United States v. Tinklenberg , 131 S. Ct. 2007 ( 2011 )


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  • (Slip Opinion)              OCTOBER TERM, 2010                                       1
    Syllabus
    NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
    being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
    The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
    prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
    See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 
    200 U. S. 321
    , 337.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    Syllabus
    UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR
    THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    No. 09–1498. Argued February 22, 2011—Decided May 26, 2011
    The Speedy Trial Act of 1974 (Act) provides, inter alia, that in “any case
    in which a plea of not guilty is entered, the trial . . . shall commence
    within seventy days” after the arraignment, 
    18 U. S. C. §3161
    (c)(1),
    but lists a number of exclusions from the 70-day period, including
    “delay resulting from any pretrial motion, from the filing of the mo
    tion through the conclusion of the hearing on, or other prompt dispo
    sition of, such motion,” §3161(h)(1)(D).
    Respondent Tinklenberg’s trial on federal drug and gun charges
    began 287 days after his arraignment. The District Court denied his
    motion to dismiss the indictment on the ground that the trial violated
    the Act’s 70-day requirement, finding that 218 of the days fell within
    various of the Act’s exclusions, leaving 69 nonexcludable days, thus
    making the trial timely. On Tinklenberg’s appeal from his convic
    tion, the Sixth Circuit agreed that many of the 287 days were exclud
    able, but concluded that 9 days during which three pretrial motions
    were pending were not, because the motions did not actually cause a
    delay, or the expectation of delay, of trial. Since these 9 days were
    sufficient to bring the number of nonexcludable days above 70, the
    court found a violation of the Act. And given that Tinklenberg had
    already served his prison sentence, it ordered the indictment dis
    missed with prejudice.
    Held:
    1. The Act contains no requirement that the filing of a pretrial mo
    tion actually caused, or was expected to cause, delay of a trial.
    Rather, §3161(h)(1)(D) stops the Speedy Trial clock from running
    automatically upon the filing of a pretrial motion irrespective of
    whether the motion has any impact on when the trial begins. Pp. 3–
    12.
    2                  UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Syllabus
    (a) The Sixth Circuit reasoned that subparagraph (D)’s “delay re-
    sulting from” phrase, read most naturally, requires a court to apply
    the exclusion provision only to motions that actually cause a trial de-
    lay, or the expectation of such a delay. While such a reading is lin-
    guistically reasonable, it is not the only reasonable interpretation.
    The subparagraph falls within a general set of provisions introduced
    by the phrase: “The following periods of delay shall be excluded.”
    §3161(h). That phrase is followed by a list that includes “[a]ny period
    of delay resulting from other proceedings concerning the defendant,
    including. . . .” §3161(h)(1). This latter list is followed by a sublist,
    each member (but one) of which is introduced by the phrase “delay
    resulting from . . . .” Ibid. Those words are followed by a more spe-
    cific description, such as “any pretrial motion” from its “filing”
    “through the conclusion of the hearing on, or other prompt disposition
    of, such motion.” §3161(h)(1)(D). The whole paragraph can be read
    as requiring the automatic exclusion of the members of that specific
    sublist, while referring to those members in general as “periods of de-
    lay” and as causing that delay, not because Congress intended the
    judge to determine causation, but because, in a close to definitional
    way, the words embody Congress’ own view of the matter. Thus, lan-
    guage alone cannot resolve the basic question presented. Pp. 4–7.
    (b) Several considerations, taken together, compel the conclusion
    that Congress intended subparagraph (D) to apply automatically.
    First, subparagraph (D) and neighboring subparagraphs (F) and (H)
    contain language that instructs courts to measure the time actually
    consumed by the specified pretrial occurrence, but those subpara-
    graphs do not mention the date on which the trial begins or was ex-
    pected to begin. Second, during the 37 years since Congress enacted
    the statute, every other Court of Appeals has rejected the Sixth Cir-
    cuit’s interpretation. Third, the Sixth Circuit’s interpretation would
    make the subparagraph (D) exclusion significantly more difficult to
    administer, thereby hindering the Act’s efforts to secure fair and effi-
    cient trials. Fourth, the Court’s conclusion is reinforced by the diffi-
    culty of squaring the Sixth Circuit’s interpretation with the “auto-
    matic application” rule expressed in, e.g., Henderson v. United States,
    
    476 U. S. 321
    , 327. Fifth, the legislative history also supports the
    Court’s conclusion. Sixth, because all the subparagraphs but one un-
    der paragraph (1) begin with the phrase “delay resulting from,” the
    Sixth Circuit’s interpretation would potentially extend well beyond
    pretrial motions and encompass such matters as mental and physical
    competency examinations, interlocutory appeals, consideration of
    plea agreements, and the absence of essential witnesses. Pp. 7–12.
