State of New Jersey v. Michael Richard Powers , 448 N.J. Super. 69 ( 2016 )


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  •                   NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-3764-14T2
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    December 14, 2016
    v.                                         APPELLATE DIVISION
    MICHAEL RICHARD POWERS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    __________________________________________________
    Argued September 20, 2016 – Decided December 14, 2016
    Before Judges Fisher, Ostrer and Leone.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New
    Jersey, Law Division, Middlesex County,
    Municipal Appeal No. 49-2014.
    Michael Richard Powers,         appellant,     argued
    the cause pro se.
    Jason M. Boudwin, Assistant Prosecutor,
    argued the cause for respondent (Andrew C.
    Carey, Middlesex County Prosecutor, attorney;
    Mr. Boudwin, of counsel and on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    FISHER, P.J.A.D.
    Defendant was convicted after a trial in municipal court,
    and again upon his appeal to the Law Division, of obstruction,
    which   occurs   when,   as   pertinent    here,    a   person   "purposely
    obstructs,    impairs     or     prevents    .   .   .   a    public    servant        from
    lawfully     performing     an   official    function         by    means   of    .    .   .
    physical interference . . . or by means of any independently
    unlawful act." N.J.S.A. 2C:29-1(a). The State claimed that by
    way of "physical interference" and by means of an "independently
    unlawful     act"   defendant      obstructed        a   state      trooper      in     the
    issuance of a summons for a parking violation at a New Jersey
    Turnpike rest stop. We conclude that defendant could not be
    convicted of obstruction by means of "an independently unlawful
    act"   but   remand   for      further   findings        as    to    what   the       judge
    believed constituted "physical interference."
    In considering defendant's argument about the sufficiency
    of the evidence,1 we start by recognizing that, on an appeal of a
    municipal conviction, a Law Division judge is "to determine the
    case completely anew on the record made in the municipal court,
    giving due, although not necessarily controlling, regard to the
    opportunity of the magistrate to judge the credibility of the
    1
    Defendant's attack on the sufficiency of the evidence is posed
    over the course of two points of his brief. Defendant argues in
    his other points that: (1) the municipal judge failed to arraign
    him as required by Rule 7:6-1; (2) the municipal judge erred in
    denying his motion for a judgment of acquittal; (3) the State
    "did not disprove [his] affirmative defense beyond a reasonable
    doubt"; (4) the State failed to provide discovery; and (5) the
    municipal judge improperly reinstated the charges when he had
    previously dismissed them.    Because of our disposition of the
    appeal, we need not reach these other points.
    2                                       A-3764-14T2
    witnesses."       State v. Johnson, 
    42 N.J. 146
    , 157 (1964). Our
    review of the factual record is also limited to determining
    whether there is sufficient credible evidence in the record to
    support the Law Division judge's findings.           
    Id. at 161-62;
    State
    v. Clarksburg Inn, 
    375 N.J. Super. 624
    , 639 (App. Div. 2005).
    Accordingly, we defer to those findings made in the Law Division
    that are supported by credible evidence, but we owe no deference
    to the legal conclusions drawn from those findings. State v.
    Handy, 
    206 N.J. 39
    , 45 (2011).
    By way of a written opinion, the Law Division judge found
    that, on November 6, 2013, at a Woodbridge rest stop on the New
    Jersey Turnpike, defendant and another motorist had parked their
    vehicles in a no-parking area.            A state trooper came upon these
    two unoccupied vehicles and provided a dispatcher with their
    license plates to ascertain whether the vehicles were stolen or
    abandoned. As this occurred, defendant exited the building and
    approached.      The    trooper   asked    for   defendant's   license     and
    explained   he    was    citing   defendant's    vehicle   because   it    was
    parked in a no-parking area.
    The trooper instructed defendant to enter his vehicle; the
    trooper testified this instruction was based on his concern for
    defendant's safety due to the amount of traffic at the rest
    stop. Defendant did not comply. In addition, as the Law Division
    3                              A-3764-14T2
    judge observed, "defendant's hands repeatedly [went] in and out
    of his pockets," causing the trooper to instruct defendant not
    to do that. When defendant did not comply, the trooper grabbed
    defendant's wrist and again instructed him to keep his hands out
    of his pockets.        With that, defendant responded, "Why did you
    grab me?     Why did you assault me?"; he removed a cellphone from
    his   vehicle    and    dialed    9-1-1,    reporting     he    had      just   been
    assaulted by an officer. Upon observing defendant recite his
    patrol car numbers during this phone call, the trooper called
    for backup.
