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Treptow v. State
408 P.3d 1220
| Alaska Ct. App. | 2017
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*1 NOTICE

The text of this opinion can be corrected before the opinion is published in the Pacific Reporter. Readers are encouraged to bring typographical or other formal errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts: 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501 Fax: (907) 264-0878

E-mail: corrections @ akcourts.us IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA MATTHEW JAMES TREPTOW,

Court of Appeals No. A-12092 Appellant, Trial Court No. 3AN-13-10472 CR v.

O P I N I O N STATE OF ALASKA,

Appellee. No. 2576 — December 1, 2017 Appeal from the Superior Court, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Michael L. Wolverton, Judge.

Appearances: J. Adam Bartlett, Anchorage, under contract with the Office of Public Advocacy, for the Appellant. Terisia K. Chleborad, Assistant Attorney General, Office of Criminal Appeals, Anchorage, and Jahna Lindemuth, Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.

Before: Mannheimer, Chief Judge, Allard, Judge, and Suddock, Superior Court Judge. *

Judge MANNHEIMER. * Sitting by assignment made pursuant to Article IV, Section 16 of the Alaska

Constitution and Administrative Rule 24(d).

Matthew James Treptow appeals his conviction for felony drivingunder the influence. 1 Treptow’s offense was classified as a felony because he had two prior

convictions for DUI within the preceding ten years, one from Alaska and one from

Arizona.

In this appeal, Treptow argues that his Arizona DUI conviction should not be counted because of a purported difference between Arizona law and Alaska law.

Under Arizona law, a person charged with a crime (felony or misdemeanor) is entitled to waive their right to a jury trial, but only with the consent of the government

and the approval of the court. 2 Treptow acknowledges that Alaska law is the same with

respect to defendants charged with felonies, but Treptow asserts that misdemeanor

defendants in Alaska have an absolute right to demand a bench trial, even when the

government and the court do not consent.

Based on this purported difference between Alaska law and Arizona law, Treptow argues that Arizona DUI convictions do not qualify as “prior convictions” for

purposes of Alaska’s felony DUI law.

For the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that Treptow’s argument is based on a misreading of Alaska Criminal Rule 23(a). We hold that, under

1 AS 28.35.030(n). At the time Treptow’s case was litigated in the superior court, Arizona Criminal Rule

18.1(b) stated: “The defendant may waive the right to trial by jury with consent of the

prosecution and the court. In a capital case, the defendant may also waive the right to have

a jury determine aggravation or the penalty if the prosecution and the court concur.”

Earlier this year, the Arizona Supreme Court amended the wording — but not the

substance — of Criminal Rule 18.1(b). The rule now states, “The defendant may waive the

right to trial by jury if the State and the court consent. If the State and the court agree, a

defendant also may waive the right to have a jury determine aggravation or the penalty in a

capital case.”

Criminal Rule 23(a), a defendant’s waiver of jury trial must be approved by both the

government and the court, regardless of whether the defendant is being tried for a felony

or a misdemeanor.

The rule at issue: Alaska Criminal Rule 23(a)

Alaska Criminal Rule 23(a) states:

(a) Trial by Jury . Cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless the defendant waives a jury trial. In felony cases, the waiver must be in writing with the approval of the court and the consent of the state. In misdemeanor cases, the waiver may be in writing or made on the record in open court.

As can be seen, the second sentence of Rule 23(a) says that a felony defendant’s waiver of jury trial is conditioned on three things: (1) the waiver must be

in writing; (2) the court must approve; and (3) the state must consent.

The third sentence of Rule 23(a) then says that, in misdemeanor cases, the waiver may either be in writing or made on the record in open court.

Because the third sentence of Rule 23(a) does not expressly reiterate the requirements of “approvalof the court” and “consent of the state”, Treptow interprets the

rule as saying that these elements are not required in misdemeanor cases. According to

Treptow, Criminal Rule 23(a) gives misdemeanor defendants an absolute right to waive

a jury and demand a bench trial, regardless of whether the court and the state consent.

But the third sentence of Rule 23(a) could reasonably be interpreted in a different light: it could be read as simply relaxing the “writing” requirement that governs

waivers of jury trial in felony cases — so that, in misdemeanor cases, jury waivers can

be either written or oral.

To resolve this ambiguity, we have examined the legislative history of Alaska Criminal Rule 23(a). For the reasons we are about to explain, we conclude that

when a defendant wishes to waive the right to a jury trial, Criminal Rule 23(a) requires

the approval of the court and the consent of the government in all cases — both felonies

and misdemeanors.