    2. The Sixth Circuit also misinterpreted §3161(h)(1)(F), which ex-
    cludes from the 70-day calculation “delay resulting from transporta-
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)                       3
    Syllabus
    tion of any defendant . . . to and from places of examination . . . , ex
    cept that any time consumed in excess of ten days . . . shall be pre
    sumed to be unreasonable.” The lower courts agreed that a total of
    20 transportation days had elapsed when Tinklenberg was evaluated
    for competency, and that because the Government provided no justi
    fication, all days in excess of the 10 days specified in the statute were
    unreasonable. However, the Sixth Circuit exempted 8 weekend days
    and holidays from the count on the theory that subparagraph (F) in
    corporated Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 45(a), which, at the
    time, excluded such days when computing any period specified in
    “rules” and “court order[s]” that was less than 11 days. Thus, the
    Circuit considered only two transportation days excessive, and the
    parties concede that the eight extra days were enough to make the
    difference between compliance with, and violation of, the Act.
    This Court exercises its discretion to consider the subsidiary sub
    paragraph (F) question because doing so is fairer to Tinklenberg, who
    has already served his sentence. In the Court’s view, subparagraph
    (F) does not incorporate Rule 45. The Act does not say that it does so,
    the Government gives no good reason for such a reading, and the
    Rule itself, as it existed at the relevant time, stated it applied to rules
    and court orders, but said nothing about statutes. The fact that Rule
    45 is revised from time to time also argues against its direct applica
    tion to subparagraph (F) because such changes, likely reflecting con
    siderations other than those related to the Act, may well leave courts
    treating similar defendants differently. The better reading includes
    weekend days and holidays in subparagraph (F)’s 10-day period un
    der the common-law rule that such days are included when counting
    a statutory time period of 10 days unless a statute specifically ex
    cludes them. Many courts have treated statutory time periods this
    way, and Congress has tended specifically to exclude weekend days
    and holidays from statutory time periods of 10 days when it intended
    that result. Indeed, Rule 45 has been recently modified to require a
    similar result. Pp. 12–14.
    3. Although the Sixth Circuit’s interpretations of subparagraphs
    (D) and (F) are both mistaken, the conclusions the court drew from
    its interpretations in relevant part cancel each other out, such that
    the court’s ultimate conclusion that Tinklenberg’s trial failed to com
    ply with the Act’s deadline is correct. Pp. 14–15.
    
    579 F. 3d 589
    , affirmed.
    BREYER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which KENNEDY,
    GINSBURG, ALITO, and SOTOMAYOR, JJ., joined, and in which ROBERTS,
    C. J., and SCALIA and THOMAS, JJ., joined as to Parts I and III. SCALIA,
    J., filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment,
    4               UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Syllabus
    in which ROBERTS, C. J., and THOMAS, J., joined. KAGAN, J., took no part
    in the consideration or decision of the case.
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)                              1
    Opinion of the Court
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
    preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
    notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash
    ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order
    that corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 09–1498
    _________________
    UNITED STATES, PETITIONER v. JASON LOUIS
    TINKLENBERG
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    [May 26, 2011]
    JUSTICE BREYER delivered the opinion of the Court.
    The Speedy Trial Act of 1974, 
    18 U. S. C. §3161
     et seq.,
    provides that in “any case in which a plea of not guilty is
    entered, the trial . . . shall commence within seventy days”
    from the later of (1) the “filing date” of the information or
    indictment or (2) the defendant’s initial appearance before
    a judicial officer (i.e., the arraignment). §3161(c)(1). The
    Act goes on to list a set of exclusions from the 70-day
    period, including “delay resulting from any pretrial mo
    tion, from the filing of the motion through the conclusion
    of the hearing on, or other prompt disposition of, such
    motion.” §3161(h)(1)(D) (2006 ed., Supp. III) (emphasis
    added).
    The United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
    held in this case that a pretrial motion falls within this
    exclusion only if it “actually cause[s] a delay, or the expec
    tation of a delay, of trial.” 
    579 F. 3d 589
    , 598 (2009). In
    our view, however, the statutory exclusion does not con
    tain this kind of causation requirement. Rather, the filing
    of a pretrial motion falls within this provision irrespective
    of whether it actually causes, or is expected to cause, delay
    2              UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Opinion of the Court
    in starting a trial.
    I
    Jason Louis Tinklenberg, the respondent, was convicted
    of violating federal drug and gun laws. 
