State v. Garner

289 P.3d 351, 253 Or. App. 64, 2012 WL 5286191, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1309
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedOctober 24, 2012
DocketD064137T; A147928
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 289 P.3d 351 (State v. Garner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Garner, 289 P.3d 351, 253 Or. App. 64, 2012 WL 5286191, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1309 (Or. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

HASELTON, C. J.

The state appeals from an order dismissing, on statutory speedy trial grounds, ORS 135.747,1 a complaint for misdemeanor driving under the influence of intoxicants (DUII), ORS 813.010, that had been filed over four years earlier. In so ruling, the trial court determined that time incurred before this court in the context of the state’s earlier successful appeal of a prior dismissal on former jeopardy grounds, State v. Garner, 234 Or App 486, 228 P3d 710, rev den, 348 Or 621 (2010) {Garner I), was “unreasonable” so as to compel dismissal under ORS 135.747. As amplified below, we conclude that, for purposes of ORS 135.747, defendant was “brought to trial” approximately nine months after the complaint was filed even though that trial ended in a mistrial. For that reason, the trial court erred in dismissing the accusatory instrument on statutory speedy trial grounds. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

The underlying circumstances of this case are pedestrian. And, as with virtually every statutory speedy trial appeal, a detailed, even pedantic, recounting of the operative facts seems unavoidable. We turn, then, to those facts.

On September 1, 2006, the state filed a complaint against defendant for misdemeanor DUII. Defendant’s trial was initially set for January 10,2007. Although the trial was continued or reset several times, defendant requested only a single continuance that resulted in a delay of approximately 50 days. Ultimately, defendant proceeded to trial on June 6, 2007 — approximately nine months after the complaint had been filed — but it ended when the state caused a mistrial. Thereafter, defendant moved to dismiss the complaint against him on former jeopardy grounds, and, on July 25, the trial court granted that motion. On August 21, 2007, the state timely appealed the trial court’s dismissal.

[66]*66The parties completed their appellate briefs in September 2008. At that point, it took approximately eight months to set oral argument — that is, approximately eight months elapsed between the time that the case was ready to be heard by the court and the oral argument on May 6,2009. An additional 11 months elapsed between oral argument and the issuance of our decision in Garner I, on March 31, 2010, reversing the trial court’s dismissal and remanding the case to the trial court.

Defendant then sought review in the Supreme Court on May 5,2010. That court denied review on July 29, and the appellate judgment issued a month later on August 27.

The trial court scheduled defendant’s retrial for December 9, 2010. On November 23, approximately two weeks before his December 9 trial date, defendant filed a motion to dismiss his case on, inter alia, statutory speedy trial grounds.

The parties’ competing contentions concerning defendant’s motion were predicated on an underlying assumption — viz., that the circumstances relevant to the disposition of defendant’s motion spanned roughly 50 months from the time that the complaint was filed in September 2006 to the then-current trial date in December 2010. In other words, the parties assumed that, for purposes of ORS 135.747, even though defendant’s first trial ended in a mistrial in June 2007, defendant had not yet been “brought to trial” as of the time that he filed his motion to dismiss in November 2010.

In support of that motion, defendant contended that he had not been “brought to trial within a reasonable period of time” as required by ORS 135.747 for two reasons. First, defendant contended that most of the delay attributable to the state’s first appeal in Garner I — viz., the approximately eight months between the completion of the briefing and oral argument and the 11 months between oral argument and the issuance of our decision — was unreasonable. Second, relying primarily on our decision in State v. Adams, 193 Or App 469, 89 P3d 1283 (2004) (Adams I), aff’d, 339 Or 104, 116 P3d 898 (2005) (Adams II), defendant explained that [67]*67the purpose of ORS 135.747 is to “purg[e] cases that clog and clutter the judicial system because they have been there too long, regardless of the reason,” and that the overall delay here “on a non-complicated traffic case is unreasonable and intolerable.”

The state remonstrated that Adams was inapposite because it did not involve a pretrial appeal. Further, the state contended that the time expended on appeal was “reasonable and typical for a case of this kind, and in some ways * * * shorter than average.” In support of its position, the state presented the testimony of Susan Howe, the Senior Assistant Attorney General who acted as appellate counsel in Garner I. In general terms, Howe testified that the case was briefed, scheduled for argument, and ultimately decided within typical time lines.

Ultimately, the trial court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss on statutory speedy trial grounds. The court explained that “[approximately 42 months of [the total 50-month delay was] attributable to the state.” In determining that the case must be dismissed on statutory speedy trial grounds, the court’s analysis essentially focused on the 19 months that was attributable to this court — that is, the eight months that elapsed between the completion of the briefing and oral argument and the 11 months between oral argument and the issuance of our decision.2 The trial court explained that that 19-month period was

“due to the workload of the Court of Appeals. I accept that the Court of Appeals worked diligently on this case, and all other cases before it during this period. Nevertheless, 20 months is too long for the court to decide a case of this limited complexity. Absent a huge backlog of cases and inadequate resources to handle its caseload, it should have taken about half that long for the appellate court to move from receiving defendant’s brief to issuing a judgment.”

Relying on the Supreme Court’s decision in Adams II, the trial court reasoned that “[s]ome delay, no matter the type, is unreasonable simply because it is so long” and [68]*68that “ [d] elays due to crowded dockets, exacerbated by lack of resources, are not per se reasonable.” Applying those principles to the circumstances of this case, the trial court concluded that,

“where there is a single issue, relatively simple appeal on a misdemeanor DUII case, an [appellate] delay of one and one half of the statute of limitations — three years — is unacceptable. Here, the total delay caused by the government was one and three quarters of the statute of limitations— three and a half years [or 42 months]. That is simply too long.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 P.3d 351, 253 Or. App. 64, 2012 WL 5286191, 2012 Ore. App. LEXIS 1309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-garner-orctapp-2012.