Byrd v. Caswell

Decision Date16 October 2001
Docket NumberNo. HC-2001-385.,HC-2001-385.
Citation2001 OK CR 29,34 P.3d 647
PartiesBrian Keith BYRD, Appellant, v. The Honorable Susan CASWELL, Judge of the District Court of Oklahoma County.
CourtUnited States State Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma. Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
ORDER GRANTING APPLICATION FOR WRIT OF PROHIBITION

¶ 1 On April 4, 2001, Petitioner filed an application in this Court challenging an order of the District Court of Oklahoma County, entered April 3, 2001, denying his motion to dismiss or application to stay revocation proceedings in that Court in Case No. CF-00-320. This Court stayed the proceedings below and directed a response from the Respondent, the Honorable Susan P. Caswell, District Judge, or her designated representative.1

¶ 2 On July 14, 2000, Petitioner pled guilty to felony Driving Under the Influence of Alcohol and Driving Under Suspension in Oklahoma County Case No. CF-2000-320. He received a five-year suspended sentence, with the first year to be served in the Work Habilitation Inpatient Program (WHIP). On October 10, 2000, the State filed an application to revoke Petitioner's suspended sentence, alleging he (1) tested positive for cocaine, and (2) was not in compliance with the WHIP program. Petitioner was arraigned on this application on December 15, 2000. The courthouse was closed on his first court date and the case was rescheduled for January 3, 2001. At that time Petitioner refused to waive his statutory right to have a hearing on the application to revoke within twenty days of his arraignment on the charges.2 The State asked the District Court to dismiss the application without prejudice, the Court dismissed the case, and the State indicated it would re-file the application. The State filed an Order of Dismissal on January 12, 2001. The State re-filed the application to revoke Petitioner's suspended sentence on January 24, 2001. Petitioner was arraigned on March 22, 2001, and given a court date of April 3, 2001. On that date he moved to dismiss the application as being outside the original twenty-day limit, running from the December 15, 2000, arraignment on the original application.

¶ 3 We first dispose of Petitioner's claim that the trial court exceeded its authority by ordering the State to re-file the application to revoke after dismissing the original application on January 3. The Oklahoma County District Attorney, responding on behalf of Respondent Judge Caswell, disputes this claim, correctly noting that it is not within Respondent's discretion to order the State to re-file an application. Respondent claims the State merely asked the case be dismissed on January 3 while independently notifying Petitioner of the State's intention to re-file. Petition has provided this Court with no records or transcripts of proceedings in the District Court.3 We cannot review this claim on this record.

¶ 4 Petitioner complains that the State has failed to hold a revocation hearing within twenty days of his December 15, 2000, arraignment on the original application to revoke. He contends the District Court no longer has jurisdiction in the case, and claims his continued confinement in the Oklahoma County jail is in violation of the United States and Oklahoma constitutions as well as Oklahoma statutes and case law. He asks this Court to issue (1) a writ of habeas corpus releasing him from unlawful confinement; (2) a writ of prohibition prohibiting Respondent from exercising authority in the case; and in the alternative, (3) a writ of mandamus ordering the Respondent to dismiss the State's application to revoke.

¶ 5 The crux of this case is the appropriate use of the twenty-day rule. The Legislature provided that a suspended sentence may be revoked only after "competent evidence justifying the revocation of the suspended sentence is presented to the court at a hearing to be held for that purpose within twenty (20) days after the entry of the plea of not guilty to the petition, unless waived by both the state and the defendant."4 Petitioner contends the State cannot file an application to revoke a suspended sentence, arraign the defendant, wait until the twenty-day requirement for a hearing is due without providing that hearing, dismiss the application, and re-file the application using the same violations as a basis for the charges. We agree. The statute says the State has twenty days after arraignment to justify its application to revoke, unless the defendant waives that time limit. The statute does not suggest the State may evade its responsibility to prove its case within twenty days by dismissal and re-filing, using the same charges as the basis for the revocation. Under this practice this State may postpone the hearing date for months, as was done here. On the record before us it is clear that the second application filed here was based on the same violations which were used to support the first application.5

