Defendant appeals his conviction for delivery of a controlled substance, former ORS 475.992 (2003), renumbered as ORS 475.840 (2005), a Class B felony, assigning error to the trial court’s denial of his motion to dismiss on statutory speedy trial grounds. ORS 135.747. For the reasons explained herein, we affirm.
The pertinent facts are procedural. Defendant was charged by information on June 28, 2004, with possession of a controlled substance (PCS) and delivery of a controlled substance (DCS), based on events occurring the day before. On July 23, 2004, the state recharged defendant by indictment. Defendant entered a plea of not guilty, and trial was set for August 20, 2004. On that date, the court informed defendant that the assigned judge was in the midst of an ongoing trial and that there were no judges available to try his case. The next date when the court, the prosecutor, and defense counsel were all available for trial was December 3, 2004.
On December 3,2004, defendant’s case came to trial. A jury convicted him on the PCS charge, but deadlocked on the DCS charge. The state requested time to consider whether to retry defendant, and the trial court set a status conference for December 20, 2004.
Defendant failed to appear for the scheduled status conference, at which the prosecutor informed the court that the state would retry defendant on the DCS charge. The court then issued a warrant for defendant’s arrest. Defendant failed to appear at the next scheduled status conference on January 3, 2005, but appeared later that day. The court recalled the warrant and rescheduled the status conference for January 24, 2005. The court later postponed the status conference to January 31, 2005.
At that status conference, defense counsel requested a trial date in May. However, the prosecutor and defense counsel were not available on the May dates that were open on the court’s calendar, so the trial was set for June 3, 2005.
Defendant filed a demurrer and, at a hearing on the demurrer on May 12, 2005, the judge informed the parties that he would not be available for trial on June 3, 2005, *138 because of personal travel plans. The court reset trial for the next mutually available date, September 7, 2005, but later postponed trial to October 21, 2005, and again to March 16, 2006.
On March 14, 2006, defendant moved to dismiss the case for lack of a speedy trial. In moving to dismiss, defendant contended that, in light of the fact that he had never requested a continuance and had been ready for trial on all of the previously scheduled trial dates, the delay from the date of his arrest to the second trial was unreasonable under ORS 135.747. Although there is no transcript of the proceeding, the trial court apparently heard argument on defendant’s motion on March 16, the date set for trial, and took the matter under advisement. The court also reset trial to May 5, 2006.
On the scheduled trial date, the trial court denied the motion to dismiss and proceeded with trial. In denying the motion to dismiss, the trial court did not expressly address the question of the reasonableness of the delay. The court explained that, although there had been delays in bringing the case to trial, most of the delays were due to the court’s schedule, and not attributable to the state:
“[Tjhis case was tried on December the third [2004]. There was a hung jury on [the delivery charge]. And then it next appeared on the docket on June the third [2005]. Well, I don’t get out of here much but during that time frame there were two periods of time that I was regularly away * * *.
“* * * So the 6/3/05 I’m relatively sure that I was either in Texas visiting my parents or on the way.
“The September seventh trial [date] is at or about Labor Day which is when I take an annual hike with my sons, and it was also getting caught up in [a complex criminal case]. I was not available to do anything from virtually the middle of August [2005] until January the seventeenth [2006] when the jury portion of [the other case] finally concluded. * * * But then I started trying TPRs and divorces every day. And frankly it was only yesterday that I actually got caught up on the dissolution work. I still haven’t gotten caught up on the criminal work * * *.
*139 “So that’s the reality when you have one task to do for six or seven months and you have an individual docketing system.
“This case, if it hadn’t gone to trial, could have probably been switched back to somebody else who was available if it had hit [the] docket again, but having gone to trial it’s unlikely that someone else would do it.
“So yeah, there’s been delay. That’s the reason. Can I attribute that to the State? I don’t think so, so that might make an interesting issue for the Appellate Court but so motion’s denied.”
Thus, the judge explained, the majority of the delay was attributable to the court, because of the judge’s own heavy caseload and the court’s “individual docketing system,” i.e., the practice of assigning cases to a single judge from beginning to end.
On appeal, defendant asserts that the trial court erred in failing to dismiss the indictment under ORS 135.747. That statute provides:
“If a defendant charged with a crime, whose trial has not been postponed upon the application of the defendant or by the consent of the defendant, is not brought to trial within a reasonable period of time, the court shall order the accusatory instrument to be dismissed.”
In reviewing the denial of a motion to dismiss on statutory speedy trial grounds, we review for errors of law the trial court’s conclusion that the delay in bringing the defendant to trial was reasonable under ORS 135.747. In calculating the length of a delay under the statute, the court begins by determining the length of time from the date the defendant was charged, and subtracts from that period any delays either consented to or requested by the defendant.
State v. Bayer,
*140
As we noted in
State v. Garcia
/
Jackson,
The parties agree that the starting point for calculating the length of time to bring defendant to trial the second time is the date on which he was charged.