    The    trooper    again    instructed    defendant       to   get    in    his
    vehicle.     Defendant again refused; he told the trooper he was an
    attorney, knew his rights, and was waiting for "direction from
    someone on the phone."           When another trooper arrived, defendant
    was arrested.
    In interpreting the significance of these events, the Law
    Division judge described the issue as whether defendant, "in
    failing to comply with the trooper's orders to keep his hands
    out of his pockets and sit in his vehicle for the duration of
    the motor vehicle stop," obstructed the officer.
    As    noted    earlier,    N.J.S.A.    2C:29-1(a)    declares         that    a
    person     commits   the   offense    of    obstruction    "if      he   purposely
    obstructs, impairs . . . or attempts to prevent a public servant
    4                                   A-3764-14T2
    from    lawfully    performing    an     official     function   by   means     of
    flight, intimidation, force, violence, or physical interference
    or obstacle, or by means of any independently unlawful act." The
    Law    Division     judge    concluded       that   defendant    impaired      the
    trooper's performance by both "physical interference" and "by
    means of an[] independently unlawful act," ibid., but it is far
    from clear whether he drew those different conclusions from the
    same facts, as suggested in his opinion by these comments:
    Although [d]efendant acted without violence,
    his conduct (i.e., standing outside of his
    car and repeatedly putting his hands in his
    pockets) directly opposed [the] [t]roop-
    er['s] instructions and physically inter-
    fered with the officer's ability to perform
    his official duties of issuing the summons
    while protecting his own safety and the
    safety of others.
    . . . .
    Notwithstanding the [c]ourt's finding that
    [d]efendant in this case did in fact
    physically interfere[] with the officer's
    ability to carry out his duties, the [c]ourt
    also 
    finds, supra
    , that even absent such
    physical interference, [d]efendant is still
    guilty of obstruction on the independent
    basis that [d]efendant committed an unlawful
    act.
    In short, the judge may have relied on the same facts – that
    defendant stood outside his vehicle and repeatedly put his hands
    in    and   took   his   hands   out   of    his    pockets   contrary   to    the
    trooper's directions – to conclude that defendant impeded the
    5                               A-3764-14T2
    trooper by both physically interfering and by engaging in an
    independently unlawful act.
    Nonetheless, it is unclear exactly how the judge believed
    defendant's failure to obey the trooper's commands physically
    interfered with his ability to write or issue a parking ticket.
    Nor is it clear whether the judge believed defendant engaged in
    additional, unspecified conduct that physically interfered with
    the   trooper,   such      as     standing   in    his   path    or    physically
    distracting him.     What constitutes obstruction may often turn on
    the precise details of the charged conduct.                     Absent clearer
    findings, we cannot determine where on the existing continuum of
    similar cases2 this matter might be found.
    Because of this lack of clarity and the absence of specific
    findings   to    support        the   judge's     conclusion    that   defendant
    2
    In State v. Rone, 
    410 N.J. Super. 589
    , 596-97 (App. Div. 2009),
    the evidence was sufficient to support an obstruction conviction
    where the defendant arrived at the police stop, parked her
    vehicle between the stopped vehicle and the police vehicle, and
    later briefly stood between the two vehicles. And, in State v.
    Perlstein, 
    206 N.J. Super. 246
    , 253 (App. Div. 1985), an
    obstruction conviction was affirmed where, during a motor
    vehicle stop, the defendant attempted to move her car contrary
    to an officer's directions.     On the other hand, in State v.
    Camillo, 
    382 N.J. Super. 113
    , 118 (App. Div. 2005), we held that
    the defendant's refusal to provide requested information "may,
    in fact, have in a real sense obstructed the trooper from
    preparing his report" but that, "in the absence of physical
    interference," he could not be found to have violated N.J.S.A.
    2C:29-1(a).
    6                               A-3764-14T2
    physically interfered with the trooper, we remand for further
    findings.
    The     Law    Division         judge,   however,        was    clear   about      the
    conduct he believed constituted an "independently unlawful act."
    The   judge    found       that      defendant's     actions      were     "independently
    unlawful"     by    force       of    N.J.S.A.     39:4-57,     which      provides    that
    "[d]rivers of vehicles . . . shall at all times comply with any
    direction, by voice or hand, of a member of a police department"
    when the officer is in the course of "enforcing a provision of
    this chapter." As part of his analysis of this statute, the Law
    Division judge determined the trooper was enforcing "a provision
    of this chapter" when issuing a summons because the vehicle was
    parked in violation of N.J.A.C. 19:9-1.6.                       We disagree with the
    judge's application of this statute.
