Shafsky v. City of Casper

Decision Date26 July 1971
Docket NumberNo. 3941,3941
Citation487 P.2d 468
PartiesA. B. SHAFSKY, Appellant (Defendant below), v. The CITY OF CASPER, Appellee (Plaintiff below).
CourtWyoming Supreme Court

Robert A. Burgess, of Winter, Burgess & Bullock, Casper, for appellant.

Jack D. Emery and Richard E. Day, City Atty., Casper, for appellee.

Before McINTYRE, C. J., and PARKER, McEWAN, and GRAY, JJ.

Mr. Justice GRAY delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 12th day of July, 1967, an unverified complaint was filed in the municipal court of the City of Casper, Wyoming, charging the defendant, A. B. Shafsky, with the sale of alcoholic beverages to a minor in violation of and contrary to an ordinance of the city. In response thereto defendant entered a plea of not guilty, was tried, convicted, and sentenced to serve ten days in the city jail. Thereupon an appeal was taken and perfected to the district court. Other than a motion to quash the complaint and warrant on the ground that the charge made was not signed and sworn to before the police justice as the statute requires but was attested by a facsimile stamp of the justice's signature, which motion was denied on September 10, 1968, nothing further was done until July 30, 1970, when the district court entered an order on motion of the city, dismissing the appeal for lack of defendant's diligence in prosecuting the appeal. The defendant has appealed.

Two claims of error are advanced. First, that once the appeal was perfected, which is not questioned, the district court was without authority to dismiss the appeal because of defendant's lack of diligence in having the case set for trial and thus deprive him of his constitutional right to a jury trial, and secondly that the district court erred in denying his motion to quash.

As to defendant's first claim, it is conceded that the order of dismissal was based upon this court's holding in City of Casper v. Wagner, 74 Wyo. 115, 284 P.2d 409. In that case it was held that the defendant's failure to bring his appeal on for trial within three terms of the district court, without excuse, entitled the city to a dismissal for want of diligent prosecution. It is argued, however, that the holding was clearly erroneous in that the statutory provisions for appeal gave to the district court no authority to dismiss the appeal and the decision was unsupported by any constitutional, statutory, or common-law authority conferring such power We are not impressed by such argument.

Conceding that the statutes pertaining to the appeal to the district court contain no provision for dismissal of the appeal for lack of prosecution by the defendant, the argument overlooks the inherent power of the district court to do so in the proper exercise of its discretion. City of Wichita v. Houchens, 184 Kan. 297, 335 P.2d 1117, 1118; State v. Dodson, 226 Or. 458, 360 P.2d 782, 786, 787; State v. Koerner, 103 Wash. 516, 175 P. 175, 176. Even prior to Wagner we held in State v. Anderson, 71 Wyo. 127, 255 P.2d 220, and City of Casper v. Benaris, 74 Wyo. 58, 283 P.2d 1026, which was recently reaffirmed in Cisneros v. City of Casper, Wyo., 479 P.2d 198, that the burden was on the defendant to prosecute his appeal and Wagner was simply the application of the rule to the bringing of the case on for trial. The court did not, as defendant argues, extend by implication the provisions of § 10-1313, W.C.S.1945. 1 It was necessary to set forth the section because defendant was claiming to be entitled to discharge thereunder. It was specifically held, however, that the section had no application to an appeal. The most the court did was to use the time there fixed as a reasonable time sufficient to justify the order of dismissal under the circumstances presented. Had we held as defendant now says we should have held the result would be to interfere with the right of the district court to exercise its discretion in the first instance and that we refuse to do.

Apparently by way of justification for the delay in trial and as an additional attack on the order of dismissal it is asserted on the basis of State v. Hungary, 75 Wyo. 423, 296 P.2d 506, 'that once the appeal has been perfected the case must be tried as if the case had been commenced in the district court.' If defendant is using the word 'tried' as synonymous with the meaning of the word 'trial' we can agree. It was in that sense that the word was used in Hungary when it was said, 296 P.2d at 509, that after arraignment in the district court, which was necessitated because of the plea of guilty below, the matter would 'be tried in all respects as if the case had originated in the higher court.' In State ex rel. Suchta v. District Court of Sheridan County, 74 Wyo. 48, 283 P.2d 1023, 1024, it was stated somewhat differently in that the term 'trial de novo,' which was regarded as synonymous with the term 'trial anew,' means 'that it is on the same footing as though it had originated in the district court' insofar as the right to a jury trial is concerned. However, that is as far as those cases go. Nothing therein stands for the proposition that the appeal in all other respects must be treated as though it was commenced in the district court.

For example, with respect to pleadings, we just recently held in Cisneros, supra that the trial on appeal to the district court is confined to the issues made up below. To hold otherwise would entirely ignore the purpose of the provisions of § 7-447, W.S.1957, requiring a certified copy of the docket entries and papers below to be furnished. If from that certification it appears that the complaint sufficiently alleged the violation of a valid city ordinance to which the defendant entered a plea of not guilty and was tried, it comes before the district court solely for purposes of a second trial.

