State v. Abernathy ( 2022 )


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    03/24/2022 01:06 AM CDT
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    Nebraska Supreme Court Advance Sheets
    310 Nebraska Reports
    STATE v. ABERNATHY
    Cite as 
    310 Neb. 880
    State of Nebraska, appellee,
    v. Kyle S. Abernathy,
    appellant.
    ___ N.W.2d ___
    Filed February 11, 2022.   No. S-21-016.
    1. Judgments: Speedy Trial: Appeal and Error. Generally, a trial court’s
    determination as to whether charges should be dismissed on speedy trial
    grounds is a factual question which will be affirmed on appeal unless
    clearly erroneous.
    2. Judgments: Jurisdiction: Appeal and Error. A jurisdictional issue that
    does not involve a factual dispute presents a question of law, which an
    appellate court independently decides.
    3. Speedy Trial. The statutory right to a speedy trial is set forth in 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 29-1207
     and 29-1208 (Reissue 2016).
    4. ____. To calculate the deadline for trial under the speedy trial statutes, a
    court must exclude the day the State filed the information, count forward
    6 months, back up 1 day, and then add any time excluded under 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 29-1207
    (4) (Reissue 2016).
    5. Constitutional Law: Speedy Trial. A pretrial order denying a motion
    for discharge on constitutional speedy trial grounds does not affect a
    substantial right in a special proceeding for purposes of 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1902
    (1)(b) (Cum. Supp. 2020).
    Appeal from the District Court for Sarpy County: Michael
    A. Smith, Judge. Affirmed in part, and in part dismissed.
    April O’Loughlin, Assistant Sarpy County Public Defender,
    for appellant.
    Douglas J. Peterson, Attorney General, and Stacy M. Foust
    for appellee.
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    STATE v. ABERNATHY
    Cite as 
    310 Neb. 880
    Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, Funke, Papik, and
    Freudenberg, JJ., and Daugherty, District Judge.
    Papik, J.
    Kyle S. Abernathy appeals an order of the district court
    overruling his motion for absolute discharge, which asserted
    violations of his constitutional and statutory rights to a speedy
    trial. See, U.S. Const. amend VI; Neb. Const. art. I, § 11; 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. §§ 29-1205
     to 29-1209 (Reissue 2016). Abernathy
    primarily argues that the district court erred by finding that
    continuances of trial in response to the COVID-19 pandemic
    were for good cause. For reasons we will explain, we affirm in
    part, and in part dismiss.
    BACKGROUND
    Information, Pretrial Motions, and
    Initial Continuances of Trial.
    On September 10, 2019, Abernathy was charged by informa-
    tion with one count of first degree sexual assault. He thereafter
    made several pretrial motions.
    One of Abernathy’s pretrial motions was an oral motion to
    continue the trial made on October 22, 2019. The district court
    granted the request that day and set trial for January 22, 2020.
    On January 14, the district court, on its own motion, continued
    the trial to March 18.
    District Court’s COVID-19 Continuances.
    On March 17, 2020, the district court, again acting on
    its own motion, continued the trial previously scheduled for
    March 18 to May 20. In its order continuing the trial, the
    district court made a number of observations regarding the
    COVID-19 pandemic. It observed that the spread of COVID-19
    had begun to impact a variety of societal and governmental
    functions in Nebraska; that the President of the United States
    and the Governor of Nebraska had issued emergency procla-
    mations; that the Chief Justice of the Nebraska Supreme Court
    had ordered the courts to continue to function but “placed
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    restrictions on individuals that may have been exposed to the
    virus”; that the U.S. District Court of Nebraska had continued
    jury trials for the month of March 2020 in an order noting that
    “the gathering of jurors may be seen as contrary to the advice
    being given by public health officials, and that these health
    concerns would likely interfere with the ability to select a jury
    and with the jury’s deliberations”; that a “Douglas County
    judge” had continued a jury trial to allow those potential jurors
    to adapt to the closing of schools and daycare facilities; that
    the district court had consulted with the local health depart-
    ment and, while there was no recommendation that the trial be
    continued, was advised that the situation was changing rapidly
    and that the recommendation could change in a few days; and
    that after this communication with local health authorities,
    there had been “additional restrictions from various officials
    regarding public gatherings.” Based on these reasons, the dis-
    trict court stated that there was “good cause” for the contin­
    uance under § 29-1207(4)(f). The district court also stated that
    it was “willing to address any speedy trial matters, including
    the findings of this order, upon the motion of a party with
    appropriate notice given.”