    18 U. S. C. §922
    (g)(1) (felon in possession of a firearm); 
    21 U. S. C. §843
    (a)(6) (possession of items used to manufacture a
    controlled substance). He made his initial appearance
    before a judicial officer on October 31, 2005, and the
    Speedy Trial clock then began to run. His trial began on
    August 14, 2006, 287 days later. Just before trial,
    Tinklenberg asked the District Court to dismiss the in
    dictment on the ground that the trial came too late, vio
    lating the Speedy Trial Act’s 70-day requirement. The
    District Court denied the motion after finding that 218
    of the 287 days fell within various Speedy Trial Act exclu
    sions, leaving 69 nonexcludable days, thereby making the
    trial timely.
    On appeal the Sixth Circuit agreed with the District
    Court that many of the 287 days were excludable. But it
    disagreed with the District Court about the excludability
    of time related to three pretrial motions. The Government
    filed the first motion, an unopposed motion to conduct a
    video deposition of a witness, on August 1, 2006; the Dis
    trict Court disposed of the motion on August 3, 2006. The
    Government filed the second motion, an unopposed motion
    to bring seized firearms into the courtroom as evidence at
    trial, on August 8, 2006; the District Court disposed of the
    motion on August 10, 2006. Tinklenberg filed the third
    motion, a motion to dismiss the indictment under the
    Speedy Trial Act, on August 11, 2006; the District Court
    denied that motion on August 14, 2006. In the Sixth
    Circuit’s view, the nine days during which the three mo
    tions were pending were not excludable because the mo
    tions did not “actually cause a delay, or the expectation of
    delay, of trial.” 
    579 F. 3d, at 598
    . Because these 9 days
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)            3
    Opinion of the Court
    were sufficient to bring the number of nonexcludable days
    above 70, the Court of Appeals found a violation of the Act.
    And given the fact that Tinklenberg had already served
    his prison sentence, it ordered the District Court to dis
    miss the indictment with prejudice.
    We granted certiorari at the Government’s request in
    order to review the Sixth Circuit’s motion-by-motion cau
    sation test. We now reverse its determination. But be
    cause we agree with the defendant about a subsidiary
    matter, namely, the exclusion of certain holidays and
    weekend days during the period in which he was trans
    ported for a competency examination, 
    id., at 597
    , we af
    firm the Court of Appeals’ ultimate conclusion.
    II
    A
    In relevant part the Speedy Trial Act sets forth a basic
    rule:
    “In any case in which a plea of not guilty is entered,
    the trial of a defendant . . . shall commence within
    seventy days from [the later of (1)] the filing date . . .
    of the information or indictment, or . . . [(2)] the date
    the defendant has appeared before a judicial officer of
    the court in which such charge is pending . . . .”
    §3161(c)(1) (2006 ed.).
    The Act then says that the “following periods of delay shall
    be excluded in computing . . . the time within which the
    trial . . . must commence.” §3161(h) (2006 ed., Supp. III).
    It lists seven such “periods of delay.”
    It describes the first of these seven excludable periods as
    “(1) Any period of delay resulting from other proceed
    ings concerning the defendant including but not lim
    ited to—
    “(A) delay resulting from any proceeding . . . to de
    termine the mental competency or physical capacity of
    4            UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Opinion of the Court
    the defendant;
    “(B) delay resulting from trial with respect to other
    charges . . . ;
    “(C) delay resulting from any interlocutory appeal;
    “(D) delay resulting from any pretrial motion, from
    the filing of the motion through the conclusion of
    the hearing on, or other prompt disposition of, such
    motion;
    “(E) delay resulting from any proceeding relating to
    the transfer of a case [or defendant] . . . from another
    district . . . ;
    “(F) delay resulting from transportation of any de
    fendant from another district, or to and from places of
    examination or hospitalization, except that any time
    consumed in excess of ten days . . . shall be presumed
    to be unreasonable;
    “(G) delay resulting from consideration by the court
    of a proposed plea agreement . . .;
    “(H) delay reasonably attributable to any period, not
    to exceed thirty days, during which any proceeding
    concerning the defendant is actually under advise
    ment by the court.” Ibid. (2006 ed. and Supp. III)
    (emphasis added).
    B
    The particular provision before us, subparagraph (D),
    excludes from the Speedy Trial period “delay resulting
    from any pretrial motion, from the filing of the motion
    through the conclusion of the hearing on, or other prompt
    disposition of, such motion.” §3161(h)(1)(D). The question
    is whether this provision stops the Speedy Trial clock from
    running automatically upon the filing of a pretrial motion
    irrespective of whether the motion has any impact on
    when the trial begins. Unlike the Sixth Circuit, we believe
    the answer to this question is yes.
    We begin with the Act’s language. The Sixth Circuit
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)            5
    Opinion of the Court
    based its answer primarily upon that language. It argued
    that the phrase “delay resulting from,” read most natu
    rally, requires a court to apply the exclusion provision only
    to those “motion[s]” that “actually cause a delay, or the
    expectation of a delay, of trial.” 
