The defendant, Daniel C. Thompson, appeals a decision of the 2d Circuit Court — Lebanon District Division (drone, J.) denying his request for an appeal to superior court for a de novo jury trial and a decision of the Superior Court (Vaughan, J.) denying his petition to allow a misdemeanor appeal. We affirm.
The following facts are supported by the record or are taken from our decision in a prior appeal in this case. See State v. Thompson,
According to the circuit court order now being appealed, the defendant, at the sentencing hearing, “stated his intent to appeal... to the Supreme Court.” It appears, however, that the district court clerk’s office sent the appeal to the superior court. The defendant then filed in the superior court an assented-to motion to remand the case to the trial court so that the contemplated appeal to this court could be filed. The superior court granted that motion. It appears that the trial court also stayed the defendant’s sentence pending resolution of his appeal to this court.
The defendant first challenges the trial court’s ruling that his election to appeal to this court waived his right to a jury trial in superior court. We note, as an initial matter, that he contests whether RSA 502-A:12 precludes him from now appealing his trial court conviction “to the Superior Court for a jury trial where his appeal to this Court was made solely to determine whether his conviction in the [trial court] was properly for a Class A or a Class B misdemeanor.” See RSA 502-A:12 (2010). Resolution of this issue requires us to interpret the applicable statutes, which presents a question of law that we review de novo. State v. Hynes,
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 first examine the language of the statute, and, where possible, we apply the plain and ordinary meaning to the words used. We interpret legislative intent from the statute as written and will not consider what the legislature might have said or add language it did not see fit to include. Further, we interpret a statute in the context of the overall statutory scheme and not in isolation.
Id. (citations omitted).
RSA 502-A:12 provides:
I. A person sentenced by a district court for a class A misdemeanor after trial or after proceedings pursuant to District Court Rule 2.14 may appeal therefrom to the superior court for a jury trial as provided in RSA 599 ....
*783 II. A person sentenced by a district court for a class A misdemeanor may, if no appeal for a jury trial in superior court is taken, appeal therefrom to the supreme court at the time the sentence is declared or -within 30 days after the sentence is declared. The supreme court’s review shall be limited to questions of law.
RSA 502-A:12 (emphasis added). RSA 599:1, in turn, provides, in part:
A person convicted by a district court of a class A misdemeanor, at the time the sentence is declared, may appeal therefrom to obtain a de novo jury trial in the superior court, which shall hear the appeal .... If, after a jury trial in the superior court, the defendant is found guilty, the superior court shall sentence the defendant, and the defendant may appeal questions of law arising therefrom to the supreme court. In the event the defendant waives the right to a jury trial after the case has been appealed, the superior court shall forthwith remand the case to the district court for imposition of the sentence originally imposed by the district court, and the defendant may appeal questions of law arising therefrom to the supreme court.
RSA 599:1.
By its plain language, RSA 502-A:12 permits a person convicted in district (now circuit) court of a class A misdemeanor to appeal directly to this court “if no appeal for a jury trial in superior court is taken.” RSA 502-A:12. It does not allow a defendant to pursue both avenues of appeal, either simultaneously or consecutively. Accordingly, the statute requires a defendant to choose between appealing to superior court for a de novo jury trial or to this court for the resolution of questions of law. If the defendant chooses a de novo jury trial and is again convicted, he may then appeal that subsequent conviction to this court. See RSA 599:1.
The defendant argues that he could not know that he was properly convicted of a class A misdemeanor until he appealed the enhanced penalty issue to this court and that “RSA 502-A:12 never contemplated such a dilemma.” His argument rests upon the premise that if the trial court had erred in using prior convictions not proved at trial to enhance his sentence — a contention we rejected in Thompson, see Thompson,
The defendant’s statutory argument is unavailing. Both RSA 502-A:12, II and RSA 599:1 permit a defendant to appeal a class A misdemeanor “at the time the sentence is declared,” or within a limited time thereafter. At the time the defendant’s sentence was declared by the trial court, he had been unambiguously convicted of a class A misdemeanor. That the defendant believed that classification was erroneous and intended to challenge it does not alter the conviction’s validity at that time for purposes of determining the available avenues of appellate review. “[U]nless and until [a defendant’s] conviction is overturned, it is deemed valid ....” Stewart v. Bader,
We now turn to the defendant’s constitutional argument. Specifically, he contends that by choosing a direct appeal to this court, he did not waive his right to a jury trial, as guaranteed by Part I, Article 15 of the New Hampshire Constitution and the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution. We first address the defendant’s claim under the State Constitution and rely upon federal law only to aid our analysis. State v. Ball,
It is undisputed that the defendant was entitled to a jury trial. See Opinion of the Justices (DWI Jury Trials),
The defendant contends that “[t]he facts and circumstances of this case do not support a valid waiver of [his] right to a jury trial” because “it cannot be fairly argued that he intentionally, voluntarily, knowingly and intelligently waived his right to [a] jury trial in Superior Court.” ‘Whether the facts support a valid waiver is a question of law which we review de novo.” Id. There is, however, “no set formula by which to validate a waiver of a jury trial.” Id. at 327.