The pre-statehood history of Alaska Criminal Rule 23(a) The history of Alaska Criminal Rule 23(a) begins in 1930, when the United States Supreme Court decided Patton v. United States , 281 U.S. 276, 50 S.Ct. 253,

74 L.Ed. 854 (1930).

The issue addressed in Patton was whether, consistent with the Sixth Amendment’s guarantee of jury trial, a criminal defendant could ever waive their right

to have a jury decide their case. The underlying question (as framed by the Supreme

Court) was whether the guarantee of jury trial should be viewed as a fundamental aspect

of the form of government guaranteed by the federal constitution, or whether the

guarantee of jury trial should be viewed as a personal right of a criminal defendant —

a right that could be waived. 3

At common law, a defendant was not allowed to waive a jury trial. 4 And in 1930, at the time of the Patton decision, there was still significant judicial

authority holding that the right of jury trial could not be waived — on the ground that the

jury was an essential aspect of a properly constituted criminal tribunal. 5 But in Patton ,

3 Patton , 281 U .S. at 293, 50 S .Ct. at 256. Id. , 281 U .S. at 306, 50 S .Ct. at 261. See Low v. United States , 169 F. 86, 92 (6th Cir. 1909), and Dickinson v. United

(continued...) *5 the Supreme Court rejected this view of the law and held that the right to jury trial was

a right conferred on defendants, and that it could be waived. 6

However, the Supreme Court declared that a defendant’s right to waive a jury trial was not absolute. The Court cautioned that having a jury sit as the fact-finder

in a criminal case is not simply a right of the defendant; it is also an important element

of the criminal justice system itself. Thus, both the trial judge and the government

should have to approve any waiver of jury trial offered by a defendant:

Trial by jury is the normal and, with occasional exceptions, the preferable mode of disposing of issues of fact in criminal cases above the grade of petty offenses. ... [T]he value and appropriateness of jury trial have been established by long experience, and are not now to be denied. Not only must the right of the accused to a trial by a constitutional jury be jealously preserved, but the maintenance of the jury as a fact-finding body in criminal cases is of such importance and has such a place in our traditions, that, before any waiver can become effective, the consent of government counsel and the sanction of the court must be had, in addition to the express and intelligent consent of the defendant. And the duty of the trial court in that regard is not to be discharged as a mere matter of rote, but with sound and advised discretion, with an eye to avoid unreasonable or undue departures from that mode of trial or from any of the essential elements thereof, and with a caution increasing in degree as the offenses dealt with increase in gravity.

Patton , 281 U.S. at 312-13, 50 S.Ct. at 263.

(...continued) States , 159 F. 801 (1st Cir. 1908) — both discussed in Patton , 281 U.S. at 294, 50 S.Ct. at

256. Patton , 281 U.S. at 298, 50 S.Ct. at 258.

In 1944, based on the Supreme Court’s decision in Patton , Congress enacted Federal Criminal Rule 23(a) — a rule based on the Patton decision.

Originally, Federal Criminal Rule 23(a) stated, “Cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless the defendant waives a jury trial in writing with the

approval of the court and the consent of the government.” Because Alaska was a

federal territory at the time, Federal Criminal Rule 23(a) was the law that governed

criminal trials in Alaska.

In its current version, Federal Criminal Rule 23(a) states: (a) Jury Trial . If the defendant is entitled to a jury trial, the trial must be by jury unless:
(1) the defendant waives a jury trial in writing; (2) the government consents; and

(3) the court approves. The post-statehood history of Alaska Criminal Rule 23(a) Alaska became a state in 1959, fifteen years after the promulgation of Federal Criminal Rule 23(a). In that year, our newly formed supreme court issued the

initial version of Alaska’s court rules. See Supreme Court Order No. 4 (effective

October 4, 1959).

In its 1959 version, Alaska Criminal Rule 23(a) tracked the then-current wording of its federal counterpart:

(a) Trial by Jury . Cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless the defendant waives a jury trial in writing with the approval of the court and the consent of the state.

Quoted in Hatchett v. Government of Guam , 212 F.2d 767, 777 (9th Cir. 1954). *7 The 1959 version of the Alaska Criminal Rules also contained a section (“Part X”) that was titled “Procedures for the trial of cases before magistrates” — i.e. ,

procedures for the trial of misdemeanor cases in the district court.

The first rule in Part X of the Criminal Rules was Criminal Rule 59, “Applicability of Rules; Special Provisions”. Criminal Rule 59 declared that the rules

of criminal procedure codified in the regular Criminal Rules “shall apply to criminal

actions in the district magistrate courts ... except as follows”. Criminal Rule 59 then

contained a series of subsections, each specifying how the procedures in district court

criminal cases would differ from the normal procedures set forth in the regular Criminal

Rules.

Subsection (d) of Criminal Rule 59 established a single departure from the regular Criminal Rules with respect to waivers of jury trial. That difference was that a

defendant’s waiver of jury trial could be made orally in district court cases:

(d) Trial by Jury; Waiver . The manner of drawing juries shall be as provided by Section 68-6-8, [Alaska Compiled Laws Annotated] 1949. Waiver by the defendant of jury trial or agreement by the parties for trial by a jury of less than twelve need not be in writing, but shall be made in open court, and the magistrate shall make a proper notation thereof in the record of the proceedings.

To summarize the law set forth in Alaska’s original 1959 court rules: Criminal Rule 23(a) declared that a defendant’s waiver of jury trial had to be in writing, and that the waiver required the government’s consent and the court’s

approval.

Under the provisions of Criminal Rule 59, the jury waiver procedures set forth in Criminal Rule 23(a) governed the trial of misdemeanor cases in the district court

except as specified in Rule 59(d) — and Rule 59(d) only relaxed the requirement that the

defendant’s waiver had to be in writing.

Thus, under this original version of Alaska’s Criminal Rules, the requirements of court approval and government consent governed all waivers of jury

trial — i.e. , waivers in both felony and misdemeanor cases.