    On the same day it entered the order continuing the trial,
    the district court held a hearing on a motion in limine filed by
    the State. During the hearing, the district court explained its
    decision to continue the trial. It also stated that if the parties
    wished to raise any issues regarding the continuance or “speedy
    trial factors,” they could file a motion. Abernathy’s counsel
    responded that she would read the order of continuance and
    then “file whatever motion needs to be filed.”
    The district court continued the trial again on April 17, 2020.
    The district court’s order of continuance stated, “Given the cur-
    rent public health emergency due to the COVID-19 disease,
    the Court is continuing or canceling all in-person hearings and
    trials.” It found that “the safety and health of the participants
    is good cause for continuance.” Trial was scheduled for July 7
    through 24, with specific dates to be determined later.
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    At a pretrial conference on June 16, 2020, both defense
    counsel and the State agreed to a trial date of September 8, and
    the district court issued an order setting trial. On August 13,
    the district court ordered the case to be called for a jury trial
    on September 9.
    Motion for Discharge.
    On August 31, 2020, Abernathy filed a motion for absolute
    discharge. He asserted that he was entitled to discharge because
    the State had violated his statutory and constitutional rights to
    a speedy trial. The district court held a hearing on the motion
    on September 29. It took judicial notice of the entire court file,
    and the State introduced transcripts of certain hearings held
    in the case.
    Later that same day, the State filed what it styled as a
    “Motion to Establish Good Cause.” The motion requested that
    the district court find that the time between March 16 and
    September 8, 2020, was excluded for purposes of the statutory
    speedy trial calculations, because there was “good cause” for
    such delay under § 29-1207(4)(f).
    A hearing was held on the State’s motion. At the hearing,
    the State offered evidence, which included (1) a March 13,
    2020, proclamation by the Governor of Nebraska declaring
    a state of emergency within the State of Nebraska due to
    COVID-19; (2) a press release from the Governor dated March
    17, 2020, reminding Nebraskans about the new guidelines
    from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to limit
    gatherings to 10 people or less; (3) an order dated March 18,
    2020, from the judicial district’s presiding judge excusing
    jurors from service for the next 30 days because of the public
    health emergency caused by COVID-19; (4) an order extend-
    ing the aforementioned order through May 31; (5) another
    order extending the aforementioned order through the end of
    June 2020 for the district court jury panel; and (6) the district
    court’s sua sponte orders of continuance in this case. Attached
    to the presiding judge’s initial order excusing jurors from jury
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    service were affidavits from the Sarpy County jury commis-
    sioner and the clerks of the district courts of Sarpy County
    and Cass County stating that impaneling the required number
    of prospective jurors would violate public gathering limits set
    forth by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and
    other entities.
    Abernathy objected to the State’s offer of evidence, claiming
    that the district court lacked “jurisdiction to reopen the record.”
    Abernathy argued that once he filed his motion for discharge,
    the district court could not receive evidence offered to sup-
    port a finding of “good cause” under § 29-1207(4)(f). The
    district court took under advisement the question of whether it
    could receive the State’s evidence for purposes of Abernathy’s
    motion for discharge.
    The district court ultimately overruled Abernathy’s motion
    for discharge in a written order. The district court found that
    Abernathy’s pretrial motions and request for a continuance
    resulted in 170 excluded days. The district court also found
    an additional period of excluded time between March 18 and
    July 1, 2020. The district court rejected Abernathy’s argument
    that it lacked jurisdiction to consider the evidence the State
    offered regarding the COVID-19 pandemic and received it for
    purposes of the motion for discharge. It then relied on that
    evidence to find that it “was effectively precluded from hold-
    ing jury trials” from the entry of the continuance on March 18
    through July 1 and such delay was thus for “good cause” under
    § 29-1207(4)(f). Accounting for the number of excluded days,
    the district court found that the State had until December 18
    to bring Abernathy to trial and that Abernathy was not entitled
    to discharge.
