381 N.E.2d 1357 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1978
Lead Opinion
The defendant-appellant, Kenneth Eberhardt, hereinafter referred to as the appellant, was indicted by the Cuyahoga County Grand Jury on June 10, 1976. The indictment's sole count charged the appellant with aggravated robbery, R. C.
The factual background to the institution of criminal proceedings against the appellant is not disputed between the parties. The appellant was arrested on May 11, 1976, by the Cleveland Police for the crime of aggravated robbery. Bond was set but was not posted to enable the appellant's release on bail. As a result, the appellant was held in custody on the above charge from May 11, 1976, until October 14, 1976.
On September 2, 1976, the appellant filed a motion to dismiss the indictment for failure to afford him a speedy trial as required by the
A hearing was held on the motion to dismiss; and on October 4, 1976, the motion was overruled by the court. In its journalized decision, the trial court determined that the appellant was arrested on May 11, 1976, and had been incarcerated since that date due to a clerical error. The trial court determined that it had discretion to overrule the motion for discharge under R. C.
"The time within which an accused must be brought to trial * * * may be extended only by the following: * * *
"(H) The period of any continuance granted on the accused's own motion, and the period of any reasonable continuance granted other than upon the accused's own motion."
The record shows that prior to the filing of the motion to dismiss no motion for a continuance had been made by either the appellant or the state and no entry had been made by the court continuing the case for any reason. The record also shows that shortly after the trial court denied the motion to dismiss anolle prosequi was entered on the indictment at the state's request.
On October 24, 1976, the appellant filed a notice of appeal to challenge the proceedings against him.
In effect, the appellant's sole assignment of error is that due to the combination of the denial of the motion to dismiss and the interposition of the nolle prosequi in the case plus the facts in the record demonstrating that he was not brought to trial within the statutory time limits solely because of clerical error, he was entitled to a dismissal of the indictment and discharge thereunder.
R. C.
In the appellant's case, more than ninety days elapsed after his arrest and incarceration due to a clerical error. No provision of R. C.
In the appellant's case, however, the trial court after denying the motion to dismiss allowed the state's request for anolle prosequi. This action by the court ended immediate prosecution against the appellant but, as the appellant correctly notes, did not foreclose the possibility of his reindictment for the same criminal activity. See Columbus v. Stires (1967),
Because of the nature of the trial court's orders, we must also determine if there is a final appealable order presented in this appeal.
To provide a basis for appeal in a criminal case, there must be a sentence which constitutes judgment or there must be a final order amounting to a disposition of the cause. R. C.
R. C.
The courts of this state have often addressed the question of whether a particular order is a final appealable one. As a consequence, a considerable body of law has evolved defining final appealable orders. Thus, with respect to nearly all of the orders commonly employed by the trial courts, we have general rules to guide us in determining whether a given order is a final appealable order or is merely interlocutory. The body of case law relative to this issue teaches that it is not the name or the character of the order which determines its appealability — it is the effect of the order upon the action. State v. Holt
(1967),
In determining whether a given order is a final appealable order it is not enough to say the order is interlocutory and therefore not appealable. That an order is interlocutory is the conclusion of the analysis, not its starting point. The proper test to apply is whether the order affects a substantial right and in effect determines the action and prevents a judgment. R. C.
Generally speaking, the overruling of a motion to dismiss in a criminal case or a civil case is not considered a final appealable order. State v. Lile (1974),
The foregoing is consistent with the general rule in Ohio that there should be one trial and one appeal. The general rules recited above do not mean, however, that these orders are not final appealable orders as a matter of law. There are unusual instances when orders which standing alone are not considered final appealable orders become appealable by virtue of the exceptional circumstances under which they are rendered. In the final analysis, all such orders must satisfy the three requirements of R. C.
The appellant was not brought to trial within the statutory time limitation due to a clerical error. His motion to dismiss the indictment was denied although no justification existed under Ohio's speedy trial statutes for an extension of time within which he could lawfully be brought to trial. The trial court had no discretion to extend the time for trial under the facts of the case, and the appellant was entitled to be discharged. Had the case proceeded to trial, the appellant would have been either acquitted or convicted. If acquitted, the denial of his motion to dismiss would become a moot issue. If convicted, the appellant would be able to raise the state's failure to afford him a timely trial as error on appeal. Thenolle prosequi prevented either disposition and committed the appellant to the uncertainty of possible reindictment and trial. And, in subsequent proceedings instituted against him, the appellant would ultimately be discharged due to the state's failure to afford him a speedy trial. *199
No useful purpose is served by requiring additional burdensome procedural steps to be undertaken before our consideration of the question raised in this appeal. See State v.Holt, supra; Forest City Investment Co. v. Haas (1924),
Under the circumstances presented by this appeal, we conclude that there is an order affecting a substantial right which determined the action and prevented judgment within the meaning of R. C.
We accede to the general proposition that in criminal actions neither the entering of a nolle prosequi nor the denial of a motion to dismiss is a final appealable order. It is only the admittedly rare combination such as presented here — the denial of the appellant's motion to dismiss coupled with the nolleprosequi following the trial court's disposition of the motion to dismiss which was contrary to law — which renders the case final and appealable.*
The trial court should have dismissed the indictment under R. C.
The appellant is discharged, which discharge is a bar *200 to any further criminal proceedings against him based on the same conduct alleged in the indictment.
Judgment reversed.
PRYATEL and DAY, JJ., concur.
Concurrence Opinion
I quite agree with the viewpoint so persuasively presented and offer some additional comments.
In the present posture of a nolle, the defendant could be reindicted (albeit mistakenly) and held for trial, with the likelihood that the case would again be nolled as the facts came to light. Defendant should be spared the worry and anxiety of such an occurrence which our holding would prevent. Moreover, if reindicted, the defendant or the state should be spared the additional cost of hiring or assigning counsel to obtain the discharge due the defendant under the undisputed facts connected with this unseasonably brought trial. *201