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State ex Rel. Delgado v. Stanley

Supreme Court of New Mexico
Apr 14, 1972
83 N.M. 626 (N.M. 1972)

Summary

holding that the state must demonstrate a bona fide reason for refiling charges after dismissing those charges by filing a nolle prosequi if the defendant asserts that it was done to circumvent the six-month rule

Summary of this case from State v. White

Opinion

No. 9436.

April 14, 1972.

James G. Huber, Alamogordo, for petitioners.

Norman D. Bloom, Jr., Dist. Atty., Alamogordo, for respondent.


OPINION


Petitioners in this original prohibition proceeding seek a writ prohibiting the trial judge from proceeding further in an Otero County District Court criminal proceeding in which they are defendants.

Petitioners assert that the case must be dismissed with prejudice pursuant to § 41-11-4.1, N.M.S.A., 1953 and Rule 95 of the Rules of Civil Procedure [§ 21-1-1(95), N.M.S.A., 1953 (1971 Pocket Supp.)].

The chronology of the petitioners' vicissitudes in Otero County is as follows:

August 19, 1971: Petitioners were arrested for allegedly possessing heroin.

September 17, 1971: Following a preliminary hearing and bind-over in magistrate court, an information was filed charging petitioners and others with possession of heroin in violation of § 54-7-13, N.M.S.A., 1953.

October 5, 1971: The district attorney filed a nolle prosequi as to each of the petitioners.

January 7, 1972: Petitioners were rearrested on newly issued warrants charging each of them with possession of heroin. This was the same charge on the same offense said to have occurred on the same day, August 19, 1971, as that charged in the information.

February 2, 1972: Petitioners were indicted by the Otero County Grand Jury on the same charge allegedly committed on the same day, viz., August 19, 1971.

February 19, 1972: Six-month period commencing with the date of petitioners' first arrest expires, an event to which petitioners seek to attach significance by reason of provisions of § 41-11-4.1, supra.

March 17, 1972: Six months from the date of the filing of the original information, an event to which petitioners seek to tie commencement of the running of Rule 95, supra.

The case, at the time of the filing of the petition for writ of prohibition, had not been tried, but was set for trial on March 22, 1972. No extension of time for the commencement of trial under either § 41-11-4.1, supra, or Rule 95, supra, has been sought or obtained by the State.

Petitioners take the position that the second prosecution, initiated by the indictment, is in truth but a continuation of the first, which was initiated by the filing of an information, and that for purposes of the statute, the time would have commenced running on August 19, 1971, and on September 17, 1971, so far as Rule 95, supra, is concerned.

We need not consider the statute. Under the doctrine of separation of powers, the matter of expediting the flow of criminal cases through the courts is a peculiarly judicial function. Rule 95, supra, covers the field on this behalf. See State v. Roy, 40 N.M. 397, 60 P.2d 646 (1936); State v. Arnold, 51 N.M. 311, 183 P.2d 845 (1947); and Southwest Underwriters v. Montoya, 80 N.M. 107, 452 P.2d 176 (1969).

Concerning the application of Rule 95, supra, it provides for the commencement of trial within six months of the date of filing of the information or indictment and for dismissal with prejudice in event trial does not commence within the six-month period or within the period of any extension granted as provided in the rule. We are here concerned with Otero County District Court case No. 3958 — the proceeding initiated by indictment. The indictment was not filed until February 3, 1972, and dismissal would not be required, absent trial or extension, until six months from that date. Cause No. 3958 superceded and supplanted No. 3922 — the proceeding initiated by information.

It appears that the indictments were obtained following the termination of the first cause as a result of newly obtained evidence which presumably came to light after the filing of the nolle prosequi. At least it is not asserted to the contrary, and counsel for petitioners, with commendable frankness, stated in open court that he did not assert that the procedure utilized by the State was followed for purposes of delay or to circumvent the operation of Rule 95, supra.

The petitioners do raise a troublesome point which causes us concern. Petitioners say that the State could easily circumvent the operation of Rule 95, supra, by filing nolle prosequis and later filing new information or procuring new indictments, taking the position that each time this occurred the time laid down by the rule would not commence to run until the filing of the latest charge. Such are not the facts of this case. Should such a course of procedure be pursued in other cases, we will know how to deal with it.