    The district court also found no merit to Abernathy’s argu-
    ment that his constitutional speedy trial rights were violated.
    Abernathy appealed.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Abernathy assigns several errors, but they can be consoli-
    dated and restated as two: (1) that the district court erred by
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    STATE v. ABERNATHY
    Cite as 
    310 Neb. 880
    finding his statutory speedy trial rights were not violated and
    (2) that the district court erred by finding that his constitutional
    speedy trial rights were not violated.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    [1] Generally, a trial court’s determination as to whether
    charges should be dismissed on speedy trial grounds is a
    factual question which will be affirmed on appeal unless
    clearly erroneous. State v. Lovvorn, 
    303 Neb. 844
    , 
    932 N.W.2d 64
     (2019).
    [2] A jurisdictional issue that does not involve a factual
    dispute presents a question of law, which an appellate court
    independently decides. Mutual of Omaha Bank v. Watson, 
    301 Neb. 833
    , 
    920 N.W.2d 284
     (2018).
    ANALYSIS
    Statutory Right to Speedy Trial.
    [3] Abernathy contends that he was entitled to discharge
    because the State violated his statutory right to a speedy trial.
    The statutory right to a speedy trial is set forth in §§ 29-1207
    and 29-1208. State v. Vela-Montes, 
    287 Neb. 679
    , 
    844 N.W.2d 286
     (2014). Under these statutes, criminal defendants must
    be brought to trial by a 6-month deadline, but certain periods
    of delay are excluded and thus can extend the deadline. See
    Lovvorn, 
    supra.
     Relevant to this appeal, § 29-1207(4)(f) pro-
    vides that periods of delay not specifically enumerated in the
    statute may be excluded, “but only if the court finds that they
    are for good cause.” If a defendant is not brought to trial by
    the 6-month speedy trial deadline, as extended by any excluded
    periods, he or she is entitled to absolute discharge from the
    offense charged and for any other offense required by law to be
    joined with that offense. See Lovvorn, 
    supra.
    Abernathy’s appeal is focused on the district court’s deter-
    mination that the period of time between March 18 and
    July 1, 2020, was a period of delay for good cause under
    § 29-1207(4)(f) and thus excluded. In his initial brief on
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    STATE v. ABERNATHY
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    appeal, Abernathy presented two arguments in support of his
    position that the district court erred in its good cause determi-
    nation. First, he argued that the State was obligated to present
    evidence that would support a finding of good cause prior to
    the filing of the motion for discharge and that it did not do so.
    Second, and alternatively, he argued that even if the district
    court could consider evidence presented after the filing of the
    motion for discharge, the record did not contain evidence that
    would support a finding of good cause.
    Abernathy was not the only criminal defendant to make
    such arguments to challenge findings that continuances entered
    in response to the COVID-19 pandemic were for good cause.
    After the submission of briefs in this case, we addressed sub-
    stantially similar arguments in State v. Chase, ante p. 160,
    
    964 N.W.2d 254
     (2021), and State v. Brown, ante p. 224, 
    964 N.W.2d 682
     (2021). In Chase, supra, we held that evidence of
    good cause is properly presented at a hearing on a motion for
    absolute discharge and need not be presented at the time of a
    court’s sua sponte order delaying trial. And in Brown, supra,
    we held that the district court did not clearly err when it found
    that continuances of trial in response to the COVID-19 pan-
    demic in March and May 2020 were for good cause. We noted
    that the State had presented evidence of restrictions imposed as
    a result of the pandemic and that the district court had taken
    judicial notice of “various . . . orders and declarations of public
    officials and directives of health agencies such as the [local]
    Health Department and the CDC.” Id. at 236, 964 N.W.2d
    at 691.
    In light of our decisions in Chase and Brown, Abernathy’s
    arguments fail. Under Chase, the State was not obligated to
    present evidence that would support a finding of good cause
    prior to the filing of the motion for discharge. And we see
    no meaningful difference between the evidence regarding the
    COVID-19 pandemic that we found supported a finding of
    good cause in Brown and the evidence offered by the State in
    this case.
