OPINION
The State petitions this Court for special action relief, claiming that the trial court erred in granting defendant’s request for a jury trial. We agree and grant the State’s requested relief.
Because the State is without an adequate remedy by appeal, and special action review is the proper manner to address the right to a jury trial, we accept jurisdiction.
See State v. Miller,
The facts are as follows. Defendant was charged with contracting without a license, a class one misdemeanor. See Ariz.Rev.Stat. Ann. (“A.R.S.”) § 32-1151. If convicted, defendant faced a possible punishment of six months imprisonment and a $2,500 fine, which is the maximum punishment for a class one misdemeanor. The municipal court judge denied defendant’s request for a jury trial and convicted him following a bench trial.
Defendant appealed to the Maricopa County Superior Court and again requested a jury trial. The trial judge granted defendant’s request, ruling that the maximum fine for conviction of the charged offense was sufficiently severe to warrant a jury trial.
The State argues that the trial court exceeded its authority in ordering a jury trial. We agree.
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In order to determine whether a defendant has a right to a jury trial, Arizona courts apply the three part test set forth in
Rothweiler v. Superior Court,
Defendant’s potential penalty — six months in jail and a $2,500 fine — is not sufficiently severe to warrant a jury trial. This Court most recently addressed this issue in Freder-ickson, supra. In Frederickson, we held that leaving the scene of an accident is a jury-eligible offense. Although Frederickson rested on the moral turpitude of the offense, we cited the following definition of the severity prong in dictum:
Under Arizona law a crime is a jury eligible offense if:
(1) the defendant is exposed to a severe penalty, i.e. a penalty in which the exposure exceeds six months imprisonment or $1,000 infines[] ...
Frederickson,
Harrison
in turn attributed this definition of “severe penalty” to
State ex rel. Baumert v. Superior Court,
The amount of the fine alone does not control the right to jury trial.
E.g., Baumert, supra.
The total potential punishment is determinative. Accordingly, we examine the potential fine in conjunction with the maximum jail sentence. In 1980, our supreme court held that six months in jail and a $1,000 fine was not “serious” enough to warrant a jury trial.
Baumert, supra.
More recently, this Court held that six months in jail and a $2,500 fine did not expose defendant to “severe penalty.”
Mungarro v. Riley,
Relief granted.
Notes
. Defendant clearly fails the final two parts of the Rothweiler test. This Court has held that contracting without a license does not involve moral turpitude and is unrelated to any common law offense. Miller, supra. Therefore, defendant is not entitled to a jury trial under these parts of the Rothweiler test.
. The right to a jury trial based on more than six months potential incarceration is required by United States Supreme Court case interpreting the Sixth Amendment, which applies to the States under the Due Process Clause.
See, e.g., Baldwin v. New York,
