State v. Howell

818 S.W.2d 681, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1465, 1991 WL 185218
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 24, 1991
DocketNo. WD 43867
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 818 S.W.2d 681 (State v. Howell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Howell, 818 S.W.2d 681, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1465, 1991 WL 185218 (Mo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

LOWENSTEIN, Chief Judge.

The state charged defendant Allen “Buddy” Howell with the class D felony of escape from confinement. Section 575.210, RSMo 1986. A jury found him guilty. The court determined him to be both a prior and a persistent offender, § 558.016, RSMo 1986, and sentenced him to imprisonment for five years, served consecutively with sentences previously imposed. Howell raises three points on appeal. Point I is that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to hear the escape charge and should have sustained his motion to dismiss because his previously filed motions for discovery and change of venue constituted a request to dispose of the charge under the Interstate Agreement on Detainers. Point II is that the trial court incorrectly denied his motion to disqualify the prosecutor on the basis of conflict of interest. Point III is that the verdict director did not conform to the MAI.

Howell was originally arrested in Missouri in 1986, on a first degree assault warrant. During the fall of 1986, while awaiting trial on the assault, he alleges the Callaway County jailer approached him to “make a hit” on the jailer's brother. Howell told his attorney, and the state responded by holding at least one, 30-45 minute meeting between the prosecutor Diane Gar-ber, the sheriff and Howell. Although Garber did not testify, the evidence was that Howell agreed at this meeting to wear a wire into the jail and so prove or disprove his story. According to Howell, shortly thereafter and before the “investigation” commenced, the jailer reiterated his desire for a “hit,” threatening Buddy with a gun. The next day Howell escaped from the Callaway County Jail. He was arrested six months later in May of 1987, in Georgia, and transferred to federal custody in Terra Haute, Indiana.

The Callaway County prosecutor, Gar-ber, lodged a detainer against Howell in the fall of 1987, but no request for temporary custody under the Agreement on De-tainers (hereinafter “AOD”) was then or ever made of the Terra Haute federal penitentiary authorities. When the Terra Haute officials informed Garber of his release in January of 1989, some two years later, Garber took custody of Howell in Terra Haute under a governor's warrant, and he was returned to stand trial in Missouri on the assault and the escape charge.

The record reflects that shortly after Howell’s federal confinement commenced, in the spring of 1987, proceedings on the original assault charge began, and Howell made an appearance through counsel in Callaway County. The attorney filed several motions in the original assault case (discovery and change of venue). No such motions were ever made with regard to the escape charge, the subject of this appeal.

Howell complains the state failed to comply with the Agreement on Detainers (“AOD”). He asserts that the pre-trial motions made in July of 1987, constituted a “request” under the AOD, for Missouri as receiving state to dispose of the charges pending against him.

Addressing the first point this court will assume, as the parties have, that a detainer was lodged for the escape charge, under Missouri’s AOD, § 217.490, RSMo 1986.1 The language of the AOD [683]*683clearly contemplates written notice to the court and prosecutor requesting disposition of charges. While Missouri recognizes that literal compliance is not required,2 and that the burden of compliance after a valid request rests upon the receiving state, the prisoner must make a good faith effort to invoke the benefits of the AOD, and omit nothing essential to its operation.

Howell asserts that the AOD should be liberally construed to find that the discovery and change of venue motions constitute a “request” under the AOD. He cites to State ex rel. Saxton v. Moore, 598 S.W.2d 586 (Mo.App.1980), for his proposition that literal compliance is unnecessary. In Saxton the court concluded that the defendant made a “good faith” effort to comply with the AOD by filling out and returning three separate documents as requested by the Jackson County prosecutor’s office. The prosecutor’s office had told the defendant that receipt of these forms by the office would invoke the AOD time limitations. Additionally, the state in Saxton was found to have waived the requirement of written notice to the court, as required by the AOD, see State ex rel. Hammett v. McKenzie, 596 S.W.2d 53, 56 (Mo.App.1980), and State v. Bussard, 494 S.W.2d 401, 403 (Mo.App.1973), by instructing the defendant on complying with the AOD, and later assuring defendant of its own intended compliance. Id. at 592. Saxton does not support a breaking away from compliance with the “essential elements” of the AOD. See also State v. Barnard, 678 S.W.2d 448, 450-51 (Mo.App.1984), (where the defendant asked prison officials to “take care of” the detainers, yet still the court said this did not comprise written notice of a desire to dispose of charges); State v. Savage, 522 S.W.2d 144, 146-47 (Mo.App.1975) (where the defendant personally sent a “petition” to the trial court seeking dismissal of the detainer and charges, yet this was not deemed a “request” under the AOD).

The court finds no grounds for error in the trial court’s denial of Howell’s motion to dismiss — the trial court correctly decided it had jurisdiction to hear the escape charge. No attempt was made to comply with the essential elements of the AOD, no documents personally signed or requested by Howell were sent to Missouri from Terra Haute, and there are no documents which could constitute written notice of a request to dispose of the charges. The pretrial motions for discovery and change of venue do not comply with the written notice provisions of the AOD, and do not give notice to anyone of a desire to invoke the time limitations of the AOD.3

The second point on appeal is that the trial court erred in denying his motion to disqualify the prosecutor, since Garber was involved in the events leading up to his escape. What Howell is really arguing for is a disqualification of the entire Callaway County prosecutor’s office. The court first notes that a ruling on a motion to disqualify a prosecutor is a matter for the trial court’s discretion, State v. Newman, 605 S.W.2d 781, 787 (Mo.1980). Under the facts of this case, and the applicable law, the court finds no abuse of such discretion.

Firstly, Missouri Disciplinary Rules 5-101(B) and 5-102, applying to disqualification of counsel appearing as a witness in [684]*684a case, were addressed in the prosecutorial context by the Missouri Supreme Court in State v. Johnson, 702 S.W.2d 65, 67-70 (Mo. banc 1985). In Johnson, the Supreme Court held these rules do not apply to multi-member prosecuting attorney offices. Id. at 70. Garber’s office employs several assistants, one of whom handled this prosecution.

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Bluebook (online)
818 S.W.2d 681, 1991 Mo. App. LEXIS 1465, 1991 WL 185218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-howell-moctapp-1991.