The Alaska Supreme Court later moved the provisions of Part X of the Criminal Rules into a separate set of rules — first, as the “Magistrate Criminal Rules”,

and later as the “District Court CriminalRules”. When that happened, the provisions that

were originally contained in Criminal Rule 59 were moved to a new Rule 1 of the

District Court Criminal Rules.

But the wording of the special misdemeanor rule remained essentially the same: District Court Criminal Rule 1 still codified the principle that the normal rules of

criminal procedure would apply to misdemeanor cases in the district court unless some

variation was specified in the district court rules. Until mid-2013, District Court

Criminal Rule 1 declared:

Wherever practicable[,] the Rules of Criminal Procedure shall apply to criminal actions within the jurisdiction of the district courts.

Thus, the jury waiver procedures specified in Criminal Rule 23(a) — including the

requirements of court approval and government consent — governed criminal cases in

the district court unless the District Court Criminal Rules specified some different

procedure.

And, like the old Criminal Rule 59(d), District Court Criminal Rule 1(d) modified only the requirement that the defendant’s waiver needed to be in writing:

(d) Trial by Jury — Waiver . The manner of drawing juries shall be as provided by AS 09.20.040 – 09.20.090. Waiver by the defendant of jury trial need not be in writing, but shall be made in open court, and the district judge or magistrate shall make a proper notation thereof in the record of the proceedings.

So again, under the Criminal Rules and the District Court Criminal Rules as they existed

until mid-2013, Criminal Rule 23(a)’s requirements of court approval and government

consent applied to waivers of jury trial in both felony and misdemeanor cases.

The repeal of the District Court Criminal Rules, and the amalgamation of those rules into the regular Criminal Rules

In late 2012, the Alaska Court Administration began drafting a proposal to abolish the District Court Criminal Rules. The court administration’s plan had two parts.

The first part of the plan was to take all the special provisions of the District Court Rules that applied to the trials of non-criminal offenses (“violations” that carried

no possibility of imprisonment) and move those provisions into a new group of “Minor

Offense Rules”.

The second part of the plan was to take all the provisions of the District Court Criminal Rules that applied to misdemeanor offenses and incorporate those

provisions into the regular Criminal Rules.

To carry out this second part of the plan, members of the court administrative staff drafted a series of proposed rule changes. These proposals were

circulated by memorandum in late December 2012.

In line with the goal of incorporating the various misdemeanor provisions of District Court Criminal Rule 1 into the regular Criminal Rules, the court administra­

tion proposed that the supreme court amend Criminal Rule 23(a) to its current form,

so that the rule would cover both felony and misdemeanor cases. The administrative

staff’s proposed language is underlined:

(a) Trial by Jury . Cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless the defendant waives a jury trial. In felony cases, the waiver must be in writing with the approval of the court and the consent of the state. In misdemeanor cases, the waiver may be in writing or made on the record in open court.

See the memo, “Moving DCCrR 1 to Criminal Rules, Draft of 12-28-2012”, at page 10

of 11. 8

Contrary to Treptow’s argument on appeal, this new language was not drafted to give misdemeanor defendants a new, absolute right to waive a jury without the

approval of the court and the consent of the government. Just the opposite: the

administrative staff was not trying to change the law at all. As part of their memo

describing the proposed change to Criminal Rule 23(a), the administrative drafters

included an “Explanation of Changes”. That explanation reads:

The changes in this rule clarify that felony waivers must still be in writing and that misdemeanor waivers may be in writing or made orally on the record as [currently] provided in [District Court Criminal Rule] 1(d).

Ibid.

This memo, as well as the Criminal Rules Committee minutes that we refer to in this opinion, are contained in the Court Rules Attorney’s file on Criminal Rule 23. We have

included the pertinent portions of these documents as attachments to this opinion. The full

documents are available for inspection in the Anchorage administrative offices of the Alaska

Court System.

The court administrative staff presented their proposed rule changes to the Alaska Supreme Court at the court’s “rules conference” on March 15, 2013. 9 Normally,

proposed changes to the Criminal Rules are examined and vetted by the supreme court’s

Criminal Rules Committee before the supreme court considers the changes. But in this

instance, the court administrative staff presented their proposals directly to the supreme

court, without vetting by the Criminal Rules Committee, because the staff believed that

their proposals “[did] not change the substance of the existing rule provisions”. 10

At its March 2013 rules conference, the supreme court decided to move forward with the staff proposal to abolish the District Court Criminal Rules. The court

approved a draft order to this effect (draft Supreme Court Order No. 1799). But “to

make sure that [the court] was not missing anything”, 11 the supreme court decided to

have the Criminal Rules Committee review the proposed changes.

The supreme court’s draft order amending the Criminal Rules was presented to the Criminal Rules Committee at its May 2013 meeting. The list of

proposed changes to the Criminal Rules was a last-minute addition to the Committee’s

agenda, and the Committee was informed that the supreme court wanted to move

quickly. According to the Committee minutes, the Committee “made time for the

discussion [of the proposed changes] in consideration of the [supreme] court’s interest

9 See the minutes of the Criminal Rules Committee from May 6, 2013, page 1.

10 Ibid.

11 Ibid. Ibid.

in taking final action on this proposal before the publication deadline for the [next edition

of the] rule book.”

