This case is here on review from a decision of the Court of Appeals, which reversed a district court order dismissing a murder indictment against defendant for failure to afford him a speedy trial under § 795.2, The Code. We reverse the Court of Appeals and reinstate the district court order of dismissal.
I. This matter has been in the courts since 1974. Prior proceedings include an appeal to this court challenging the admissibility of defendant’s purported confession.
See State v. Cullison,
Claiming the state violated § 795.2 by failing to provide him with a speedy retrial, defendant moved for dismissal of the charge against him. His motion was sustained, and the state appealed. The Court of Appeals reversed. It is this judgment of the Court of Appeals which is now before us on defendant’s application for further review.
II. A preliminary question concerns the time at which the provisions of § 795.2 begin to run when defendant is awaiting, not his original trial, but a new trial. We decided a related issue involving mistrials in both
State v. Butler,
III. Defendant was not tried within that time. In fact when the trial court ordered his case dismissed, 183 days had elapsed since entry of the new trial order. It is therefore incumbent upon the state to justify this delay of 123 days or defendant is entitled to a dismissal.
State v. Butler,
The state, not the defendant, must see that prosecution is timely and that a trial is afforded within the allowable period.
State v. Palimore,
IV. We set out the significant dates which control our consideration of this issue, keeping in mind the fact defendant was confined in jail from the date of his arrest on February 23, 1974, until his release on May 25, 1976, following the trial court’s order of dismissal:
November 20, 1975—New trial granted.
December 19, 1975—Petition for writ of certiorari filed.
December 22, 1975—Order issued staying proceedings in district court.
January 8, 1976—Certiorari denied.
January 22, 1976—Procedendo issued.
February 17, 1976—Rehearing denied.
March 31,1976—Defendant’s motion filed in Supreme Court, asking prompt trial, transcript of first trial, and opportunity to have his own expert examine physical evidence.
April 8, 1976—Motion filed in Supreme Court on March 31, 1976, withdrawn and same motion refiled in district court.
*547 April 22, 1976 — Defendant’s motion to dismiss for failure to provide speedy trial filed.
April 26, 1976 — Hearing on motions of April 8 and April 22.
May 21, 1976 — Motion to dismiss sustained for failure to comply with § 795.2.
V.In deciding 795.2 cases, we must do more than engage in a mathematical count of days. Each case has its own facts and circumstances to be considered under a delicate balancing process.
Our review is not a de novo one. We reverse only for an abuse of discretion.
State v. Goff,
Applying these principles, we hold the state has failed to demonstrate good cause for the prolonged delay. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in so ruling. The result must be an absolute discharge of the case.
State v. Goff,
We have given careful attention to the state’s claim there were several good-cause delays which occurred while this case was awaiting re-trial. One of these resulted from the State’s petition for certiorari to review the trial court’s new trial order, the other from defendant’s motion for a transcript of the first trial and the right to examine certain physical evidence important to his defense. Neither singly nor jointly do they excuse the delay which occurred in the present case.
VI.Certiorari Proceedings
We held in
State v. Albertsen,
However, when the delay is said to result from other pending proceedings in the same or related cases, we require diligence from those seeking, on the one hand, to prove good cause or, on the other, from those claiming denial of a speedy trial.
In
State v. Goff,
In the case now before us, the state waited twenty-nine of a possible thirty days before filing its petition for writ of certio-rari on a matter it appears likely the state knew all along it intended to challenge. We take this circumstance into account in considering if the state has shown good cause.
The certiorari matter was decided adversely to the state on January 8, 1976, and procedendo issued on January 22. After some misunderstanding and confusion about whether a petition for rehearing had been filed, we considered and denied a rehearing on February 17. The trial court used this as the date upon which the certio-rari proceedings terminated. For purposes of this appeal, we do likewise, although ordinarily the trigger date would be the day the procedendo issued.
From February 17 on, the state was obligated to go forward with trial plans within the mandate of § 795.2. As pointed out in Division VIII, it failed to do so. It took no action, and indeed it was defendant who took the initiative in bringing the case to a head by filing the motion which we now discuss.
VII.Defendant’s motion for transcript and discovery
On April 8, 1976, defendant filed his motion for a transcript of his first trial and for the right to examine physical evidence it had used against him. He combined with it a motion for speedy trial. In our consideration we disregard the fact defendant first incorrectly filed this motion in the Supreme Court on March 31. It was withdrawn and properly filed in district court on April 8.
*548 From February 17 (when rehearing on the certiorari application was denied) until April 8 (when defendant’s motion was filed) the state remained totally indifferent to defendant’s right to be tried. During this fifty-one-day period, the state took no steps to fix a trial date. It showed no interest in bringing about a disposition of the case.
In allowing fifty-one days to go by after final disposition of the certiorari proceedings without even
asking
about trial dates, the state made it virtually impossible to try defendant within sixty days of February 17. Coupled with the state’s maximum delay in seeking certiorari in the first place, this demonstrates the state’s total failure to implement the public policy considerations of § 795.2, as we have said the state is obligated to do.
State v. Leonard,
The state argues the delay was attributable to defendant’s motion for a transcript and for discovery, but this is simply not the case. When defendant’s motion was filed, his right to a dismissal had already matured for the reasons we have just stated.
VIII. No matter which way the state turns, it is confronted by its own inattention and neglect. We have considered all the state’s arguments, including the one that several witnesses from the first trial had become unavailable, but we are unable to find any substantial evidence of good cause in any of them.
The state relies on
State v. Butler,
Here the state had already slept on its rights before defendant’s request for a transcript was made. No trial date had either been set or requested. When the case was dismissed, 183 days had elapsed. Giving the state the benefit of every possible time extension, we still cannot say the trial court abused its discretion in holding defendant was entitled to a dismissal.
IX. We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and reinstate the trial court order dismissing the charges against defendant.
JUDGMENT OF COURT OF APPEALS REVERSED AND DISTRICT COURT ORDER DISMISSING CASE REINSTATED.
