FSM SUPREME COURT APPELLATE DIVISION

Cite as Kosrae v. Jim, 17 FSM Intrm. 97 (App. 2010)

[17 FSMIntrm. 97]

STATE OF KOSRAE,

Appellant,

vs.

SMEHL D. JIM,

Appellee.

APPEAL CASE NO. K4-2009

ORDER OF DISMISSAL

Decided: March 26, 2010

BEFORE:

Hon. Martin G. Yinug, Associate Justice, FSM Supreme Court
Hon. Dennis K. Yamase, Associate Justice, FSM Supreme Court
Hon. Ready E. Johnny, Associate Justice, FSM Supreme Court

APPEARANCES:

        For the Appellant:                Snyder H. Simon, Esq.
                                                    Assistant Attorney General
                                                    Office of the Kosrae Attorney General
                                                    P.O. Box 870
                                                    Tofol, Kosrae FM 96944

[17 FSMIntrm. 98]

        For the Appellee:                Harry Seymour, Esq.
                                                   Office of the Public Defender
                                                   P.O. Box 245
                                                   Tofol, Kosrae FM 96944

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HEADNOTES

Appellate Review – Briefs, Record and Oral Argument; Appellate Review – Motions

Motions, even motions to dismiss an appeal, may be decided without oral argument. Kosrae v. Jim, 17 FSM Intrm. 97, 98 (App. 2010).

Appellate Review – Decisions Reviewable

In a prosecution appeal from an acquittal in a Kosrae State Court criminal case, the appellate court has no jurisdiction to reverse a not guilty finding and to either order a guilty finding entered or to order a new trial and it has no jurisdiction to render an advisory opinion on statutory construction or to decide a moot appeal. It will accordingly dismiss the appeal. Kosrae v. Jim, 17 FSM Intrm. 97, 99 (App. 2010).

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COURT'S OPINION

PER CURIAM:

This comes before the court on appellee Smehl D. Jim's Motion for Dismissal of Appeal, filed January 6, 2010. Jim's motion is granted. Our reasons follow.

I.

Smehl D. Jim was arrested and charged disturbing the peace (one count), offensive behavior in a pubic place (three counts), and drunken and disorderly conduct (three counts). The prosecution moved and the Kosrae State Court dismissed three counts before trial (two offensive behavior in a pubic place counts and one drunken and disorderly conduct count). During trial, the court acquitted Jim, on his Rule 29 motion for acquittal, of all remaining counts except the disturbing the peace count. Jim was convicted on that count.

The prosecution appealed the offensive behavior in a pubic place and the two drunken and disorderly conduct acquittals. It has filed its opening brief. It asserts that Jim's actions did violate the offensive behavior in a pubic place and drunken and disorderly conduct statutes. The prosecution contends that the trial court engrafted new elements and omitted prerequisite elements of those offenses, and thus, in effect, held those two criminal statutes invalid. The prosecution contends that we have jurisdiction to hear this appeal because the prosecution is permitted to appeal in a criminal case "when the Court has held a law or regulation invalid." Kos. S.C. § 6.404(5).

II.

Motions, even motions to dismiss an appeal, may be decided without oral argument, e.g., Smith v. Nimea, 16 FSM Intrm. 346, 348 (App. 2009); Palsis v. Tafunsak Mun. Gov't, 16 FSM Intrm. 116, 127 (App. 2008); Heirs of George v. Heirs of Dizon, 16 FSM Intrm. 100, 111 (App. 2008); Kosrae v.

[17 FSMIntrm. 99]

Langu, 16 FSM Intrm. 83, 86 (App. 2008); Christian v. Urusemal, 14 FSM Intrm. 291, 293 (App. 2006), especially when, as in this appeal, no opposition has been filed.

The prosecution's position in this appeal is virtually identical to the prosecution's position in Kosrae v. Benjamin, 17 FSM Intrm. 1 (App. 2010). In Benjamin, the defendant was charged with assault and battery, disturbing the peace, assault, and misconduct in public office, and was acquitted at trial after a Rule 29 motion. Id. at 2-3. The prosecution then appealed contending that the Kosrae State Court had misinterpreted the statutory criminal offenses of assault and of assault and battery by, in its view, engrafting new elements to the offenses and omitting other requisite elements, and thereby invalidated those statutes. We held that we had no jurisdiction to reverse a not guilty finding and to either order a guilty finding entered (barred by statute, Kos. S.C. § 6.403(3)), or to order a new trial (barred by constitutional protections against double jeopardy, FSM Const. art. IV, § 7; Kos. Const. art. II, § 1(f)), and that any appeal that sought only an order instructing the trial court in the proper interpretation of a criminal statute would be a moot appeal seeking an advisory opinion and that we do not have jurisdiction to issue advisory opinions or decide moot appeals. Benjamin, 17 FSM Intrm. at 3-4.

This appeal is no different. We have no jurisdiction to reverse a not guilty finding and to either order a guilty finding entered or to order a new trial and we have no jurisdiction to render an advisory opinion on statutory construction or to decide a moot appeal. Accordingly, the appellee's motion is granted and this appeal is dismissed.

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