During its discussion of the various proposed changes, the Committee considered the draft amendment to Criminal Rule 23(a) — the amendment that we

described above:

(a) Trial by Jury . Cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless the defendant waives a jury trial. In felony cases, the waiver must be in writing with the approval of the court and the consent of the state. In misdemeanor cases, the waiver may be in writing or made on the record in open court.

It was here, during the Committee’s discussion of Rule 23(a), that the ambiguity in the administrative staff’s wording was first perceived. Did the third

sentence of the new version mean that waivers in misdemeanor cases could be either

written or oral — the rule previously codified in District Court Criminal Rule 1(d)? Or

was the third sentence also intended to eliminate the requirements of government consent

and court approval in misdemeanor cases?

To further complicate matters, there was disagreement among the Committee members as to whether the then-current version of the rule — District Court

Criminal Rule 1(d) — required court approval and government consent for any waiver

of jury trial. 14 According to the minutes, “opinions differed” on this issue.

Some members of the Committee expressed the view that, because the introductory language of District Court Criminal Rule 1 incorporated every provision

of the Criminal Rules unless the District Court Criminal Rules specified otherwise, the

13 Ibid. See the minutes of the Criminal Rules Committee from May 6, 2013, page 2.

requirements of Criminal Rule 23(a) regarding court approval and government consent

applied to waivers of jury trial in the district court. 15 But other members of the

Committee suggested that “practice or custom” on this issue “[might] vary in different

[court] locations”. 16

The Committee tried to draft revised language for Criminal Rule 23(a) to clarify that the requirements of court approval and government consent applied to all

waivers of jury trial. But in the end, the Committee decided not to tinker with the

language that had been drafted by the court administration — even though “several

members found [this language] ambiguous”. 17

According to the minutes, the Committee decided to take no action on this language because the Committee “was not of one mind” and because the Committee

“was hesitant to expressly call for what would be a change in practice in at least some

areas of the state.” 18 Instead, the Committee opted for the ambiguous language drafted

by the court administration because the Committee “preferred to leave [this matter]

ambiguous.”

Several weeks later, on June 24, 2013, the supreme court promulgated Supreme Court Order No. 1799 (effective October 15, 2013). In this order, the court

enacted the version of Criminal Rule 23(a) that had been proposed in December 2012 by

the court administration.

15 See the minutes of the Criminal Rules Committee from May 6, 2013, pages 2-3.

16 See the minutes of the Criminal Rules Committee from May 6, 2013, page 3.

17 Ibid.

18 Ibid. Ibid.

The legislative record does not indicate what consideration, if any, the supreme court gave to the Criminal Rules Committee’s discussion of this issue. With

regard to the ultimate wording of Criminal Rule 23(a), the record contains only the

explanation provided by the court administrative staff who drafted that wording.

As we have explained, the court administrative staff who drafted the current version of Criminal Rule 23(a) did not think that they were changing Alaska law.

Rather, they were merely trying to incorporate the existing provisions of District Court

Criminal Rule 1 into the regular Criminal Rules. According to the staff’s accompanying

“Explanation of Changes”, the new version of Criminal Rule 23(a) was intended to

incorporate the same rule that had been codified in District Court Criminal Rule 1(d) —

the rule that, in misdemeanor cases, an oral waiver of jury trial was acceptable.

Our analysis of Criminal Rule 23(a)

As we explained early in this opinion, Alaska’s Criminal Rule 23(a) was based on the corresponding federal rule that governed criminal trials in Alaska during

territorial days. Alaska’s Rule 23(a) incorporates the federal rule’s three requirements

of (1) a written waiver by the defendant, (2) consent by the government, and (3) court

approval.

Until the summer of 2013 (when the Alaska District Court Criminal Rules were repealed), District Court Criminal Rule 1 clearly stated that the provisions of the

regular Criminal Rules applied to the trials of misdemeanor cases in the district court

unless some provision of the District Court Criminal Rules specified otherwise.

With respect to waivers of jury trial, District Court Criminal Rule 1(d) relaxed the requirements of Criminal Rule 23(a) in one respect only: District Court

Criminal Rule 1(d) declared that a defendant’s waiver of jury trial did not need to be in

writing — that it could be made orally on the record instead.

In all other respects, Criminal Rule 23(a) governed waivers of jury trial in district court proceedings. Thus, the requirements of government consent and court

approval applied to jury trial waivers in district court criminal proceedings.

Although the current wording of Alaska Criminal Rule 23(a) might be clearer, the intent of its drafters is very clear. Those drafters were simply trying to meld

the provisions of District Court Criminal Rule 1(d) with the provisions of Criminal Rule

23(a) — without changing the substantive law.

For these reasons, we interpret Criminal Rule 23(a) to mean that, in both felony and misdemeanor cases, a defendant can waive jury trial only with the consent of

the government and the approval of the court.

And because there is no difference between Alaska law and Arizona law on this issue, we reject Treptow’s argument that Arizona DUI convictions should not be

counted as “prior convictions” when an Alaska court or jury assesses whether an instance

of driving under the influence is a felony or a misdemeanor under AS 28.35.030(n).

