Hawaii Revised Statutes
702. General Principles of Penal Liability
702-210 Requirement of wilfulness satisfied by acting knowingly. §702-210 Commentary:

§702-210 Requirement of wilfulness satisfied by acting knowingly. A requirement that an offense be committed wilfully is satisfied if a person acts knowingly with respect to the elements of the offense, unless a purpose to impose further requirements appears. [L 1972, c 9, pt of §1]
COMMENTARY ON §702-210
Many regulatory penal offenses appear in statutes other than the Penal Code. These regulatory statutes often employ different words to designate the state of mind or culpability requirement needed to establish various regulatory offenses. In this respect the penal statutes dealing with regulatory offenses are much the same as those appearing in the previous Title on crimes.[1] While no attempt will be made to correlate the present culpability requirements of regulatory offenses with the four states of mind which the Code recognizes as sufficient to establish culpability with respect to the elements of an offense, an exception is made for the word "wilful" or "wilfully."
That term is used pervasively in penal statutes to describe the requisite culpability or state of mind. However, the phrase has been defined differently in similar contexts. For example, it has been held that the felony of wilfully failing to account for and to pay over tax monies requires "bad purpose and evil motive," whereas, the misdemeanor of wilfully failing to file an income tax return requires that the defendant acted "with bad purpose or without grounds for believing that one's act is lawful or without reasonable cause, or capriciously or with careless disregard whether one has the right to so act."[2] With respect to the same misdemeanor, it has been said that "[m]ere voluntary and purposeful, as distinguished from accidental, omission to make timely return might meet the test of wilfulness."[3]
In a Hawaii case, involving a disputed labor contract, the court, in discussing the penal remedies afforded to the employer by then existing law, said that a wilful absence was "one without sufficient legal excuse"[4]--a rather transparent definition at best.
To eliminate distinctions of this type, the Code equates acting wilfully with acting knowingly. This equation reaches a result in accord with most decisions. The Code recognizes, however, that in some situations the courts have construed "wilful" to impose an additional requirement of culpability. In such situations the "perception of such a ... [legislative] purpose [to impose additional culpability requirements] normally derives, of course, from judicial appraisal of the consequences of the enactment if its scope is not limited by construction."5 To allow for situations of this kind, the final clause provides that the section is not applicable if a purpose to impose further culpability requirements appears.
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§702-210 Commentary:
1. Cf. Commentary on §702-204.
2. Abdul v. United States, 254 F.2d 292, 294 (1958); Martin v. United States, 317 F.2d 753 (1963).
3. Spies v. United States, 317 U.S. 492, 498, 63 S.Ct. 364, 367, 87 L.Ed. 418 (1943).
4. Rickard v. Couto, 5 Haw. 507, 513 (1885).
5. M.P.C., Tentative Draft No. 4, comments at 130 (1955). See Screws v. United States, 325 U.S. 91 (1945) (holding that a statute making it an offense to wilfully deprive a person of rights secured by the Constitution required, when applied to rights secured through the due process clause, a specific intent to deprive the person of a right which has been made specific by the express terms of Constitution, the laws of the United States, or by a decision interpreting them), and United States v. Murdock, 290 U.S. 389 (1933) (holding that a tax statute making it an offense to wilfully fail to supply information to the government regarding income tax returns did not make criminal the bona fide, albeit intentional and erroneous, refusal to answer on the ground of self-incrimination).

Structure Hawaii Revised Statutes

Hawaii Revised Statutes

Title 37. Hawaii Penal Code

702. General Principles of Penal Liability

702-200 Requirement of voluntary act or voluntary omission. §702-200 Commentary:

702-201 "Voluntary act" defined. §702-201 Commentary:

702-202 Voluntary act includes possession. §702-202 Commentary:

702-203 Penal liability based on an omission. §702-203 Commentary:

702-204 State of mind required. §702-204 Commentary:

702-205 Elements of an offense. §702-205 Commentary:

702-206 Definitions of states of mind. §702-206 Commentary:

702-207 Specified state of mind applies to all elements. §702-207 Commentary:

702-208 Substitutes for negligence, recklessness, and knowledge. §702-208 Commentary:

702-209 Conditional intent.

702-210 Requirement of wilfulness satisfied by acting knowingly. §702-210 Commentary:

702-211 State of mind as determinant of grade or class of a particular offense. §702-211 Commentary:

702-212 When state of mind requirements are inapplicable to violations and to crimes defined by statutes other than this Code. §702-212 Commentary:

702-213 Effect of absolute liability in reducing grade of offense to violation. §702-213 Commentary:

702-214 Causal relationship between conduct and result. §702-214 Commentary:

702-215 Intentional or knowing causation; different result from that intended or contemplated. §702-215 Commentary:

702-216 Reckless or negligent causation; different result from that within the risk.

702-217 Causation in offenses of absolute liability. §702-217 Commentary:

702-218 Ignorance or mistake as a defense. §702-218 Commentary:

702-219 Ignorance or mistake; reduction in grade and class of the offense. §702-219 Commentary:

702-220 Ignorance or mistake of law; belief that conduct not legally prohibited. §702-220 Commentary:

702-221 Liability for conduct of another. §702-221 Commentary:

702-222 Liability for conduct of another; complicity. §702-222 Commentary:

702-223 Liability for conduct of another; complicity with respect to the result.

702-224 Liability for conduct of another; exemption from complicity. §702-224 Commentary:

702-225 Liability for conduct of another; incapacity of defendant; failure to prosecute or convict or immunity of other person. §702-225 Commentary:

702-226 Liability for conduct of another; multiple convictions; different degrees. §702-226 Commentary:

702-227 Penal liability of corporations and unincorporated associations. §702-227 Commentary:

702-228 Liability of persons acting, or under a duty to act, in behalf of corporations or unincorporated associations. §702-228 Commentary:

702-229 Definitions relating to corporations and unincorporated associations.

702-230 Intoxication. §702-230 Commentary:

702-231 Duress.

702-232 Military orders.

702-233 Consent; general. §702-233 Commentary:

702-234 Consent to bodily injury. §702-234 Commentary:

702-235 Ineffective consent. §702-235 Commentary:

702-236 De minimis infractions. §702-236 Commentary:

702-237 Entrapment. §702-237 Commentary: