OPINION
Appellant, Scott Wertheimer, was arrested on May 12, 2007, for driving while impaired. Wertheimer had three previous driving-while-impaired (DWI) convictions, with the earliest on May 12, 1997. Following Wertheimer’s May 12, 2007, arrest, the State charged him with first-degree DWI, a felony, on the assumption that his May 12, 2007, violation was “within ten years of’ his May 12, 1997, conviction as required by Minn.Stat. § 169A.24, subd. 1(1) (2008). The sole issue before us is whether May 12, 2007, is within ten years of May *160 12, 1997. The parties dispute whether we should apply Minn.Stat. § 645.15 (2008) — a time computation statute — -to determine the bounds of the ten-year period.
For purposes of this appeal, the facts are undisputed. On Saturday, May 12, 2007, Wertheimer was arrested for DWI. Wertheimer was later charged with two counts of felony first-degree DWI under Minn.Stat. § 169A.20, subds. 1-2 (2008) (DWI and test refusal), and one count of violation of a restricted license under Minn.Stat. § 171.09, subd. 1(d)(1) (2008). Section 169A.24, subdivision 1, states, in relevant part, “[a] person who violates section 169A.20 (driving while impaired) is guilty of first-degree driving while impaired if the person ... commits the violation within ten years of the first of three or more qualified prior impaired driving incidents.... ” Wertheimer was convicted of DWI on May 12, 1997; December 15, 1998; and March 23, 2004. Each of those three convictions represents a “qualified prior impaired driving incident” for the purposes of section 169A.24. See Minn.. Stat. § 169A.03, subd. 22 (2008) (defining qualified prior impаired driving incident to include “prior impaired driving convictions”).
At his omnibus hearing, Wertheimer moved to dismiss the first-degree DWI charges on the ground that his May 12, 2007, violation was not within ten years of his May 12, 1997, conviction, and therefore the requirements of section 169A.24, subdivision 1, were nоt met. The district court denied Wertheimer’s motion. The State then dismissed all but one charge: felony first degree DWI (test refusal) under sections 169A.20, subdivision 2, and 169A.24, subdivision 1. The district court conducted Wertheimer’s
Lothenbach
trial under Minn. R.Crim. P. 26.01, subd. 4,
see State v. Lothenbach,
Because this case involves only issues of statutory interpretation, the standard of review is de novo.
State v. Engle,
Minnesota Statutes § 645.15 prescribes the method for computing time in certain circumstances, under Minnesota law. Section 645.15 states, in relevant part,
[w]here the performance or doing of any act, duty, mattеr, payment, or thing is ordered or directed, and the period of time or duration for the performance or doing thereof is prescribed and fixed by law, the time ... shall be computed so as to exclude the first and include the last day of the presсribed or fixed period or duration of time. When the last day of the period falls on Saturday, Sunday, or a legal holiday, that day shall be omitted from the computation.
Section 169A.24, subdivision 1, under which Wertheimer was charged, requires the computation of a ten-year period and a determination of whether certain offenses fall within that period. Section 169A.24, subdivision 1, states that a person is guilty of first-degree DWI if he “commits the [DWI] violation within ten years of the first of three or more qualified prior impaired driving incidents.... ” Id., subd. 1(1).
The State argues that section 645.15 should apply to all statutes necessitating the computation of time unless a different computation method appears in the statute itself. The State argues that because section 169A.24, subdivision 1, does nоt pro *161 vide an alternative method for computing its ten-year period, section 645.15 should apply. Wertheimer concedes that section 169A.24, subdivision 1, does not include a method for computing time, but contends that, by section 645.15’s unambiguous, plain languagе, section 645.15 should not apply to section 169A.24, subdivision 1.
The State cites
Nelson v. Sandkamp,
But there are important differences between this case and the cases in which we have applied section 645.15 and its common-law predecessor. First, the plain language of section 645.15 indicates that it does not apply here. Section 645.15 states that it applies “[w]here the performance or doing of any act, duty, matter, payment, or thing is ordered or directed.” We have consistently applied section 645.15 to statutes that
required the performance of an act
within a time period.
1
Required acts triggering application of the statute include, fоr example, the filing of a cause of action before the expiration of the statute of limitations,
Nelson,
227 Minn, at 181-82,
Section 169A.24, subdivision 1, does not order or direct the doing or performance of any act, duty, matter, payment, or thing. Rather, section 169A.24, subdivision 1, describes an element of first-degree DWI, as opposеd to other driving-while-intoxicated violations under section 169A.20. Section 169A.24, subdivision 1, states that a defendant is guilty of first-degree DWI if that person violates section 169A.20 “within ten years of the first of three or more qualified prior impaired driving incidents.” Minn. Stat. § 169A.24, subd. 1. Only under a strained reаding can section 169A.24, subdivision 1, be construed to require the performance of an act, e.g., perhaps directing everyone not to violate Minnesota’s DWI statutes. A general obligation to obey criminal statutes is very different from the specific stаtutory acts and duties to which we have applied section 645.15 in the past.