(In reaching this conclusion, we do not mean to say that DUI convictions from states whose law does differ from Alaska law on this jury waiver issue are thereby

disqualified as “prior convictions” for purposes of Alaska’s felony DUI law. We do not

reach this question, because Treptow’s case does not require us to resolve it.)

The judgement of the superior court is AFFIRMED.

Rules Referral Memorandum -D.Ct.Cr.Rules, Criminal Rules (SCO 1799) Page 3 of 5

May 17, 2013

The first sentence of paragraph (f)(4), recited above (green), is correct in that "the defendant

must give written consent to have the case tried before a magistrate." On the second alternate

SCO 1799 (tan), I have suggested language that builds on that original sentence, and drops the

second original sentence:

(4) The judicial officer shall inform the defendant that the case may not be tried before a magistrate without the defendant's written consent: and that if the defendant does not give that written consent. the case will be assigned to a district court judge.

This language is intended to avoid the problem that the Criminal Rules Committee had with the

earlier language. Rather than requiring a defendant to opt out of an assignment to a magistrate

judge, the defendant would need to opt in to an assignment to a magistrate judge.

A slightly more directive option would replace the last clause with:

; and that in the absence of that written consent. the case will be assigned to a district court judge.

One of the challenges of imprementing this right is that there is no set time for the defendant to

be asked for or to offer written consent.

Criminal Rule 23 - Jury Waiver and the Number of Jurors. As noted in the meeting minutes

excerpt, the Criminal Rules Committee declined to change the rule language to state that a

misdemeanor defendant's consent to waive a jury trial must include the consent of the

prosecutor and approval of the court. Practice surrounding consent varies and the committee

was reluctant to mandate any changes. It did suggest replacing "state" with the broader term

[0] government" to identify whose consent is required for the waiver, to read as follows:

(a) Trial by Jury•. Cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless the defendant waives a jury trial. In felony cases. the waiver must be in writing with the approval of the court and the consent of the qovernment&tate. In misdemeanor cases. the waiver may be in writing or made on the record in open court.

Opinions differed whether the misdemeanor and felony waiver standards in the current rules are

different beyond the "in writing" requirement. One member argued that the consent and

approval requirement applied already to misdemeanor cases by virtue of Dlstrfct Court Criminal

Rule 1 's advice that the Criminal Rules apply wherever applicable. The specificity and

seemingly comprehensive approach taken in the existing Criminal Rufe 23 and District Court

Criminal Rule 1(d) weigh against that reading. Following the meeting, I researched the origin of

the divergent standards and found that they can be traced essentially to statehood. See

Attachment D (excerpt of SCO 4). Criminal Rule 23's jury waiver standard is unchanged. And

the jury waiver standard in the existing District Court Criminal Rules was taken directly from

Criminal Rule 59(d). Rule 59 appeared in the part of the Criminal Rules that provided

procedures for the district magistrate courts; those rules were later replaced with the District

Court Criminal Rules.

Given that it would likely change the standard to require consent and approval for a

misdemeanor defendant's waiver of a jury trial, this rule proposal may not be the best vehicle. If

there is interest in pursuing change to the waiver standards, it might be better handled as a

separate rule change proposal that goes through the usual committee review and comment

process.

Finally, with regard to proposed Rule 23(b), the committee questioned why the rule did not

permit the parties in misdemeanor cases to stipulate to having the jury consist of less than six.

Attachment A

Rules Referral Memorandum-0.Ct.Cr.Rules, Criminal Rules (SCO 1799) Page 4 of 5

May 17, 2013

The current district court rule makes no such allowance, but the existing Rule 23 does. The

committee ran out of time before it had the chance to explore the question further. It agreed to

note the issue but did not attempt to form a recommendation.

The original Criminal Rule 59(d) (shown in SCO 4) did allow the parties to agree to have a jury

of fewer than twelve. But when the separate Magistrate Rules were created and made effective

by SCO 49 on January 1, 1963, that provision was eliminated. (The language of Magistrate Rule

1(e) is identical to the language in D.Ct. Cr. R. 1(d).) The materials I have reviewed relating to

SCO 49's creation of the magistrate rules did not directly address the issue of the number of

jurors. But the change may be a consequence of the 1961 enactment of AS 22.15.150, which

provides that trial juries in the district court shaU consist of six persons.

If the court were inclined. Rule 23(b) could be amended to allow parties in misdemeanor cases

to agree to a jury of fewer than six persons. A possible approach is shown below:

In felony cases. Juries juries shall be of persons. In misdemeanor cases. juries shall be of six persons. ~9ut at any time before verdict ... the parties may stipulate in writing with the approval of the court that the jury shall consist of fewer personsany AUFRbeF less thaFJ 1 a.
The more conservative approach would be to retain the existing, proposed language (taken

from the district court rule) and let any proposal for change go through the full rule change

review process if there is interest.

Other Edits to Criminal Rule 5(c).

The criminal rules committee also suggested some other edits to the SCO. Most appear in

Criminal Rufe 5(c). (The committee also suggested that Criminal Rule 5(bfs heading be

amended to match its text.) Its well-taken suggestion to delete Rule 5 (c)(3)(E) is discussed above. The committee also recommended deleting the repetitive language found at

Rule 5 (c)(3}(C).

