The defendant, Max Wilson, appeals his convictions, following a jury trial in Superior Court (Smukler, J.), on four counts of violating RSA 632-A:10 (2016), which prohibits persons convicted of certain offenses from providing child care services. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
The jury could have found the following facts. The defendant is a New Hampshire registered sex offender. At trial, the State and the defendant stipulated that the defendant had been convicted of a sexual assault, which is a qualifying conviction under RSA 632-A:10, I. He registered at least seven times between October 4, 2012, and December 27, 2013, each time acknowledging that he could not “undertake employment or volunteer service involving the care, instruction or guidance of minor children.” (Quotation omitted.)
Around 2012, the defendant moved in with a family with whom the victim’s parents were friends. The victim was a friend of one of that family’s children and became familiar with the defendant through spending time at their home. In addition, the victim’s father attended Bible studies that the defendant taught at that family’s home. The victim’s father testified that the defendant “had mentioned that he had counseled boys in the past from church activities,” and, in particular, had spoken of “previous encounters where he counseled troubled youngsters.”
In January 2014, the victim was fourteen years old. The 2013 holiday season had been difficult, following the death of the victim’s grandfather earlier in the year. When the victim’s mother resumed homeschooling her children after the holiday break, she found the victim to be challenging and disruptive. The victim’s parents discussed having the defendant help with the victim because he respected and looked up to the defendant.
The victim’s father testified that he called the defendant on January 6, “and asked him if he would help [the victim] out and would do some [Bible] devotions with [the victim] and possibly help him with his schooling.” He *759 also “asked that they would be involved in different activities that would teach [his] boy manhood type principles.”
On the morning of January 7, the defendant and the victim discussed the Bible over the telephone. Later that day, the defendant went to the victim’s house in Hopkinton. They discussed ideas for woodworking projects and then the defendant drove the victim to Concord, where they went to a restaurant and worked on homework in the café area of a bookstore. They returned home and worked on models in the victim’s room, after which the defendant stayed for dinner with the victim’s family.
The victim’s father testified that during the week following January 7, the victim “start[ed] to withdraw from . . . family activities.” On January 9, the victim’s father again called the defendant and shared his concern that the victim was “drifting away.” He indicated that he and the victim’s mother “wanted to make sure that [the victim] was being put back and pushed towards his parents as the authority figures in his life.”
On January 10, the defendant called the victim and again discussed the Bible with him over the telephone. The defendant later went to the victim’s house and worked on models with the victim in his room. That day, the defendant also took the victim shopping in Concord.
Also on January 10, the victim’s mother, according to her testimony, “had an uneasiness that [she] could not put [her] finger on” regarding the defendant’s relationship with the victim and shared her concern with her two older daughters. One of the daughters searched the defendant’s background on her computer and discovered that he is a registered sex offender. The victim’s father then terminated the defendant’s contact with the victim.
The defendant was indicted on four counts of violating RSA 632-A:10, which provides, in pertinent part:
A person is guilty of a class A felony if, having been convicted in this or any other jurisdiction of any felonious offense involving child pornography, or of a felonious physical assault on a minor, or of any sexual assault, he knowingly undertakes employment or volunteer service involving the care, instruction or guidance of minor children, including, but not limited to, service as a teacher, a coach, or worker of any type in child athletics, a day care worker, a boy or girl scout master or leader or worker, a summer camp counselor or worker of any type, a guidance counselor, or a school administrator of any type.
RSA 632-A: 10, I (emphasis added). The jury returned a guilty verdict on each felony count. The court imposed the following sentences: on the first *760 conviction, seven-and-one-half to fifteen years of imprisonment; on each of the second, third, and fourth convictions, a period of incarceration to run consecutively to the sentence on the preceding conviction. In addition, the record establishes that the defendant pleaded guilty to charges of sexually assaulting the victim while volunteering to provide him care, instruction or guidance, although it is unclear whether there were two or three such charges and pleas.
On appeal, the defendant argues that the trial court erred in: (1) denying his motion to dismiss for insufficient evidence; (2) denying his motion to dismiss on grounds that “RSA 632-A:10, I, is void for vagueness, either facially or as applied”; and (3) “entering multiple convictions or imposing multiple punishments.” The defendant advanced a fourth issue in an assented-to motion to add issues, which we granted; however, because the defendant failed to brief that issue, we deem it waived.
