Brandon Battering v. State of Indiana ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                            FILED
    Oct 11 2019, 8:43 am
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                     ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Mark K. Leeman                                             Curtis T. Hill, Jr.
    Leeman Law Office and                                      Attorney General
    Pulaski County Public Defender                             Angela N. Sanchez
    Logansport, Indiana                                        Assistant Section Chief,
    Criminal Appeals
    Indianapolis, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Brandon Battering,                                         October 11, 2019
    Appellant-Defendant,                                       Court of Appeals Case No.
    18A-CR-2309
    v.                                                 Appeal from the
    Pulaski Circuit Court
    State of Indiana,                                          The Honorable
    Appellee-Plaintiff                                         Michael A. Shurn, Judge
    The Honorable
    Mary Welker, Judge
    Trial Court Cause No.
    66C01-1512-F1-3
    Vaidik, Chief Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019                           Page 1 of 19
    Case Summary
    [1]   Brandon Battering, who is charged with child molesting and child solicitation
    based on allegations that he engaged in sexual conduct with his twelve-year-old
    stepsister, appeals the denial of his motion for discharge under Indiana Rule of
    Criminal Procedure 4(C). Rule 4(C) entitles a criminal defendant to discharge
    if the State fails to bring the defendant to trial within one year of the filing of
    charges or the arrest of the defendant, whichever is later. The deadline can be
    extended for a variety of reasons. Our Supreme Court held in Pelley v. State, 
    901 N.E.2d 494
     (Ind. 2009), reh’g denied, that when the State pursues an
    interlocutory appeal and the trial-court proceedings get stayed as a result, the
    deadline is extended accordingly. The issue in this case is whether the trial-
    court proceedings were “stayed” when the trial court authorized an
    interlocutory appeal by the State and vacated the upcoming trial date but did
    not actually use the word “stay.” We hold that they were, and we therefore
    affirm the trial court’s denial of Battering’s motion for discharge.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [2]   Rule 4(C) provides, in relevant part, “No person shall be held on recognizance
    or otherwise to answer a criminal charge for a period in aggregate embracing
    more than one year from the date the criminal charge against such defendant is
    filed, or from the date of his arrest on such charge, whichever is later[.]”
    Battering was arrested on December 3, 2015, but he was not charged until the
    next day, December 4, 2015. Under Rule 4(C), then, the State initially had
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019         Page 2 of 19
    until December 4, 2016, to take Battering to trial. However, at a pretrial
    conference held in April 2016, trial was set for January 24-26, 2017, apparently
    with no 4(C) objection from Battering.
    [3]   On January 13, 2017, eleven days before trial was set to begin, Battering filed a
    motion to suppress incriminating statements he made to police, claiming that
    officers had continued questioning him after he invoked his right to remain
    silent. The trial court held a hearing on Battering’s motion on January 19 and
    granted it the same day.
    [4]   During a telephonic conference the next afternoon, the prosecutor indicated
    that he would be asking the court to certify its suppression order for
    interlocutory appeal. Defense counsel asked the prosecutor, “Are you going to
    ask to stay the proceedings and to continue the jury trial?” Supp. Tr. p. 7. The
    prosecutor answered, “Yes.” 
    Id.
     The judge stated that he would be “inclined to
    grant” a motion for certification and that “I would be vacating the trial if I’m
    granting that.” 
    Id.
     Shortly after the call ended, the State filed a combined
    motion for certification and motion to “continue” the jury trial. Appellant’s
    App. Vol. III pp. 103-04. The State did not explicitly request a “stay,” as it said
    it would, but it asserted, “That in order to allow time for the Court of Appeals
    to review this matter, it is necessary to continue the trial of the Defendant that
    is currently set for January 24, 25, and 26, 2017.” Id. at 104.
    [5]   The judge and the lawyers then got back on the phone. The judge said that he
    was going to certify the suppression order for interlocutory appeal and
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019      Page 3 of 19
    “continue” the jury trial. Supp. Tr. p. 11. Defense counsel objected to the
    continuance of the trial as follows:
    And for my purposes, Your Honor, I need to show my objection
    to the continuance. We object to any continuance. We’re
    prepared and ready for trial. We believe the State should be, as
    well, and so any – we would object to the continuance. And then
    I will file a Rule 4 issue after this.
