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Reports of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands |
TRUST TERRITORY OF THE PACIFIC ISLANDS, Plaintiff-Respondent
v.
KENNEDY ESTE, ITIKO ROMAN, TEAS ESTE and APAS, Defendants-Appellants
Criminal Appeal No. 64
Appellate Division of the High Court
December 22, 1977
Appeal following conviction of appellants tried for fishing with explosives. The Appellate Division of the High Court, Hefner, Associate Justice, held that where trial was not had until seventeen months after arrest, defendant had not asserted his right to speedy trial, prosecution had not attempted to delay trial and no prejudice to defendant was shown, right to speedy trial was not violated.
1. Appeal and Error—Briefs—Late Filing
Where for third time in past two appellate sessions the Attorney General's Office failed to observe the rules on appeal, the Attorney General having filed brief just two weeks before oral argument was scheduled, the brief would be stricken from the record and no oral argument by the Attorney General's representative would be allowed.
2. Constitutional Law—Right to Speedy Trial—Tests
The four factors to be considered in determining whether speedy trial was denied are length of delay, reason for delay, defendant's assertion of his right, and prejudice resulting from the delay.
3. Constitutional Law—Right to Speedy Trial—Assertion or Waiver
In absence of statute prescribing exact times by which criminal cases are to be heard, a precise time when the right to a speedy trial must be asserted or waived cannot be set and each case must be analyzed on its own.
4. Constitutional Law—Right to Speedy Trial—Delay
In considering delay of trial for purpose of determining whether right to speedy trial was violated, court must consider district in which case was pending and availability of a court and court personnel to hear the case.
5. Constitutional Law—Right to Speedy Trial—Delay
Where criminal case was heard in Truk District, where no High Court Justice had been permanently assigned for many years, delay of seventeen months from arrest to trial was not, for purpose of determining whether right to speedy trial was violated, extraordinary.
6. Constitutional Law—Right to Speedy Trial—Right Not Denied
Where trial was not had until seventeen months after arrest, defendant had not asserted his right to speedy trial, prosecution had not attempted to delay trial and no prejudice to defendant was shown, right to speedy trial was not violated.
BURNETT, Chief Justice, BROWN, Associate Justice, and HEFNER, Associate Justice
HEFNER, Associate Justice
The appellants were charged by complaint on March 13, 1975, with a violation of 45 TTC Sec. 1, Fishing with Explosives. The offense was alleged to have occurred on February 8, 1975. Although the case was set for trial in the District Court on March 27, 1975, it did not go to trial for unknown reasons. On August 14, 1975, the case was transferred from the District Court to the High Court. On July 23, 1976, an information was filed charging the same section and at or about this time, the appellants filed two motions which are the subject of this appeal. The first was a motion to dismiss the information on the ground that the appellants had been denied a speedy trial. The second was a motion for discovery. The Court granted certain portions of the motion but denied appellants' motion for a list of prosecution witnesses and their statements.
[1] On August 2, 1976, an amended information was filed and the trial was held on August 31, 1976. After conviction, the appellants prosecuted this appeal on three grounds.[1]
It is asserted that the appellants were denied their right to a speedy trial; that the trial court erred in taking judicial notice of the court calendar and sittings in Truk District, and that the trial court erred in not requiring the prosecution to divulge the names of its witnesses upon their motion for discovery.
For the determination as to whether the defendants were denied a speedy trial, this court adopts the balancing test developed in the United States Supreme Court case of Barker v. Wingo, 407 U.S. 514, 92 S.Ct. 2182, 33 L.Ed.2d 101 (1972).
[2] The four factors to be considered are the length of delay, defendants' assertion of their right to a speedy trial, the reason for the delay, and prejudice resulting from the delay.
[3] In the Trust Territory, the right to a speedy trial is guaranteed in 1 TTC Sec. 4. There is no statute which prescribes exact times by which misdemeanor or felony cases are to be beard. With no such statute, the nature of the right to a speedy trial makes it impossible to pinpoint a precise time in the process when the right must be asserted or waived. Barker v. Wingo, supra.
The lesson learned from Barker v. Wingo is that each case must be analyzed and the four factors mentioned above be considered in the light of the case before the court.
A. LENGTH OF DELAY:
It was seventeen and one-half months from the time the first information was filed to the date of trial. The appellants argue that in the Trial Division case of Trust Territory v. Borja, Crim. Case 19-73, Mariana Islands, it was held that seventeen months was extraordinary. However, a comparison with the facts in that case to those present here reveals the need to analyze each case as it is presented.
In Borja, by the time the motion for dismissal for failure to obtain a speedy trial was heard, the case had never been set for trial and a total of twenty-one months had elapsed from the first filing of the complaint to the motion to dismiss. The seventeen month period noted in Borja was from arrest to arraignment.
[4] In considering whether the length of delay is extraordinary, an additional consideration must be given in the Trust Territory. That consideration is the District in which the case is pending and the availability of a court and court personnel to hear the case.
[5] This case was heard in the Truk District where no High Court Justice has been permanently assigned for many years. This has a direct effect on the length of time a case can go to trial. Under these circumstances, it cannot be said that the length of delay of seventeen and one-half months from the arrest to trial was extraordinary.
B. DEFENDANTS' ASSERTION OF THEIR RIGHT TO A SPEEDY TRIAL:
The appellants concede that at no time up until their motion to dismiss, did they request or demand a speedy trial. The court in Barker v. Wingo stated that the defendant has no duty to bring himself to trial. However, there is no doubt that this is a factor to be considered. In Borja
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