STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Defendant appeals conviction of Criminal Recklessness, a class C felony. 1 We reverse.
FACTS
On January 26,1986, Christina Epperson, the defendant’s two-year old daughter, suffered a head injury when she was struck by a screwdriver which the defendant threw across a room. Christina was transported from the family’s home to a hospital where she underwent surgery. Later that day Epperson accompanied a police officer to the police station where Epperson signed a waiver of rights form and made a statement about the incident. The statement was tape recorded, and the tape subsequently was transcribed. The following day Epperson returned to the police station and signed a typed copy of the statement he had made the day before. On January 28,1986, a probable cause hearing was held and a warrant issued for Epperson’s arrest. Epperson was charged by information with Criminal Recklessness, a class C felony.
The defendant made several attempts to take the deposition of his former wife, Tamara Epperson, but she could not be located. Epperson then entered into a plea agreement with the state where Epperson agreed to plead guilty to unrelated burglary and theft charges in exchange for the state’s promise to file a Motion to Nolle Proseque on the recklessness charge. The trial court granted the state’s motion on May 18, 1987, dismissed the criminal recklessness charge, and accepted the defendant's guilty pleas in the other two (2) cases. On June 9, 1987, the state moved to withdraw the plea agreement and reinstate the cause of action for criminal recklessness. The court held a hearing on the motion where the state argued that the plea agreement had been based on a mutual mistake of fact, a mistaken belief that Tamara Ep-person would not cooperate in testifying about the incident. The court sustained the state’s motion, and Epperson’s criminal recklessness case proceeded to a trial by jury. Epperson was convicted of Criminal Recklessness, a class C felony, and was sentenced to a term of five (5) years with one (1) year suspended.
ISSUES
Epperson raises three issues, but the following are dispositive:
1. Did the trial court err in allowing the state to withdraw a plea agreement?
2. Did the trial court properly reinstate a cause of action for Criminal Recklessness after the case had been dismissed?
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
Issue One
Epperson argues first that the trial court erred by allowing the state to withdraw a plea agreement and reinstating the criminal recklessness charge after it had been dismissed pursuant to the original plea agreement. We agree. The state entered into a plea agreement with Epperson which provided that Epperson would plead guilty to unrelated burglary and theft charges, and in exchange the state would dismiss the criminal recklessness charge. Accordingly, Epperson pleaded guilty to the burglary and theft counts, and on May 18, 1987, the state filed a Motion to Nolle Prosequi the criminal recklessness cause of action. The court granted the state’s motion and ordered the case dismissed. On June 9, 1987, the state filed a Motion to Withdraw Plea Agreement and Re-institute Cause of Action. The court conducted a hearing on the motion where the state argued that it should be able to withdraw *745 from the plea agreement because that agreement had been based on a mistake of fact. Epperson’s attorney argued that there was no mistake of fact, the agreement should stand, and Epperson should be sentenced in accordance with the agreement. The court sustained the state’s motion to withdraw the plea agreement and ordered the criminal recklessness charge reinstated.
It is clear that a criminal defendant has no constitutional right to engage in plea bargaining.
Coker v. State
(1987), Ind.,
Although contract principles are helpful, they are not determinative in cases involving plea agreements.
Id.
at 826. Because important due process rights are involved, plea negotiations must accord a defendant requisite fairness and be attended by adequate safeguards which insure the defendant what is reasonably due in the circumstances.
Id.
“Promises which induce guilty pleas must be fulfilled in order to satisfy the voluntariness of the guilty plea standard.”
Ryan v. State
(1985), Ind.,
In the case at bar, we are unable to determine from the record whether the plea agreement had been accepted by the court at the time the state filed its motion to withdraw the plea agreement. If the court accepts a plea agreement, it shall be bound by its terms. Indiana Code section 35-35-3-3. However, the trial court may set aside an accepted guilty plea prior to entry of judgment.
Patton v. State
(1987), Ind.,
The state’s Motion to Nolle Prosequi explained that the state was unable to meet its burden of proof in the case because of a lack of cooperation by a crucial witness. At the hearing on the state’s Motion to Withdraw the Plea Agreement and Re-instate Cause of Action, the prosecutor explained that the state had erroneously believed that its crucial witness, Epperson’s wife, was unwilling to cooperate, when in fact, she simply had not received notice about the prior depositions. Upon learning that its witness would cooperate, the state attempted to reinstate the cause of action. The state did not claim that its inability to procure Mrs. Epperson’s attendance at depositions was due to any fault of the defendant. Rather, the state argued that the erroneous belief in Mrs. Epperson’s un-cooperativeness was a mutual mistake of fact, and that the mistake was grounds for rescission of the agreement. Epperson emphasized that the witness’s failure to appear was not his fault and that he had bargained with the state in good faith. As noted in Bielak, the resolution of each case depends in part upon the government’s conduct relating to its obligation. In this case the state agreed to nolle prosequi the criminal recklessness charge because the prosecutor believed the state could not produce a crucial witness and because Epperson would plead guilty to other charges in exchange. The case had already been dismissed when the state learned that the witness would cooperate. After Epperson had pleaded guilty to the other charges, the state reneged on its agreement. We cannot allow the state to withdraw a plea agreement simply because the prosecutor learns after the defendant has pleaded guilty as agreed, that the state made a bad deal. Epperson bargained with the state in good faith, and it was not his fault that the state could not produce Mrs. Epperson for a deposition. We cannot justify allowing the state to renege on its plea agreement. The trial court erred when it allowed the state to withdraw the plea agreement. The only appropriate remedy in this case is to enforce the nolle prosequi provision of the original plea agreement.
Issue Two
We next consider whether the trial court properly reinstated the criminal recklessness charge after the case had been dismissed. Indiana Code section 35-34-1-13 provides in pertinent part that where a case is dismissed upon the prosecutor’s motion, “unless the defendant objects to dismissal, the granting of the motion does not bar a subsequent trial of the defendant on the offense charged.” Thus, absent the plea agreement in this case, it would appear that the defendant could subsequently have been tried for the same offense. Where dismissal occurs prior to the attachment of jeopardy, the state can refile an information charging the same offense.
Burdine v. State
(1987), Ind.,
REVERSED.
Notes
. Indiana Code section 35-42-2-2.
. It appears from the record that Epperson pleaded guilty to the burglary and theft charges a second time after the criminal recklessness charge was reinstated. However, the details of those pleas and any pertinent plea agreement are not before us. Therefore, we are unable to *746 conclude that Epperson would have pleaded guilty the first time even absent the prosecutor's promise to nolle prosequi. Epperson’s subsequent entry of guilty pleas did not constitute a waiver of this issue.
