State v. Carrillo

Decision Date06 December 1932
Docket NumberCriminal 782
PartiesSTATE, Appellant, v. ALFREDO CARRILLO, Respondent
CourtArizona Supreme Court

APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of the County of Apache. Levi S. Udall, Judge. Order affirmed.

Mr. K Berry Peterson, Attorney General, and Mr. Dodd L. Greer County Attorney, for the State.

Mr. J Smith Gibbons, for Respondent.

OPINION

ROSS, J.

This appeal is taken by the state from an order dismissing the prosecution because the defendant was not brought to trial within sixty days after the filing of the information.

The facts upon which the motion was granted are stipulated as follows: On December 9, 1931, defendant was committed by the examining magistrate to the superior court of Apache county for the crime of grand larceny and let out on bail of $150. An information against him was filed December 15th. When he was called for arraignment on July 2, 1932, he made his motion to dismiss for want of prosecution within the time fixed by law. The delay in arraigning and bringing defendant to trial was not at his instance or request, but he took no affirmative action to secure or compel the trial. No trial jury was in attendance upon the court from the time of filing of the information until defendant was arraigned because there had not been sufficient cases awaiting trial by jury to justify the court's calling a jury, and defendant was all the time, from the date he was held over, out on bail.

The Constitution guarantees to persons charged with crime a speedy trial (section 24, art. 2), and our legislature has determined that, unless the prosecution shows good cause for not bringing the case to trial within sixty days after filing the information, or unless the trial is postponed on the application of the accused, the court must order the prosecution dismissed. Section 5204, Rev. Code 1928. It was incumbent upon the state to show good cause for the delay in bringing the case to trial. Hernandez v. State, 40 Ariz. 200, 11 P.2d 356.

The prosecution would excuse the delay on three grounds: (1) The defendant did not request a trial; (2) that the business of the court did not justify the summoning or drawing of a trial jury; and (3) that defendant was at large on bail. As we read the law, defendant is not required to request a trial. He is not the moving party. It is the state that initiates the accusation, and any delay in its prosecution, except for most cogent reasons, is not contemplated or justifiable. If the state can excuse itself for not bringing the accused to trial because he did not request a trial, then the onus for celerity is shifted to the accused. There is no intimation in the law that the accused must request a trial before he may claim the right to be dismissed for failure on the part of the state to bring on the prosecution within the limit fixed by law. If the trial is postponed for any reason other than some cause attributable to the accused, in the absence of a showing of good cause for the postponement, it must be dismissed.

Clearly, here the reason the defendant was not brought to trial was that there was no trial jury in attendance upon the court. And the reason that there was no trial jury was that the court thought there were not sufficient cases to justify the summoning of one. If these reasons constitute good cause for the delay, then it was error to dismiss the prosecution.

It does not seem that constitutional and statutory rights of a person charged with crime should be made dependent upon the amount of business in the court or the number of jury cases at issue. If so, what would be good cause for delay would mean one thing in those counties with little litigation and another thing in those where the litigation requires the frequent attendance of trial juries. In Hernandez v State, supra, we held that the long-established rule or custom of having no jury trials in Maricopa county...

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16 cases
  • Pines v. Dist. Court in & for Woodbury Cnty.
    • United States
    • Iowa Supreme Court
    • 22 Octubre 1943
    ...v. Keefe, 17 Wyo. 227, 98 P. 122, 22 L.R.A.,N.S., 896, 17 Ann.Cas. 161;State v. Arkle, 76 Mont. 81, 245 P. 526, 528;State v. Carrillo, 41 Ariz. 170, 16 P.2d 965;In re Miller, 66 Colo. 261, 180 P. 749;In re Schechtel, 103 Colo. 77, 82 P.2d 762, 764, 118 A.L.R. 1032. As stated in State v. Kee......
  • Pines v. District Court in and for Woodbury County
    • United States
    • Iowa Supreme Court
    • 27 Julio 1943
    ...v. Keefe, 17 Wyo. 227, 98 P. 122, 22 L.R.A.,N.S., 896, 17 Ann.Cas. 161; State v. Arkle, 76 Mont. 81, 245 P. 526, 528; State v. Carrillo, 41 Ariz. 170, 16 P.2d 965; In Miller, 66 Colo. 261, 180 P. 749; In re Schechtel, 103 Colo. 77, 82 P.2d 762, 764, 118 A.L.R. 1032. As stated in State v. Ke......
  • State v. Cross
    • United States
    • Ohio Supreme Court
    • 23 Junio 1971
    ... ... State v. Carrillo (1932), 41 Ariz. 170, 16 P.2d 965; Hicks v. People (1961), 148 Colo. 26, 364 P.2d 877; Zehrlaut v. State (1951), 230 Ind. 175, 102 N.E.2d 203; State v. Hess (1956), 180 Kan. 472, 304 P.2d 474; People v. Prosser (1955), 309 N.Y. 353, 130 N.E.2d 891; Brummitt v. Higgins (1945), 80 Okl.Cr. 183, 157 ... ...
  • State v. Maldonado
    • United States
    • Arizona Supreme Court
    • 13 Julio 1962
    ...the minority rule that an accused need not demand a trial in order to avail himself of the protection of Rule 236. State v. Carrillo, 41 Ariz. 170, 16 P.2d 965 (1932). 5 But Rule 236 on its face applies only 'when a person has been held to answer for an offense' and/or 'when a person has be......
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