IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 46916
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STATE OF IDAHO, )
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Plaintiff-Respondent, ) Boise, December 2020 Term
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v. ) Opinion Filed: June 30, 2021
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KEVIN JONATHAN COX, ) Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk
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Defendant-Appellant. )
_______________________________________ )
Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of
Idaho, Ada County, Deborah A. Bail, District Judge.
The judgment of conviction is vacated and the case is remanded.
Eric D. Fredericksen, State Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for appellant. Sally
J. Cooley argued.
Lawrence G. Wasden Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. Justin R.
Porter argued.
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BRODY, Justice.
In this case, we address the effect of Idaho’s persistent violator sentencing enhancement
on the number of peremptory challenges available to a defendant at trial. For the reasons below,
we hold that the number of peremptory challenges available to both sides is determined by
reference to the enhanced sentence a defendant could receive, not by the sentence prescribed for
the underlying offense.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Kevin Cox was charged by information with attempted strangulation and intentional
destruction of a telecommunication instrument stemming from the domestic abuse of his wife.
The crime of attempted strangulation is a felony punishable by up to fifteen years imprisonment.
I.C. § 18-923. Intentional destruction of a telecommunication instrument is a misdemeanor
punishable by up to one year imprisonment. I.C. § 18-6810. Cox pleaded not guilty to both
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charges. The State then filed an Information Part II alleging that Cox was a persistent violator
under Idaho Code section 19-2514 because he had been convicted of three prior felonies. Section
19-2514 provides that upon conviction for a third or subsequent felony, a person is subject to a
sentence of not less than five years and up to life imprisonment, irrespective of the penalty
prescribed for the underlying offense.
The district court held a jury trial in December 2018. Before voir dire, Cox’s counsel
opposed the district court’s intention to allow only six peremptory challenges per side, plus one
for the alternate juror. Cox’s counsel argued that because Cox could be sentenced to life
imprisonment if he were determined to be a persistent violator, Cox was entitled to ten
peremptory challenges, plus one, under Idaho Criminal Rule 24(d) (“Rule 24”). Rule 24 provides
that “[i]f the offense charged is punishable by death, or life imprisonment, each party . . . is
entitled to 10 peremptory challenges. In all other felony cases each party. . . is entitled to six
peremptory challenges.” I.C.R. 24(d). However, the district court ruled that Cox was entitled to
only six peremptory challenges, reasoning that despite the sentencing enhancement the
substantive charges against Cox did not carry a possible life sentence.
The jury was empaneled, with each side exhausting its peremptory challenges. Cox made
no objection to the composition of the jury after it was selected. However, he was never asked if
he passed the jury for cause, apparently due to an oversight by the district court after an
interruption during voir dire. As a result, Cox never passed the panel for cause.
The jury found Cox guilty on both charges and Cox admitted to being a persistent
violator. The district court imposed a ten-year sentence with three years fixed for the attempted
strangulation conviction, a concurrent sixty-day sentence for the destruction of a
telecommunication instrument conviction, and retained jurisdiction. After a rider review hearing,
the district court suspended Cox’s sentence and placed Cox on probation for ten years. Cox
timely appealed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“[T]he interpretation of a court rule must always begin with the plain, ordinary meaning
of the rule’s language . . . .” State v. Montgomery, 163 Idaho 40, 44, 408 P.3d 38, 42 (2017).
However, in light of the Court’s role as the author of court rules, the plain language of a rule
“may be tempered by the rule’s purpose.” Id. Further, “in keeping with the Idaho Criminal
Rules’ aim of ‘provid[ing] for the just determination of every criminal proceeding[,]’ [the Court]
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construe[s] the rules ‘to secure simplicity in procedure, fairness in administration and elimination
of unjustifiable expense and delay.’ ” Id. (quoting I.C.R. 2(a)) (internal citations omitted).
III. ANALYSIS
A. The district court erred in denying Cox ten peremptory challenges.
Idaho Criminal Rule 24 provides: “If the offense charged is punishable by death, or life
imprisonment, each party . . . is entitled to 10 peremptory challenges. In all other felony cases
each party. . . is entitled to six peremptory challenges.” I.C.R. 24(d). Cox maintains he was
entitled to ten peremptory challenges because this provision focuses on the maximum possible
punishment that a defendant may face if convicted, while the State maintains that the
legislatively prescribed penalty for the underlying offense controls, without regard to any
potential enhancement.
Our task in this case is straightforward. We only resort to rules of interpretation where the
language at issue is ambiguous and we find no ambiguity here. Rule 24 focuses on the potential
punishment the accused may face if convicted. Here, the State alleged both that Cox had
committed a felony and that he was a persistent violator under Idaho Code section 19-2514.
