State v. Crees

474 N.W.2d 282, 1991 Iowa App. LEXIS 55, 1991 WL 140556
CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMay 29, 1991
Docket89-1917
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 474 N.W.2d 282 (State v. Crees) 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 v. Crees, 474 N.W.2d 282, 1991 Iowa App. LEXIS 55, 1991 WL 140556 (iowactapp 1991).

Opinion

HABHAB, Judge.

Craig Crees was charged, in a single trial information, with second-degree theft (a felony) and two misdemeanors. The trial information was approved by a district associate judge.

The jury had been selected and the case was ready for trial. However, the district court, on motion by defendant’s counsel, dismissed the felony-related theft charge for the trial information had been approved by a district associate judge rather than a district judge as required under Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure 5(4).

Thereafter, the State filed its motion seeking court approval of an amended and *283 substituted trial information under Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure 10(7), which we set forth later in this opinion. That motion, at least as it relates to the theft charge, was denied by the district court on November 8, 1989.

The State appeals the November 8 ruling, as permitted by Iowa Code section 814.5(l)(a). We limit our review to the merits of the November 8 ruling for this is the ruling urged as the ground for reversal in the State’s notice of appeal. The defendant contends the State did not timely file its appeal.

I.

Initially we must address the question of whether the State timely filed its appeal. Before resolving this part of the appeal and to better clarify the defendant’s position, we need to return to the day the events that gave rise to this controversy occurred. It was on April 25, 1989, that this case was fixed for trial. After the jury had been selected but before evidence was taken, the trial court noted that the information had been signed by a district associate judge. He called this to the attention of trial counsel.

Defense counsel then moved for a dismissal of the felony charge of theft in the second degree. The court, on the same date, sustained the dismissal motion as to that charge on the grounds the probable cause statement should have been signed by a district court judge. (The defendant was charged with two other non-felony charges in the same trial information. Those two charges are not involved in this appeal.)

The State then on May 15, relying on rule 10(7), timely filed a motion asking the court to approve an amended and substituted trial information. 1 Hearing on that motion was substantially delayed because the defendant had absconded. Finally, defendant was apprehended and hearing was held on October 6,1989. The trial judge on November 8 filed his ruling overruling that motion. As we pointed out earlier, it is from this ruling that the State, on December 8, 1989, filed its notice of appeal.

The defendant claims the State did not timely file its notice of appeal. He claims the thirty days in which the State may appeal commenced on April 25, 1989, the date the theft charge was dismissed. He cites us to Iowa Rule of Appellate Procedure 101 2 which provides in part:

Appeal in a criminal action shall be taken and perfected within thirty days of final judgment in the manner prescribed by the rules of appellate procedure relating to appeals in civil cases.
* * * * He *

We, of course, agree with defendant that appeals in criminal actions must be taken and perfected within thirty days of final judgment. But that does not resolve our problem. Here the State on May 15 filed a motion seeking approval of an amended and substituted trial information under Rule of Criminal Procedure 10(7). That rule, in part, provides:

If the court grants a motion based on a defect ... in the indictment ... it may also order that the defendant be held in custody ... pending the filing of a new ... information if the same was dismissed by the court or the amendment of any such pleading if the defect is subject to correction by amendment. The new information ... must be filed within twenty days of the dismissal of the original ... information. The ninety-day period under R.Cr.P. 27(2)(b) for bringing a defendant to trial shall commence anew with the filing of the new ... information.

The defendant does not contend that the State’s rule 10(7) motion was not timely filed. Our review of the record determines *284 that it was. The defendant merely contends the time for appeal should run from April 25. We disagree.

The new information was filed within twenty days of the dismissal of the original information. The trial judge overruled the motion to approve the new information on November 8, 1989. The State filed its appeal on December 8, 1989. We conclude that the State’s right of appeal commenced on November 8, 1989.

We believe this result harmonizes the applicable rules of criminal procedure. We hold the notice of appeal was timely filed. We confine ourselves to the matter asserted in the notice of appeal.

II.

From our reading of the rules of criminal procedure, we believe that rule 10(7) must be read in conjunction with rule 10(6)(e). That rule provides:

A motion to dismiss the information may be made on one or more of the following grounds:
(1) When the minutes of evidence have not been filed with the information.
(2) When the information has not been filed in the manner required by law.
(8) When the information has not been approved as required under Iowa R.Crim.P. 5(4).

As it relates to Iowa Rule of Criminal Procedure 5(4) mentioned in subparagraph (3) above, that rule in essential part provides:

Prior to the filing of the information, it must be approved by a district judge, or a district associate judge or judicial magistrate having jurisdiction of the offense. If the judge or magistrate finds that the evidence contained in the information and the minutes of evidence, if unexplained, warrant a conviction by the trial judge, the judge or magistrate shall approve the information which shall be promptly filed.

It is without serious dispute that since the trial information contained the charge of second-degree theft, a felony under Iowa Code section 714.1(2), a district court judge must approve the information by finding that the evidence shown in the minutes, “if unexplained, would warrant a conviction by the trial jury.” Iowa R.Crim.P. 5(4).

As explained in State v. Shank, 296 N.W.2d 791 (Iowa 1980), the probable cause finding referred to above serves two purposes. One is to meet the due process requirement of U.S. Constitution Amendment XIV that a probable cause determination is a condition to any significant pretrial restraint on liberty. See Gernstein v. Pugh, 420 U.S. 103, 113, 95 S.Ct. 854, 863, 43 L.Ed.2d 54, 64-65 (1975); State v. Lass 228 N.W.2d 758, 763 (Iowa 1975).

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Bluebook (online)
474 N.W.2d 282, 1991 Iowa App. LEXIS 55, 1991 WL 140556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-crees-iowactapp-1991.