See State v. Blackmer,
I. Sufficiency of the Evidence
We first address the defendant’s sufficiency of the evidence argument. “A challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence raises a claim of legal error; therefore, our standard of review is
de novo’.’ State v. Collyns,
The defendant’s insufficiency argument is based upon his interpretation of the phrase “volunteer service” in RSA 632-A:10, I, as “encompassing] only formal services performed for a volunteer organization.” The State conceded at trial that it had produced no evidence that the services the defendant undertook to provide in alleged violation of RSA 632-A:10, I, were provided through or for an organization. Accordingly, the claim of error on appeal turns upon an issue of statutory interpretation.
See Collyns,
In matters of statutory interpretation, we are the final arbiter of the intent of the legislature as expressed in the words of a statute considered as a whole. We construe provisions of the Criminal Code according to the fair import of their terms and to promote justice. We first look to the language of the statute itself, and, if possible, construe that language according to its plain and ordi *761 nary meaning. We interpret legislative intent from the statute as written and will not consider what the legislature might have said or add language that the legislature did not see fit to include. We must give effect to all words in a statute, and presume that the legislature did not enact superfluous or redundant words. Finally, we interpret a statute in the context of the overall statutory scheme and not in isolation.
Id. (quotations and citations omitted).
The defendant argues that the plain and ordinary meaning of “volunteer service” does not encompass all unpaid activity, but, rather, “is limited to activity provided through an organization.” He contends that engaging in any unpaid activity may be described as “volunteering,” but that “volunteer service” connotes something more; namely, acting through an organization. He asserts that “this intuitive, common-sense understanding of the word ‘volunteer’ is confirmed by the legislature’s definition of the word in two other statutes” and “is reflected in statutes outside of New Hampshire as well.”
We are not persuaded. First, the term “volunteer” in RSA 632-A:10, I, modifies the term “service.” Thus, definitions of the term “volunteer,” standing alone, are inapposite. Additionally, while “[i]t is a general rule,” in construing our own statutes, that “different statutes relative to the same subject[ ] are to be construed together,”
Sloan v. Bryant,
The defendant next relies upon three canons of statutory construction to support his interpretation. The first is the principle of
ejusdem, generis,
which we have stated “provides that, where specific words in a statute follow general ones, the general words are construed to embrace only objects similar in nature to those enumerated by the specific words.”
State v. Meaney,
The State questions our expression of the
ejusdem generis
principle in
Meaney
and similar cases, observing that the doctrine has been “traditionally understood and applied” in the opposite presentation; that is, where general words follow a specific enumeration.
See, e.g., In the Matter of
*762
Preston and Preston,
The defendant asserts that all of the specific examples of persons included within the prohibition of RSA 632-A:10, I, are “persons who engage in activity either (a) for pay, or (b) as . . . volunteers] for an organization.” He notes that “[t]he statute even lists several types of organizations!:] the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts, ‘a summer camp’ and ‘a school.’ ” He then argues that, “[u]nder the principle of ejusdem generis, this Court should thus construe ‘volunteer service’ as encompassing only activity that is similar to the enumerated roles, specifically activity that is either (a) paid or (b) conducted through an organization.”
We reject the premise that the relevant similarity of the services specifically enumerated in RSA 632-A:10, I, is that the services describe “persons who engage in activity either (a) for pay, or (b) as .. . volunteers] for an organization.”
The basis of the ejusdem generis rule is that the mention of one thing followed by a general descriptive term gives color and meaning to the class covered by the latter and limits that class to the things having a likeness to the specified thing. The likeness contemplated by the rule, however, is as to characteristics material to the purpose of the classificat ion.
State v. New Hampshire Gas & Electric Co.,
The legislature stated the purpose of RSA 632-A: 10 in the enacting legislation:
The general court recognizes that those who seek to exploit and abuse children often attempt to create opportunities for themselves to do so by seeking to perform services of one type or another in a field involving the care or training of children. The public policy of the state demands that these people be denied such opportunities.