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    Faced with our decisions in Chase and Brown, Abernathy
    raised a new contention at oral argument. There, he contended
    that the district court lacked jurisdiction to allow the State to
    present evidence that would support a finding of good cause
    after the conclusion of the hearing on his motion for discharge
    on September 29, 2020. Abernathy’s jurisdictional argument
    is misplaced. The district court had subject matter jurisdiction
    of this criminal felony case, and prior to its order denying
    Abernathy’s motion for discharge, no appeal had been filed
    that would divest it of that jurisdiction. See, In re Estate of
    Adelung, 
    306 Neb. 646
    , 657-68 
    947 N.W.2d 269
    , 282 (2020)
    (“[s]ubject matter jurisdiction is the power of a tribunal to
    hear and determine a case in the general class or category to
    which the proceedings in question belong and to deal with the
    general subject matter involved”); Heckman v. Marchio, 
    296 Neb. 458
    , 
    894 N.W.2d 296
     (2017) (explaining that appellate
    court acquires jurisdiction if party appeals from final order
    or judgment).
    We understand the district court to have treated the State’s
    “Motion to Establish Good Cause” as, effectively, a motion to
    reopen the record for the submission of additional evidence on
    the motion for discharge. The district court did not lack juris-
    diction to reopen the record. The reopening of the record to
    receive additional evidence on the motion was a matter within
    the district court’s discretion. See, e.g., State v. Stricklin,
    
    290 Neb. 542
    , 
    861 N.W.2d 367
     (2015) (reviewing denial of
    motion to reopen evidence for abuse of discretion); Myhra v.
    Myhra, 
    16 Neb. App. 920
    , 925, 
    756 N.W.2d 528
    , 536 (2008)
    (“[t]he reopening of a case to receive additional evidence is
    a matter within the discretion of the district court and will
    not be disturbed on appeal in the absence of an abuse of that
    discretion”).
    [4] Given our conclusion that the district court did not err
    by finding that the period of time between March 18 and July
    1, 2020, was excluded for good cause, Abernathy’s argument
    that his statutory speedy trial rights were violated cannot
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    succeed. To calculate the deadline for trial under the speedy
    trial statutes, a court must exclude the day the State filed the
    information, count forward 6 months, back up 1 day, and then
    add any time excluded under § 29-1207(4). State v. Liming,
    
    306 Neb. 475
    , 
    945 N.W.2d 882
     (2020). Because the informa-
    tion in this case was filed on September 10, 2019, the State
    had until March 10, 2020, to bring Abernathy to trial if there
    were no excluded days. Abernathy concedes, however, that the
    district court properly found over 100 excluded days as a result
    of his various pretrial motions and request for a contin­uance.
    When those excluded days and the days the district court found
    were excluded for good cause are added, time remained on
    the speedy trial clock when Abernathy filed his motion for
    discharge. The district court thus did not err in overruling the
    motion for discharge on statutory speedy trial grounds.
    Constitutional Right to Speedy Trial.
    Abernathy also claims that the district court erred by finding
    that his constitutional right to a speedy trial was not violated.
    We have held and reaffirmed on a number of occasions that
    the denial of a motion for discharge on statutory speedy trial
    grounds is an order that affects a substantial right in a special
    proceeding and thus is immediately appealable. See State v.
    Gibbs, 
    253 Neb. 241
    , 
    570 N.W.2d 326
     (1997). See, also, State
    v. Williams, 
    277 Neb. 133
    , 
    761 N.W.2d 514
     (2009). We do
    not appear, however, to have previously analyzed whether the
    denial of a motion for discharge on constitutional speedy trial
    grounds is also immediately appealable.