    579 F. 3d, at 598
    . We
    agree that such a reading is linguistically reasonable, but
    the Court of Appeals wrote that there “is no conceivable
    way to read this language other than to require a delay to
    result from any pretrial motion before excludable time
    occurs.” 
    Ibid.
     See also 
    ibid.
     (“[T]he statute is clear”). And
    here we disagree.
    When the Court of Appeals says that its reading is the
    only way any reasonable person could read this language,
    it overstates its claim. For one thing, even though the
    word “delay” ordinarily indicates a postponement, it need
    not inevitably do so. Compare The American Heritage
    Dictionary 480 (4th ed. 2000) (“[t]o postpone until a later
    time” or “[t]o cause to be later or slower than expected or
    desired”) with 
    ibid.
     (“[t]he interval of time between two
    events”). In any event, terms must be read in their statu
    tory context in order to determine how the provision in
    question should be applied in an individual case.
    Statutory language that describes a particular circum
    stance, for example, might require a judge to examine
    each individual case to see if that circumstance is present.
    But, alternatively, it might ask a judge instead to look at
    more general matters, such as when a statute requires a
    judge to increase the sentence of one convicted of a “crime
    of violence” without requiring the judge to determine
    whether the particular crime at issue in a particular case
    was committed in a violent manner. See Taylor v. United
    States, 
    495 U. S. 575
    , 602 (1990) (“crime of violence” char
    acterizes the generic crime, not the particular act commit
    ted). Similarly a statute that forbids the importation of
    “wild birds” need not require a court to decide whether a
    particular parrot is, in fact, wild or domesticated. It may
    6             UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Opinion of the Court
    intend to place the entire species within that definition
    without investigation of the characteristics of an individ
    ual specimen. See United States v. Fifty-Three (53) Eclec
    tus Parrots, 
    685 F. 2d 1131
    , 1137 (CA9 1982).
    More than that, statutory language can sometimes
    specify that a set of circumstances exhibits a certain char
    acteristic virtually as a matter of definition and irrespec
    tive of how a court may view it in a particular case. A
    statute that describes “extortion” as a “crime of violence”
    makes that fact so by definition, without asking a court
    to second-guess Congress about the matter. 
    18 U. S. C. §924
    (e)(2)(B)(ii) (2006 ed.) (defining “violent felony” to
    include extortion for purposes of the Armed Career Crimi
    nal Act).
    The statute before us, though more complex, can be read
    similarly. The pretrial motion subparagraph falls within a
    general set of provisions introduced by the phrase: “The
    following periods of delay shall be excluded.” §3161(h)
    (2006 ed., Supp. III). That phrase is then followed by a list
    that includes “[a]ny period of delay resulting from other
    proceedings concerning the defendant, including . . . .”
    §3161(h)(1). This latter list is followed by a sublist, each
    member (but one) of which is introduced by the phrase
    “delay resulting from . . . ,” ibid. (2006 ed. and Supp. III),
    which words are followed by a more specific description,
    such as “any pretrial motion” from its “filing” “through the
    conclusion of the hearing on, or other prompt disposition
    of, such motion.” §3161(h)(1)(D) (2006 ed., Supp. III). The
    whole paragraph can be read as requiring the automatic
    exclusion of the members of that specific sublist, while
    referring to those members in general as “periods of delay”
    and as causing that delay, not because Congress intended
    the judge to determine causation, but because, in a close to
    definitional way, the words embody Congress’ own view of
    the matter.
    It is not farfetched to describe the members of the spe
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)            7
    Opinion of the Court
    cific sublist in the statute before us in this definitional
    sense—as “periods of delay” or as bringing about delay.
    After all, the exclusion of any of the specific periods de
    scribed always delays the expiration of the 70-day Speedy
    Trial deadline. Or Congress might have described the
    specific periods listed in paragraph (1) as “periods of de
    lay” and “delay[s] resulting from” simply because periods
    of the type described often do cause a delay in the start of
    trial. Both explanations show that, linguistically speak
    ing, one can read the statutory exclusion as automatically
    applying to the specific periods described without leaving
    to the district court the task of determining whether the
    period described would or did actually cause a postpone
    ment of the trial in the particular case. Thus, language
    alone cannot resolve the basic question presented in this
    case. But when read in context and in light of the stat
    ute’s structure and purpose, we think it clear that Con
    gress intended subparagraph (D) to apply automatically.