    Id. The judge overruled the objection, explaining, “Well, I don’t know how to
    certify this issue for interlocutory appeal and still have a trial, but I sort of think
    that if I’ve got to do the one, I have to do the other. They seem to go hand in
    hand.” Id. The judge added, “If I’m going to grant the interlocutory appeal,
    the trial has to be continued, and so I have to grant the State’s motion for that.”
    Id. at 12. The State did not expressly request a “stay,” nor did the court
    expressly state that it was imposing a “stay,” but at no point did defense
    counsel object on either ground to vacating the trial date. After the conference,
    the trial court issued a written order that provided, in pertinent part, “The Court
    . . . now grants the State’s motion, Orders the issues certified for interlocutory
    appeal, and vac[a]tes the trial setting previously set for January 24, 2017.”
    Appellant’s App. Vol. III p. 123.
    [6]   The State then had thirty days to ask this Court to accept the appeal. During
    that period, Battering made multiple filings in the trial court. He filed a Motion
    to Exclude Certain Discovery at Trial on January 26 and a Motion to Reduce
    Bond on February 6. Then, on February 15, he filed a Motion to Set Jury Trial.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019          Page 4 of 19
    The same day, the State filed its motion for interlocutory appeal with this
    Court, which we granted on March 17.
    [7]   On June 1, while the appeal was still pending in this Court, the trial court held
    a hearing to address Battering’s motions. As soon as the hearing began,
    though, Battering raised a new issue: he asserted that he was entitled to be
    discharged pursuant to Rule 4(C). Citing Pelley, where our Supreme Court
    explained that “the time for an interlocutory appeal is excluded from Rule
    4(C)’s limitation only when the trial court proceedings have been stayed,” 901
    N.E.2d at 500, Battering argued that the State had not requested a stay of the
    trial-court proceedings pending the interlocutory appeal and that as a result the
    4(C) clock had continued to run and had expired. In the alternative, Battering
    asked that he “get a trial as soon as possible,” Tr. p. 13, without waiting for this
    Court to decide the interlocutory appeal. The trial court and the State, on the
    other hand, agreed that no trial should take place before the conclusion of the
    interlocutory appeal. The court wondered whether it even had “jurisdiction to
    do the entire case” with an interlocutory appeal pending, id. at 18, and then
    asked, “[W]hy would we go forward with the trial on all of the issues if it’s up
    on interlocutory appeal before the decision on interlocutory appeal?”, id. at 20.
    The State maintained that the interlocutory appeal “needs to be determined
    before the trial begins,” id. at 23, and asserted that holding a trial before getting
    a ruling in the appeal “vitiates the whole basis for doing the appeal to begin
    with,” id. at 22. Based on Battering’s guess that the interlocutory appeal would
    be decided by late September or early October of 2017, the trial court scheduled
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019        Page 5 of 19
    trial for October 9-12. However, the court also directed the parties to brief the
    Rule 4(C) issue in the meantime. At the end of the hearing, the prosecutor
    added that “since [Battering’s] so adamant about wanting a piece of paper
    saying things are stayed,” the State would be filing a motion to stay. Id. at 37.
    [8]   The State had not filed that motion as of June 7, when Battering filed his
    written motion for discharge pursuant to Rule 4(C). Again, Battering argued
    that the trial-court proceedings had not been stayed pending the State’s
    interlocutory appeal and that the delay caused by the appeal is therefore
    attributable to the State under Pelley. The next week, on June 13, the State filed
    a motion to stay. The trial court granted that motion on June 15.
    [9]   The State then filed its response to Battering’s motion for discharge. It argued
    that even though it did not formally request a “stay” until two weeks earlier, it
    had effectively sought a stay when it asked the trial court to certify its
    suppression order and to “continue” the trial date:
    [A]lthough the State never filed any “Motion to Stay,” it has
    done the functional equivalent. What a motion actually means is
    not how a party identifies the pleading in the title, but on the
    effect the pleading will have on the proceedings. Although not
    titled as a motion to stay, the motions filed herein by the State
    were designed to achieve the same result. The motions filed by
    the State in this case had the effect of stopping of action until the
    Court of Appeals could rule.
