State v. Reed

Decision Date14 October 1975
Citation345 A.2d 891
PartiesSTATE of Maine v. Robert L. REED.
CourtMaine Supreme Court

Frank M. Harding, Dist. Atty., Rockland, for plaintiff.

Harmon & Jones by John J. Sanford, Camden, for defendant.

Grossman, Faber & Miller by, A. Alan Grossman, Barry M. Faber, Rockland, for amicus curiae.

Before DUFRESNE, C. J., and WEATHERBEE, POMEROY, WERNICK, ARCHIBALD and DELAHANTY, JJ.

WERNICK, Justice.

Approximaely at 12:30 a. m. on September 27, 1974 defendant was walking on Main Street in the City of Rockland, Maine. He was arrested and subsequently charged in District Court, District Six, Division of Knox, with a violation of a Rockland ordinance which provided:

'No person on probation, or parole, from a legal court sentence shall be, or remain, upon any street or public place after 10:00 P.M. standard or daylight savings time (whichever is in effect as the legal time) unless said person is going or coming from his place of employment or as part of the conditions of his probation or parole. Whoever violates this section of his ordinance shall be punished by a fine of not less than $25.00 and not more than $100.00 or by imprisonment for not more than 30 days, or both such fine and imprisonment.'

Under Rule 40 D.C.Crim.R. the case was transferred to the Superior Court (Knox County). There, defendant filed a motion to dismiss the complaint on the grounds: (1) the City of Rockland '. . . exceeded its authority in enacting the ordinance' and (2) the ordinance is invalid because 'it violates the Constitution of the State of Maine . . . (and) the Constitution of the United States.'

On October 16, 1974 the attorney for the State and defendant's attorney signed on agreement to have the case reported to the Law Court pursuant to Rule 37A M.R.Crim.P. The attorneys submitted an Agreed Statement of Facts establishing, inter alia, that the ordinance was in effect at all relevant times, defendant had been paroled from a legal sentence to the Men's Correctional Center on May 23, 1974 and defendant was on Main Street in Rockland at 12:30 a.m. on September 24, 1974 while he was a parolee as aforesaid and was neither going to or from his place of employment nor on the Street as part of the conditions of his parole.

The Justice presiding in the Superior Court entered an order reporting the case to the Law Court pursuant to Rule 37A M.R.Crim.P. Asking the Law Court for a decision 'as the rights of the parties may require', the order of report specifically stated that

'. . . if the ordinance . . . is invalid, . . . defendant's motion to dismiss should be granted, thus resulting in a final disposition of this action in favor of the defendant'

and, further,

'. . . if the ordinance . . . is valid, . . . defendant will plead guilty of violation of the ordinance and will be sentenced accordingly; . . . (thus to effect) a final disposition of this action in favor of the State.'

We deal, preliminarily, with a procedural matter. The agreement for report is signed on behalf of defendant only by defendant's attorney. The record reveals no document signed by the defendant himself waiving defendant's constitutional right to trial by jury or otherwise committing defendant, consistently with constitutional safeguards, to enter a guilty plea. The statement in the order of report that 'defendant will plead guilty' must be taken, therefore, to lack legal force to bind the defendant.

This, however, does not defeat the jurisdiction of this Court to entertain the report since under Rule 37A(a) the 'report' jurisdiction of the Law Court is properly invoked as to

'any question of law . . . of sufficient importance or doubt . . . provided . . . the decision thereof would in at least one alternative result in a final disposition of the action in...

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1 cases
  • State v. Falcone
    • United States
    • Maine Supreme Court
    • 27 d4 Julho d4 2006
    ...the term "domicile" is inadequately defined, leaving people "of common intelligence [to] necessarily guess at its meaning," State v. Reed, 345 A.2d 891, 894 (Me.1975) (quotation marks omitted), I would find that basing criminal sanctions on section 5102(5)(A) violates the defendants' right ......

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