    First,        N.J.S.A.         39:4-57       has    no    application        because
    defendant was not at the time a "driver[] of [a] vehicle[]." He
    was   not   inside        the   vehicle    and,      in   fact,      the   State   insists
    obstruction occurred in part because defendant refused to enter
    his   vehicle        at     the      trooper's       direction;       that     contention
    logically defies what it means to be a driver of a vehicle
    whether we apply existing case law3 or the law of physics.4
    3
    The Legislature's definition of "driver" is not helpful in
    resolving the issue presented. N.J.S.A. 39:1-1 (defining
    (continued)
    7                                   A-3764-14T2
    Second, the trooper was not in the process of enforcing
    what    N.J.S.A.   39:4-57   refers       to   as   "a   provision   of   this
    chapter." The statute refers only to Chapter 39. Because the
    trooper was not citing defendant for a moving violation or any
    provision of Chapter 39, and instead was only in the process of
    writing a ticket because defendant parked in a prohibited area,
    (continued)
    "[d]river" as "the rider or driver of a horse, bicycle or
    motorcycle or the driver or operator of a motor vehicle, unless
    otherwise specified" in Chapter 39).    Questions regarding the
    nature of a defendant's relationship to a vehicle frequently
    arise when the defendant is charged with "operat[ing] a motor
    vehicle" while under the influence, N.J.S.A. 39:4-50(a). But
    "operation" suggests a broader scope of conduct than "driving."
    See State v. Wright, 
    107 N.J. 488
    , 491 n.1 (1987) (relying on
    the definition of "operator" in N.J.S.A. 39:1-1, as "a person
    who is in actual physical control of a vehicle"). In Wright, the
    Court found "evidence that defendant was sitting in the driver's
    seat with the headlights on and the motor running seems to be
    sufficient to establish that he was the 'operator' of the 
    car." 107 N.J. at 491
    n.1. In referring to another case decided the
    same day, State v. Mulcahy, 
    107 N.J. 467
    (1987), the Court held
    a defendant was operating a vehicle because he "put [the] key in
    [the] ignition [with the] intent to drive [the] 
    car." 107 N.J. at 491
    n.1 (emphasis added). Wright and Mulcahy, in short,
    recognize that "driving" a car involves the guiding of the
    vehicle while in motion, whereas "operating" involves some
    physical control over the vehicle with an "intent to drive."
    
    Wright, supra
    , 107 N.J. at 491 n.1.    Either way, until modern
    technology causes a revisiting of what it means to "operate" or
    "drive" a vehicle, our jurisprudence does not view a person in
    possession of car keys but not actually inside the vehicle as a
    "driver."
    4
    Just as Schrödinger's cat cannot logically be observed as both
    dead and alive at the same time, defendant could not be both
    inside and outside his vehicle at the same time.
    8                              A-3764-14T2
    N.J.S.A.   39:4-57     cannot          form    a    basis    for       the    independently
    unlawful act found by the Law Division judge.
    Although     we    agree       with       the    judge       that       the   obstruction
    statute was intended "to prohibit a broad range of behavior
    designed    to      impede        or     defeat       the        lawful       operation     of
    government," 
    Camillo, supra
    , 382 N.J. Super. at 116-17 (quoting
    Final Rep. of the N.J. Criminal Law Revision Comm'n (1971), Vol.
    II, at 280), we cannot lose sight of the fact that we are
    construing the elements of a criminal offense.                                See State v.
    Churchdale Leasing, 
    115 N.J. 83
    , 102 (1989) (holding that courts
    are obligated to strictly construe ambiguous criminal and quasi-
    criminal    statutes).       We        therefore       reject         the    invitation      to
    loosely    interpret       what    it     means       to    be    a    "driver[]      of    [a]
    vehicle[]" or what constitutes a violation of Chapter 39 in
    determining whether the facts found by the Law Division judge
    support a conviction for obstruction.
    In concluding defendant was not obligated by N.J.S.A. 39:4-
    57 to comply with the trooper's commands that he remove his
    hands from his pockets or enter his own vehicle, we reject the
    argument that defendant engaged in an "independently unlawful
    act" as the basis for his obstruction conviction. And, as noted
    above,    because    the     judge       was       unclear   about          the   actions    of
    9                                     A-3764-14T2
    defendant that he believed constituted "physical interference,"
    we remand for further findings.
    Remanded.   We do not retain jurisdiction.
    10                   A-3764-14T2
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-3764-14T2

Citation Numbers: 448 N.J. Super. 69, 150 A.3d 951, 2016 N.J. Super. LEXIS 153

Filed Date: 12/14/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/14/2016