    The motion to certify the order for interlocutory appeal filed in
    the trial court was also a motion to continue the jury trial. It was
    captioned as such. Additionally, it specifically stated, “That in
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019         Page 6 of 19
    order to allow time for the Court of Appeals to review this
    matter, it is necessary to continue the trial of the Defendant that
    is currently scheduled for January 24, 25, and 26, 2017.” Also,
    the motion expressly requested that the jury trial “be continued
    pending the resolution of the Interlocutory Appeal . . . .” To find
    that this was not a request for a stay would be to elevate form
    over substance. Though the “magic word” stay was not used, the
    motion unambiguously requests that trial be delayed until after
    resolution of the interlocutory appeal. That is effectively the
    equivalent of a request for a stay. Furthermore, the trial court’s
    order certifying the order for appeal simply stated that it granted
    the motion to certify and motion to continue trial; it did not place
    any caveats on that or alter or limit the wording of the request in
    any way. The court then vacated the current trial dates, which is
    entirely consistent with the State’s request and the grant of a stay
    pending resolution of the appeal. Therefore, the trial court
    effectively granted a stay and recognized that the trial cannot be
    held before resolution of the interlocutory appeal.
    Appellant’s App. Vol. IV pp. 111-12.
    [10]   The trial court had not ruled yet on Battering’s motion for discharge when, on
    September 18, 2017, this Court issued an opinion affirming the trial court’s
    suppression order. State v. Battering, 
    85 N.E.3d 605
     (Ind. Ct. App. 2017), reh’g
    denied. The State filed a petition for rehearing, which we denied on November
    30. In late December, before our opinion had been certified, the parties filed
    competing motions in the trial court: on December 19, Battering filed a motion
    to lift the stay and for discharge under Rule 4(C), renewing his claim that the
    State had failed to bring him to trial “within the Rule 4 period,” Appellant’s
    App. Vol. IV p. 154, and on December 27, the State filed a Motion to Set for
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019      Page 7 of 19
    Jury Trial. Our opinion was certified on January 24, 2018. The trial court then
    lifted the stay and set a hearing date of April 17 on the 4(C) issue.
    [11]   At the April 17 hearing, Battering reiterated his argument that the State did not
    request a stay when it pursued the interlocutory appeal and that therefore the
    Rule 4(C) clock had continued running and expired. In response, the State
    again argued that its January 2017 request to “continue” the trial date pending
    the interlocutory appeal was in effect a motion to stay because no trial was
    going to be held until the appeal was complete. The State explained that the
    only reason it formally filed the motion to stay in June 2017 was that Battering
    “kept harping on it[.]” Tr. p. 67. The trial court denied Battering’s motion for
    discharge and scheduled trial for August 29-30, 2018.
    [12]   In July 2018, Battering again moved for discharge under Rule 4(C). The trial
    court denied the motion, explaining that the delay caused by the interlocutory
    appeal should not be counted against the State because “the trial court lost
    jurisdiction during that interlocutory appeal[.]” Appellant’s App. Vol. IV p.
    194. However, the court vacated the trial date, certified its order for
    interlocutory appeal, and stayed the proceedings, and we accepted jurisdiction.
    Trial is currently scheduled to begin on January 7, 2020.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019      Page 8 of 19
    Discussion and Decision
    [13]   Battering contends that the trial court erred by denying his motion for discharge
    under Criminal Rule 4(C). The relevant facts are undisputed, so we review the
    issue de novo. See Austin v. State, 
    997 N.E.2d 1027
    , 1039 (Ind. 2013).
    [14]   As noted above, Rule 4(C) provides, in pertinent part, “No person shall be held
    on recognizance or otherwise to answer a criminal charge for a period in
    aggregate embracing more than one year from the date the criminal charge
    against such defendant is filed, or from the date of his arrest on such charge,
    whichever is later[.]” Battering was arrested on December 3, 2015, and charged
    the next day, so this case has been pending for almost four years—more than
    1,300 days—much longer than the one year contemplated by the rule. But not
    all delays count against the one-year period, and this appeal concerns only 146
    days: the time that passed between the trial court’s January 20, 2017 order
    certifying its suppression order for interlocutory appeal and the court’s June 15,
    2017 order granting the State’s Motion to Stay pending the appeal. The parties
    agree that if those days count against the State, the 4(C) period has run and
    Battering is entitled to discharge. Battering asserts that there was no stay in
    place during these 146 days, as required by our Supreme Court’s decision in
    Pelley, and that those days should therefore count against the State. The State
    argues that there was a stay in place all along, that its Motion to Stay and the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019      Page 9 of 19
    trial court’s order granting it were just formalities, and that the 146 days should
    not count against it.1
    [15]   In Pelley, the defendant was charged with murdering four members of his
    family. The State sent a subpoena to a third party that had provided counseling
    to the Pelley family before the murders, and the third party moved to quash it.