That raises the query of what the statute on appeal contemplated by use of the word 'trial.' In Suchta, supra, we held it meant, among other things, a jury trial unless waived by defendant. As a general proposition, we said in Griggs v. Meek, 37 Wyo. 282, 261 P. 126, 128, rehearing denied 264 P. 91:

'* * * In modern times trial is usually said to be:

"The examination before a competent tribunal, according to the law of the land, of the facts or law put in issue in a cause for the purpose of determining such issue, including all of the steps in the case from the submission to the jury or to the court, to the rendition of the judgment.' 3 Bouv.Law Dict. (Rawles' Third Revision p.) 3320.'

That, of course, was a civil case but in an early Indiana case, Hunnel v. State, 86 Ind. 431, 434 (1882), it was said:

'In its general sense the term 'trial' means the 'investigation of a matter in issue between opposing parties before a tribunal competent to decide upon it;' and, in a criminal cause, the term does not include the arraignment, or any other merely preparatory proceeding which may be taken prior to the time of administering the requisite oath to the jury. * * *'

In Thomas v. Mills, 117 Ohio St. 114, 157 N.E. 488, 489, 54 A.L.R. 1220, this was said:

'In its strict definition, the word 'trial' in criminal procedure means the proceedings in open court after the pleadings are finished and the prosecution is otherwise ready, down to and including the rendition of the verdict; and the term 'trial' does not extend to such preliminary steps as the arraignment and giving of the pleas, nor does it comprehend a hearing in error.'

See also Berness v. State, 263 Ala. 641, 83 So.2d 613, 618, and Ex parte Coone, 67 Ariz. 299, 195 P.2d 149.

From the foregoing it is evident that defendant's reliance upon Hungary is misplaced. In the first instance there was no need here for an arraignment in view of the plea of not guilty, and the argument that defendant was entitled to sit by and do nothing until brought before the district court for arraignment hardly bears scrutiny in view of our previous holdings that the defendant rather than the city has the burden of processing his appeal. Secondly, Hungary did not detract in any way from those holdings and we do not agree that defendant was wrongfully deprived of his right to a jury trial. It is true, of course, that on a criminal charge commenced in the district court for violation of a State law a jury trial is automatic unless waived by the accused. However, when the case comes to the district court on appeal for a second trial the circumstances are entirely different. The defendant, not the city, becomes the moving force so far as the obtaining of the jury trial afforded by the appeal statute is concerned, and unless within a reasonable time the defendant affirmatively avails himself of the opportunity afforded, which is solely for his own benefit, he has no cause to complain if dismissal results.

That is particularly true under the circumstances here for the reason that the district court in its memorandum opinion overruling the defendant's motion to quash gave notice of the need for affirmative action when it said that the defendant knew 'very well what the charge is and what the issues are and he will have a full trial anew in the court by a jury if he so desires.' Notwithstanding, the defendant, as noted above, did nothing to bring the case on for trial from September 10, 1969, the date of the order overruling his motion to quash, to July 30, 1970, when the order dismissing the appeal was issued.

In concluding the discussion concerning the trial court's authority to dismiss the appeal for lack of prosecution, we were not unaware of defendant's undeveloped and unsupported claim that such dismissal resulted in a violation of Amendments 5 and 14 of the United States Constitution and Art. 1, § 10 of the Wyoming Constitution. Insofar as the United States Constitution is concerned, it will be noted that defendant did not claim a violation of Amendment 6 concerning the rights to a speedy trial and to a public trial by an impartial jury....

To continue reading

Request your trial
11 cases
  • Taylor v. State
    • United States
    • Wyoming Supreme Court
    • 30 Mayo 1980
    ...Wyo., 500 P.2d 1027 (1972). Right to speedy trial may be waived. Cosco v. State, Wyo., 503 P.2d 1403 (1972); and Shafsky v. City of Casper, Wyo., 487 P.2d 468 (1971). Again, the list is long and incomplete but supportive of the general rule above announced that where a constitutional right ......
  • Stuebgen v. State, 4325
    • United States
    • Wyoming Supreme Court
    • 12 Abril 1976
    ...our most recent cases on this constitutional question are Boggs v. State, Wyo., 484 P.2d 711 (decided in May, 1971), and Shafsky v. City of Casper, Wyo., 487 P.2d 468 (decided in September, 1971), reh. den., where lack of prejudice and lack of demand for trial, constituting waiver of the ri......
  • State ex rel. Weber v. Municipal Court of Town of Jackson
    • United States
    • Wyoming Supreme Court
    • 29 Julio 1977
    ...of the Sixth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States. This, of course, is the rule expressed in Shafsky v. City of Casper, Wyo., 487 P.2d 468 (1971) which holds that the rule is the same under the provisions of Art. 1, § 10 of the Constitution of the State of Weber does claim, ho......
  • Department of Revenue and Taxation v. Irvine
    • United States
    • Wyoming Supreme Court
    • 2 Febrero 1979
    ...v. State, 114 Tex.Cr.App. 398, 23 S.W.2d 733 (1929); Salt Lake City v. Hanson, 19 Utah 2d 32, 425 P.2d 773 (1967). See Shafsky v. City of Casper, Wyo., 487 P.2d 468 (1971) (disapproving practice of furnishing stamp to police officers but not challenging the facsimile stamp It would follow f......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT