Pеtitioner Steven Wayne Eubanks seeks a writ of prohibition against Respondent Honorable Marion Humphrey and the Pulaski County Circuit Court to prevent a trial for the offenses of driving while intoxicated (DWI), fourth offense, an unclassified felony, and driving with a suspended driver’s license. Respondent trial court denied Eubanks’s motion to dismiss the charges on speedy-trial grounds, and he now seeks a writ of prohibition in this court pursuant to A.R.Cr.P. Rule 28.1(d). We have jurisdiction to hear this petition pursuant to Ark. Sup. Ct. R. 1-2(a)(3). We grant the writ.
A criminal defendant’s constitutional right to a speedy trial is protected by Rules 27-30 of the Arkansas Rules of Criminal Procedure. Archer v. Benton County Circuit Court,
On November 4, 1997, Eubanks filed a motion to dismiss for violation of his right to a speedy trial. A hearing was conducted on December 8, 1997, wherein the Respondent trial court denied the motion, ruling that Eubanks had waived his right to speedy trial without limitation on November 19, 1996. The trial court found that a total of 686 days were excludable from the calculation of the twelve-month period: (1) one day, July 18, 1995, was excludable due to Eubanks’s failure to appear for his arraignment; (2) 224 days, from October 3, 1995 through May 14, 1996, were excludable because the case was twice continued on Eubanks’s motions; (3) 75 days, from June 20, 1996 through Sеptember 3, 1996, were also excludable due to Eubanks’s motion to continue the case; and (4) 386 days, from November 19, 1996 through December 10, 1997, were excludable as a result of Eubanks’s waiver of speedy trial.
The record of the November 19, 1996 hearing reflects that Eubanks’s trial was set for that date; however, another trial was already in progress in the same court. As a result of the scheduling conflict, the trial court indicated that Eubanks’s case would be tried the following day. This was not, however, agreeable to Eubanks. The colloquy is аs follows:
The Court: Let’s pass this one until tomorrow.
[Prosecutor]: Your Honor, one concern I have is I know that I have an expert. The defense has an expert. And I haven’t spoken with my expert to see if she’ll be available tomorrow.
[Defense]: My expert’s not available tomorrow, Judge. Wе had a date certain today. We talked about it earlier. We will waive speedy trial. I know there’s a speedy-trial problem with that. Reset this case and maybe something else can be worked out about maybe trying it before the Court.
The Court: Well, pass on the Court’s motion.
[Defense]: Your Honor, I will nеed my expert witness. I want to make sure that he’s available, Judge.
The Court: You waive speedy trial?
[Defense]: Yes, sir.
The case was then reset for January 22, 1997. On that date, Eubanks again indicated that he was waiving speedy trial. The record reflects the following exchange:
[Prosecutor] : Your Honor, this is a DWI fourth. He was arrested on the eighth of April of Ninety-five. There’s been several periods of tollable times. It looks like the defendant waived speedy trial the last court date. I calculated it to find approximately one hundred days to try this case. It’s my understanding that the defense is going to waive speedy trial.
[Defense]: That’s correct, your Honor. I provided the Court with a letter from Mr. Blagg about days he and his expert witness are unavailable so that the Court doesn’t have to reschedule it again. And would just ask the trial be set any day оther than those.
[Prosecutor]: And, your Honor, we would ask that speedy trial be tolled during that time period.
The Court: I show speedy trial waived.
The trial court reset the trial for May 21, 1997. During the hearing on that date, Eubanks’s counsel explained that the reason he had agreed to waive speedy trial on November 19, 1996, was to secure a trial date that was convenient for his expert witness.
It is well settled that a defendant does not have a duty to bring himself to trial; rather, the burden is on the court and the prosecutor to see that the trial is held in a timely fashion. Tanner v. Stаte,
Eubanks does not contest the trial court’s exclusion of those periods of time that resulted from his requested continuances and his failure to appear for arraignment. Nor does he contest the trial court’s ruling excluding the time from November 19, 1996 to May 21, 1997. Eubanks does, however, argue that the remaining time, from May 22, 1997 to December 10, 1997, should not have been excluded from the computation of the twelve-month period. Eubanks argues further that he did not unconditionally waive his right to speedy trial оn November 19, 1996, or on January 22, 1997; rather, he claims that he merely agreed that the twelvemonth period would be temporarily tolled to May 21, 1997. Thus, he contends that the time for speedy trial began to run again on May 22, 1997. He argues further that our rules of criminal procеdure do not recognize such a waiver. The question then is whether the trial court erred in finding that Eubanks unconditionally waived his right to speedy trial on November 19, 1996.
