State of Iowa v. Cleotha Chairse

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMay 27, 2026
Docket25-0868
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Cleotha Chairse (State of Iowa v. Cleotha Chairse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Iowa v. Cleotha Chairse, (iowactapp 2026).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA _______________

No. 25-0868 Filed May 27, 2026 _______________

State of Iowa, Plaintiff–Appellee, v. Cleotha Chairse, Defendant–Appellant. _______________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, The Honorable Jesse Ramirez (motion to dismiss) and The Honorable David Nelmark (trial), Judges. _______________

AFFIRMED _______________

Krisanne C. Weimer of Weimer Law, PC, Council Bluffs, attorney for appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Katherine Wenman, Assistant Attorney General, attorneys for appellee. _______________

Considered without oral argument by Greer, P.J., and Buller and Langholz, JJ. Opinion by Langholz, J.

1 LANGHOLZ, Judge.

Cleotha Chairse was charged with operating while intoxicated, third offense, after he got into an accident driving a sport utility vehicle. He smelled of alcohol and marijuana, admitted to smoking marijuana two hours before, refused to complete field sobriety tests or to submit to a chemical test, mumbled and slurred his speech, and was so lethargic that he fell asleep while being transported in the patrol car away from the scene. Chairse’s first trial ended in a mistrial. And the retrial was set at a date Chairse proposed—more than ninety days after the mistrial was declared—then moved even later at Chairse’s request because his counsel had been unable to prepare for trial for over a month because of a family emergency, and finally moved again at the State’s request because of a witness’s unavailability.

So when Chairse then filed a motion to dismiss alleging a violation of his right to be retried within ninety days after the mistrial, the district court denied the motion. And a jury eventually convicted Chairse of operating while intoxicated and two other offenses—driving while barred and driving while license revoked. Chairse now appeals all his convictions, challenging the denial of the motion to dismiss and the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his operating-while-intoxicated conviction.

Because Chairse’s conduct after the mistrial waived his speedy-trial right and the district court did not abuse its discretion in finding that good cause supported the delay in retrial, his speedy-trial right was not violated. And substantial evidence supports the jury’s verdict that he was under the influence of alcohol, drugs, or a combination of both when he operated a motor vehicle. We thus affirm Chairse’s convictions.

2 I. Speedy Trial

We first consider Chairse’s challenge to the district court’s denial of his motion to dismiss asserting a violation of his right to a speedy trial under the Iowa Rules of Criminal Procedure. Rule 2.33(2)(b) generally requires trial within ninety days of the filing of a trial information. And after a mistrial, the ninety-day period resets—“the case shall be retried within 90 days unless double jeopardy bars further prosecution, the defendant waives speedy trial, or good cause for further delay is shown.” Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.19(5)(a)(2); see also State v. Zaehringer, 306 N.W.2d 792, 794–95 (Iowa 1981).

We review the “application of the procedural rules governing speedy trial for correction of errors at law.” State v. McNeal, 897 N.W.2d 698, 703 (Iowa 2017). But we review the decision “whether the State carried its burden to show good cause for the delay for abuse of discretion.” Id. The court’s factual findings are binding if supported by substantial evidence. Id.

Here, Chairse waived his speedy-trial right under rule 2.33(2)(b) before his first trial by filing a written waiver in June 2024. On the first day of trial—November 4, 2024—the court declared a mistrial.1 The mistrial order noted that “[a] new trial date will be set upon consultation wit[h] the parties.” The State expressed no preference for a new date while Chairse proposed three potential trial dates, two of which were within ninety days of the mistrial and a third—February 10, 2025—which was ninety-eight days after. In late November, after noting that Chairse “has waived speedy trial,” the court set the retrial for that last day he proposed: February 10.

1 According to the court’s order, “Before any evidence was presented, it was discovered that one juror was a friend of a prosecuting witness and that another juror was present when a person, not a witness, discussed matters concerning this case that would not have been admissible at trial and would have been prejudicial.”

3 Three days before the rescheduled trial date, Chairse moved for a continuance because his counsel had “been out of the office and largely unavailable to prepare for trial” for over a month due to a family emergency. His motion asserted that he had “waived speedy trial in this matter” and would be prejudiced if his counsel had “to proceed to trial without having had the time and opportunity to properly prepare.” The State did not resist. And the same day, the court rescheduled the trial for February 24.

Six days later, the State moved to continue the trial because one of its law-enforcement witnesses was unavailable. The State’s motion again asserted that Chairse “waived his right to a speedy trial in this matter,” and that he “does not resist a continuance to a trial date when [the witness] will be available.” The court initially denied the motion to continue, ordering the parties to “provide the court with a confirmed trial date prior to this court granting a continuance.” So a week after its first motion, the State again moved to continue, proposing several potential dates in March or early April and noting its disagreement with several of Chairse’s proposed dates for late April and May because they were more than a year after his arraignment and Chairse had not waived his speedy-trial right under rule 2.33(2)(c). See Iowa R. Crim. P. 2.33(2)(c) (“All criminal cases must be brought to trial within one year after the defendant’s initial arraignment pursuant to rule 2.8 unless an extension is granted by the court, upon a showing of good cause.”). The same day, the court rescheduled the trial for March 10, again noting that Chairse “has waived speedy trial.”

Four days later, Chairse moved to dismiss, arguing that his “right to a speedy trial has been violated in this matter because his re-trial did not commence within ninety days of the mistrial.” The district court denied his motion. It found that Chairse “was an active participant in the choosing of

4 these trial dates” and thus waived his right to a trial within ninety days of the mistrial. And alternatively, it found “there was good cause to continue that trial date” past the ninety-day period because of his counsel’s unavailability for preparation or trial starting in mid-December due to her family emergency that was noted in his motion to continue the February 7 trial date.

The district court did not err in ruling that Chairse waived his right to retrial within ninety days after the court declared a mistrial. We assume without deciding that a new waiver was required to waive the reset ninety- day deadline under rule 2.19(5)(a)(2). Contrast State v. Hamilton, 309 N.W.2d 471, 475–76 (Iowa 1981) (holding that waiver made before interlocutory appeal continued to apply on remand until the defendant withdrew the waiver), with State v. Lovan, No. 17-0729, 2020 WL 2972137, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. June 3, 2020) (declining to follow Hamilton for a speedy- trial waiver made before mistrial and instead analyzing whether the defendant waived the reset ninety-day deadline after the mistrial).

“[M]ere acquiescence in the setting of a trial date beyond the period for speedy trial does not constitute waiver” of a defendant’s speedy-trial right.

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Related

State v. LeFlore
308 N.W.2d 39 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1981)
State v. Zaehringer
306 N.W.2d 792 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1981)
State v. Hamilton
309 N.W.2d 471 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1981)

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State of Iowa v. Cleotha Chairse, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-cleotha-chairse-iowactapp-2026.