    The trial court granted that motion but certified its order for interlocutory
    appeal. This Court accepted jurisdiction and ordered a stay of the trial-court
    proceedings. Ultimately, our Supreme Court reversed the trial court in part.
    See State v. Pelley, 
    828 N.E.2d 915
     (Ind. 2005). The case was remanded to the
    trial court, and the defendant later filed a motion for discharge under Rule 4(C).
    He argued, among other things, that the delay caused by the interlocutory
    appeal was chargeable to the State. The trial court denied the defendant’s
    1
    Arguably, Battering’s claim under Pelley is not even properly before us. After the trial court denied that
    claim at the hearing on April 17, 2018, Battering asked the court to certify the issue for interlocutory appeal.
    The court denied that motion for certification on May 31, 2018. Then, on June 27, 2018, our Supreme Court
    issued its decision in State v. Larkin, 
    100 N.E.3d 700
     (Ind. 2018), reh’g denied. There, the defendant had
    pursued an interlocutory appeal, and the Court held that the delay caused by that appeal was chargeable to
    the defendant for purposes of Rule 4(C). Id. at 705. Battering’s July 2018 motion for discharge—the one that
    led to this appeal—was based on Larkin. Specifically, Battering argued that Larkin stands for the proposition
    that “delay caused by a discretionary interlocutory appeal [is] chargeable to the party who pursued the
    interlocutory appeal,” regardless of whether the trial-court proceedings are stayed during the appeal.
    Appellant’s App. Vol. IV pp. 185-86. In other words, Battering took the position that Larkin overruled Pelley
    with regard to interlocutory appeals pursued by the State. The trial court rejected that argument and denied
    Battering’s motion for discharge. Battering then moved to have that order certified for interlocutory appeal,
    asserting that “[t]his matter involves a substantial question of pure law, i.e., does Larkin’s holding apply to
    interlocutory appeals pursued by the State.” Id. at 191. At the hearing on the motion, Battering argued that
    certification was appropriate because Larkin represented “a sea change in the law” and that whether Larkin
    applies in this case is a “profound issue[.]” Tr. pp. 105, 106. In his briefs to this Court, however, Battering
    has abandoned his claim under Larkin and returned to his claim under Pelley—the claim on which the trial
    court denied certification back in May 2018. That is, the issue the trial court certified for interlocutory appeal
    is not the issue Battering addresses in his briefs. We might be able to dispose of Battering’s appeal on that
    ground alone, see Curtis v. State, 
    948 N.E.2d 1143
    , 1147-48 (Ind. 2011), but the State has not asked us to do
    that, so we proceed to the merits of Battering’s claim under Pelley.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019                                Page 10 of 19
    motion. Our Supreme Court affirmed, emphasizing the fact that the trial-court
    proceedings had been stayed pending the interlocutory appeal:
    When trial court proceedings have been stayed pending
    resolution of the State’s interlocutory appeal, the trial court loses
    jurisdiction to try the defendant and has no ability to speed the
    appellate process. As a practical matter, applying the Criminal
    Rule 4(C) one-year requirement to interlocutory appeals would
    render an appeal by the State impossible because it would in all
    likelihood trigger a mandatory discharge of the defendant.
    Accordingly, we conclude that Rule 4(C)’s one-year limitation
    does not include the time during which trial proceedings have
    been stayed pending interlocutory appeal.
