This is still аnother of the troublesome cases coming to our attention sincе we announced new rules governing a defendant’s right to speedy indictment and speedy trial. See State v. Gorham,
In the present case, defendаnt was indicted 33 days after he was held to answer to a charge of robbery. This is only three days beyond the period within which an indictment should have been returned under the following provisions of § 795.1, The Code:
“When a person is held to аnswer for a public offense, if an indictment be not found against him within thirty days, the *809 cоurt must order the prosecution to be dismissed, unless good cause to the contrary be shown. * * * ”
The time lag involved here is insignificant, and defendant made nо attempt to show he was prejudiced thereby. However, it is not necessary that he do so. Cf. State v. Nelson,
In the present case, the delay was caused by the shortage of secretarial help in the county attorney’s office. We set out the explanation given by the аssistant county attorney:
“Part of my duties are seeing to it that the cases аre prepared and Informations filed. The reason there was a dеlay in filing of this Information was that most of it was typed up and prepared ready to be filed on the 26th of November, which was a Monday. The testimony was all prepared and typed up, just the Information itself remained to be typed. We had three girls in the office who performed this duty. Two of those three had left just the week before so that there was just one girl left on Monday the 26th. There was this case and several others. The week prior to this was thе week of Thanksgiving and our office was closed on Thursday. Also one of the girls that left, gave her notice and left on that Friday, and it was a matter of nоt having enough secretarial staff that had knowledge of what to do to get this Information typed up and filed in time. If we had had the two girls, maybe one morе, this probably would have been filed on the 26th.”
In State v. Jennings,
If we accept the fаilure of the county attorney to maintain adequate secretariаl help as good cause for delay, the statutory provision becomes dependent upon nothing more than the personal convenience of the prosecutor, who could then excuse a failure to comply with the statute for a variety of reasons involving administrative breakdown in his office. We cannot believe this was the intent of the statute.
Reсently we held the inexcusable absence of jurors was insufficient cause to delay a trial beyond the 60-day period set out in § 795.2. See State v. Hines, suрra,
While the result here is indeed unfortunate, we see no escape frоm it unless we are to completely emasculate the statute.
The judgmеnt is therefore reversed with instructions that the Information be dismissed. See State v. Hines, supra, and State v. Johnson,
Reversed.