    C
    We now turn to several considerations, which, taken
    together, convince us that the subparagraphs that specifi
    cally list common pretrial occurrences apply automatically
    in the way we have just described. First, subparagraph
    (D) clarifies that the trial court should measure the period
    of excludable delay for a pretrial motion “from the filing of
    the motion through the conclusion of the hearing on, or
    other prompt disposition of such motion,” but nowhere
    does it mention the date on which the trial begins or was
    expected to begin. §3161(h)(1)(D) (2006 ed., Supp. III).
    Thus, it is best read to instruct measurement of the time
    actually consumed by consideration of the pretrial mo
    tion. Two other related subparagraphs contain clarifying
    language that contemplates measurement of the time
    actually consumed by the specified pretrial occurrence
    without regard to the commencement of the trial. See
    8             UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Opinion of the Court
    §3161(h)(1)(F) (“Any time consumed in excess of ten days
    from the date an order of removal or an order directing
    such transportation, and the defendant’s arrival at the
    destination shall be presumed to be unreasonable”);
    §3161(h)(1)(H) (“delay reasonably attributable to any
    period, not to exceed thirty days, during which any pro
    ceeding concerning the defendant is actually under ad
    visement by the court”). If “delay” truly referred to the
    postponement of trial, then presumably those subpara
    graphs would instruct that excludable periods should be
    measured from the date that trial was otherwise sched
    uled to begin.
    Second, we are impressed that during the 37 years since
    Congress enacted the Speedy Trial Act, every Court of
    Appeals has considered the question before us now, and
    every Court of Appeals, implicitly or explicitly, has re
    jected the interpretation that the Sixth Circuit adopted in
    this case. See United States v. Wilson, 
    835 F. 2d 1440
    ,
    1443 (CADC 1987) (explicit), abrogated on other grounds
    by Bloate v. United States, 559 U. S. ___ (2010); United
    States v. Hood, 
    469 F. 3d 7
    , 10 (CA1 2006) (explicit);
    United States v. Cobb, 
    697 F. 2d 38
    , 42 (CA2 1982) (ex
    plicit), abrogated on other grounds by Henderson v. United
    States, 
    476 U. S. 321
     (1986); United States v. Novak, 
    715 F. 2d 810
    , 813 (CA3 1983) (explicit) abrogated on other
    grounds by Henderson v. United States, 
    476 U. S. 321
    (1986); United States v. Dorlouis, 
    107 F. 3d 248
    , 253–254
    (CA4 1997) (explicit); United States v. Green, 
    508 F. 3d 195
    , 200 (CA5 2007) (explicit); United States v. Montoya,
    
    827 F. 2d 143
    , 151 (CA7 1987) (explicit); United States v.
    Titlbach, 
    339 F. 3d 692
    , 698 (CA8 2003) (implicit); United
    States v. Van Brandy, 
    726 F. 2d 548
    , 551 (CA9 1984)
    (explicit); United States v. Vogl, 
    374 F. 3d 976
    , 985–986
    (CA10 2004) (explicit); United States v. Stafford, 
    697 F. 2d 1368
    , 1371–1372 (CA11 1983) (explicit). This unanimity
    among the lower courts about the meaning of a statute of
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)             9
    Opinion of the Court
    great practical administrative importance in the daily
    working lives of busy trial judges is itself entitled to strong
    consideration, particularly when those courts have main
    tained that interpretation consistently over a long a period
    of time. See General Dynamics Land Systems, Inc. v.
    Cline, 
    540 U. S. 581
    , 593–594 (2004).
    Third, the Sixth Circuit’s interpretation would make the
    subparagraph (D) exclusion significantly more difficult to
    administer. And in doing so, it would significantly hinder
    the Speedy Trial Act’s efforts to secure fair and efficient
    criminal trial proceedings. See Zedner v. United States,
    
    547 U. S. 489
    , 497 (2006) (noting that the Act’s exceptions
    provide “necessary flexibility”); H. R. Rep. No. 93–1508, p.
    15 (1974) (the Act seeks to achieve “efficiency in the proc
    essing of cases which is commensurate with due process”);
    S. Rep. No. 93–1021, p. 21 (1974). Trial judges may, for
    example, set trial dates beyond 70 days in light of other
    commitments. And in doing so, a trial judge may well be
    aware, based on his or her experience, that pretrial mo
    tions will likely consume the extra time—even though the
    judge may know little about which specific motions will be
    filed, when, and how many. How is that judge to apply the
    Sixth Circuit’s approach, particularly when several, in
    cluding unanticipated, pretrial proceedings did consume
    the time in question?