Laws 1988, 257:1;
see Flood Control Dist. v. Paloma Inv. Ltd.,
Thus, even assuming that the services listed in RSA 630-A:10, I,
also
happen to share the characteristic of being provided through organizations, we do not find that characteristic to be “material to the purpose of the classification” in the statute.
New Hampshire Gas & Electric Co.,
The defendant next argues that the trial court’s interpretation violates the interpretive canon that the “legislature is not presumed to
*765
waste words or enact redundant provisions and whenever possible, every word of a statute should be given effect.”
In re Search Warrant (Med. Records of C.T.),
We explain our reasoning by reference to an argument the defendant makes elsewhere in his brief. The defendant asserts that the “prohibition in RSA 632-A:10, I, is broad” and notes, “for instance, [that it] does not exclude from its reach the parent of the child who is provided care, instruction or guidance.” He then argues that a parent with a qualifying conviction “would be legally required to limit the care, instruction and guidance to that required under their [parental] duty of care” because “[a]ny care, instruction or guidance beyond that legally required [of the parent] would constitute ‘volunteer service’ and thus would run afoul of the statute.”
The statute, however, cannot be as broadly interpreted as the defendant asserts, in part, because the very language he contends is superfluous prevents it from being so interpreted. Continuing with the defendant’s parent-child example, we note that only a strained and unnatural construction of “volunteer service,” RSA 632-A:10, I, would permit that term to describe a parent’s provision of care, instruction, or guidance to his own child.
[P]arents generally have the right, coupled with the high duty, to recognize and prepare their children for additional obligations. The law’s concept of the family rests on a presumption that parents possess what a child lacks in maturity, experience, and capacity for judgment required for making life’s difficult decisions. More important, historically it has recognized that natural bonds of affection lead parents to act in the best interests of their children.
Troxel v. Granville,
The defendant next contends that “this Court will not interpret a statute to create absurd results.” The defendant begins with the premise, noted above, that the “prohibition in RSA 632-A:10, I, is broad,” and he then posits a number of hypothetical examples to which application of the trial court’s interpretation of RSA 632-A:10, I, would lead, in the defendant’s view, to absurd results. The defendant concludes that “the plain language of the phrase ‘volunteer service’ as used in RSA 632-A: 10, I, includes only activity that is volunteered through an organization.” We disagree.
“It is a fundamental principle of statutory construction that whenever possible, a statute will not be construed so as to lead to absurd consequences. Thus, as between a reasonable and unreasonable meaning of the language used, the reasonable meaning is to be adopted.”
Appeal of Marti,
The defendant appears to suggest that, unless the term “volunteer service” is construed to apply only to services provided through an organization, the statute could conceivably criminalize every interaction between a person with a qualified conviction and a child. We disagree. As indicated by the foregoing discussion of the defendant’s “ ‘service’ by parents” argument, other terms in the statute act to limit such an application. Thus, it is by no means either an obvious or foregone conclusion that the statute would apply to innocuous, chance encounters between a person with a qualifying conviction and a child. We note that, although the defendant bases his argument upon the premise that the “prohibition in *767 RSA 632-A:10,1, is broad,” he has not brought a constitutional overbreadth challenge and does not claim to fall within any of the hypothetical scenarios that he asserts would be absurd. We leave for another day, and a properly brought challenge, the question of whether the statute is in any respect unconstitutionally overbroad. Accordingly, we reject the defendant’s absurd results argument.
The defendant further contends that: (1) “the legislative history [of RSA 632-A:10] demonstrates that the legislature intended the statute to apply only to either (a) employment, or (b) unpaid activity provided through an organization”; and (2) we should apply the rule of lenity to restrict the meaning of the term “volunteer service” to service through an organization. The applicability of both theories, however, is contingent upon the ambiguity of the statute in question.