Eubanks relies on language from this court’s decision in Tanner,
Thе United States Supreme Court recognized in Barker v. Wingo,
The trial court here relied on Goston v. State,
It is undisputed that Mr. Goston’s аttorneys waived his right to a speedy trial both on February 17, 1993, and April 7, 1993. The abstract does not reveal that these waivers contained any conditions or limitations. Therefore, all of the time that elapsed between February i 1, 1993, and the date of the trial apрears to be excludable for speedy-trial purposes.
Id. at 20,
Similarly, in Garrison v. State,
Here, the waiver made by Eubanks on November 19, 1996, was well within the twelve-month period for speedy trial. Eubanks was arrested on April 8, 1995; hence, the time for speedy trial would have run, provided there were no excludable time periods, on April 8, 1996. There were 225 days from April 8, 1996 to November 19, 1996, but there were 300 days of excludable time as of thе latter date due to Eubanks’s delays. Thus, at the time that Eubanks waived speedy trial, the twelve-month period had not expired. Moreover, it is apparent from the record that Eubanks did not attach any conditions or limitations to the waiver at the time it was given on Nоvember 19, 1996, or on January 22, 1997, when the waiver was ratified. It is further apparent that the waiver was of benefit to Eubanks, as it allowed him to secure a trial date that was more convenient for his expert witness. Accordingly, we conclude that Eubanks effectively waivеd his right to speedy trial. Our inquiry does not, however, end there.
The next issue we must decide is whether the waiver remained without conditions or limitations until the date of the last trial setting, December 10, 1997. The State contends that in order to withdraw or limit his waiver, Eubanks was required to make а motion to the trial court, and that until such a motion was made, the waiver remained without conditions. The State contends further that Eubanks did not make such a motion until November 4, 1997, when he filed his motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 28.1(d). The State relies on our holding in Welch v. State,
The record of the August 19, 1997 hearing, before Special Judge Leon Johnson, reflects that the trial set for that date, was going to be rescheduled for December 10, 1997, as Respondent was unavailable due to a death in his family. During that hearing, the following exchange took place:
[Defense]: I understand that the Judge can’t be here today because of illness in his family.
The Court: Bight. Death in his family.
[Defense]: Bight.
The Court: That’s correct. And, so, today we’re going to reschedule this matter.
[Defense]: That’s my understanding. It’s to be rescheduled.
The Court: Okay. I just wanted to make sure we’re all on the same page.
[Prosecutor] : Your Honor, will speedy trial be tolled?
The Court: That’s my understanding.
[Defense] : I’m not agreeing to toll speedy trial, your Honor.
The Court: Okay.
[Prosecutor]: Your Honor, the rule specifically states if the Court finds circumstances to toll speedy trial it will.
The Court: Bight. That’s my understanding also.
[Defense]: Well, I’m not agreeing, Judge.
The Court: I understand.
[Defense]: For the record, I want it clear that I’m not agreeing that speedy trial be tolled.
The Court: I understand that.
From the foregoing discussion, it is readily apparent that defense counsel apprised the trial court that Eubanks no longer wished to waive his right to speedy trial. The fact that counsel did not convey this message through a formal motion does not change the character of the message itself. We thus conclude that the time for speedy trial commenced running again on August 19, 1997. It follows then that the time from August 20, 1997 to December 10, 1997, a totаl of 113 days, is not excludable from the computation of the
Additionally, we reject the State’s argument that the delay from August 19, 1997 to December 10, 1997, was for good cause pursuant to Rule 28.3(h). The State has not met its burden of proving that a death in the Respondent’s family constituted good cause to delay Eubanks’s trial for 113 days. This court has previously held that absence by the trial judge due to illness was not good cause for delaying the trial. Novak,
Writ granted.
