UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Sidney Marvin BILSKY, Robert Clyde Lovell, Joyce Elaine
Lovell, Defendants-Appellants.
Sidney Marvin BILSKY, Robert Clyde Lovell and Joyce Elaine
Lovell, Petitioners,
v.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE
AT MEMPHIS, Respondent.
Nos. 81-5148, 81-5149.
United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.
Argued June 12, 1981.
Decided Nov. 24, 1981.
A. G. Burkhart, Jr., Kemper Durand, Rosenfield, Borod & Kremer, Memphis, Tenn., for defendants-appellants.
W. Hickman Ewing Jr., U. S. Atty., Devon Gosnell, Asst. U. S. Atty., Memphis, Tenn., for plaintiff-appellee.
Before EDWARDS, Chief Judge, ENGEL, Circuit Judge, and CELEBREZZE, Senior Circuit Judge.
CELEBREZZE, Senior Circuit Judge.
The principal issue in this case is whether the district court's denial of a motion to dismiss the indictment for violation of the Speedy Trial Act is appealable prior to trial. We conclude that such a denial fails to fall within the "collateral order" exception pronounced in Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
I.
On May 13, 1980, a federal grand jury in the Western District of Tennessee returned an indictment against the appellants, Robert Clyde Lovell, Joyce Elaine Lovell, Sidney Marvin Bilsky, and three other defendants, charging them with conspiracy and transportation of stolen merchandise in excess of $5,000.00 in interstate commerce. See 18 U.S.C. Section 2314. A superseding indictment was returned on September 22, 1980, charging appellants with conspiracy and receiving stolen merchandise in excess of $5,000 in interstate commerce. See 18 U.S.C. Section 2315. The different charges arose from the same circumstances.
On November 18, 1980, the original indictment was dismissed on the government's motion and trial commenced on the September indictment. That trial was terminated and a mistrial declared on November 28, 1980. A written order declaring a mistrial was entered by the district court on December 4, 1980. A motion for a judgment of acquittal was filed on behalf of all defendants on December 5, 1980; the district court denied the motion on December 9, 1980.
On January 15, 1981, the district court denied the appellants' motions to dismiss the indictment for failure to grant a speedy trial. In their motion the Lovells had argued that more than 180 days had elapsed since the original indictment was returned on May 13, 1981, and that the date of the filing of the superseding indictment related back to the date of the filing of the original indictment under 18 U.S.C. Section 3161(d)(1).
On February 17, 1981, the case was set for retrial on March 9, 1981. On February 26, 1981, the Lovells filed another motion to dismiss for failure to comply with the Speedy Trial Act. Bilsky filed a similar motion on February 27, 1981. In those motions the appellants argued, in contradiction to their earlier argument, that the September 22 superseding indictment was the only relevant indictment, and that since the case had not been set for retrial within 70 days of the date on which the order declaring the mistrial was entered as required by the Speedy Trial Act, dismissal of the indictment was mandated. The district court denied the motions to dismiss and entered a written order to that effect on March 3, 1981. First, the court concluded that the time of filing of the superseding indictment related back to the date of the original indictment of May 13, 1980. Since the sanctions to be imposed for failure to comply with the provisions of the Speedy Trial Act were applicable only to indictments returned "on or after July 1, 1980," they were not relevant to the present case. Second, the court held that the plan for "Suspension of Speedy Trial Limits" in the Western District of Tennessee as approved by the Judicial Council of the Sixth Circuit provided that a retrial after a mistrial could be held within 180 days of the mistrial, and therefore the retrial schedule for March 9, 1981 was timely. And third, Judge McCrae found that even if the retrial should have been held within 70 days of the mistrial, the confusion created in the Western District of Tennessee regarding the suspension of the Speedy Trial Act sanctions dictated that the "interests of justice" would best be served by determining the period between 70 days after the mistrial and March 9, 1981, to constitute excludable delay.
On March 4, 1981, the Lovells and Bilsky filed a notice of appeal from the order denying their motion to dismiss; the Lovells also filed a petition for a writ of mandamus. On March 5, 1981, the district court conducted a hearing on the status of the case and ruled that the trial would proceed on March 9, 1981. That same day the appellants filed a petition for a stay or extraordinary writ seeking to prevent the case from going to trial on March 9, 1981. This court granted the stay so that the district court would have an opportunity to rule on the motion for a stay. After a hearing on the motion, the district court denied the application for a stay on March 16, 1981. On April 3, 1981 we directed that the appeal in Case No. 81-5148 (Bilsky) and the appeal and mandamus petition in Case No. 81-5149 (Lovells) be presented to and considered by a panel of this court.
II.
As a threshold matter we must determine whether the order denying appellants' motions to dismiss the indictment because of a violation of the Speedy Trial Act is appealable prior to trial. The right of appeal in a criminal case "is purely a creature of statute," Abney v. United States,
As a general rule, a pretrial order denying a defendant's motion to dismiss an indictment is not an appealable "final decision" under Section 1291. See e.g. United States v. Sisk,
On several occasions the Supreme Court has departed from the rule that finality is required as a predicate for federal appellate jurisdiction. In criminal cases those departures have involved fundamental rights where the order of the district court "finally determined claims of rights separate from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until the whole case is adjudicated." Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
Application of the Cohen criteria to a double jeopardy claim produced a different result in Abney v. United States,
In stark contrast to Abney is the Court's decision in United States v. MacDonald,
The Speedy Trial Act differs from the MacDonald Court's interpretation of the sixth amendment right in several respects.3 While the cases fail to fix any time limit, the Act provides for a 100 day timetable. A defendant must be indicted within thirty days of arrest, 18 U.S.C. Sec. 3161(b), and tried within seventy days thereafter, Id. Sec. 3161(c)(1). A more critical difference is between the dismissals available under the Speedy Trial Act and the Supreme Court interpretations. A finding of a constitutional speedy trial violation mandates dismissal with prejudice. Strunk v. United States,
Notwithstanding these distinctions, application of the Cohen criteria to a Speedy Trial Act claim produces the same result reached in MacDonald. Admittedly, the district court's order was a complete and final determination of appellant's claims. And appellate review at this time would conclusively determine the disputed question by resolving an issue collateral to and separate from the defendants' guilt or innocence. For unlike a sixth amendment claim, a Speedy Trial Act claim is not measured by prejudice to the defendant which can best be evaluated after a trial. The question remains, however, whether the particular right involved would be "lost, probably irreparably" if immediate appellate review is not available.
In MacDonald, the Court emphasized that the sixth amendment's speedy trial guarantee did not embody a right "not to be tried" which must be upheld before trial if it is to be enjoyed at all. Appellants urge that by delineating a timetable in which they must be prosecuted, the Act confers such a right "not to be tried" after expiration of the prescribed period. In other words, they have a right to be tried within a certain time frame or not at all. This "right" is evident, we are told, from the Act's sanctions provisions which mandate that the indictment be dismissed when compliance with the Act is not achieved.
Undoubtedly, the Act injected a new concept of immediacy into the fundamental right to a speedy trial guaranteed by the sixth amendment. In setting uniform time limits for all phases of the criminal process it created a right to a trial within a predetermined number of days to which a defendant is entitled to as a matter of law. That is not to say, however, that every defendant is vested with a right not to be tried after expiration of the Act's time limits. To infer such a substantial right from the Act's remedy, i. e., dismissal, would ignore the relativity of the right. The right is not absolute in the same sense as the double jeopardy rights vindicated in Abney. While dismissal is mandatory when the Act is violated, the dismissal does not necessarily terminate the prosecution of the defendant. The court is given ample latitude to dismiss the case without prejudice so as to allow the government to recommence prosecution. In this respect the Speedy Trial Act does not attempt to insulate a defendant from trial, but from delay. As the Ninth Circuit has noted in finding the denial of a motion to dismiss on Speedy Trial Act grounds to be non-appealable: "It is the delay and not the trial that is the target of the Act. Proceeding with trial does not cause or compound the harm at which the statute is aimed." United States v. Mehrmanesh,
If we were to hold that the appellants' claims are appealable at this stage, we would open the door to countless interlocutory appeals which would prove counterproductive. In MacDonald, the Court listed several important policy considerations which "reinforced" its conclusion, policies which apply with equal force in the instant case. Foremost among these is the nature of the criminal process in which there is inevitably delay between the indictment and trial stages. The inherent delay would permit virtually every defendant to raise a pretrial motion for dismissal on speedy trial grounds. If the denial of that motion were immediately appealable, the result would seriously exacerbate pretrial delay at the expense of the finality requirement. Moreover, "allowing an exception to the rule against pretrial appeals in criminal cases for speedy trial claims would threaten precisely the values manifested in the Speedy Trial Clause."