See ATV Watch v. N.H. Dep’t of Transp.,
For the foregoing reasons, we reject the defendant’s interpretation limiting “volunteer service” under RSA 632-A:10, I, to service provided through an organization. Because the statutory construction premise underlying the defendant’s sufficiency of the evidence challenge fails, we conclude that he has failed to establish “that no rational trier of fact, viewing all of the evidence and all reasonable inferences from it in the light most favorable to the State, could have found guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Fandozzi,
II. Vagueness
The defendant next argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss based upon his assertion that RSA 632-A:10,1, is void for vagueness under the State and Federal Constitutions. The constitutionality of a statute is a question of law, which we review
de novo. State v. Lamarche,
“A party challenging a statute as void for vagueness bears a heavy burden of proof in view of the strong presumption favoring a statute’s constitutionality.”
State v. White,
“[W]e will not review any issue that the defendant did not raise before the trial court.”
Blackmer,
At the close of the State’s case, the defendant moved to dismiss, and submitted to the court a memorandum of law “regarding the scope of RSA 632-A:10.” He set forth the same proposed interpretation urged here — that the term “volunteer services” means only services through an organization — and asserted both that “a broader construction of the term . . . would render the statute void for vagueness, and [that] the court must favor a constitutional limiting construction if it may reasonably do so.” In the memorandum, he further stated that “[t]he phrase ‘volunteer service’ saves the statute from vagueness by limiting the statute’s scope to formal volunteering for an organization. Without that limitation, the statute makes any sex offender a target for arrest if he or she so much as talks to a child.” As examples of circumstances inviting such targeting, the defendant offered: “Helping a child cross the street is care of a minor child. Answering a question at a retail establishment is instruction. Giving directions is guidance.”
On appeal, the defendant appears to contend that these examples demonstrate a facial challenge to the statute. We find the examples ambiguous at best, however, particularly in light of other portions of the defendant’s memorandum. For instance, he noted that “the New Hampshire Supreme Court entertains facial challenges to a statute only where the statute implicates a fundamental right,” yet he made no assertion that any fundamental right is implicated by the statute at issue.
The defendant also argues that “the [trial] court’s order demonstrates that it considered and rejected [his] facial vagueness challenge.” Specifically, he points to the following language in the order: “Unless a statute implicates a fundamental right, a defendant can only launch a vagueness *769 attack as the statute is applied to him.... RSA 632-A:10 does not implicate a fundamental right. Thus, the defendant can only prevail on his vagueness claim as the statute applies to him.”
We decline to read the trial court’s order in the manner urged by the defendant. An equally plausible interpretation is that the trial court took the defendant’s failure to allege an implicated fundamental right as a concession that none existed. Further indication that the trial court did not consider a facial challenge is provided by the defendant’s own declarations that his void for vagueness challenge was as applied, not facial. In arguing the motion to dismiss, the defendant’s counsel stated: “And finally, I make a void — on as applied, void for vagueness challenge . . . .” Even if this statement, taken alone, could be read consistently with the defendant’s assertion that he also raised a facial challenge, that interpretation is foreclosed by counsel’s statement that “[t]his statute has been construed by one Superior Court Judge, and that was a facial challenge to the statute, ■which we are not making.” (Emphasis added.)
The defendant now asserts that his counsel was not “discussing his constitutional vagueness challenge” when he made the second quoted statement, and, therefore, it “do[es] not indicate that [he] waived his facial vagueness challenge.” We are not persuaded. Although the defendant attempts on appeal to distinguish his counsel’s statutory interpretation argument from his constitutional argument, we are unable to conclude from the record that the trial court could not have reasonably understood the defendant to be disclaiming a facial challenge. The defendant will not now be heard to complain “of the fact that the court ruled consistently with defense counsel’s representations at” trial.
State v. Gay,
The defendant nevertheless urges that, even if he failed to preserve a facial challenge, we “should still address it under the exception to the preservation requirement set forth in
State v. Brown,
We decline to apply an “exception” to the preservation rule here. We note that although we have described
Nelson,
as “recognizing] a limited exception to the preservation rule,”
Brown,
Because we hold that the defendant failed to preserve his argument that RSA 632-A: 10, I, is unconstitutionally vague on its face, we consider only his as-applied challenge. We first address the defendant’s claim under the State Constitution and rely upon federal law only to aid our analysis.
State v. Ball,
“A statute can be impermissibly vague for either of two independent reasons: (1) it fails to provide people of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to understand the conduct it prohibits; or (2) it authorizes or even encourages arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.”