¶ 6 We will not presume the Legislature to have done a vain thing.6 Elementary statutory interpretation requires us to avoid any construction which would render any part of the statute superfluous or useless.7 We must construe the plain, ordinary meaning of statutory language, while giving effect to the expressed intention of the Legislature.8 Here the plain language of the statute provides the State one opportunity to justify its application to revoke a suspended sentence, and requires the State to take that opportunity within twenty days of arraignment on the charges raised in the application. We have held the Legislature enacted the twenty-day rule in an effort to ensure there is no substantial time lag between arrest or arraignment on an application to revoke and the trial court's eventual determination of whether a suspended sentence should be revoked.9 The Legislature chose twenty days as the limit which would safeguard the process from undue delay. This Court cannot, by judicial fiat, extend that twenty-day limitation; nor can the State disregard the Legislature's expressed intent by dismissing and re-filing claims based on the same charges. If the twenty-day period is not adequate time, the remedy is for the Legislature, not the executive branch or the courts.

¶ 7 Rather than analyzing this claim, Respondent suggests it is an attempt to "muddy the waters" of the proceedings below.10 Respondent asserts that the State dismissed the original application on the nineteenth day "as it would have been nearly impossible to locate the witnesses and hold a revocation hearing within the remaining twenty-four hour time period that remained in the twenty days."11 This suggests the State never intended to hold Petitioner's hearing within the limits of the twenty-day rule. Either the State relied on Petitioner waiving his right to a hearing within twenty days, or the State planned to dismiss and re-file, based on the same charges, while it located its witnesses. This behavior contributed to a substantial time lag between arraignment — on December 15, 2000 — and the hearing on the charges, which has not yet been held. The Legislature mandated that, absent a defendant's waiver, the State must hold a hearing within twenty days. The State should be prepared to undertake that burden and consider that time limit when filing an application to revoke. The State should not assume a defendant will waive his timely right to a hearing. By dismissing and re-filing an application when it is "nearly impossible" to hold a timely hearing the State in effect forces the defendant to waive that right. Moreover, the Legislature's specific twenty-day time limit becomes meaningless. In this case alone, five months passed between the last scheduled hearing date and the time the State first arraigned Petitioner on the charges which form the basis for the current application to revoke his suspended sentence. If we condone this practice, the Legislature's intention in enacting the twenty-day rule is negated, and the rule has no purpose.12 We hold that the State may not file an application to revoke based on specific charges, fail to hold a timely hearing, dismiss that application, and re-file another application to revoke based on the same charges. This contravenes the Legislature's purpose and intent, and is an abuse of the explicit statutory time limitation.

¶ 8 Nothing in this opinion precludes the State from dismissing the original application and subsequently filing a new application, as long as the new application to revoke alleges new violations as the basis for revocation. That is, the State is prohibited from filing subsequent applications to revoke based on the same specific charges. However, the State may file subsequent applications based on different charges. That is true in this case as in any other.

¶ 9 Petitioner also claims Respondent has no jurisdiction over him. The District Court of course has general jurisdiction over revocation proceedings.13 However, that jurisdiction was not properly invoked here. Respondent's jurisdiction to hear the case depends on the validity of the case filing.14 We have determined that the State improperly violated the twenty-day rule by re-filing the application to revoke Petitioner's suspended sentence. Petitioner's Application for Writ of Prohibition is GRANTED. The case is DISMISSED.

¶ 10 IT IS SO ORDERED.

/s/ Gary L. Lumpkin GARY L. LUMPKIN, Presiding Judge, Dissenting /s/ Charles A. Johnson CHARLES A. JOHNSON, Vice Presiding Judge /s/ Charles S. Chapel CHARLES S. CHAPEL, Judge /s/ Reta M. Strubhar RETA M. STRUBHAR, Judge /s/ Steve Lile STEVE LILE, Judge, Dissenting and joins Judge Lumpkin's writing

LUMPKIN, Presiding Judge, dissenting:

¶ 1 The order correctly states "[t]he crux of this case is the appropriate use of the twenty-day rule [22 O.S.Supp.2000, 991b (A)]." The order also correctly recognizes that our task is to construe the plain, ordinary meaning of Section 991b(A), and to give effect to the expressed intention of the Legislature by making sure the twenty-day rule does not become...

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