Rosen v. Watson

103 S.W.3d 25, 2003 Ky. LEXIS 78, 2003 WL 1936585
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 2003
Docket2002-SC-0057-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 103 S.W.3d 25 (Rosen v. Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rosen v. Watson, 103 S.W.3d 25, 2003 Ky. LEXIS 78, 2003 WL 1936585 (Ky. 2003).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Justice COOPER.

Appellee Joseph Watson is charged with escape in the second degree, a Class D felony, KRS 520.030(2). After the Boyd Circuit Court denied his motion to dismiss for failure to comply with his request for final disposition, KRS 500.110, Appellee petitioned the Court of Appeals for relief pursuant to CR 76.36. The Court of Appeals granted the petition and issued a writ prohibiting the Boyd Circuit Court from continuing the prosecution of the escape charge. Appellants appeal from that action as a matter of right. Ky. Const. § 115; CR 76.36(7)(a). We affirm.

On July 29, 1999, Appellee’s probation officer filed a criminal complaint against him in the Boyd District Court alleging that Appellee had escaped from a half-way house in Boyd County the previous day. A warrant of arrest was issued on July 29, 1999, but was not served on Appellant until more than a year later, November 9, 2000. At that time, Appellee was imprisoned on other charges at the Northpoint Training Center in Mercer County, Kentucky. On November 15, 2000, the Boyd District Court lodged a detainer against Appellee with Northpoint based on the escape charge pending in that court.

On March 27, 2001, pursuant to KRS 500.110, Appellee filed a pro se request for a final disposition of the escape charge within 180 days. Appellee filed his request in the Boyd District Court and served notice on the Boyd County attorney, the prosecuting officer responsible for representing the Commonwealth in that court. KRS 15.725(2). The district court took no action on the motion.

On April 26, 2001, a Boyd County grand jury issued a direct indictment against Ap-pellee on the charge of escape in the second degree, effectively removing the case from the district court to the Boyd Circuit Court for further proceedings. Appellee did not refile his request for a final disposition in the circuit court. However, on November 1, 2001, 219 days after that request had been filed in the district court, Appellee moved for dismissal of the circuit court indictment for failure to prosecute the charge against him within the required 180 days. The Boyd Circuit Court denied the motion, holding that, because a district court has no jurisdiction to try a felony case, KRS 24A.110(l)(a), Appellee had not filed his KRS 500.110 request in the appropriate court, ie., the Boyd Circuit Court.

*27 Appellee then petitioned the Court of Appeals pursuant to CR 76.86(1) for a writ prohibiting the Boyd Circuit Court from proceeding against him on the escape charge. The Court of Appeals, relying on Huddleston v. Jennings, Ky.App., 723 S.W.2d 381 (1986), granted the petition, holding that the filing of Appellee’s request for a final disposition in the Boyd District Court triggered the running of the 180 day period and that the Commonwealth had, thus, forfeited the right to continue proceedings against Appellee after the expiration of that period.

On appeal, Appellants assert that the Court of Appeals erred in granting the writ because (1) Appellee did not file his request for a final disposition in the “appropriate court,” and (2) Appellee filed his request prematurely because he filed it before the grand jury issued its indictment against him.

I. APPROPRIATE COURT.

KRS 500.110 provides:

Whenever a person has entered upon a term of imprisonment in a penal or correctional institution of this state, and whenever during the continuance of the term of imprisonment there is pending in any jurisdiction of this state any untried indictment, information or complaint on the basis of which a detainer has been lodged against the prisoner, he shall be brought to trial within one hundred and eighty (180) days after he shall have caused to be delivered to the prosecuting officer and the appropriate court of the prosecuting officer’s jurisdiction written notice of the place of his imprisonment and his request for a final disposition to be made of the indictment, information or complaint; provided that for good cause shown in open court, the prisoner or his counsel being present, the court having jurisdiction of the matter may grant any necessary or reasonable continuance.

(Emphasis added.)

The issue here is which court is the “appropriate court of the prosecuting officer’s jurisdiction.” That same issue was raised in Huddleston, supra, on virtually identical facts. Like Appellee, the prisoner in Huddleston had been charged with a felony offense by criminal complaint in district court and the district court had lodged a detainer against him. Like Ap-pellee, the prisoner in Huddleston filed his KRS 500.110 request for a final disposition in the district court and served notice on the county attorney before the issuance of the grand jury’s indictment against him. Id. at 382. Huddleston concluded that the prisoner had filed his request in the “appropriate court.”

We interpret “the prosecuting officer and the appropriate court of the prosecutor’s jurisdiction” to mean the pros-ecutorial office which has lodged the detainer and the court in which the entered indictment, information or complaint forming the basis for the detainer was pending when the detain-er was lodged. That, after all, is what the detainer is about.... We believe the intent of the statute is that the 180 days begin to run once an otherwise proper request is made to the court in which the detainer charge was pending when lodged and to the normal prosecutor in that court. An indictment on the same charge subsequent to the lodging of the detainer would not require that the request be made to the circuit court and the Commonwealth attorney unless the indictment had become the basis for the detainer.

Id. at 382-83 (emphasis added).

Huddleston further noted that a prisoner is not required to resubmit his motion *28 to the circuit court in the event his case is transferred upon a grand jury indictment, stating that “it does not seem an unreasonable burden to place on the county attorney to forward the request to the Commonwealth attorney, and upon the district court to forward the request to the circuit court.” Id. 1

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 S.W.3d 25, 2003 Ky. LEXIS 78, 2003 WL 1936585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosen-v-watson-ky-2003.