    In their initial briefing, both parties assume that we could
    review Abernathy’s constitutional speedy trial claim in this
    appeal. That assumption is understandable as we have previ-
    ously considered the merits of constitutional speedy trial argu-
    ments in other immediate appeals. See, e.g., State v. Brown,
    ante p. 224, 
    964 N.W.2d 682
     (2021); State v. Lovvorn, 
    303 Neb. 844
    , 
    932 N.W.2d 64
     (2019); State v. Gill, 
    297 Neb. 852
    ,
    
    901 N.W.2d 679
     (2017); State v. Bridgeford, 
    298 Neb. 156
    ,
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    903 N.W.2d 22
     (2017), modified on denial of rehearing 
    299 Neb. 22
    , 
    907 N.W.2d 15
     (2018), and disapproved on other
    grounds, Lovvorn, 
    supra;
     State v. Hettle, 
    288 Neb. 288
    , 
    848 N.W.2d 582
     (2014); State v. Loyd, 
    269 Neb. 762
    , 
    696 N.W.2d 860
     (2005); State v. Feldhacker, 
    267 Neb. 145
    , 
    672 N.W.2d 627
     (2004); State v. Tucker, 
    259 Neb. 225
    , 
    609 N.W.2d 306
    (2000). We did not, however, analyze our appellate jurisdiction
    in those cases, and we cannot merely assume that it exists. To
    the contrary, it is our duty to independently determine whether
    we have jurisdiction over the matters before us. See State
    v. Uhing, 
    301 Neb. 768
    , 
    919 N.W.2d 909
     (2018). With that
    duty in mind, we ordered the parties to submit supplemental
    briefs addressing whether we have appellate jurisdiction over
    Abernathy’s claim that the district court erred by finding that
    he was not entitled to discharge on constitutional speedy trial
    grounds. We take up that issue now.
    An assessment of whether we have appellate jurisdiction to
    consider Abernathy’s constitutional speedy trial argument must
    begin with 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1902
    (1) (Cum. Supp. 2020).
    That statute enumerates four categories of “final orders,”
    which appellate courts are authorized to “vacate[], modif[y], or
    reverse[].” See, also, 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-1911
     (Reissue 2016)
    (“[a] judgment rendered or final order made by the district
    court may be reversed, vacated, or modified for errors appear-
    ing on the record”). The denial of a motion for discharge based
    on constitutional speedy trial grounds could possibly fit in only
    one of those categories—“[a]n order affecting a substantial
    right made during a special proceeding.” § 25-1902(1)(b). But
    as we will explain, we find that it does not.
    Our conclusion—that an order denying a motion for dis-
    charge based on constitutional speedy trial grounds is not an
    order affecting a substantial right during a special proceed-
    ing—is largely informed by the Nebraska Court of Appeals’
    opinion in State v. Wilson, 
    15 Neb. App. 212
    , 
    724 N.W.2d 99
    (2006). There, the Court of Appeals concluded that such an
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    order, standing on its own, does not affect a substantial right
    and is not issued in a special proceeding.
    In support of its conclusion that such an order, standing
    on its own, does not affect a substantial right, the Court of
    Appeals relied on United States v. MacDonald, 
    435 U.S. 850
    ,
    
    98 S. Ct. 1547
    , 
    56 L. Ed. 2d 18
     (1978), a U.S. Supreme Court
    case in which the court held that a defendant may not take an
    interlocutory appeal of an order denying a motion to dismiss
    an indictment based on constitutional speedy trial grounds.
    The Court of Appeals observed that in MacDonald, the U.S.
    Supreme Court determined that the constitutional speedy trial
    right was not a “right not to be tried” and that constitutional
    speedy trial claims, because they usually depend on a show-
    ing of prejudice, are best assessed after the development of
    facts at a trial. Wilson, 
    15 Neb. App. at 220
    , 
    724 N.W.2d at 107
    , quoting MacDonald, 
    supra
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted). In support of its conclusion that an order denying
    a motion for discharge based on constitutional speedy trial
    grounds is not issued in a special proceeding, the Court of
    Appeals in Wilson noted that, unlike the statutory right to a
    speedy trial, the constitutional right to a speedy trial is not a
    statutory remedy and does not authorize a special application
    to a court to enforce it.
    [5] A few years after the Court of Appeals’ opinion in
    Wilson, we briefly commented upon it in State v. Williams, 
    277 Neb. 133
    , 
    761 N.W.2d 514
     (2009). In the course of rejecting
    an argument that we should overrule our precedent finding
    that orders denying motions for discharge based on statutory
    speedy trial rights are immediately appealable, we observed
    that the Court of Appeals “correctly noted” in Wilson that
    “‘speedy trial claims based on statutory grounds are more
    amenable to resolution prior to trial than are those claims
    based on constitutional grounds.’” 
    Id. at 137
    , 761 N.W.2d at
    520, quoting Wilson, 
    supra.
