Defendant Edward Nichols appeals his conviction of disorderly conduct in violation of 13 VS.A. § 1026. We affirm.
First, defendant contends that surplus-age in the information permitted conviction of a crime not authorized by the Legislature, a claim made for the first time on appeal. A defendant who fails to object to an information before trial waives all objections except those that challenge the trial court’s jurisdiction or allege that the information failed to charge an offense. VR.Cr.E 12(b)(2). Any nonjurisdictional challenges to the information will be reviewed only for plain error. VR.Cr.E 52(b). An error is plain only in rare and extraordinary cases where it so affects the substantial rights
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of the defendant that it must be noticed despite lack of preservation.
State v. Roy,
A person may not be convicted of a crime that has not been authorized by the Legislature. See
State v. Kreth,
Defendant’s alleged behavior was contained within the statutory definition of disorderly conduct and was proscribed by 13 VS.A. § 1026. The use of conjunctive language in the information, requiring the State to prove two elements instead of one, did not disadvantage defendant. Defendant has not shown that the alleged error in the information was one of substance, or that the surplusage amounted to plain error. See generally 1 C. Wright, Federal Practice and Procedure § 127, at 424 (2d ed. 1982) (“surplusage is not fatal to the validity of an indictment”).
Next, defendant argues that surplus-age in the jury instructions permitted the jury to convict him of abusive language without finding that the language rose to the level of “fighting words.” See
State v. Read,
For the above reasons we also reject defendant’s claim that the jury may have convicted him without unanimity because some jurors could have based their decision on defendant’s language while others could have relied on defendant’s behavior. The jury instruction was phrased in the conjunctive and required jury unanimity on improper behavior, as well as improper language.
Affirmed.