Accordingly, the order of the district court denying the appellants' motions to dismiss the indictments is not subject to interlocutory appeal.
III.
In the alternative the Lovells have requested mandamus relief from the district court's order denying their motion to dismiss. Mandamus under 28 U.S.C. Section 1651 is an extraordinary writ of limited dimensions. Allied Chemical Corp. v. Daiflon,
The second justification for conducting the retrial more than seventy days after the declaration of the mistrial revolves around the emergency relief provisions of the Act. Section 3174 enables the judicial council of the circuit to suspend certain time limits contained in the Act.
On June 3, 1980, a resolution was filed by the Speedy Trial Planning Group for the Western District of Tennessee with the Judicial Council of the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit for suspension of the time limits under the Speedy Trial Act. Application was made for a one year suspension of the time limits by the Chief Judge, Robert M. McRae, Jr., pursuant to Section 3174. That application included the following provision under the heading Time Within Which Trial Must Commence : (b) Retrial; Trial after Reinstatement of an Indictment or Information. The retrial of a defendant shall commence within 180 days from the date the order occasioning the retrial becomes final, as shall the trial of a defendant upon an indictment or information dismissed by a trial court and reinstated following an appeal. Section 3161(d)(2), (e) The plan was approved by the Sixth Circuit Judicial Council. The plan for suspension of the time limits as submitted by the Chief Judge clearly provides for retrials to take place 180 days after the order on the retrial becomes final.
Section 3174(b) provides in pertinent part:
(b) If the judicial council of the circuit finds that no remedy for such congestion is reasonably available such council may, upon application by the chief judge of a district, grant a suspension of the time limits in Section 3161(c) in such district for a period of time not to exceed one year for the trial of cases for which indictments or informations are filed during such one-year period. During such period of suspension, the time limits from arrest to indictment, set forth in Section 3161(b), shall not be reduced, nor shall the sanctions set forth in Section 3162 be suspended; but such time limits from indictment to trial shall not be increased to exceed one hundred and eighty days.
Appellants have argued that this section empowers the judicial council to suspend only the time limit for commencement of trial set forth in Section 3161(c), and not the limits for a retrial set out in Section 3161(e). Thus, they assert that the judicial council exceeded its statutory authority in authorizing an increase in the period between mistrial and retrial from 70 to 180 days.
In response the government urges us to read the statute in a more liberal fashion. The government emphasizes that the subsequent sentence of the section specifically prohibits suspension of the time limits applicable to Section 3161(b) (requiring an indictment within 30 days of arrest) and also forbids suspension of the sanctions of Section 3162. Had Congress intended to proscribe the suspension of the time for a retrial, the argument goes, it would have expressly provided for such. Since it did not, this circuit's judicial council had the implicit authority to suspend the timetable of Section 3161(e).
We have considered these arguments at length and conclude that the debate between the parties concerns solely issues of law. Even assuming-and in no way do we express any views on the merits of the various controversies-that the district court is wrong on all points, his errors are not the kind, grounded on differing perceptions of statutory interpretation, that are appropriate for mandamus review. In this situation mandamus is not an appropriate substitute for appeal. See Mehrnamesh, supra.
The appeals are dismissed. The petitions for mandamus are denied.
Notes
See also United States v. Brizendine,
In a similar vein, the Court in Helstoski v. Meanor,
Another case analogous to Abney is Forsyth v. Kleindeist,
Indeed, the House Committee Report found the Act was "necessary in order to give real meaning" to the speedy trial guarantee. H.R.Rep.No. 1508, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 11-12, reprinted in 1974 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 7401, 7404
The Act enumerates four factors a judge shall consider in determining whether to dismiss with or without prejudice: 1) the seriousness of the offense; 2) the facts and circumstances of the case which led to the dismissal; 3) the impact of a reprosecution on the administration on the Act; and 4) the impact of a reprosecution on the administration of justice. 18 U.S.C. Sec. 3162(a)(2)
However, the Supreme Court has noted that while an interlocutory order may not be appealable, if irreparable harm seems imminent, a party might seek to have the district court certify the question for interlocutory appellate review pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Section 1292(b), and, in exceptional circumstances, seek a writ of mandamus from a court of appeals. Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord,