    Moreover, what is to happen if several excludable and
    several nonexcludable potential causes of delay (e.g., pre
    trial motions to take depositions, potential scheduling
    conflicts, various health examinations, etc.) coincide,
    particularly in multidefendant cases? Can the judge,
    motion by motion, decide which motions were responsible
    and which were not responsible for postponing what oth
    erwise might have been an earlier trial date? And how is
    a defendant or his attorney to predict whether or when a
    judge will later find a particular motion to have caused a
    postponement of trial? And if the matter is difficult to
    10            UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Opinion of the Court
    predict, how is the attorney to know when or whether he
    or she should seek further postponement of the 70-day
    deadline?
    With considerable time and judicial effort, perhaps
    through the use of various presumptions, courts could find
    methods for overcoming these and other administrative
    difficulties. In some instances, the judge may know at the
    time of filing that a given motion is easily resolved or that
    its complexity will almost certainly postpone the trial.
    Judges could note on the record their predictions about
    whether the motion will postpone trial at the time that the
    motion is filed. Parties could also stipulate as to whether
    a given motion would be excluded from the Speedy Trial
    clock. But those theoretical strategies would not prevent
    all or even most mistakes, needless dismissals of indict
    ments, and potential retrials after appeal—all of which
    exact a toll in terms of the fairness of and confidence in
    the criminal justice system. And any such future strate
    gies for administering the Sixth Circuit’s rule cannot
    provide a present justification for turning the federal
    judicial system away from the far less obstacle-strewn
    path that the system has long traveled.
    Fourth, we are reinforced in our conclusion by the diffi
    culty of squaring the Sixth Circuit’s interpretation with
    this Court’s precedent. In Henderson v. United States, 
    476 U. S. 321
     (1986), the Court rejected the contention that
    the exclusion provision for pretrial motions governs only
    reasonable delays. The Court there concluded (as the
    Court of Appeals had held) that the exclusion “was in
    tended to be automatic.” 
    Id., at 327
     (quoting United States
    v. Henderson, 
    746 F. 2d 619
    , 622 (CA9 1984); internal
    quotation marks omitted). See also Bloate v. United
    States, 559 U. S. ___ (2010) (holding based in part on
    the view that the exclusion applies “automatically” to the
    specified period of delay). Henderson did not consider
    whether a trial court must determine whether the pretrial
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)           11
    Opinion of the Court
    motion actually caused postponement of the trial in each
    individual case. But the Sixth Circuit’s interpretation
    would nonetheless significantly limit the premise of “auto
    matic application” upon which the case rests.
    Fifth, for those who find legislative history useful, it is
    worthwhile noting, (as this Court noted in Henderson)
    that the Senate Report concerning the reenactment of the
    provision in 1979 described it, along with the other provi
    sions in §3161(h)(1), as referring to “specific and recurring
    periods of time often found in criminal cases,” and charac
    terized them as “automatically excludable delay,” S. Rep.
    No. 96–212, p. 9 (1979). See H. R. Rep. No. 93–1508, at 21
    (“The time limits would be tolled by hearings, proceedings
    and necessary delay which normally occur prior to the
    trial of criminal cases” (emphasis added)); S. Rep. No. 93–
    1021, at 21 (“[The Act] has carefully constructed exclu
    sions and exceptions which permit normal pre-trial prepa
    ration in the ordinary noncomplex cases which represent
    the bulk of business in the Federal courts”). But cf. id., at
    35 (paragraph (h)(1) excludes “[d]elays caused by proceed
    ings relating to the defendant” (emphasis added)).
    Sixth, because all the subparagraphs but one under
    paragraph (1) begin with the phrase “delay resulting
    from,” the Sixth Circuit’s interpretation would potentially
    extend well beyond pretrial motions and encompass such
    matters as mental and physical competency examinations,
    interlocutory appeals, consideration of plea agreements,
    and the absence of essential witnesses. See §3161(h)(1)
    (2006 ed., Supp. III); §3161(h)(3)(A) (2006 ed.). Given the
    administrative complexity the causation requirement
    would bring about in all these areas, those Circuits that
    have considered a causation requirement in respect to
    these other matters have rejected it. See, e.g., United
    States v. Pete, 
    525 F. 3d 844
    , 852 (CA9 2008) (interlocutory
    appeal); United States v. Miles, 
    290 F. 3d 1341
    , 1350
    (CA11 2002) (unavailability of essential witnesses); United
    12            UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Opinion of the Court
    States v. Robinson, 
    887 F. 2d 651
    , 656–657 (CA6 1989)
    (trial on other charges). That further complexity, along
    with these lower court holdings, reinforce our conclusion.
    We consequently disagree with the Sixth Circuit that
    the Act’s exclusion requires a court to find that the event
    the exclusion specifically describes, here the filing of the
    pretrial motion, actually caused or was expected to cause
    delay of a trial. We hold that the Act contains no such
    requirement.
