delivered the Opinion of the Court.
William H. Tweedy (Tweedy) appeals from an order of the Ninth Judicial District Court, Glacier County, dismissing his appeal from a Justice Court conviction. We reverse and remand with instructions.
The issues on appeal are:
1. Did the District Court have jurisdiction over Tweedy’s appeal from the Justice Court?
2. Did the District Court err in granting the State of Montana’s motion to dismiss Tweedy’s appeal?
3. Was Tweedy’s right to a speedy trial violated?
On January 3,1989, the State of Montana (State) charged Tweedy in Glacier County Justice Court with two counts of misdemeanor assault. On April 11,1989, a jury found Tweedy not guilty on the first count, and guilty on the second count, of misdemeanor assault. The *315 Justice Court scheduled sentencing for April 18, 1989, and Tweedy filed a notice of appeal to the District Court on April 19, 1989. The Justice Court filed its sentencing order on May 3,1989.
The District Court scheduled Tweedy’s trial for July 21, 1989. Tweedy subsequently requested, and received, a continuance of that trial date. No new trial date was ever scheduled. In April of 1990, Tweedy filed a letter requesting that his name be substituted for that of his previous counsel as attorney of record.
Nothing further occurred in the case until January 13,1995, when the State moved to dismiss the appeal on the basis that Tweedy had failed to diligently pursue it. Tweedy responded with a motion to dismiss the underlying charge for lack of speedy trial and prosecutorial prejudice. The District Court held a hearing on the motions and, thereafter, granted the State’s motion to dismiss Tweedy’s appeal. Tweedy appeals.
1. Did the District Court have jurisdiction over Tweedy’s appeal from the Justice Court?
On appeal, Tweedy argues that the District Court erred in dismissing his appeal from the Justice Court and in implicitly denying his motion to dismiss the charge against him on speedy trial grounds and other bases. In addition to responding to Tweedy’s arguments, the State contends that the District Court did not acquire jurisdiction over Tweedy’s appeal because his notice of appeal from the Justice Court was premature.
The issue of subject matter jurisdiction may be raised by a party, or by the court itself, at any stage of a judicial proceeding.
In re Marriage of Miller
(1993),
The manner in which an appeal from a justice court to a district court must be taken is controlled by statute in Montana and recently has been clarified by this Court. Pursuant to § 46-17-311(2), MCA, a defendant initiates an appeal to the district court by filing written notice of intention to appeal within 10 days after a justice court judgment is rendered. A judgment on a criminal conviction includes the sentence; therefore, the imposition of sentence and final judgment by the justice court is a prerequisite for an appeal from that court to
*316
the district court.
State v. Todd
(1993),
Here, Tweedy filed his notice of appeal after the April 11,1989, jury verdict finding him guilty of misdemeanor assault, but before the Justice Court filed its sentencing order on May 3, 1989. Tweedy asserts, however, that the Justice Court orally pronounced sentence on April 18, 1989, in the presence of himself and his attorney, that the judgment against him was final on that date and that his attorney prepared the notice of appeal later that day. On the basis of these assertions, Tweedy contends that he timely filed his notice of appeal on April 19, 1989, and the District Court acquired jurisdiction.
We previously have held that the statutory 10-day period for filing a notice of appeal runs from the date on which a justice court orally renders judgment in open court, regardless of whether a written judgment is issued.
State v. Mortenson
(1978),
The record in the present case, insofar as it is relevant to this issue, consists of a jury verdict finding Tweedy guilty of one count of misdemeanor assault on April 11, 1989; a Justice Court notice requesting Tweedy to appear on April 18,1989, for sentencing; Tweedy’s notice of appeal, dated April 18,1989, and filed on April 19,1989; and the Justice Court’s sentencing order on Tweedy’s misdemeanor assault conviction, filed on May 3,1989.
Although the sentencing order does not refer to any sentencing proceeding or oral pronouncement of sentence having occurred on April 18, 1989, there also is no indication in the record that Tweedy did not appear, as ordered, for sentencing in the Justice Court on that date. Thus, while the record is not altogether clear in this regard, the order to appear for sentencing on April 18,1989, taken together with Tweedy’s notice of appeal dated the same day and filed on April 19, 1989, creates a strong inference that the Justice Court orally pronounced sentence on April 18,1989, in accordance with its scheduling order and that the May 3, 1989, sentencing order was merely a written formalization of its earlier oral sentence. As a result, judg *317 ment was rendered on April 18, 1989, and Tweedy’s notice of appeal to the District Court was timely filed within the statutory 10-day period. We conclude, therefore, that the District Court had subject matter jurisdiction over Tweedy’s appeal from the Justice Court.
We note that, in 1991, the legislature enacted § 46-18-116, MCA, which provides as follows:
The judgment must set forth the plea, verdict or finding, and the adjudication. If the defendant is convicted, it must set forth the sentence or other disposition. The judgment must be signed and entered on the record.