Because a persistent violator may be sentenced to life imprisonment upon conviction of an
additional felony, Cox was entitled to ten peremptory challenges.
The crux of the State’s argument is that the persistent violator enhancement is not really
an offense at all. Therefore, the State maintains, only the sentence prescribed for the underlying
offense is relevant for purposes of determining the number of peremptory challenges:
[T]he persistent violator enhancement alleged in the information part II was not
an “offense charged.” Rather, it is merely an allegation that Cox is “a persistent
violator of the law,” and thus he “should be sentenced pursuant to Idaho Code §
19-2514, upon conviction of the charge(s) contained in PART I of the
Information.”
(capitalization in original).
We disagree with the State’s contention. Certainly, the State is correct insofar as it asserts
that a sentencing enhancement is not a separate offense. See State v. Schall, 157 Idaho 488, 492–
94 337 P.3d 647, 651–53 (2014). However, the State’s narrow focus on the words “offense
charged” ignores the full phrase employed by the rule—i.e., “[i]f the offense charged is
punishable by death, or life imprisonment.” (emphasis added). In this context, it is plain that the
maximum sentence actually faced by a defendant is decisive. To arrive at the State’s suggested
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meaning would, in effect, require us to insert the words “without regard to any applicable
sentencing enhancement” after the words “is punishable by death, or life imprisonment.”
Moreover, the State’s suggestion that we only focus on Part I of the information (alleging
Cox committed the underlying offenses) and ignore Part II (alleging he is a persistent violator) is
inconsistent with the Idaho Criminal Rules. Idaho Criminal Rule 7 requires that charging
documents set forth the basis for both the principal charge and any enhancement sought by the
prosecution. I.C.R. 7(c). Further, because the enhancement is included within the charging
documents, Idaho Criminal Rule 10 requires that a defendant be arraigned on both the underlying
charge and the enhancement. See I.C.R. 10(a), (c). These requirements reflect that an allegation
of being a persistent violator, though not a stand-alone offense, is a grave matter triggering basic
due process requirements. See State v. Miller, 151 Idaho 828, 833, 264 P.3d 935, 940 (2011)
(finding that due process requirements must be met before adjudication as a persistent violator,
even though a court’s failure to comply with I.C.R. 7(c) did not deprive the court of jurisdiction
to sentence a defendant under the enhancement). Likewise, we hold that the possibility of a life
sentence under the persistent violator enhancement, though not otherwise a permissible
punishment for the underlying offense, triggers the entitlement to ten peremptory challenges
under Rule 24. Accordingly, the district court erred in limiting Cox to six rather than ten
peremptory challenges.
B. Cox is entitled to a new trial because we adopt a new standard for demonstrating
error from the denial of a peremptory challenge.
The State argues that even if the district court erred by denying Cox’s request for ten
peremptory challenges, any error was harmless. The State cites Nightengale v. Timmel, 151
Idaho 347, 354, 256 P.3d 755, 762 (2011), and contends that to establish prejudicial error Cox
needed to demonstrate that a biased juror was empaneled as a result of the district court’s
limitation of his available challenges. The State has correctly articulated the standard set forth in
Nightengale. Today, however, we adopt a new standard for establishing reversible error from the
denial of a peremptory challenge.
The Nightengale standard requires a defendant to do on appeal what he was not required
to do at trial—prove a juror is biased. In other words, the standard requires proof that a person
sat on the jury who should have been excluded for cause in order to establish an impairment of
the right to exclude jurors without cause. The practical effect of this incongruous standard is that
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the peremptory challenges provided by our rule evaporate with errors at trial. Because our
standard is inconsistent with our rule, we must reconsider our standard.
Moreover, our precedents reveal no compelling reason to cling to the Nightengale
standard. For many decades following statehood, this Court regarded the denial of a peremptory
challenge to be reversible error without any showing a biased juror was empaneled. See, e.g.,
State v. Dickens, 68 Idaho 173, 191 P.2d 364 (1948) (quoting People v. Weil, 40 Cal. 268 (1870)
(“It plainly appears, that the practical result of [the trial court’s error] was to contract the number
of peremptory challenges to which he was entitled, and that such an error may have been
seriously prejudicial to defendant.”); Burke v. McDonald, 2 Idaho 1023, 29 P. 98, 100 (1892) (“If
the plaintiff is compelled to use a peremptory challenge” in order to correct a trial court error in
denying a challenge for cause, “then it works an injury to the party for which a new trial should
be granted.”). However, our jurisprudence took a sharp turn in State v. Wozniak, 94 Idaho 312,
486 P.2d 1025 (1971), wherein we first applied the standard we reject today. Notably, we
adopted that new standard without explaining our reasoning, citing to authority, or even
acknowledging our break with earlier law. See id. at 319, 486 P.2d at 1032.