    901 N.E.2d at 499-500. The Court then reiterated that “the time for an
    interlocutory appeal is excluded from Rule 4(C)’s limitation only when trial
    court proceedings have been stayed.” Id. at 500.2
    [16]   We agree with the State that the trial court stayed the trial-court proceedings,
    for purposes of Pelley, as of January 20. That day, when the State indicated its
    intent to request certification of the suppression order for interlocutory appeal,
    it also said that it would “ask to stay the proceedings and to continue the jury
    trial” that was set to begin in a few days (January 24). The judge stated that he
    2
    Because there was a stay in place in Pelley, the Court was not actually faced with the issue of whether a stay
    is required in order to toll the 4(C) clock. As the Court noted, “The only question is whether Rule 4(C)
    excludes the time for the State’s interlocutory appeal from its one-year limitation.” Pelley, 901 N.E.2d at 498.
    Moreover, the two cases the Pelley Court relied on in answering that 4(C) question—Martin v. State, 
    245 Ind. 224
    , 
    194 N.E.2d 721
     (1963), and State ex rel. Cox v. Superior Court of Madison County, Div. III, 
    445 N.E.2d 1367
    (Ind. 1983)—made no mention at all of there being a stay in the trial court. In any event, we conclude below
    that the trial court did impose a stay when it authorized the first interlocutory appeal in this case.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019                              Page 11 of 19
    would be “inclined to grant” a motion for certification and that “I would be
    vacating the trial if I’m granting that.” The State then filed a combined motion
    for certification and motion to “continue” the jury trial, asserting that a
    continuance was “necessary” “in order to allow time for the Court of Appeals
    to review this matter[.]” Back on the record, the judge said that he was going to
    certify the suppression order and “continue” the jury trial, explaining, “I don’t
    know how to certify this issue for interlocutory appeal and still have a trial, but
    I sort of think that if I’ve got to do the one, I have to do the other. They seem
    to go hand in hand.” The judge went on, “If I’m going to grant the
    interlocutory appeal, the trial has to be continued, and so I have to grant the
    State’s motion for that.” By the end of the hearing on January 20, one thing
    was absolutely clear to everyone involved: no trial would be taking place until
    the State’s interlocutory appeal was complete. Cf. State v. Larkin, 
    100 N.E.3d 700
    , 705 (Ind. 2018) (“[I]nterlocutory appeals toll the 4(C) period despite who
    filed because the case cannot practically move forward[.]”), reh’g denied.
    Notably, when the trial court made that clear, Battering did not object on the
    ground that the State had not requested a stay or on the ground that the court
    had not imposed a stay. And while the State and the trial court used the word
    “continue” instead of the word “stay,” the trial was not merely pushed back
    (i.e., “continued”) to a different date. It was put off for as long as the appeal
    would take. That is a stay, regardless of the label used. See Black’s Law
    Dictionary 1639 (10th ed. 2014) (defining “stay” as “1. The postponement or
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019      Page 12 of 19
    halting of a proceeding, judgment, or the like. 2. An order to suspend all or part
    of a judicial proceeding or a judgment resulting from that proceeding.”).3
    [17]   Battering also argues that there could not have been a stay in place between
    January 20 and June 15 because there was activity in the trial court during that
    period. But the only substantive actions the trial court took during that period
    were holding a hearing on three motions Battering filed after January 20—the
    January 26 Motion to Exclude Certain Discovery at Trial, the February 6
    Motion to Reduce Bond, and the February 15 Motion to Set Jury Trial—and
    ruling on those motions in part. Having filed those motions, Battering should
    not now be heard to complain about the fact that the trial court took action on
    them. Moreover, in a recent 4(C) case, our Supreme Court rejected the
    assertion that trial-court action during an interlocutory appeal amounted to a
    “constructive lift” of a stay. Larkin, 100 N.E.3d at 704.4, 5
    3
    In his reply brief, Battering cites Indiana Appellate Rule 14(H), which provides, in part, “An interlocutory
    appeal shall not stay proceedings in the trial court unless the trial court or a judge of the Court of Appeals so
    orders.” Because we hold that the trial court did order a stay in this case, this provision does not help
    Battering’s cause.
    4
    In light of Larkin, it seems to us that Pelley should not be read to require an unqualified stay in the sense that
    all proceedings in the trial court must come to a complete halt. If getting to trial quickly is a priority for a
    defendant—and the filing of a 4(C) motion certainly suggests that it is—then the defendant would benefit
    from the trial court being able to deal with other pretrial matters while the interlocutory appeal is pending.