     While our approving language in
    Williams may have been dicta in that case, we continue to find
    compelling the reasoning in Wilson that an order denying a
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    motion for discharge on constitutional speedy trial grounds is
    best resolved after a trial. And given this conclusion, we could
    hardly say that the constitutional right to a speedy trial would
    be significantly undermined or irrevocably lost by postponing
    appellate review, an essential quality of an order that affects a
    substantial right. See Tilson v. Tilson, 
    299 Neb. 64
    , 
    907 N.W.2d 31
     (2018). We thus conclude that a pretrial order denying a
    motion for discharge on constitutional speedy trial grounds
    does not affect a substantial right in a special proceeding for
    purposes of § 25-1902(1)(b).
    Although the foregoing conclusion may appear to signal
    the end of the jurisdictional road, a bit more lies ahead. And
    that is because, in some circumstances, our law allows appel-
    late courts, in the course of reviewing properly appealed final
    orders, to also consider the merits of other decisions that would
    not be final orders standing on their own. In Wilson, the Court
    of Appeals relied on this law to conclude that appellate courts
    could review the overruling of a motion alleging a violation
    of the constitutional speedy trial right if raised in the context
    of an appeal also asserting a nonfrivolous claim that the court
    erred by overruling a motion for discharge based on statutory
    speedy trial grounds. In his supplemental brief, Abernathy
    contends that because he raised a nonfrivolous claim of error
    regarding the overruling of his statutory speedy trial right, we
    may consider his constitutional speedy trial claim. We find that
    our statutes governing appellate jurisdiction do not permit us
    to do so.
    In Wilson, the Court of Appeals relied on State v. Loyd,
    
    269 Neb. 762
    , 
    696 N.W.2d 860
     (2005), to find that defendants
    could obtain review of a constitutional speedy trial motion for
    discharge if joined with a nonfrivolous statutory speedy trial
    claim. In particular, the Court of Appeals relied on language in
    Loyd stating that “[a]n appeal from a final order may raise, on
    appeal, every issue presented by the order that is the subject
    of the appeal.” 
    269 Neb. at 771
    , 696 N.W.2d at 869. The prin-
    cipal authority for this citation in Loyd was an Indiana case,
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    Tom-Wat, Inc. v. Fink, 
    741 N.E.2d 343
     (Ind. 2001). In that
    case, the trial court filed a single order denying both parties’
    cross-motions for summary judgment. On appeal, the Indiana
    Supreme Court concluded that the denials of both motions
    for summary judgment were properly before it, citing another
    Indiana Supreme Court case for the proposition that “an inter-
    locutory appeal raises every issue presented by the order that is
    the subject of the appeal.” 
    Id. at 346
    , citing Harbour v. Arelco,
    Inc., 
    678 N.E.2d 381
     (Ind. 1997).
    The meaning of this particular language in Loyd is not
    immediately obvious. Viewed in isolation, one might read it to
    suggest that a party could obtain appellate review of any trial
    court finding or directive that happens to appear within a docu-
    ment in which the trial court also issues an order that qualifies
    as a final order under § 25-1902(1). Such a reading, however,
    would find no support in our statutes conferring appellate
    jurisdiction or our cases applying them. To the contrary, our
    appellate cases recognize that a trial court’s every finding
    and directive does not become immediately reviewable just
    because it happens to appear in a document containing a final,
    appealable order. See, e.g., State v. Gill, 
    297 Neb. 852
    , 
    901 N.W.2d 679
     (2017) (concluding that even if order upon which
    jurisdiction is based had also disposed of separate motion, por-
    tion of order addressing separate issue would not have been
    appealable).
    So when does the appeal of a final order allow a party
    to also obtain review of a nonfinal order? We believe that
    § 25-1911 supplies the answer. As Loyd went on to explain,
    § 25-1911 limits the authority of appellate courts to reversing,
    vacating, or modifying the final order from which the appeal
    is taken. On some occasions, in order for an appellate court to
    determine whether a final order was erroneous or void and thus
    subject to reversal, vacation, or modification, it must review
    a trial court’s determination of other issues. But when, in the
    language of Loyd, a district court’s resolution of another issue
    “do[es] not bear on the correctness of the final order upon
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    which its appellate jurisdiction is based” it cannot be reviewed.
