Thе critical issue is whether the appellant Stuart’s Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial has been infringed.
In February, 1968, the District Attorney of Los Angeles County, California, *914 filed a criminal complaint charging Stuart with robbery. Shortly thereafter, Stuart was arrested in Butte County, California, the basis for the arrest being an outstanding warrant issued in Los Angeles after the complaint was filed. While being held pending the arrival of Lоs Angeles County authorities, Stuart was charged with an unrelated felony which he had allegedly committed in Butte County. He was convicted of that charge on May 31, 1968 and was subsequently transferred to a stаte penal institution. While imprisoned, but before any effort was made to obtain jurisdiction over him in Los Angeles, Stuart made a written demand, pursuant to § 1381 of the California Penal Code, that he be brought to trial within 90 days. The demand was received by the Los Angeles District Attorney on July 23, 1968.
After a number of unexplained administrative delays in the District Attorney’s office, Stuart was finally transported to Los Angeles оn September 6, 1968. He was arraigned on September '8. A preliminary hearing, scheduled for September 18, but postponed due to the absence of the robbery victim, was conducted on Oсtober 10, and Stuart was held to answer. A trial date could not, however, be set before October 29, the end of the statutory 90-day period. Thus, on October 29, the superior court dismissed the robbery сharges against Stuart. The District Attorney, acting on the authority of California Penal Code § 1387, 1 immediately refiled the same charge against Stuart.
On November 22, Stuart moved to dismiss the action on the ground,
inter alia,
that he had been denied his right to a speedy trial, аs secured by the United States
2
and California constitutions.
3
The motion was denied, apparently without a factual hearing by the trial court, and subsequent actions to obtain relief from a California District Court of Appeal and the California Supreme Court were of no avail. Thereafter, on March 5, 1969, Stuart was convicted of robbery. The District Court of Appeal modified the conviction, but it held that Stuart’s contention that he was denied a speedy trial was inadequate since he had “[t]he record contain[ed] no allegation of prejudice nor [did] it show any.” People v. Stuart,
*915
The right to a speedy trial is relative, and each case must be judged on its facts. Beavers v. Haubert,
In this case, there is no question that the Sixth Amendment applies; delays between indictment and trial are clearly restricted by the Constitution.
See, e. g.,
Lucas v. United States,
It is true, as the appellee contends, that the length of the delay in this casе (13 months, 3 of which were caused by Stuart’s interim collateral actions) is not
per se
sufficient to find a denial of Sixth Amendment rights. United States v. Penland,
Here, the District Court Order denying Stuart’s petition noted that much of the pre-trial delay was caused by administrative blunders in the District Attornеy’s office. In addition, after the District Court denied his petition, Stuart filed a Motion for Rehearing which specified several possible sources of prejudice.
4
Both of these points deserved full consideration.
See Dickey, supra,
The Supreme Court has held that the Speedy Trial Clause may be violated when a delay in prosecution, occurring after indictment, is deliberate or oppressive, Pollard v. United States,
In
Dickey,
the Supreme Court held that sufficient prejudice for a Sixth Amendment violation was shown when the pre-trial delay resulted in the loss of three defense witnesses — two died and one could not be located — and the unavailability of police records. Here, Stuart alleged in his Motion for Rehearing that he lost, at thе minimum, the services of a number of helpful witnesses — one was terminally ill, others had failing memories.
Cf.
Ross v. United States,
Unfortunately, the record before us provides no adequate basis for a dis-positive decision. Stuart has yet to have a hearing on the facts underlying his Sixth Amendment claim in either the state or federal courts. As a result, there is a barren record which neither validates nor invalidates Stuart’s claim.
Cf. Hanrahan, supra,
Upon remand, the District Court may exercise its discretion as to whether it shall itself first proceed with the required evidentiary hearing or hоld the petition in abeyance so as to allow the state authorities a reasonable period of time within which to afford the hearing in the first instance.
6
See
Townsend v. Sain,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. “An order for the dismissal of the aсtion is [not] a bar to any other prosecution for the same offense . . . if it is a felony.”
See
People v. Godlewski,
.
See
Klopfer v. North Carolina,
Stuart also claims that his due procеss rights were violated by the pretrial delay. In light of our decision on his Sixth Amendment claim, we do not specifically decide this due process argument. It should be noted, however, that the Due Process Clause has been interpreted to bar “unreasonable” delays in prosecution.
See, e. g.,
Beasley v. Pitchess,
. Cal.Const. Art. I, § 13.
In earlier proceedings, Stuart contended that several state statutes had bеen violated ; those arguments are, quite properly, not pressed in this action. Stuart does, however, argue that since the complaint was once dismissed under § 1387 for not being promptly prosecuted, his subsequent trial was not, in constitutional terms, speedy. As to this contention, it is sufficient to note that state statutes are never determinative of constitutional limitations.
.
Compare
this with Mull v. United States, 9 Cir.,
See also
United States v. Marion,
. The quoted language is ambiguous, and we may be incorrect in our interpretation of it, but only the District Court can provide the clarification whiсh is so obviously necessary.
. In making its decision, the District Court should consider whether Stuart failed to exhaust his state remedies by not drawing the state courts’ attention to the sources of possible prejudice revealed to the District Court.