    Otherwise, any such matters will have to be dealt with after the interlocutory appeal is complete, thereby
    further delaying the trial. Notably, in the context of appeals from final judgments, our courts have
    recognized that trial courts retain jurisdiction to perform certain tasks. See, e.g., Jernigan v. State, 
    894 N.E.2d 1044
    , 1046 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008).
    5
    In addition to his argument about the trial-court activity between January 20 and June 15, Battering notes
    that the State filed a Motion for Discovery on June 27, 2017, twelve days after the trial court granted the
    State’s Motion to Stay. However, he does not dispute that there was a stay in place after June 15. To the
    contrary, he specifically acknowledges that the 224-day period between June 15, 2017, and January 24, 2018
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019                                  Page 13 of 19
    [18]   Finally, Battering suggests that the State’s filing of a Motion to Stay on June 13
    (and the trial court’s grant of that motion two days later) proves that there was
    no stay in place before then. At the end of the June 1, 2017 hearing, the State
    noted that it would be filing a formal motion to stay only because Battering was
    “so adamant about wanting a piece of paper saying things are stayed[.]” Then,
    at the hearing on April 17, 2018, the State reiterated that the only reason it filed
    the Motion to Stay was that Battering “kept harping on it[.]” For all the
    reasons discussed above, and having closely reviewed the entire record, we are
    persuaded by the State’s characterization of its motion as a mere formality.
    [19]   The trial court correctly ruled that the delay between January 20 and June 15,
    2017, is not chargeable to the State.6
    [20]   Affirmed.
    Altice, J., concurs.
    Baker, J., dissents with separate opinion.
    (when our opinion in the first appeal was certified) “is excluded from the Rule 4(C) period.” Appellant’s Br.
    p. 20.
    6
    In his opening brief on appeal, Battering also suggests that, regardless of the time that passed during the
    original interlocutory appeal, the 4(C) period has expired in light of time that has passed since that appeal,
    specifically, the seven months between the certification of our opinion (January 24, 2018) and the trial date
    that was then set (August 29, 2018). In response, the State notes that Battering’s motion for discharge, the
    trial court’s order denying the motion, Battering’s request for certification, and the trial court’s certification
    order all focused on time that passed during the original interlocutory appeal, without discussing any time
    that has passed since that appeal. The State maintains that Battering is therefore barred from raising the
    latter issue in this appeal. In his reply brief, Battering abandons the claim.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019                                  Page 14 of 19
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    Brandon Battering,                                         Court of Appeals Case No.
    18A-CR-2309
    Appellant-Defendant,
    v.
    State of Indiana,
    Appellee-Plaintiff
    Baker, Judge, dissenting.
    [21]   While I understand the emotional appeal of the result reached by the majority,
    and I wholeheartedly agree that its analysis is where our system should be, I do
    not believe that it is where we are, based on our Supreme Court’s precedent, the
    Rules of Appellate Procedure, and the record in this case. Therefore, I
    respectfully dissent.
    [22]   As noted by the majority, in Pelley v. State, our Supreme Court found as follows:
    . . . When trial court proceedings have been stayed pending resolution of
    the State’s interlocutory appeal, the trial court loses jurisdiction to
    try the defendant and has no ability to speed the appellate
    process. As a practical matter, applying the Criminal Rule 4(C)
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019                   Page 15 of 19
    one-year requirement to interlocutory appeals would render an
    appeal by the State impossible because it would in all likelihood
    trigger a mandatory discharge of the defendant. Accordingly, we
    conclude that Rule 4(C)’s one-year limitation does not include
    the time during which trial proceedings have been stayed pending
    interlocutory appeal.
    We note that the time for an interlocutory appeal is excluded
    from Rule 4(C)’s limitation only when the trial court proceedings have
    been stayed. . . .
    
    901 N.E.2d 494
    , 499-500 (Ind. 2009) (emphases added). Recently, our
    Supreme Court reached the same conclusion, finding that when the trial court
    proceedings were stayed after the defendant filed a motion for interlocutory
    appeal, the 4(C) period was tolled. State v. Larkin, 
    100 N.E.3d 700
    , 705-06 (Ind.