Further, we have never applied section 645.15to a substantive statutory provision defining an element of a crime. Indeed, our research suggests that at the time section 645.15 was enacted, no Minnesota statutes defining the elements of a crime required the calculation of time. Rather, provisions like section 169A.24, subdivision 1, are relatively recent innovations. 2 In each case in which we have applied section 645.15to a statutory provision, that provision has been procedural in nature. We have never applied section 645.15 to a substantive provision of a criminal statute.
Despite apparently broad statements in our case law that section 645.15 applies to all statutes requiring the computation of time unless the statute itself says otherwise, we conclude that section 645.15 does not apply to section 169A.24, subdivision 1. Our conclusion complies with the plain language of section 645.15, which stаtes that it applies “[w]here the performance or doing of any act, duty, matter, payment, or thing is ordered or directed.” The statute at issue in the case before us, section 169A.24, subdivision 1, does not require the performance or doing of any act within a time period. Given this background, and given that the present case involves a substantive provision of a criminal statute, we decline to extend the application of section 645.15here.
Because we conclude that the time-сomputation statute does not apply, we turn to the language of section 169A.24, subdivision 1, to determine whether May 12, 2007, is within ten years of May 12, 1997. We construe words in statutes con *163 sistent with their common usage, unless those words have a different technical meaning in сontext. Minn.Stat. § 645.08 (2008). Section 169A.24, subdivision 1, states, in relevant part, “[a] person who violates section 169A.20 (driving while impaired) is guilty of first-degree driving while impaired if the person ... commits the violation within ten years of the first of three or more qualified prior impaired driving incidents.... ” Here, Wertheimer was convicted of DWI on May 12, 1997, was convicted of DWI two more times, and violated section 169A.20 again on May 12, 2007. We must determine whether May 12, 2007, is “within ten years of’ May 12, 1997; in other words, whether all three of Wertheimer’s DWI convictions, as well as his most rеcent violation, are within the same ten-year period.
Under Minnesota Statutes, “year” is defined as “a calendar year, unless otherwise expressed.” Minn.Stat. § 645.44, subd. 13 (2008). Under the Gregorian calendar, which we use, a calendar year consists of 12 months, 52 weeks, and 365 or 366 days (366 days during a leap year which occurs once every four years). See The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 2068 (3d ed. 1992). In other words, a year does not equal a year and a day.
By definition, a calendar year includes exactly one of each date. It includes just one January 22, just one January 23, and so on throughout the year. By extension, a ten-year period includes exactly ten of each date (except for February 29, of which there are twо or three). In ten years, for example, we have exactly ten birthdays or ten wedding anniversaries, no more, no less.
“Within” means “[ijnside the limits or extent of in time” and “[ijnside the fixed limits of.”
Id.
at 2051. So, for May 12, 2007, to be “within ten years of’ May 12, 1997, both dates must be in the same ten-year рeriod. Beginning the ten-year period on May 12, 1997 — which is necessary because section 169A.24, subdivision 1, requires that the first violation be inside the ten-year period — and counting forward ten years, we arrive at the last day of the period on May 11, 2007. This constructiоn of section 169A.24, subdivision 1, comports with the plain meaning of both the terms “year” and “within.” The State would have us define “year” to be a year and a day and a ten-year-period to be ten years and one day. We cannot square this definition with the common meaning of the term “year.”
See In re Welfare of HAD.,
Because we conclude that section 645.15 does not apply to section 169A.24, and because we conclude that May 12, 2007, is not “within ten years of’ May 12, 1997, under section 169A.24, subdivision 1, we hold that the district court erred when it denied Wertheimer’s motion to dismiss the State’s felony first-degree DWI charges.
Reversed and remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
.
E.g., Jorgensen,
. See Act of June 30, 2001, 1st Spec. Sess., ch. 8, art. 11, § 3, 2001 Minn. Laws 1943, 2112 (adding section 169A.24, which defines first-degree DWI as, among other things, a “violation within ten years of the first of three or more qualified prior impaired driving incidents”); Act of June 1, 1995, ch. 259, art. 3, § 15, 1995 Minn. Laws 2739, 2783-84 (codified as amended at Minn.Stat. § 609.2242) (defining gross misdemeanor and felony domestic assault, in part, based upon prior domestic assault convictions within a certain time period).