State v. Hynes,
The defendant next contends that “[allowing the police, the prosecutor or the jury to determine whether [the defendant’s] activity constitutes ‘volunteer service’ would only authorize or encourage discriminatory enforcement of the statute.” We find instructive the approach set forth by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in Farrell. Applying that *771 approach here, the defendant’s claim that RSA 632-A:10, I, “authorizes or even encourages arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement,” id. at 200, will fail if we conclude either:
(1) that [the] statute as a general matter provides sufficiently clear standards to eliminate the risk of arbitrary enforcement or (2) that, even in the absence of such standards, the conduct at issue falls within the core of the statute’s prohibition, so that the enforcement before the court was not the result of the unfettered latitude that law enforcement officers and factfinders might have in other, hypothetical applications of the statute.
Farrell,
We need not address the first prong because we conclude that the defendant’s conduct “falls within the core of the statute’s prohibition.”
Id.
The defendant engaged in Bible devotions with the victim, helped him with his homework, helped him build models, and took him on excursions away from his home unaccompanied by his parents — all activities that we have concluded above plainly “involv[ed] the care, instruction or guidance of [a] minor child[ ].” RSA 632-A: 10,1. These activities also plainly implicated the policy concerns underlying the enactment of RSA 632-A:10, I. As the trial court noted, in companion informations to the charges here at issue, “the defendant was accused of sexually assaulting [the victim] . . . while he was volunteering to provide care, instruction or guidance.” The defendant pleaded guilty to those charges. We conclude that the defendant’s conduct “falls so squarely in the core of what is prohibited by the law that there is no substantial concern about arbitrary enforcement because no reasonable enforcing officer could doubt the law’s application in the circumstances.”
Farrell,
The Federal Constitution offers the defendant no greater protection than does the State Constitution under these circumstances.
See Hynes,
III. Double Jeopardy
Finally, the defendant argues that the trial court “erred by entering multiple convictions or imposing multiple punishments” in violation of the double jeopardy provisions of the State and Federal Constitutions.
See
*772
N.H. Const. pt. I, art. 16; U.S. Const. amends. V, XIV. “The issue of double jeopardy presents a question of constitutional law, which we review
de novo.” State v. Carr,
The trial court rejected the defendant’s double jeopardy claim both on procedural grounds and on the merits. The court first ruled that “[b]y failing to raise this argument at the appropriate stage of litigation and delaying the issue until well after the verdicts, the defendant has effectively waived his double jeopardy rights.” It then determined, on the merits, that “[t]he defendant undertook volunteer services with respect to the victim on separate dates and in separate locations, each of which constitutes a separate offense under the plain language of the statute.” The defendant challenges both rulings.
For ease of analysis, we begin by considering the double jeopardy claim on the merits. This court and the United States Supreme Court have said that the double jeopardy clauses of our respective constitutions provide three double jeopardy protections: (1) protection against subsequent prosecution for the same offense after acquittal; (2) protection against subsequent prosecution for the same offense after conviction; and (3) protection against multiple punishments for the same offense.
See id.; Ohio v. Johnson,
Multiple punishment cases come in two varieties. First, there are the so-called “double-description” cases, in which the issue is whether two statutes describe two separate offenses or are merely different descriptions of the same offense. Second, there are “unit of prosecution” cases in which the problem is not that the same course of conduct is proscribed by more than one statute but that a defendant’s continuing course of conduct is fragmented into more than one violation of a single statutory provision.
State v. Ramsey,
Ordinarily, we would first address the defendant’s claim under the State Constitution.
Ball,
“[O]ur review of the defendant’s double jeopardy claim under the United States Constitution requires us to consider the legislature’s articulated intent.”
State v. Stratton,
The defendant argues that “[u]nder the plain language of [RSA 682-A:10, I], ‘undertaking]’ is the unit of prosecution,” and that his “agreement to help [the victim] with Bible devotions and school work and to counsel [the victim] and teach him ‘manhood type principles’ was a single ‘undertaking.’ ” He contends that “even if an individual provides multiple acts of care, instruction or guidance, and even if those acts take place over a period of time and in different towns, as long as they take place pursuant to a single ‘undertaking]’ of ‘employment or volunteer service,’ they constitute a single offense.”