Although this statute is not located in Chapter 17 of Title 46, which specifically governs criminal procedure in justice and city courts, it is applicable to criminal proceedings in all the courts of Montana “except where provision for a different procedure is specifically provided by law.” Section 46-1-103(1), MCA. Neither the legislature nor this Court has provided such a different procedure for justice courts and, therefore, § 46-18-116, MCA, is applicable to criminal proceedings in justice courts. While the § 46-18-116, MCA, requirement for a signed judgment entered on the record does not apply here because Tweedy’s Justice Court conviction occurred in 1989, compliance with this requirement by Montana courts should eliminate confusion in the future regarding when the statutory time periods for appeal from judgments in criminal cases begin to run.
2. Did the District Court err in granting the State’s motion to dismiss Tweedy’s appeal?
The State argued in the District Court that Tweedy’s appeal from the Justice Court conviction and judgment should be dismissed based on his failure to pursue it in a timely manner. The State did not file a brief in support of its motion and did not provide the District Court with authority for its position at the hearing on both parties’ motions.
The District Court’s order granting the State’s motion to dismiss Tweedy’s appeal notes only that Tweedy made no effort to pursue his appeal from the April 1990, point at which he substituted himself as counsel of record until the State filed its motion to dismiss the appeal in January of 1995. The order provides no further rationale and contains no citation to authority. The court stated at the hearing that, as the party bringing the appeal, Tweedy was obligated to ensure that the appeal was heard in a timely fashion and that the State did not have the burden to pursue the appeal. The District Court order granting the State’s motion to dismiss the appeal did not directly *318 address Tweedy’s motion to dismiss the underlying charge for lack of speedy trial on appeal.
Section 25-33-304, MCA, authorizes the dismissal of a civil appeal from a justice court to a district court for failure to prosecute or unnecessary delay. No statutory authority for such a dismissal of a criminal appeal exists, however, and this Court has not specifically addressed the issue of whether the defendant or the prosecution has the responsibility to timely pursue the prosecution of a criminal appeal from a justice court to a district court. The State contends that such responsibility lies with the party bringing the appeal.
The right of a criminal defendant to a speedy trial is guaranteed by both the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article II, Section 24, of the Montana Constitution.
State v. Matthews
(1995),
It is clear that a criminal defendant has the initial burden, pursuant to § 46-17-311, MCA, to perfect his or her appeal from a justice court in order to vest jurisdiction in. the district court. Once that appeal is perfected, the criminal defendant is entitled to a trial de novo in the district court pursuant to § 46-17-311(1), MCA. Thus, when the appeal reaches the district court, it proceeds as if it were a new trial.
State v. Sunford
(1990),
While our cases have not specifically addressed the precise issue presently before us, they clearly mandate our conclusion that the burden is on the State to diligently prosecute a criminal case which is in the district court as the result of an appeal from a justice court, without regard to which party brought the appeal. To conclude otherwise would require us to ignore the de novo nature of such a proceeding under both § 46-17-311, MCA, and Sunford and to place the burden of prosecuting a criminal case on the defendant in contravention of Tiedemann. Indeed, to conclude otherwise would penalize a criminal defendant exercising the statutory right to appeal to the *319 district court by effectively nullifying the constitutional guarantee of a speedy trial.
In addition, the situation at issue here is not dissimilar from that which occasionally results from an appeal to this Court. When a criminal defendant appeals to this Court and is granted a new trial, the State is required on remand to proceed with the new trial in a diligent and speedy manner.
See, e.g., State v. Stewart
(1994),
The State cites to
City of Seattle v. Crockett
(Wash. 1976),
We decline to adopt the State’s position, based on
Crockett,
that a criminal defendant must pursue his or her own prosecution in a trial de novo before a district court. In our view, a defendant who retains the constitutional right to a speedy trial after appealing a justice court conviction to the district court must also retain the corresponding right to require the prosecution to ensure that a speedy trial occurs. We observe, in this regard, that other jurisdictions have held that a defendant is not under any obligation to act affirmatively to protect the right to a speedy trial in a trial de novo.
See, e.g., City of Elkhart v. Bollacker
(Kan. 1988),
The State also relies on
State v. Langdon
(Idaho App. 1990),
We conclude that, once a defendant has perfected an appeal from the justice court to the district court, the State has the obligation to ensure that the prosecution of the case proceeds in a diligent manner. We hold, therefore, that the District Court erred in granting the State’s motion to dismiss Tweedy’s appeal on the basis that Tweedy failed to pursue it.
3. Was Tweedy’s right to a speedy trial violated?
An analysis of whether a defendant’s right to a speedy trial has been violated requires a balancing of the following four factors:
1) length of the delay;
2) reason for the delay;
3) assertion of the right by the defendant; and
4) prejudice to the defendant.