    III
    Tinklenberg also argues that the Sixth Circuit wrongly
    interpreted a different exclusion provision, this time the
    provision excluding
    “delay resulting from transportation of any defendant
    from another district, or to and from places of exami
    nation or hospitalization, except that any time con
    sumed in excess of ten days from the date an order of
    removal or an order directing such transportation,
    and the defendant’s arrival at the destination shall be
    presumed to be unreasonable.” §3161(h)(1)(F) (2006
    ed., Supp. III) (emphasis added).
    The District Court granted Tinklenberg’s request for a
    competency evaluation and he was transported to a medi
    cal facility for examination. The lower courts agreed that
    a total of 20 transportation days elapsed and that since
    the Government provided no justification, all days in
    excess of the 10 days specified in the statute were unrea
    sonable. But in counting those excess days, the court
    exempted weekend days and holidays. Since Veterans
    Day, Thanksgiving Day, and three weekends all fell
    within the 20-day period, only 2 days, not 10 days, were
    considered excessive, during which the 70-day Speedy
    Trial Act clock continued to tick.
    Tinklenberg argues that subparagraph (F) does not
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)          13
    Opinion of the Court
    exempt weekend days and holidays; hence the court
    should have considered 10, not 2, days to be excessive.
    And the parties concede that those 8 extra ticking days are
    enough to make the difference between compliance with,
    and violation of, the Act.
    As the Solicitor General notes, we may consider, or
    “decline to entertain,” alternative grounds for affirmance.
    See United States v. Nobles, 
    422 U. S. 225
    , 242, n. 16
    (1975). In this case, we believe it treats Tinklenberg, who
    has already served his sentence, more fairly to consider
    the alternative ground and thereby more fully to dispose of
    the case.
    The Sixth Circuit exempted weekend days and holidays
    because it believed that subparagraph (F) incorporated
    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 45(a). At the relevant
    time, that Rule excluded weekend days and holidays when
    computing any period of time specified in the “rules,” in
    “any local rule,” or in “any court order” that was less than
    11 days. Fed. Rule Crim. Proc. 45(a) (2005). But in our
    view subparagraph (F) does not incorporate Rule 45. The
    Act does not say that it incorporates Rule 45. The Gov
    ernment has given us no good reason for reading it as
    incorporating the Rule. And the Rule itself, as it existed
    at the relevant time, said that it applied to “rules” and to
    “orders,” but it said nothing about statutes. Other things
    being equal, the fact that Rule 45 is revised from time to
    time also argues against its direct application to subpara
    graph (F). That is because those changes, likely reflecting
    considerations other than those related to the Speedy
    Trial Act, may well leave courts treating similar defen
    dants differently.
    Without relying upon a cross-reference to Rule 45, we
    believe the better reading of subparagraph (F) would
    include weekend days and holidays in its 10-day time
    period. Under the common-law rule, weekend days and
    holidays are included when counting a statutory time
    14            UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Opinion of the Court
    period of 10 days unless the statute specifically excludes
    them. See 74 Am. Jur. 2d, Time §22, p. 589 (2001)
    (in calculating time periods expressed in statutes, “when
    the time stipulated must necessarily include one or more
    Saturdays, Sundays, or holidays, those days will not be
    excluded, in the absence of an express proviso for their
    exclusion”). Many courts have treated statutory time
    periods this way. See, e.g., Howeisen v. Chapman, 
    195 Ind. 381
    , 383–384, 
    145 N. E. 487
    , 488 (1924); American
    Tobacco Co. v. Strickling, 
    88 Md. 500
    , 508–511, 
    41 A. 1083
    , 1086 (1898). And Congress has tended specifically
    to exclude weekend days and holidays from statutory time
    periods of 10 days when it intended that result. Compare
    
    18 U. S. C. §3142
    (d)(2) (permitting the temporary deten
    tion of certain defendants “for a period of not more than
    ten days, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays”)
    and 5 U. S. C. §552a(d)(2)(A) (requiring an agency to
    acknowledge receipt of a request to amend agency records
    within “10 days (excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal
    public holidays)”) with 
    18 U. S. C. §2518
    (9) (establishing a
    10-day period for disclosing applications for and court
    orders authorizing wiretaps without specifically excluding
    weekends and holidays) and §4244(a) (providing a 10-day
    period after conviction for filing a motion to request men
    tal health treatment without specifically excluding week
    ends and holidays). Indeed, Rule 45 has been recently
    modified so that now (though not at the time of Tinklen
    berg’s proceedings) it requires a similar result. Fed. Rule
    Crim. Proc. 45(a)(1) (2010) (instructing that weekend days
    and holidays are to be counted when calculating all time
    periods, including statutory time periods for which no
    alternative method of computing time is specified).