*774 The State, on the other hand, argues that “[t]he appropriate unit of prosecution should be each separate instance in which the defendant engaged in the care, instruction, or guidance of the victim.” Although the State also considers “undertakes” to be “[t]he operative word” in RSA 632-A:10, I,” it argues that “[t]he legislature’s use of the word ‘undertakes’ . . . should be viewed in the context of surrounding statutory text.” Specifically, the State asserts that “[t]he direct object of ‘undertakes’ is ‘volunteer service,’ which is further described by the object complements ‘care, instruction or guidance.’ Use of the disjunctive conjunction ‘or’ signals that the legislature is prohibiting participation in three distinct fields of volunteer service.” The State concludes that “[t]he appropriate unit of prosecution should be each separate instance in which the defendant engaged in the care, instruction, or guidance of the victim.”
The State’s argument suggests that the term “undertakes” essentially means “performs” or “provides,” so that the unit of prosecution is each performance or provision of any “service involving the care, instruction or guidance of minor children,” RSA 632-A: 10,1. The plain meaning of “undertakes,” however, contravenes the State’s assertion. The dictionary definition of “undertake” includes such phrases as “to take in hand,” “enter upon,” “set about,” “to take upon oneself solemnly or expressly,” and “put oneself under obligation to perform.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 2491 (unabridged ed. 2002). Thus, we conclude that the term, as used in RSA 632-A: 10, I, connotes an arrangement or placement of oneself in a position to provide or perform the prohibited services. Said another way, the act criminalized by the statute is not the provision of “service involving the care, instruction or guidance of minor children,” RSA 632-A: 10, I, but, rather, the making of an arrangement, or the placing of oneself in a position, to do so. This conclusion is reinforced by the statute’s stated purpose of thwarting the attempts of “those who seek to exploit and abuse children ... to create opportunities for themselves to do so.” Laws 1988, 257:1 (emphasis added). Accordingly, we conclude that, as applicable to this case, the unit of prosecution intended by the legislature is each separate arrangement made for the provision or performance of “service involving the care, instruction or guidance of minor children.” RSA 632-A: 10, I.
Having so construed the statute, we agree with the defendant that his “agreement to help [the victim] with Bible devotions and school work and to counsel [the victim] and teach him ‘manhood type principles’ was a single ‘undertaking.’ ” The victim’s father testified that following the difficult 2013 holiday season, he and the victim’s mother “were searching for some way to help [the victim] out” including “getting some kind of *775 biblical counsel.” The father testified that when he and his wife “attended the Bible studies with [the defendant], we had thought that he was a good resource as far as getting some good biblical counsel for our boy.” The defendant, according to the father’s testimony, “had mentioned that he had counseled boys in the past from church activities,” and in particular, had “spoke [n] of previous encounters where he counseled troubled youngsters.” The victim’s father testified that he called the defendant on January 6, “and asked him if he would help [the victim] out” by doing Bible devotions with him, possibly helping him with his schooling, and “helping] [him] out with counseling.” Thus, the evidence showed that the defendant portrayed himself as a teacher of Bible studies with experience in counseling children, and that he made an arrangement with the victim’s parents to provide those services to their child. We conclude, therefore, that an “undertaking]” within the meaning of RSA 632-A:10, I, resulted from the father’s telephone call with the defendant on January 6.
We also conclude that this was a single “undertaking],” RSA 632-A: 10,1, that encompassed all of the defendant’s volunteer service related to the victim from January 6 through January 10. We agree with the defendant that the father’s contact with him on January 9 did “not [constitute] a separate undertaking.” The father testified that in a telephone call to the defendant on January 9, he “voiced [his] concern” that the victim was withdrawing from the family and conveyed to the defendant that he and the victim’s mother “wanted to make sure that [the victim] was being put back and pushed towards his parents as the authority figures in his life.” According to the father’s testimony, the defendant “agreed wholeheartedly that he
was doing
everything he could do [to] put [the victim] back, put him towards his parents as the authority figures in his life.” (Emphasis added.) We conclude that this communication can best be seen as ongoing feedback regarding an established arrangement and did not constitute a new arrangement or “undertaking]” pursuant to RSA 632-A: 10,1. Although the victim’s father indicated that he wanted a certain aspect of the agreed-upon services emphasized or prioritized over others, the nature and scope of the arrangement did not change so as to create a new, separate “undertaking].” RSA 632-A: 10, I. Because the evidence at trial established only one “undertaking],” the defendant’s four separate convictions, and the sentences therefor, constitute multiple punishments for the same offense in violation of the double jeopardy provision of the Federal Constitution.