Matthews,
When the delay is presumptively prejudicial, the burden shifts to the State to rebut the presumption by showing a reasonable explanation for the delay and demonstrating that the defendant was not prejudiced by the delay.
Matthews,
We also must weigh the time chargeable to the State.
Matthews,
Nor was the delay intentional. Rather, it was caused by the State’s erroneous conclusion that it did not have the burden to diligently prosecute Tweedy’s trial de novo and its total failure to pursue the case from July of 1989 until its motion to dismiss the appeal in January of 1995. We noted above that we have not heretofore specifically addressed the precise issue of which party has the burden of diligently pursuing a criminal appeal from a justice court to a district court for a trial de novo; we also indicated, however, that Tiedemann, Sunford, and Bullock clearly mandated our conclusion here that the burden remained on the State to timely prosecute. Thus, Montana case law did not provide a reasonable basis for the State’s position on the burden issue. As a result, we weigh the delay of more than five years in this case heavily against the State.
The third
Barker
factor requires that a defendant assert the right to a speedy trial. “Our rule is that if a defendant has moved to dismiss before trial, he has fulfilled the requirement of asserting his constitutional right to a speedy trial.”
Britton,
The State argues, in this regard, that even if it and the District Court had some responsibility to reset Tweedy’s case for trial, that responsibility should be weighed against Tweedy’s “lack of assertion” of the right to speedy trial; in that event, according to the State, this Court “must decide whether the cause of the delay was completely attributable to the State or to a waiver of the right of speedy trial by the Defendant.” With regard to the alleged “lack of assertion” of the right, that contention is factually incorrect; indeed, the State recognizes at another portion of its brief that Tweedy asserted his right on January 17,1995. With regard to the “waiver” theory, the State cites to no authority under which a defendant’s right to a speedy trial is waived — in the legal sense — where asserted prior to trial. As presented here, these arguments by the State are merely a different, and unsupported, twist on its earlier efforts to place the burden of diligently prosecuting this trial de novo on the defendant.
The final factor of the speedy trial analysis is whether the defendant was prejudiced by the delay Three interests are considered in assessing prejudice resulting from delay: 1) prevention of oppressive
*322
pretrial incarceration; 2) minimization of the defendant’s anxiety and concern; and 3) avoidance of impairment of the defense.
Matthews,
The primary prejudice-related thrust of Tweedy’s motion to dismiss for lack of a speedy trial was that witnesses’ memories had been impaired by the delay. The State argues that, under Weeks, general claims of impairment are not persuasive, and that “none of the witnesses have passed away and there has been no destruction of the records regarding the charged incident.”
It is true that mere self-serving assertions that the defendant suffered prejudice generally are not sufficient to demonstrate impairment of, or prejudice to, the defense.
Weeks,
Moreover, given the presumptively prejudicial delay, the burden shifted to the State in this case to rebut the presumed prejudice.
Matthews,
Nor is the State’s assertion on appeal that “none of the witnesses have passed away” material here. First, Tweedy did not assert that witnesses had died; he asserted that witnesses’ memories have been impaired due to the long delay. Thus, the State’s assertion is not responsive to Tweedy’s assertion and, even if true, it would be insufficient to rebut Tweedy’s claim. More importantly, the appropriate place to respond to Tweedy’s claim of prejudice was in the District Court, not in this Court. The State could, and should, have done so by responding to Tweedy’s motion and requesting an evidentiary hearing to rebut his claims. It did not.
We recognize that, in the usual case, a defendant claiming a speedy trial violation would be required to at least submit an affidavit in support of claims of prejudice.
Matthews,
*323
Once the burden has shifted to the State to rebut presumed prejudice, however, it is the State’s duty to respond to a speedy trial motion and to properly raise, for resolution by the district court, the issues related thereto. Under the well-established principle that we will not consider an issue raised for the first time on appeal, the State acts at its own peril if it fails to do so.
See Weeks,
In this case, the State failed to raise either its fact-based responses or its legal authority regarding the sufficiency of Tweedy’s assertions in the District Court. Thus, on this record, we conclude that the State failed to meet its burden of rebutting the presumed prejudice to the defense as a matter of law. Consequently, we weigh the prejudice factor in Tweedy’s favor.
In this case, we conclude that a proper balancing of the four Barker factors pursuant to Matthews requires that we accord the extraordinary length of the delay substantially more weight than any of the other Barker factors and that we weigh it in Tweedy’s favor and against the State. The assertion of the right and prejudice factors also weigh in Tweedy’s favor, although less heavily. As a result, we hold that Tweedy’s constitutional right to a speedy trial was violated.
We reverse the District Court’s order dismissing Tweedy’s appeal and remand for entry of an order dismissing the misdemeanor assault charge against him.