    2018) (holding that where proceedings have been stayed, “interlocutory appeals
    toll the 4(C) period despite who filed because the case cannot practically move
    forward”). A stay of proceedings is not automatic upon the filing or acceptance
    of an interlocutory appeal. See Ind. Appellate Rule 14(H) (“[a]n interlocutory
    appeal shall not stay proceedings in the trial court unless the trial court or a judge
    of the Court of Appeals so orders”) (emphases added).
    [23]   The State concedes—as it must—that (1) Pelley’s holding means that the Rule
    4(C) period is tolled during an interlocutory appeal only when the trial court
    proceedings have been stayed; and (2) a stay is not automatic pursuant to
    Appellate Rule 14(H). Appellee’s Br. p. 23. The State’s position is that we
    should not focus on form over substance, insisting that the fact that the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019        Page 16 of 19
    “talismanic” word “stay” was not invoked does not mean that a stay was not,
    in effect, in place. 
    Id.
    [24]   In the State’s January 20, 2017, motion to certify the suppression order for
    interlocutory appeal, it asked that the looming trial date be “continued,” rather
    than stayed. Appellant’s App. Vol. III p. 103-04. And in its order granting the
    State’s motion, the trial court vacated the trial date but did not stay the
    proceedings. Id. at 107. When the State filed a motion asking this Court to
    accept jurisdiction of the interlocutory appeal, it did not ask that a stay be
    ordered; nor, in accepting jurisdiction on March 17, 2017, did this Court issue a
    stay. Id. at 154-58, 164-65. This course of events, in and of itself, would not
    lead us to conclude, necessarily, that no stay was issued. If it was merely an
    issue of semantics, it would elevate form over substance to conclude that word
    choice dictated the outcome here.7
    [25]   But the parties’ and the trial court’s course of action following these orders
    indicates that, in fact, they did not believe that the proceedings had been stayed.
    On February 22, 2017, the trial court scheduled a hearing on Battering’s motion
    to exclude certain discovery at trial; the State did not object to the hearing.
    Subsequently, Battering filed a motion to re-set the jury trial. On June 1, 2017,
    the trial court held a hearing on all pending motions. At that hearing, Battering
    7
    I do, however, tend to agree with Battering that “[a] motion to continue has the opposite effect of a motion
    to stay. A motion to continue requests that proceedings continue but be set for another day. A motion to
    stay, on the other hand, seeks to stop proceedings.” Reply Br. p. 5 (emphases original).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019                              Page 17 of 19
    orally moved for discharge pursuant to Rule 4(C). The State engaged in legal
    argument at this hearing but did not object on the basis that the proceedings had
    been stayed. The trial court scheduled another hearing to consider Battering’s
    motion for discharge. Before that hearing occurred, the State filed a motion to
    stay the proceedings on June 13, 2017; the trial court granted the motion two
    days later. Just two weeks later, on June 27, 2017, the State filed a motion for
    discovery, which the trial court granted, until Battering pointed out that, at last,
    the proceedings had been stayed, at which point the trial court rescinded its
    order.
    [26]   It is apparent that neither Battering, nor the State, nor the trial court believed
    that the proceedings were stayed upon the trial court’s certification of the
    suppression order for interlocutory appeal, given all of the litigation that
    occurred following that date. And as noted above, neither the trial court’s
    certification of an order for interlocutory appeal nor this Court’s acceptance of
    jurisdiction over that appeal mean that a stay is automatically granted. It must
    be requested and ordered. And here, neither the words of the relevant orders
    nor the behavior of the parties or the trial court show that a stay was put in
    place until June—long past the Rule 4(C) one-year cutoff.8
    8
    Even if it were argued that when this Court accepted jurisdiction of the interlocutory appeal, it necessarily
    removed jurisdiction from the trial court, the clock would already have run. This Court did not accept
    jurisdiction until March 17, 2017—almost two months too late.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019                               Page 18 of 19
    [27]   Because the proceedings were not stayed until months after the interlocutory
    appeal was filed and accepted, the tolling rule announced in Pelley and followed
    in Larkin does not apply. It necessarily follows that the Rule 4(C) clock did not
    stop ticking. Consequently, I believe that the trial court should have granted
    Battering’s motion for discharge. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-CR-2309 | October 11, 2019    Page 19 of 19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 18A-CR-2309

Filed Date: 10/11/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/11/2019