¶ 1 The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office (the “State”) charged Ravi R. Urs with one count of reckless driving, a class 2 misdemeanor, in violation of Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) § 28-693 (Supp.2000), for driving his vehicle on a closed portion of freeway. The justice court subsequently denied Urs’ request for a jury trial, and he sought special action relief from the superior court. That court granted relief to Urs and instructed the justice court to provide him with a jury trial. The justice court then stayed its proceedings pending our resolution of this appeal.
¶ 2 Jury eligibility is a question of law, and we therefore review the superior court’s order
de novo. Amancio v. Forster,
DISCUSSION
¶ 3 Article 2, Sections 23 and 24 of the Arizona Constitution broadly guarantee a trial by jury to all criminal defendants.
1
However, our courts have recognized that “[t]he constitutional guarantee of trial by jury is not a
grant,
but a
reservation
of a pre-statehood right.”
Benitez v. Dunevant,
¶ 4 In a line of cases commencing with
Rothweiler,
our supreme court has fashioned a test (the
Rothweiler/Dolny
test) to determine jury eligibility for present-day crimes that may or may not have existed at common law. To determine jury eligibility, a court must consider whether (1) the “offense is traceable to jury eligibility at
common
law,” (2) the maximum potential penalty for committing the offense is severe, and/or (3) the crime involves moral turpitude or has
¶5 Relying on
District of Columbia v. Colts,
¶ 6 The District of Columbia charged the defendant in
Colts
with driving a motor vehicle “at a greater rate of speed than twenty-two miles an hour over ... public highway(s) recklessly, ... at a greater rate of speed than was reasonable and proper, ... in such manner and condition so as to endanger property and individuals.”
Colts,
¶ 7 Colts appealed his conviction, and the Supreme Court held that Colts was entitled to a jury trial.
Id.
at 71,
An automobile is, potentially, a dangerous instrumentality, as the appalling number of fatalities brought about every day by its operation bear distressing witness. To drive such an instrumentality through the public streets of a city so recklessly ‘as to endanger property and individuals’ is an act of such obvious' depravity that to characterize it as a petty offense would be to shock the general moral sense. Such an act properly cannot be described otherwise than as a grave offense — a crime within the meaning of the third article of the Constitution — and as such within the constitutional guarantee of trial by jury.
Id. (citations omitted); see also Frances Wharton, 1 American Criminal Law § 4(1) (6th ed.) (1870) (Clearly, driving a carriage “in such a way as to endanger the lives of the passers-by” is an indictable, and jury-eligible, common-law disturbance of the peace).
¶ 8 The State contends that the reckless driving offense charged against Colts is distinguishable from the crime at issue in this case, and
Colts
is therefore inapplicable. Specifically, the State argues that the charge against Colts involved an element of endangerment that is not found in A.R.S. § 28-693. Absent that element, the State asserts, the offense of reckless driving loses its link to jury-eligible offenses indictable at common law.
See Colts,
¶ 9 As Urs points out, however, a charged offense does not have to be identical to common-law crimes that were jury eligible in order to be linked to such crimes. In
Bowden v. Nugent,
¶ 10 We decide that driving a vehicle “in reckless disregard for the safety of persons or property,” in violation of A.R.S. § 28-693(A), is in the character of operating a motor vehicle so “ ‘as to endanger [any] property [or] individual ]’ ” a jury-eligible offense at common law.
Colts, 282
U.S. at 73,
¶ 11 The State next argues that we should follow this court’s decision in
Aldrich,
which applied the
Rothweiler/Dolny
test and held that reckless driving in violation of A.R.S. § 28-693 is not a jury-eligible offense.
Aldrich,
¶ 12 The State finally urges us, for various policy reasons, to refrain from determining jury eligibility on an offense-by-offense basis. Because we are constrained to follow the Rothweiler/Dolny test as mandated by our supreme court, we must decline this request.
CONCLUSION
¶ 13 We hold that reckless driving in violation of A.R.S. § 28-693 was a jury-eligible offense at common law, and Urs’ right to a jury trial is thus guaranteed by Article 2, Sections 23 and 24 of the Arizona Constitution. We therefore affirm.
Notes
. Article 2, Section 23 provides that, “[t]he right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.” Section 24 states that, "[i]n criminal prosecutions, the accused shall have the right ... to have a speedy public trial by an impartial juiy....”
. A "petty” offense in this context is synonymous with a "minor” offense,
Rothweiler,
. "Indictable offenses” at common law were juty-eligible crimes.
See. Colts,