Johnson,
The court is then required to deduct from that total time the portion of the delay attributable to the defendant, either because the defendant requested a postponement or because he is deemed to have consented to it. ORS 135.747;
State v. Schneider,
When the prosecutor stated that he could not be available in October, the next mutually available date for the court, prosecutor, and defense counsel was December 3,2004. When asked by the court clerk about that date, defense counsel replied, “The third works.” The state contends, citing
Schneider,
The next delay attributable to defendant was due to his failure to appear at a status conference on December 20, 2004, at which time the state informed the court that it would retry defendant on the DCS charge.
State v. Gill,
At the January 31 status conference, in light of the fact that defendant had been released from custody, defense counsel suggested a trial date in May 2005. We construe that suggestion as consent to a delay from January 31, 2005 through May 2005, a delay of approximately 120 days.
As explained earlier, on May 12,2005, the trial judge advised the parties that, for personal reasons, he would not be available on the June 3, 2005, trial date that the parties had agreed to on January 31. The trial was therefore postponed to September 7, 2005, and then to October 21, 2005, and to March 16, 2006. None of those postponements is attributable to defendant.
On March 14, 2006, defendant moved to dismiss the DCS charge on speedy trial grounds. The trial court heard that motion on March 16, 2006, the date set for trial, and then reset trial to May 5, 2006. There is no transcript of that proceeding, and the record does not reveal why the trial was reset to May 5, 2006. The state contends that defendant is deemed to have consented to that delay by filing a motion requiring pretrial resolution.
See State v. Fleetwood,
By our calculation, the total delay attributable to defendant is 204 days. When that period is deducted from the total period of time from indictment to trial, the unconsented delay and, therefore, the relevant delay for statutory speedy trial purposes is 447 days, or just under 15 months.
A delay of 15 months exceeds expectations for bringing a case of this type to trial.
2
See Myers,
Thus, the next step in our inquiry is to address the justifications in the record for the individual delays not attributable to defendant. The record provides explanations for those delays. The period of approximately four weeks from indictment to the first trial date of August 20, 2004, no doubt falls within normal expectations for establishing an initial trial date.
Allen,
The period from December 3 to the December 20, 2004, status conference is attributable to the state’s request for a continuance to determine whether it would retry defendant on the DCS charge, and we conclude that it was a reasonable length of time. The delay from December 20,2004 to January 3,2005, is attributable to defendant because of his absence. Although not attributable to defendant, the further delay caused by the need to reschedule the status conference to January 25 was a routine delay due to the necessity of rescheduling the hearing. The reason for the rescheduling of the status conference from January 25 to January 31, 2005, is not explained. As previously noted, the delay from that date through May 2005 is attributable to defendant because it resulted from his requested trial date.
It is clear that a delay of approximately one month, June 2005, was due to the court’s personal travel schedule. Then, the lawyers’ schedules prevented the case from being reset before September 7, 2005, a routine and reasonable length of time. It is not completely clear why the September 7, 2005, trial date was rescheduled. The trial judge explained that he had personal plans over Labor Day weekend, but that *145 does not explain his unavailability on September 7, 2005, which was the Thursday after Labor Day. However, the trial judge also explained that, from approximately mid-August 2005 to January 17, 2006, a period of five months, the judge was involved in one particularly complex criminal trial. It is likely, therefore, that the judge’s caseload required postponement of the September 7, 2005, trial date.
The trial judge explained that, from the end of the complex criminal trial on January 17, 2006 until May 4, 2006, a period of almost four months, he had been catching up on his docket, including trials of termination of parental rights and dissolution cases. The judge also explained that, in light of the fact that defendant had previously been tried in his court on the same charge, it was unlikely that another judge would have heard defendant’s case.
In the state’s view, the delays described by the trial court between September 7, 2005 and May 5, 2006, fall within the acceptable justification of “docket congestion.”
See Adams,
We, too, are concerned with the length of that delay. It is true, as the trial judge explained, that the court’s individual docketing system did not allow for a case that had previously been heard to be reassigned to a different judge. It is not our place to second guess that practice or the trial court’s decisions regarding the management of its own overcrowded docket.
Adams,
We are inevitably required to assess whether the overall time period in bringing a defendant to trial was reasonable.
State v. Forsyth,
First, a portion of the unconsented delay, albeit a relatively small portion (63 days), occurred during the period before the first trial, which had been timely set within five months of the charging instrument and which ended in a mistrial. In light of the underlying purpose of ORS 135.747— to clear out cases that are languishing in the criminal justice system and to service as a “housecleaning” mechanism for trial court dockets,
Johnson,
Second, as we said in
Myers,
our cases illustrate that the acceptability of the total delay is influenced by the extent to which it is justified.
In two recent misdemeanor cases, we considered delays similar to those involved here. In
State v. Dixon,-
Affirmed.
Notes
We note that the state assumes that the time period between indictment and the mistrial is counted as a part of the total delay. In
State v. Hampton,
We note that we frequently refer to the Oregon Standards of Timely Disposition, adopted by the Oregon Judicial Conference in 1990, for guidance in our determination whether a particular length of time is longer than ordinarily expected to bring a defendant to trial for the charged offense.
See Myers,