We have stated generally that “when waiving a constitutional right, one must do so voluntarily, knowingly, and intelligently with sufficient awareness of the relevant circumstances and likely consequences.” Id. at 325 (quotation and brackets omitted). The defendant also argues, citing, among other cases, State v. Hewitt,
In State v. Bousquet,
In Bousquet, by holding that the defendant could “reasonably be deemed to have waived his right to a trial by jury,” id. (emphasis added), we recognized that in cases such as this, “the issue [is] not ‘waiver’ in the sense of voluntary relinquishment of a known right, but ‘deemed waiver,’ ” Preston v. Seay,
In Bousquet, we explicitly noted that our interpretation of Part I, Article 15 was “guided by the reasoning of Preston v. Seay,” Bousquet,
Even assuming that the defendant did not subjectively intend to waive his right to a jury trial, we find his deemed waiver to be constitutionally valid. In upholding the deemed waiver in Preston, the court noted the following:
Massachusetts’ doctrine that “solid default” of appearance constitutes a “deemed waiver” of the right to jury trial... is explicitly reasoned on the ground that “waiver” may be held to have occurred even though it is not found that defendant had a state of mind, or by his actions manifested to others that he had a state of mind, of being willing to give up his right to jury trial....
... [U]nder Massachusetts law, a defendant may lose the right to jury trial because of a deemed waiver incident to a “solid default” of appearance, whether or not the defendant understood his right to jury trial and meant to, or manifested that he meant to, give up that right.
Id. at 900-01.
Underlying the Preston court’s reasoning in giving effect to the deemed waiver is the recognition that states may, within limits, regulate the manner of exercising the right to trial by jury. See id. at 901 (“[A] state may impose reasonable regulations on the exercise of even the most precious rights.”). Thus, the United States Supreme Court, in an opinion upholding Massachusetts’s two-tiered criminal system, held: “The modes of exercising federal constitutional rights have traditionally been left, within limits, to state specification. In this case, Massachusetts absolutely guarantees trial by jury to persons accused of serious crimes, and the manner it has specified for exercising this right is fair and not unduly burdensome.” Ludwig v. Massachusetts,
[The statute] gives any person convicted before a justice of the peace or police court the right to appeal to the superior court and to have a trial by jury, and makes regulations which are reason*788 able and necessary as to the mode in which he may enter and prosecute his appeal. If he neglects so to enter and prosecute his appeal, he waives his right of a trial by jury, and the provision ... that he may thereupon be defaulted and sentenced, is not unconstitutional.
Commonwealth v. Whitney,
Also informing the court’s decision in Preston, and our decision in Bousquet, was the United States Supreme Court’s dismissal of appeals from the decisions in Francis and Commonwealth v. O’Clair,
With the foregoing in mind, we reiterate that RSA 502-A:12 “absolutely guarantees trial by jury to persons” convicted in circuit court of a class A misdemeanor, and dictates, as “the manner . . . specified for exercising this right” that the defendant may not also — either prior to, concurrently, or after his appeal to superior court — appeal that same circuit court conviction to this court. Ludwig,
Finally, the defendant presents the question as to whether, even if he waived his right to a jury trial, that waiver was the result of “honest mistake, accident, or misfortune” and, therefore, justice requires, “under the peculiar circumstances of this case,” that he be allowed an appeal for a de novo jury trial in the superior court pursuant to RSA 599:l-b. See RSA 599:l-b (2001). That statute provides:
Any person aggrieved by a decision of a district or municipal court who was prevented from appealing therefrom, as provided in RSA 599:1..., through mistake, accident or misfortune, and not from his own neglect, may petition the superior court at any time within 30 days from the time the sentence is declared, to be allowed an appeal, setting forth his interest, his reason for appealing and the cause of his delay. The court may make such order thereon as justice may require.
Id. The defendant argues that the superior court unsustainably exercised its discretion in denying his petition to allow a misdemeanor appeal without first holding a hearing. He contends that “[t]he record certainly contains no support for the Superior Court’s decision that [he] made an affirmative choice to forgo his right to jury trial,” and that “[a] hearing on that issue would have made it clear that this was not the case.”
“We will not disturb an order denying a request for an evidentiary hearing unless a party establishes that it was clearly untenable or unreasonable to the prejudice of the party’s case.” State v. McGurk,
Affirmed.