See Ohio v. Johnson,
We now turn to the dismissal of the defendant’s double jeopardy claim on procedural grounds. On November 20, 2014, the defendant filed a “double jeopardy [objection] to multiple convictions.” (Bolding, underlining and capitalization omitted.) The trial court treated this objection — and we *776 refer to it likewise — as a “motion to dismiss three of his four convictions.” The trial court ruled that the defendant “effectively waived his double jeopardy rights” by failing to raise them “at the appropriate stage of litigation.” On appeal, the defendant asserts that his double jeopardy challenge was timely brought.
In addressing the defendant’s double jeopardy claim on the merits, we noted that it falls under the category of so-called “ ‘unit of prosecution’ cases[,] in which the problem is not that the same course of conduct is proscribed by more than one statute but that a defendant’s continuing course of conduct is fragmented into more than one violation of a single statutory provision.”
Ramsey,
“Multiplicity occurs when a single crime is separated into two or more indictments.”
United States v. Carrasco,
The trial court did not explicitly cite the authority upon which it based its untimeliness ruling. Nevertheless, the court’s narrative and analysis indicate that the order was premised upon former Superior Court Criminal Rule 98(G), governing pretrial motions.
See
Super. Ct. Crim. R. 98(G) (repealed eff. Mar. 1, 2016). Specifically, the court’s order states that the defendant’s counsel “failed to disclose the anticipated motion at the pretrial conference.” In addition, the only “unit of prosecution” multiplicity case cited in support of the court’s untimeliness ruling,
United States v. Herzog,
Former Superior Court Criminal Rule 98(G) provided:
The parties shall file all pretrial motions other than discovery related motions, including but not limited to motions to dismiss, motions to suppress and motions to sever charges or defendants, not more than sixty (60) calendar days after entry of a plea of not guilty or within such other time in advance of trial as the Court may order for good cause shown or may provide for in a pretrial scheduling order.
Super. Ct. Crim. R. 98(G). We have treated a motion challenging an alleged defect in an indictment as being subject to a comparable prior rule.
See State v. Ortiz,
Rule 12(b)(3) provides that certain specified “defenses, objections, and requests must be raised by pretrial motion if the basis for the motion is then reasonably available and the motion can be determined without a trial on the merits.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 12(b)(3). Explicitly included in the specified list is “a defect in the indictment or information, including . . . charging the same offense in more than one count (multiplicity).” Fed. R. Crim. P. 12(b)(3)(B).
*778
Before the explicit reference to multiplicity was added to Rule 12(b)(8)(B) in the 2014 amendments to Rule 12,
see
Fed. R. Crim. P. 12(b)(8) advisory committee note (2014), federal courts grappled with whether failure to raise a multiplicity challenge in a pretrial motion waived that claim with respect to either the convictions, the sentences, or both.
See, e.g., United States v. Griffin,
The first line of cases, exemplified by
United States v. Rosenbarger,
The argument that one waives his right to object to the imposition of multiple sentences by his failure to object to the multiplicitous nature of an indictment is a non sequitur. Rule 12 applies only to objections with regard to the error in the indictment itself; the effect of Rule 12 is that dismissal of a multiplicitous indictment is not required; however, if sentences are imposed on each count of that multiplicitous indictment the defendant is not forced to serve the erroneous sentence because of any waiver.