    
    269 Neb. at 771
    , 696 N.W.2d at 869.
    Our precedent illustrates the line between the two catego-
    ries of cases discussed above. In Loyd, we concluded that we
    could not review the district court’s earlier denial of a motion
    for discharge based on statute of limitations grounds because
    whether the prosecution was barred by the statute of limita-
    tions did not affect whether the final order that was the subject
    of the appeal was properly overruled. See, also, Gill, 
    supra.
    On the other hand, in In re Interest of Michael N., 
    302 Neb. 652
    , 
    925 N.W.2d 51
     (2019), we held that we could review the
    denial of motions to dismiss filed by parents in a juvenile case
    even though, standing alone, they would not be appealable. We
    concluded we could review the motions to dismiss because the
    parents had also appealed a detention order, which was final
    and appealable, and if the action should have been dismissed
    pursuant to the motions to dismiss, “we would be required to
    reverse, vacate, or modify the detention order.” 
    Id. at 667
    , 925
    N.W.2d at 62. Similarly, in Breci v. St. Paul Mercury Ins. Co.,
    
    288 Neb. 626
    , 637, 
    849 N.W.2d 523
    , 532 (2014), we found that
    we could review various nonfinal orders “because a reversal on
    any of the nonfinal orders would require us to reverse, vacate,
    or modify the final judgment.”
    These cases also demonstrate that we cannot review
    Abernathy’s claim that the district court erred by overruling
    his motion for discharge on constitutional speedy trial grounds.
    The final order that is the subject of this appeal is the over­
    ruling of Abernathy’s motion for discharge on statutory speedy
    trial grounds. That is thus the order that is subject to possible
    reversal, vacation, or modification under § 25-1911. But even
    a determination that the district court erred by not granting dis-
    charge on constitutional speedy trial grounds would not require
    the reversal, vacation, or modification of the order overruling
    the motion for discharge on statutory speedy trial grounds. As
    we have said on many occasions, “the constitutional right to
    a speedy trial and the statutory implementation of that right
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    exist independently of each other.” State v. Brooks, 
    285 Neb. 640
    , 643, 
    828 N.W.2d 496
    , 499 (2013).
    Moreover, those independent rights are subject to very dif-
    ferent modes of analysis, with the statutory speedy trial right
    analyzed as essentially a math problem with no requirement
    of prejudice, see State v. Gnanaprakasam, ante p. 519, 
    967 N.W.2d 89
     (2021), while the question of whether the constitu-
    tional right has been violated is determined through the appli-
    cation of a multifactor balancing test in which prejudice to the
    defendant is one of the factors, see State v. Brown, ante p. 224,
    
    964 N.W.2d 682
     (2021). We recognize that we have said that
    the statutory speedy trial deadline “provides a useful standard
    for assessing” one of the factors in that multifactor balancing
    test. See State v. Lovvorn, 
    303 Neb. 844
    , 852, 
    932 N.W.2d 64
    ,
    70 (2019). But even so, a determination that the district court
    erred by overruling Abernathy’s motion for discharge on con-
    stitutional speedy trial grounds would not affect whether we
    would be obligated to vacate, reverse, or modify the district
    court’s separate determination that time remained on the statu-
    tory speedy trial clock at the time Abernathy filed his motion
    for discharge. Consequently, we may not review the order
    overruling the motion for discharge on constitutional speedy
    trial grounds at this time.
    As noted above, we acknowledge that in a number of cases
    in which defendants filed immediate appeals of orders over-
    ruling motions for discharge on constitutional speedy trial
    grounds, we have proceeded to the substance of the claim
    without stopping to analyze our appellate jurisdiction. Having
    now considered the issue in this case, however, we determine
    we lack appellate jurisdiction and thus dismiss that portion of
    the appeal.
    CONCLUSION
    We conclude that the district court did not err in determin-
    ing that Abernathy was not entitled to absolute discharge on
    statutory speedy trial grounds. We find that we lack appellate
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    jurisdiction to review his claim that he was entitled to absolute
    discharge on constitutional speedy trial grounds. Accordingly,
    we affirm in part, and in part dismiss.
    Affirmed in part, and in part dismissed.
    Heavican, C.J., not participating.