This is an appeal by the Commonwealth from an order dismissing with prejudice a complaint for nonsupport under G. L. c. 273, § 1. The complaint, which was brought in June, 1980, alleged nonsupport of the defendant’s wife and children “from October 10, 1974, to the present.” After an evidentiary hearing, the judge dismissed the complaint on the ground of excessive delay by the Commonwealth in instituting the complaint. We reverse.
The Commonwealth first argues that the judge erred in considering the motion to dismiss because the defendant failed to file a written motion and an affidavit as required by Mass.R.Crim.P. 13(a) (1) and (2),
In dismissing the complaint, the judge ruled:
“that the inaction over the course of six years on the part of the Department of Public Welfare cannot be excused by testimony of understaffing or overload of cases when it prejudices the rights of an individual whose liberty may be at stake as the result of a conviction under a penal statute the nature of which is being utilized, in part, to recoup funds which the Commonwealth has expended freely over the course of the family’s history of need.”
In what manner the defendant was prejudiced was not described. The judge made no subsidiary findings indicating prejudice to the defendant. Moreover, no evidence of prejudice appears in the transcript other than the claim made by the defendant that he would have looked for another job earlier and would not have persisted in trying to make a go of his own business had the Department indicated to him his activities were insufficient to shield him from prosecution. 1
This claim of prejudice is insufficient to permit the drastic remedy of dismissal. There are considerations other than
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the rights of a defendant which also must be weighed and which limit the power of a judge to dismiss a complaint and thus preclude prosecution. See
Commonwealth
v.
Brandano,
The defendant has not met the burden required by the preindictment delay cases. See
United States
v.
Lovasco,
No other improper governmental motive which bears on the propriety of bringing the complaint has been demonstrated. Although the judge may have thought unfair the Department’s efforts to procure restitution after such a long period of time, the action is not one for restitution but rather is a criminal complaint. Whether restitution is appropriate 2 is a question relating to remedy and is a matter which is to be considered only after conviction under G. L. c. 273, § 1.
The defendant has also not shown that the Department acted so unfairly as to estop the government from bringing a criminal complaint. See generally Note, Applying Estoppel Principles in Criminal Cases, 78 Yale L. J. 1046 (1969). The two leading cases which suggest that the government may be estopped are
Raley
v.
Ohio, supra,
and
Cox
v.
Louisiana, supra,
although neither case involved a motion to dismiss. In
Raley,
the Court held that the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution was violated when the State convicted defendants of contempt for refusing to answer questions of a State commission. “There was active misleading.”
However, the principles of these cases apply only where “unconscionably misleading conduct” is involved.
United States
v.
Lansing,
In reversing and remanding for further proceedings we caution, however, that nothing herein is to be construed as suggesting the guilt or innocence of the defendant or the disposition of the matter at trial. Moreover, as stated earlier, the defendant is not precluded from presenting evidence at trial of departmental acquiescence in order to support a defense that his actions were not wilful.
Order dismissing complaint reversed.
Notes
The judge did not permit the defendant to testify as to what his course of action would have been had the Department indicated to him that his business attempts did not meet his legal obligations. The defendant objected to this exclusion. We need not decide the evidentiary issue as, in any event, the evidence would not have shown prejudice or reliance sufficient to justify a motion to dismiss.
In this connection see
Commonwealth
v.
Chase,