The committee also suggested that the proposal drop the language presented in Rule

5 {c){3)(B)(i) to (iii). At the last conference, the court revised that language. drawn from

D.Ct.Cr. R. 1(b)(2). In the second alternate SCO 1799 (tan), I did not include that suggestion. If

the court adopts SCO 1799. the Minor Offense Rules will reference Criminal Rule 5(c) instead of

D. Ct. Cr. R. 1. Because of that, it may be helpful to retain advice regarding who is entitled to

appointed counsel.

The committee also suggested that the remaining provisions of Rule S(c) be restructured to

consolidate some provisions and avoid repetition of the phase "shall inform the defendant."

Because that change in structure did not fit with the substance of proposed paragraph (c)(5), the

committee suggested moving it, but did not identify where. In the second alternate SCO 1799

(tan), I further restructured subsection (c) to find a place for the otherwise orphaned provision.

All the provisions that fit the "shall inform the defendant" class are presented in (c)(1 ), the

orphaned provision is presented at (c)(2).

Whether the committee•s stylistic edits (and my additions) achieve their intended goal of

improving the rule's readability is for the court to decide. The court may prefer, for instance, the

Criminal Rule S(c) language as presented in the alternate SCO 1799 (green), with

subparagraphs (c)(3)(C) and (E) deleted.

Attachment A

Rules Referral Memorandum -0.CtCr"Rules, Criminal Rules (SCO 1799) Page 5 of 5

May 17; 2013

List of Attachments

Attachment A - Rules Referral Memorandum (SCO 1799) without attachments

(dated March 8. 2013) .........................................................................1 Attachment B - Rule Proposal with Commentary from Administrative Staff

(dated December 28, 2012) ..................................................................5 Attachment C - Excerpt of Criminal Rules Committee Meeting Minutes (May St 2013) ......... 16

Attachment D- 1959 Criminal Rules 23, and 59 (SCO 4) ......................................................24

Attachment E - Current District Court Crimtnal Rules 1, 4, 6; Minor Offense Rules 5, 6; Criminal Rules 5, 5.1, 10, 19 and 23 (blue) ............................................29

Attachment F - Alaska Statute 22.15. 120 (blue) ................................. , ......................... 39

Attachment A

Rule 5.1. Preliminary Examination in Felony Cases.

Rule 10. Felony Arraignment in Superior Court.

Rule 19. Change of Venue--Application to Court.

All applications for change of place of trial in the cases provided by AS 22.10.040 or AS 22. t!oao shall be made by motion, supported by affidavit, upon five days• notice to the other party, except that in mi5demeanor cases the request may be made orally on the record. In the event that a change of place of trial shall be ordered, the derk of the court in which the case is pending shall transmit to the clerk of the court to which the proceeding is transferred all papers in the proceeding, or duplicates thereof, and the prosecution shall continue in that court.

Explanation of Changes: We added reference to AS 22.15.080 to make It applicable to misdemeanors. Venue was previously addressed in DCCrR l(e). The Rule 19 standard is more demanding than the district court standard, so we added an exception to allow oral motions in misdemeanors as authorized in DCCrR l(e).

~

I» n :r (1) VI.TRIAL a

m Rule 23. Trial by Jury or by the Court.

(a) Trial by Jury.* cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless the defendant waives a jury trial. Jn felony cases. the waiver must be in writing with the approval of the court and the consent of the state. In misdemeanor cases. the waiver may be in writing or made on the record in ooen court, .. Exolan~ti~n of Ch~~g~~ ~e ch~~ges in this ru~ ~~;ify that felo~y w~ivers must still~· be in writi~g and that ~isdemean~~-waivers ~~·~ b~ in .]·

.... ~ ,;<.-N,·

writing or made orally on the record as provided in DCCrR l(d) '""""'"'"""" +, •••••••• ···• •

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DRAFT 12-28-2012

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Criminal Rules Committee Meeting Minutes *EXCERPT• Page 1of8 May 6, 2013

1. Changes to District Court Criminal Rules (Draft SCO 1799)

Background: At its March 15 Rules Conferencet the supreme court requested that this

committee review draft SCO 1799. That SCO would rescind the remaining District Court

Criminal Rules, make supportive amendments to Criminal Rules 5, 5.1, 10, 19, and 23 that

incorporate the substance of District Court Criminal Rule 1, and replace references to District Court Criminal Rule 1 in Minor Offense Rules 5 and 6. [1] The supreme court previously

discussed that with the establishment of the Rules of Minor Offense Procedure, separate District

Court Criminal Rules would no longer be necessary. Consistent with that expectation,

administrative staff prepared this rule proposal.

The rule change was presented directly to the supreme court as a minor rule change because it

does not change the substance of the existing rule provisions. Instead, significant provisions of

District Court Criminal Rule 1 are moved to logical places within the Criminal Rules. Rule 1 is

the only District Court Criminal Rule that offers specific guidance on procedure in the district

court. (Rule 4 provides for the title of the rules; Rule 6 repeats the language in Criminal Rule

52.) Only those provisions of Rule 1 that offer specific guidance were carried over to the

Criminal Rules. The proposal's aim is modest.

Overall, the court was supportive of the proposal, but it wanted additional review by this

committee to make sure that it was not missing anything. In particular, the court wanted

committee input on the provisions for waiving a trial by jury in Criminal Rule 23. The proposal

carries over the waiver language for misdemeanors from the current District Court Criminal Rule

1 (d). That standard differs from the felony waiver standard. This committee was asked to

address if the standards are-in fact or practice-different; and if so, should they be aligned to

the felony standard?

The court would appreciate the committee's input on its specific questions as well as any other

concerns the committee may have.

Discussion: This item was the last agenda item that the committee reached during the

meeting. It made time for the discussion in consideration of the court's interest in taking final

action on this proposal before the publication deadline for the rule book.

Criminal Rule 5(c). The committee members quickly raised issues with the existing rule

language (taken from District Court Criminal Rule 1) regarding magistrates' ability to try

misdemeanor cases. Rather than advising that a misdemeanor defendant has a right to

"demand to be tried before a district court judget" the case should be assigned to a district court judge as the default. No demand should be necessary. The consensus expressed was that

misdemeanor cases should be assigned to a magistrate for trial only after the defendant has

given consent in writing to be tried before a magistrate. Members suggested further that the

judicial appointment order could be an appropriate place to advise or remind the defendant of

the option of having the case heard by a magistrate. There is no pre..trial order in misdemeanor

cases. The only hearing before trial may be the calendar call. Consequently, last minute delays

can arise if a case is assigned to a magistrate without the defendant's consent.

[1] The changes to Minor Offense Rules 5 and 6 were not presented to the supreme court initially.

They were added upon discovery of the D.Ct.Cr. R. 1 references.

2 A member reported one instance where the court refused to appoint a district court judge.

Attachment C

Criminal Rules Committee Meeting Minutes ..EXCERPT­ Page 2 of 8

May 6, 2013

Because the defendant should not have to demand to be tried by a district court judge, the

committee questioned whether it was necessary or relevant at the time of arraignment to

address the magistrate issue. It unanimously agreed to delete the proposed added language at

Criminal Rule 5(c)(3)(E). The consensus was that there is too much information presented to

the defendant at that initial appearance; the waiver information may be more relevant or

meaningful to the defendant later.

Members also supported generally streamlining the language in Rule S(c). Judge Mannheimer

proposed edits to tighten the presentation of the information that "the judge or magistrate shall

inform the defendanf' of. He also suggested excising proposed items (c)(3)(8)(1)-(iii) as

unnecessary explanations of substantive law, and eliminating subparagraph (c)(3)(C) [1] since that

language appears later in the rule at paragraph (e)(2). Judge Mannheimer suggested that the

language of proposed paragraph (c){5) no longer fit with the other remaining paragraphs and

should be moved. But no suggestions were offered where that language should go.

In the course of its discussion of arraignments. the committee pondered the right to counsel,

when it attaches, and bail. Judge Swiderski explained that when counsel is not present, the

judge will generally enter a plea of not guilty for the defendant and avoid substantive matters.

Some expressed concern that if bail is set at arraignment, before the defendant has a chance to

retain or consult with counsel, that the defendant may be disadvantaged later in terms of the

ability to request a bail review. Judge Swiderski noted that he had never had a case where an

unrepresented defendant asked that he not set bail at arraignment.

Criminal Rule 5(f)(4). Moving on, the committee turned to the new language proposed as Rule

5(f)(4). As with the language the committee deleted at Rule 5(c)(3)(E), the committee had

problems with this paragraph. In particular, the group took issue with the second sentence as a

description of how things should or do proceed. Consistent with the earlier discussion. the group

noted that the magistrate should not hold the case in abeyance until a district court judge become available if the defendant does not consent to be trled before a magistrate; the case

should not be assigned to a magistrate in the first place absent the defendant's consent.

Members suggested that the first sentence of the paragraph could be re-written to better

emphasize that concept. As with the earlier discussion, the committee was not convinced that

this information was helpful at arraignment.

It agreed that the information needs to be shared at some point, but did not specify where in the

rules it might belong. The committee wants to avoid situations where a case is set for trial

before a magistrate but then needs to be re-scheduled at the last minute upon discovery that

the defendant does not consent.

Criminal Rule 23(a). The committee turned its attention next to the court's specific questions

about the standards for waiving a jury trial in misdemeanor and felony cases, as it relates to the

suggested revisions to Criminal Rule 23. The court's first question for the committee was

whether the waiver standards differ? The language in the current district court rule provides that

the defendant's waiver may be in writing or made on the record in open court. But Criminal Rule

23(a) requires that the waiver be in writing with the approval of the court and consent of the state. 3

Opinions differed as to whether the current district court rule included the current Criminal Rule

23(a) consent and approval standards. Judge Mannheimer took the position that Rufe 23(a)'s

3 There was some debate over the existing Rule 23(a) language and whether the court could

refuse to accept a waiver agreed to by the parties. But given that courts are routinely called

upon to inquire into and accept waivers, the issue was dropped.

Attachment C

Criminal Rules Committee Meeting Minutes *EXCERPT* Page 3 of 8

May 6, 2013

consent and approval requlrement applied to both misdemeanor and felony cases based on the

language in District Court Criminal Rule 1 providing that [11] Wherever practicable the Rules of

Criminal Procedure shall apply to criminal actions within the jurisdiction of the district courts." He

suggested that the only difference was that in misdemeanor cases, the waiver need not be in

writing. Other members suggested that the differences were broader.

