In this appeal, we are asked to determine whether the Commonwealth may refile a criminal complaint dismissed because of the absence of the Commonwealth’s witnesses on the date set for trial. The court below concluded that such a dismissal must be appealed. Because we find that the Commonwealth may refile the complaint in such a case, we reverse and remand this matter for trial.
In April 1994, Douglas F. Jones was charged with one count each of making terroristic threats and simple assault. Jones was also charged with one summary count of harassment. Judge Paul F. Lutty dismissed the information upon the failure of the Commonwealth to produce witnesses. The *435 Commonwealth did not appeal this dismissal, but instead reinstituted the original charges in a new criminal complaint. Jones filed a motion to quash the new complaint on the grounds that the refiling of charges was improper. Judge Lester G. Nauhaus granted Jones’s motion and quashed the complaint. This appeal followed.
The Commonwealth contends on appeal that the court below erred as a matter of law in that it required an appellate remedy for the failure-to-prosecute dismissal. We agree. The court below concluded that the decision of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in
Commonwealth v. LaBelle,
The court in
LaBelle
drew a distinction between dismissals of criminal complaints based on remediable, or curable, defects and dismissals for unremediable, or incurable, defects.
LaBelle, supra,
at 259-60,
The defect in the instant case, failure of prosecution witnesses to appear, is analytically similar to the defects in Hetherington and Mirarchi in that remedial action by the *436 Commonwealth (namely, production of the witnesses) is possible. The court below apparently reasoned, and Jones appears to argue, that such action would not be truly curative because it would not be production at the required time. Jones thus suggests that LaBelle entails that all dismissals for procedural defects are res judicata if not appealed. Brief of Appellee at 9. This reading of LaBelle is inconsistent with the LaBelle court’s approval of Mirarchi and makes nonsense of the curable-incurable defect distinction; it must therefore be rejected.
The analytical similarity of a dismissal for failure to produce prosecution witnesses to dismissals traditionally deemed interlocutory was confirmed by this Court in
Commonwealth v. Allem,
Ordinarily, the decision of an issuing authority to dismiss a complaint is deemed interlocutory, and the Commonwealth’s sole avenue of redress is to bring the matter before another issuing authority before the statute of limitations period expires. Commonwealth v. Genovese,493 Pa. 65 , 69 n. 7,425 A.2d 367 , 369 n. 7 (1981); Commonwealth v. Hetherington,460 Pa. 17 , 21-22,331 A.2d 205 , 208 (1975); Riggins Case,435 Pa. 321 , 323,254 A.2d 616 , 617 (1969); McNair’s Petition,324 Pa. 48 , 54,187 A. 498 , 501 (1936). The doctrines of collateral estoppel, res judicata, law of the case, and stare decisis have no operation in such proceedings; rather, the matter is heard de novo.
Id.
at 179-80,
Affirmance of the decision below would improperly elevate a defendant’s relatively limited interest in avoiding the inconvenience of an unnecessary court appearance above the Commonwealth’s interest in avoiding a costly, lengthy, limited and uncertain appellate remedy for a dismissal resulting from a relatively minor procedural deficiency. In cases involving procedural failings similar to that of the instant case, the decision below would make the trial court’s discretion, subject to review only for abuse, the sole protector of the Commonwealth’s vital interest in prosecuting those suspected of crimes. These are not desirable results. Under LaBelle, the defect in the instant case is remediable without resort to appeal and thus the Commonwealth is not barred from refiling by the doctrine of res judicata.
Despite the fact that the court below held principles of double jeopardy inapplicable in this case, Jones argues in the alternative that the decision below should be affirmed under those principles. This argument is without merit. Jeopardy did not attach in this case. Under Pennsylvania law, jeopardy attaches when the jury is sworn or, in a bench trial, when the trial court begins to hear evidence.
Commonwealth v. Metzer,
Based upon the foregoing, we reverse the order quashing the complaint, and we remand the matter for trial.
Order REVERSED. Case REMANDED. Jurisdiction RELINQUISHED.