Id. at 721-22. The court noted that “Rule 85 provides that in such a case the defendant may move that his sentence be corrected.” Id. at 722 (referencing former Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 85); see Fed. R. Crim. P. 35, 18 U.S.C. Appendix-Rules of Criminal Procedure at 1461 (1976) (amended 1979, 1988, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1991, 1998, 2002, 2004, 2007, 2009). The court chose, however, to correct the sentence in the case then before it, reasoning:
[SJince the defect in the sentence is apparent from the record, it is proper for this Court to resolve the issue on direct appeal rather than to wait for defendant to file a Rule 35 motion as it is more *779 appropriate, whenever possible, to correct errors reachable by the appeal rather than remit the parties to a new collateral proceeding.
Rosenbarger,
In the second line of cases, courts appear to recognize, at least implicitly, that because the indictment, conviction, and sentence for an offense are derivatively related, so too are any multiplicity problems associated with them; in other words, multiplicitous sentences necessarily result from multiplicitous convictions, which, in turn, result from multiplicitous indictments. Cf.
Brown v. State,
Even after the 2014 amendments to Rule 12, the reasoning embodied in
Harris
has been read into Rule 12(b)(3).
See United States v. Anderson,
Under the facts of this case, the defendant could potentially prevail under the reasoning of either
Rosenbarger
or
Harris.
We decline, however, to apply the
Rosenbarger
approach in this case. Although New Hampshire has a procedural rule somewhat analogous to former Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 35,
see
N.H. R. Crim. P 29(i) (providing court has discretion to correct an illegal sentence), we have not yet interpreted it. Furthermore, our case law dealing with challenges to illegal sentences is relatively sparse.
See, e.g., State v. Kinne,
By contrast, the trial court’s ruling, and the defendant’s challenge to it, readily lend themselves to analysis under the
Harris
approach. In particular, the defendant argues that his double jeopardy “challenge only became ripe when he faced the prospect of multiple convictions.” Thus, his argument at least touches upon the valid observation that “multiplicity problems may appear in various forms and may not be apparent until after the government presents evidence at trial.”
Griffin,
*781
Although former Superior Court Criminal Rule 98(G) did not contain limiting language similar to the federal rule’s requirements that the motion’s basis be “then reasonably available” and that “the motion can be determined without a trial on the merits,” Fed. R. Crim. R 12(b)(8), we conclude that similar purposes underlying the rules allow us to interpret former Superior Court Criminal Rule 98(G) in light of the
Harris
approach to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 12(b)(8). Our previous rules of criminal procedure lacked an explicit statement of purpose to help guide our interpretation; nevertheless, they were undoubtedly intended to serve purposes similar to those underlying criminal rules in other jurisdictions, such as, “to provide for orderly pretrial procedure, mandating fair notice and an opportunity to respond.”
State v. Baliban,
No. 1 CA-CR 08-0263,
*782 The defendant here was charged in four separate indictments. The first charged, in relevant part, that “[o]n or about the 7th of January, 2014 at Hopkinton, New Hampshire,” the defendant “commit[ted] the crime of prohibition from child care services contrary to RSA 632-A:10,” in that:
1. [The defendant] did engage in volunteer service involving the care, instruction or guidance of a minor child, [specifying the victim’s initials and date of birth];
2. [The defendant] is prohibited from said acts, having been previously convicted of an offense involving sexual assault;
3. [The defendant] committed said acts knowingly.
(Italics, bolding, and capitalization omitted.) The other three indictments were identical except for the date and location of the offense.
It is theoretically possible that a set of facts could exist such that separate undertakings in violation of RSA 632-A:10, I, could be proved on each of the dates and in each of the locations alleged in the four indictments. Thus, we conclude that the multiplicitous nature of the charges was not apparent on the face of the indictments, and, therefore, the defendant’s motion was not untimely under former Rule 98(G) as we have interpreted it herein. Accordingly, untimeliness cannot serve as an alternative basis for the denial of the defendant’s double jeopardy motion, which, we concluded above, was meritorious.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s denial of the defendant’s motion to dismiss for insufficient evidence and on the alternative ground that RSA 632-A: 10, I, is unconstitutionally vague, reverse its order on the defendant’s double jeopardy motion, and remand to the trial court with instructions to vacate three of the defendant’s convictions and resulting sentences.
Affirmed in part; reversed in part; and remanded.
