We granted James Earl Roberts’s petition for a writ of certiorari to the Court of Appeals to determine whether the doctrine of judicial estoppel was applicable in criminal cases and, if it were, whether it *611 could be successfully invoked against the State in this case. We conclude judicial estoppel is not applicable in criminal cases. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
Roberts filed a direct appeal to the Court of Appeals from the trial court’s denial of Roberts’s motion for discharge and acquittal based on Georgia’s statutory speedy trial provision, OCGA § 17-7-170. The trial court denied the motion after finding that Roberts’s demand for trial had been filed the day before he was indicted and was therefore fatally premature. See
Majia v. State,
When the trial court denied the motion for discharge and acquittal because the statutory demand was null and void due to its prematurity, Roberts invoked the doctrine of judicial estoppel, asserting that the State should be estopped from relying on the actual date of indictment in light of the prosecutor’s statement in open court that Roberts had been indicted the day the demand for trial was filed. The trial court denied the motion for discharge and acquittal, but quashed the indictment returned against Roberts since he had not received the preliminary hearing to which he had been statutorily entitled. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s denial of the motion for discharge and acquittal, declining to apply the doctrine of judicial estoppel on the ground that it was an equitable defense “ ‘unavailable against the State where its application would thwart a strong public policy, such as [the] enforcement of criminal law.’
Stinson v. State,
The rule known as judicial estoppel was described by the United States Supreme Court in
New Hampshire v. Maine,
State and federal appellate courts throughout the United States vary in the degree to which they endorse application of judicial estoppel in criminal cases. Compare
State v. Towery,
After reviewing the various positions by appellate courts throughout the country and recognizing that the U. S. Supreme Court’s decision in
New Hampshire v. Maine
did not address the applicability of the doctrine in criminal proceedings,
2
we conclude that the recent decision of the Supreme Court of North Carolina in
Whitacre Partnership v. Biosignia,
supra,
a higher value to the “sanctity of the oath” than to the guilt or innocence of the accused. . . . “[T]he judicial process can more easily survive a rule that precludes the use of judicial estoppel to keep intact convictions of innocent persons than it can a rule that purports to preserve judicial sacrosanctity by leaving wrongful convictions in place as a sanction for lying.” [Cit.]
Whitacre Partnership v. Biosignia,
supra,
Inasmuch as the case at bar is a criminal prosecution, application of the doctrine of judicial estoppel is inappropriate. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals holding that the trial court did not err when it failed to apply judicial estoppel in the case at bar.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Judicial estoppel is commonly used in civil actions to preclude a bankruptcy debtor from pursuing a damages claim he failed to include among his assets in his petition seeking bankruptcy relief.
Period Homes v. Wallick,
While the U. S. Supreme Court cited three cases arising from criminal convictions, in none of them was judicial estoppel applied against the defendant. It appears the Court cited the cases for their discussion of judicial estoppel rather than their application of the doctrine.
Whitacre Partnership v. Biosignia,
supra,