Most agreed that it was uncommon for a defendant to waive a jury. Mr. Olson of OSPA reported

that he had been asked for consent in the past and never objected. But Ms. Franklin of the

municipal prosecutor's office reported that she is never asked for consent. Her office handles

70% of the misdemeanor cases in Anchorage. Members allowed that the practice or custom

may vary in different locations. For some, it would be a change to require consents or approval.

. The committee experimented with revised language for Rule 23(a) to make the consent and

approval requirements clearly apply in all cases, including as follows: Trial by Jury*. Cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless

(a) the defendant waives a jury trial with the approval of the court and the consent of the stateqovernment. Jn misdemeanor cases. the waiver may be in writing or made on the record in open court. In felony cases. the waiver must be in writing:. with the appreval ef tt:le set:1Ft aRd tt:le oeAseAt ef the state. IR FRisdemeanor cases. the waiver mav ee in writina er made en tt:ae reoerd in eeen court.

But rather than recommend that change or similar, the committee opted to leave the proposed

language-which several members found ambiguous-essentially as is, though "staten would

be replaced with "government":

(a) Trial by Jury*. Cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless the defendant waives a jury trial. In felony cases. the waiver must be in writing with the approval of the court and the consent of the governmentstale. In misdemeanor cases. the waiver may be in writing or made on the record in open court.

This result reflects a certain ambivalence on the part of the committee with regard to the court's

second question: whether the court's approval and the state's consent should be required for a

misdemeanor defendant's waiver? The committee was not of one mind and was hesitant to

expressly call for what would be a change in practice in at least some areas of the state. It

preferred to leave it ambiguous.

Earlier in the discussion, Mr. Murtagh had expressed his general preference that any time an

important right is waived, it should be in writing, since that process tends to elicit more thought

and reflection. But the committee did not pursue that change. (The limited purpose of the

proposal was to move the existing substantive provisions of District Court Criminal Rule 1 into

the Criminal Rules.)

Criminal Rule 23(b). As time was running out, a committee member queried whether the parties

in misdemeanor cases should be permitted to stipulate, with the courtts consent, to having fewer

than six jurors. The rule provides that in felony cases, the parties may stipulate to a jury of Jess

than 12. Lacking time, the committee did not attempt to resolve the question.

In light of the upcoming rule-book publication deadline, the committee agreed to share the work

it was able to complete with the court. The proposal with the committee revisions is shown

below:

Attachment C

Criminal Rules Committee Meeting Minutes *EXCERPT* Page 7of8

May 6, 2013

(~+) The judicial officer shall ask the defendant to enter a plea pursuant to Criminal Rule 11, If the defendant pleads not guilty, the court shall fix a date for trial at such
(~~) time as will afford the defendant a reasonable opportunity to prepare. *23 (4) IJ the defendant is sharqed witl=t a misdemeanor. the eJefendant FRust gi'Je written conseRt to have the Gase tried baf.ore a FRaaistrate. If a defendant daee net aive Sl:Joh 'A'ritten sensent, the magistrate shalJ hold Iha proseedinga in abeyance until a distriet jl:Jeae besemes availabte tt=le ease. te tn• [NOTE: The committee favored removing or moving this paragraph as ill-timed at arraignment. In addition, the standard presented is not correct. Because a defendant must first consent to have a case tried by a magistrate, the case should be assigned initially to a judge, not to a magistrate.) ( 4§) The judicial officer shall inform the defendant that the defendant may peremptorily disqualify the district judge or magistrate to whom the case is assigned pursuant to AS 22.20.022.
Rule 5.1. Preliminary Examination in Felony Cases • ****

Rule 10. Felony Arraignment in Superior Court

****

Rule 19. Change of Venue-Application to Court All applications for change of place of trial in the cases provided by AS 22.10.040 or AS 22.15.080 shall be made by motion, supported by affidavit, upon five days' notice to the other party. exceot that in misdemeanor cases the request may be made orally on the record. In the event that a change of place of trial shall be orderedt the clerk of the court in which the case is pending shall transmit to the clerk of the court to which the proceeding is transferred all papers in the proceeding. or duplicates thereof, and the prosecution shall continue in that court.

Rule 23. Trial by Jury or by the Court

(a) Trial by Jury•. Cases required to be tried by jury shall be so tried unless the defendant waives a jury trial. Jn felony cases. the waiver must be in writing with the approval of the court and the consent of the governmentstate. In misdemeanor cases. the waiver may be in writing or made on the record in open court.
[NOTE: The committee opted to leave the rule ambiguous, at least for now. Opinions differed as to whether the current district court rule included the current Criminal Rule 23(a) consent and approval standards.]

(b) Jury of Less Than Twelve. In felony cases. J1:1ries iuries shall be of 12 persons"' but at any time before verdict the parties may stipulate in writing with Attachment c

Case Details

Case Name: Treptow v. State
Court Name: Court of Appeals of Alaska
Date Published: Dec 1, 2017
Citation: 408 P.3d 1220
Docket Number: 2576 A-12092
Court Abbreviation: Alaska Ct. App.
Read the detailed case summary
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