We recognize that in the prosecution of criminal cases, because of fluctuations in the stories of witnesses, the unavailability and subsequent reappearance of witnesses, because of newly discovered evidence or for any one of numerous other good and sufficient reasons, a criminal prosecution may be terminated and subsequently reinstituted. However, we recognize it is possible that a district attorney might follow such a course of procedure for delay or to circumvent the operation of Rule 95, supra.

In event a defendant in a criminal case should assert that such a course of procedure has been followed for delay or to circumvent the rule, either in a motion to dismiss, under Rule 95(4), supra, or in a response in opposition to the State's petition for extension under Rule 95(3), supra, the State must be prepared to demonstrate by proof the bona fides of the procedure it has utilized and that it has not been followed to delay defendant's trial beyond the six-month period, as it may have been extended, or to circumvent the operation of the rule. In event of failure of the State so to do, we would be inclined to look past the form to the substance and hold that the operative date which commenced the running of the period laid down in the rule was that on which the original indictment or information was filed.

The petition for prohibition will be denied.

It is so ordered.

COMPTON, C. J., and McMANUS, OMAN and MONTOYA, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

State ex Rel. Delgado v. Stanley

Supreme Court of New Mexico
Apr 14, 1972
83 N.M. 626 (N.M. 1972)

holding that the state must demonstrate a bona fide reason for refiling charges after dismissing those charges by filing a nolle prosequi if the defendant asserts that it was done to circumvent the six-month rule

Summary of this case from State v. White

holding that if a defendant asserts that the state's action was to delay or otherwise circumvent the rule, "the [s]tate must be prepared to demonstrate by proof the bona fides of the procedure it has utilized and that it has not been followed to delay defendant's trial beyond the six-month period . . . or to circumvent the operation of the rule"

Summary of this case from State v. Rayburns

holding that the State properly reindicted the defendants after filing nolle prosequis because the State obtained new evidence against them and did not otherwise act in bad faith

Summary of this case from State v. Lucero

holding that if a defendant asserts that the State's action was to delay or otherwise circumvent the rule, "the State must be prepared to demonstrate by proof the bona fides of the procedure it has utilized and that it has not been followed to delay defendant's trial beyond the six-month period, . . . or to circumvent the operation of the rule"

Summary of this case from State v. Carreon

holding that courts may look past the form to the substance to determine operative date that time to commence trial begins running

Summary of this case from State v. Talamante

denying writ of prohibition where petitioners argued that a second prosecution, filed after the first prosecution was dismissed by nolle prosequi, was merely a continuation of the first

Summary of this case from State v. Ware

noting that the rule providing that a trial commence within six months, or the charges are to be dismissed with prejudice, was promulgated to "expedit[e] the flow of criminal cases through the courts"

Summary of this case from State v. Smallwood

In New Mexico ex rel. Delgado v. Stanley, 83 N.M. 626, 495 P.2d 1073 (1972) this court held that the speedy trial clock, interrupted by a nolle prosequi filing, started again with a subsequent indictment.

Summary of this case from Work v. State

indicating that when the state is unable "to demonstrate by proof the bona fides of the procedure it has utilized and that it has not been followed to delay defendant's trial beyond the six-month period . . . or to circumvent the operation of the rule," the court calculates the six-month rule period based on the original indictment or information

Summary of this case from State v. Rayburns

In State ex rel. Delgado v. Stanley, 83 N.M. 626, 495 P.2d 1073 (1972), the supreme court recognized the potential abuse which could result by starting the six-month period anew with the filing of an amended information.

Summary of this case from State v. Benally
Case details for

State ex Rel. Delgado v. Stanley

Case Details

Full title:STATE of New Mexico ex rel. Albert DELGADO and Robert Delgado, Petitioners…

Court:Supreme Court of New Mexico

Date published: Apr 14, 1972

Citations

83 N.M. 626 (N.M. 1972)
495 P.2d 1073

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