Since we decided Wozniak, we have offered little additional justification for the
Nightengale standard. In State v. Ramos, 119 Idaho 568, 808 P.2d 1313 (1991), over a dissent by
Justice Bistline, we made express Wozniak’s implied overruling of earlier precedent. But in so
doing, we affirmed Wozniak because it stated the more recent rule, not the better-reasoned one.
Id. at 569–70, 808 P.2d at 1314–15. Indeed, in place of substantive analysis, we merely cited to
Ross v. Oklahoma, 487 U.S. 81 (1988), introduced by a “cf.” signal. (The abbreviation “cf.”
stands for the Latin “confer/conferatur” both of which mean “compare.”) However, as Justice
Bistline argued in his dissent, the significance of Ross is that the existence and scope of a
peremptory challenge right is a matter of state law. Ramos, 119 Idaho at 574, 808 P.2d at 1319;
see also Ross, 487 U.S. at 89 (“[I]t is for the State to determine the number of peremptory
challenges allowed and to define their purpose and the manner of their exercise. As such, the
‘right’ to peremptory challenges is ‘denied or impaired’ only if the defendant does not receive
that which state law provides.”) (citations omitted). Thus, Ross supports the authority of this
Court to interpret the scope of the right to peremptory challenges under Idaho law, but it offers
no more support for the rule adopted by Wozniak than for the rule abandoned by it.
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Our only significant consideration of the Nightengale standard was in Nightengale itself.
There we rejected an argument to overturn Ramos, holding that “Ramos follows the general
weight of authority on the issue.” Nightengale, 151 Idaho at 354, 256 P.3d at 762. In support, we
cited to Ross; to cases from California, Texas, Minnesota, and Tennessee; and to a section of
American Jurisprudence, Second Edition. Id. However, on further consideration, we were
mistaken.
An examination of the American Jurisprudence section cited in Ramos is illuminating. It
provides that “no reversible error is shown unless the defendant exhausted his peremptory
challenges and one or more objectionable jurors sat on the jury.” 47 AM. JUR. 2D Jury § 198
(2020) (formerly located at § 205) (emphasis added). But “objectionable” is not the same as
“biased.” A juror may be objectionable simply because a party would have used a peremptory
challenge to remove the juror if it could have done so. Consistent with this principle, the Texas
and California cases cited by Nightengale do not speak of bias, but of “dissatisfaction with the
jury as empaneled” and “objectionable veniremembers.” See People v. Hamilton, 200 P.3d 898,
925 (2009); Cortez ex rel. Estate of Puentes v. HCCI-San Antonio, Inc., 159 S.W.3d 87, 91 (Tex.
2005). In fact, of the six authorities we cited to support the Nightengale standard (including Ross,
discussed above), only State v. Prtine, 784 N.W.2d 303, 311–12 (Minn. 2010) and State v.
Schmeiderer, 319 S.W.3d 607, 632–33 (Tenn. 2010) offer any support for the Nightengale
standard. Contrary to these cases, it appears the weight of authority supports the standard we
adopt today.
Accordingly, we return to course from the detour that began with Wozniak. To
demonstrate error from the denial of a peremptory challenge, we no longer require that a party
prove a biased juror was empaneled. Rather, we hold that a party complaining of an erroneous
denial of a peremptory challenge must demonstrate that it exhausted its remaining peremptory
challenges and an objectionable juror was empaneled as a result. Further, guided by the
authorities discussed above, we hold that the record must disclose which juror (or jurors) would
have been struck but for the trial court’s alleged error. Finally, to preserve such an error for
appeal, a party must object to the composition of jury before it is sworn. Cf. State v. Ish, 166
Idaho 492, 501, 461 P.3d 774, 783 (2020).
Here, the district court erred in denying Cox ten peremptory challenges, and he exhausted
the six peremptory challenges he was allowed. Though Cox has not met the requirements we
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announce today to preserve the error, he did not have the benefit of this decision to guide his
objection. Further, the district court’s failure to ask Cox if he passed the jury for cause deprived
him of a clear opportunity to object to the jury as empaneled. Therefore, in the interest of justice,
remand for a new trial is appropriate.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of conviction against Cox is vacated and the case
is remanded for a new trial.
Chief Justice BEVAN, and Justices BURDICK, STEGNER, and MOELLER CONCUR.
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