Leo Wees appeals from the district court’s reversal of a magistrate court order dismissing the criminal complaint against Wees. The district court disagreed with the magistrate’s holding that Idaho Code § 3-420, prohibiting the unlawful practice of law, is unconstitutional for vagueness. We affirm the decision of the district court upholding the constitutionality of the statute.
I.
BACKGROUND
Wees operated a business called Self-help Legal Alternatives of Idaho, through which he sold do-it-yourself legal forms designed for use by non-lawyers wishing to represent themselves in court or to conduct transactions without the assistance of an attorney. The State charged Wees with two counts of unlawful practice of law, I.C. § 3-420, a misdemeanor. In the first count, the State alleged that Wees, who is not licensed to practice law in Idaho, interviewed and advised Scott Brown with reference to a pending divorce case. The State contends that Wees advised Brown to file a motion to set aside a *121 default that had been entered against Brown in the divorce action and that Wees also “chose and prepared” a notice of appearance, a motion to set aside default and default judgment, and an affidavit in support of motion to set aside default and default judgment for Brown, which documents were allegedly filed with the court in the divorce proceeding.
In the second count, the State alleged that Wees interviewed and advised Lianne McCallister with reference to a pending case involving visitation rights. The State asserts that he prepared a petition for grandparents visitation rights and a proposed order granting visitation rights, which were filed in court. After the court refused to act on those documents, Wees allegedly further advised McCallister and prepared revised documents, including a petition for grandparents visitation rights, a notice of petition for grandparent rights, an affidavit in support of petition for grandparents rights, and a proposed order. According to the State, Wees did not merely perform a clerical function of typing onto the forms information supplied by the customers, but, rather, advised the customers on what information to include and helped compose the statements that were placed onto the forms.
Wees moved to dismiss these charges on the ground that I.C. § 3-420 is overbroad and vague, in violation of the United States Constitution and the Idaho Constitution. The magistrate agreed with Wees’s assessment that I.C. § 3^20 was void for vagueness and therefore dismissed the complaint. The State appealed to the district court, which reversed the decision of the magistrate. Wees now appeals from the district court’s decision.
II.
ANALYSIS
When reviewing a decision of the district court made in its appellate capacity, we give attention to the district court’s analysis, but our focus is upon the decision of the magistrate court.
State v. Evans,
The statute under which Wees was prosecuted, I.C. § 3-420, provides:
If any person shall, without having become duly admitted and licensed to practice law within this state or whose right or license to practice therein shall have terminated either by disbarment, suspension, failure to pay his license or otherwise, practice or assume to act or hold himself out to the public as a person qualified to practice or carry on the calling of a lawyer within this state, he shall be guilty of an offense____
The State does not allege that Wees held himself out to the public as being a lawyer but that he “practiced” law without a license in performing the alleged services for customers Brown and McCallister. Thus, it is the prohibition against the unlicensed “practice” of law that is pertinent here. Wees makes two constitutional challenges. He contends that the statute’s prohibition of the unlicensed practice of law is facially over-broad because it prohibits speech that is protected by the First Amendment, and that the statute violates due process guarantees because it is unduly vague.
A. Overbreadth
The overbreadth doctrine may be used to challenge statutes which, though designed to prohibit legitimately regulated conduct, nevertheless include within their prohibitions constitutionally protected freedoms.
Cantwell v. Connecticut,
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20 (1940);
Richards,
Infirmity for overbreadth may be avoided when a limiting construction has been or can be applied to the challenged statute.
Ferber,
The practice of law as generally understood, is the doing or performing services in a court of justice, in any matter [pending] therein, throughout its various stages, and in conformity with adopted rules of procedure. But in a larger sense, it includes legal advice and counsel, and the preparation of instruments and contracts by which legal rights are secured, although such matter may or may not be [pending] in a court.
In re Matthews,
As thus construed, it cannot be said that the prohibition against the unlicensed practice of law in § 3-420 is unconstitutionally overbroad. The statute plainly covers a wide range of “easily identifiable and constitutionally proscribable conduct,”
e.g.,
rendering advice on legal rights and responsibilities in the context of a for-hire relationship, drafting contracts, wills and other legal instruments, appearing in court on behalf of another, and composing pleadings and other documents for filing in a court of law. The State may legitimately prohibit such activities by persons who are not trained or li
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censed in the law in order to “protect the public against unskilled and unauthorized would-be practitioners.”
Meservy,
Wees argues that I.C. § 3-420 purports to regulate a substantial amount of constitutionally protected speech because the proscription of “advising” another with regard to legal matters could be applied to wholly innocent speech, such as casual conversation between neighbors discussing a pending court case to which one of the neighbors is a party. However, even if I.C. § 3-420 could be interpreted to prohibit such neighborly chats, the statute would still not be facially overbroad because its ban plainly encompasses a wide range of constitutionally proscribable conduct. As with the statute at issue in
Broadrick,
“whatever overbreadth may exist should be cured through case-by-case analysis of the fact situations to which its sanctions, assertedly, may not be applied.”
Broadrick,
B. Vagueness
We next consider Wees’s contention that the statute is void for vagueness. The vagueness doctrine is grounded on the precept that criminal statutes must define offenses with sufficient clarity to (1) give persons a reasonable opportunity to know what is prohibited so that they may act accordingly, and (2), avoid arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.
Hoffman Estates,
Authoritative judicial construction of an otherwise vague statute may provide persons with sufficient notice to pass constitutional muster.
Winters v. New York,
Our conclusion that this statute, prohibiting the unlicensed practice of law, is not unconstitutionally vague finds seemingly unanimous support in the courts of our sister states.
See Statewide Grievance Comm. v. Patton,
C. Rule of Lenity
Wees finally argues that the doctrine of lenity requires I.C. § 3-420 to be strictly construed in his favor. The doctrine of lenity requires courts to construe ambiguous criminal statutes in favor of the accused.
State v. Dewey,
We have held that I.C. § 3-420 is not vague as applied to Wees because the statute plainly bars the activities of which Wees is accused. It follows that the statute is not ambiguous as to Wees, and therefore the doctrine of lenity has no application in this case.
III.
CONCLUSION
Idaho Code § 3-420 does not suffer constitutional infirmity due to either overbreadth or vagueness. Accordingly, we affirm the appellate decision of the district court, which reversed the magistrate court’s dismissal order. This case is remanded to the magistrate division for further proceedings.
Notes
. On this record, it is not clear whether Wees is alleged to have charged for the service of drafting documents in addition to charging for the forms that were purchased, but it is alleged that he provided these services in the context of a business for profit.
