality might reasonably be questioned . . . .” RSA 490: App. R. 25 C(l) (Supp. 1975), (3) General principles of due process.
See Connally v. Georgia,
Many of the statements relied on by defendants to show prejudice were made at the arraignment. However, the record also contains other statements by the court to the effect that it was not prejudging the guilt of the defendants and would reach a verdict
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on the evidence. The defendants claim that an impartial judge does not need to make such statements and therefore a disclaimer of prejudgment shows bias. Adherence to this argument would produce a somewhat novel rule of law. “The characterization of the petitioner’s conduct as contemptuous, disorderly, and malingering was at most a declaration of a charge against the petitioner, based on the judge’s observations, which, without more, was not a constitutionally disqualifying prejudgment of guilt, just as issuance of a show-cause order in any criminal case, based on information brought to the attention of the judge, is not ... a prejudgment of guilt.”
Ungar v. Sarafite,
The fact that the judge had personal knowledge of disputed evidentiary facts does not necessarily constitute bias. Some of this knowledge was gathered at a meeting between the court and defendants’ counsel Lesser just before this incident on August 22, 1976. The judge also candidly admitted that he had gathered information from accounts in newspapers and on the radio. The issues upon which the defendants’ claim that the judge should have been available as a witness most likely would not have been material at the trial or evidence thereon could be obtained from other sources.
The third basis of defendants’ claim is that the trial judge became personally embroiled and acted as a prosecutor. This is the type of bias usually engendered in a prior confrontation between the judge and the defendants which causes a personal sting on the court.
Mayberry v. Pennsylvania,
VIII. Right to Call Witnesses.
The defendants argue that they were denied the right to call witnesses in their behalf because the trial court refused to grant immunity to, or seal the testimony of, defense witnesses who invoked the fifth amendment. Defendants cite no authority for their position that an order to testify coupled with an offer *884 to seal the testimony would override one’s fifth amendment rights. In effect, defendants ask us to fashion a judicial form of immunity. This we will not do.
Under the immunity presently available, a trial court does not have the power to grant immunity on its own, or to require the government to seek immunity for defense witnesses. RSA 516:34. “Finally, there is no merit to the argument that a defendant has a constitutional right to have immunity conferred upon a defense witness who exercises his privilege against self-incrimination.”
United States v. Ramsey,
IX. Sentences.
The trial court in this case sentenced all ten defendants to the Rockingham County House of Correction for a period of six months, three months suspended. The defendants were released pending appeal.
State v. Riley,
The defendants were all found guilty of the same offense. We held in
State v. Streeter,
Exceptions overruled.