    *    *    *
    We disagree with the Sixth Circuit’s interpretation of
    both subparagraph (D) and subparagraph (F), and now
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)         15
    Opinion of the Court
    hold that its interpretations of those two provisions are
    mistaken. Nonetheless the conclusions the court drew
    from those two interpretations in relevant part cancel
    each other out such that the court’s ultimate conclusion
    that Tinklenberg’s trial failed to comply with the Speedy
    Trial Act’s deadline is correct. Therefore, the Sixth Cir
    cuit’s judgment ordering dismissal of the indictment on
    remand is
    Affirmed.
    JUSTICE KAGAN took no part in the consideration or
    decision of this case.
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)            1
    Opinion of SCALIA, J.
    SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
    _________________
    No. 09–1498
    _________________
    UNITED STATES, PETITIONER v. JASON LOUIS
    TINKLENBERG
    ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE UNITED STATES COURT OF
    APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    [May 26, 2011]
    JUSTICE SCALIA, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and
    JUSTICE THOMAS join, concurring in part and concurring
    in the judgment.
    I join Parts I and III of the Court’s opinion. I agree with
    the judgment of the Court in Part II that a pretrial motion
    need not actually postpone a trial, or create an expecta
    tion of postponement, in order for its pendency to be ex
    cluded under the Speedy Trial Act of 1974, 
    18 U. S. C. §3161
    (h)(1)(D) (2006 ed., Supp. III). But I think that
    conclusion is entirely clear from the text of the Speedy
    Trial Act, and see no need to look beyond the text. The
    clarity of the text is doubtless why, as the Court’s opinion
    points out, ante, at 8, every Circuit disagrees with the
    Sixth Circuit’s conclusion. That is the direction in which
    the causality proceeds: Clarity of text produces unanimity
    of Circuits—not, as the Court’s opinion would have it,
    unanimity of Circuits clarifies text.
    As the Court discusses, ante, at 5, the word “delay” can
    mean postponement, but it can also mean an “interval of
    time between two events.” American Heritage Dictionary
    480 (4th ed. 2000). One might refer to the “delay” between
    two ticks of a clock, or between seeing lightning and hear
    ing thunder, but that does not imply that the first post
    poned or slowed the second. Here there are substantial
    textual indications that the word “delay” similarly refers
    2               UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Opinion of SCALIA, J.
    to the period between ticks of the speedy trial clock—in
    other words, the period during which the Speedy Trial
    Act’s 70-day requirement is tolled.
    Interpreting the “delay” referred to in §3161(h)(1)(D) (or
    referred to anywhere else in §3161(h)) as the delay of a
    trial date* would make little sense in light of the context
    of the provision and the structure of the statute. Section
    3161(h)(1)(D) specifies starting and stopping points for the
    excludable “delay” that bear no relation whatsoever to the
    actual amount of time that a trial might be postponed by a
    pretrial motion. It equates the “delay resulting from any
    pretrial motion” to the period of time between “the filing
    of the motion” and “the conclusion of the hearing on, or
    other prompt disposition of, such motion.” This equation is
    possible if “delay” refers to an interval of time excludable
    for purposes of the Speedy Trial Act, but it makes no sense
    if “delay” refers to the time a trial is postponed. Consider,
    for example, a pretrial motion that is pending for 10 days
    but causes the district court to push back a trial’s begin
    ning by only one day. In such a situation, §3161(h)(1)(D)
    would require that the entire 10-day period be excluded
    for Speedy Trial Act purposes.
    Neighboring statutory provisions, moreover, link the
    excludable “delay” to the time consumed by the specified
    event, not the number of days a trial is postponed. Section
    3161(h)(1)(H), for example, excludes “delay reasonably
    attributable to any period, not to exceed thirty days,
    during which any proceeding concerning the defendant
    is actually under advisement by the court.” And
    §3161(h)(1)(F) excludes “delay resulting from transporta
    ——————
    * I consider only this possibility, and not the extended meaning in
    vented by the Sixth Circuit (“expectation of a dela[y] of trial”)—
    presumably to explain how delay can be computed ex ante, before any
    trial delay has actually occurred. See 
    579 F. 3d 589
    , 598 (2009).
    “[E]xpectation of a delay” is simply not one of the possible meanings of
    “delay.”
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)             3
    Opinion of SCALIA, J.
    tion . . . except that any time consumed in excess of ten
    days from . . . an order directing such transportation, and
    the defendant’s arrival at the destination shall be pre
    sumed to be unreasonable.” If “delay” means trial delay, it
    makes little sense for Congress to have placed a limit upon
    the “time consumed” in transporting a defendant rather
    than upon the permissible postponement of trial date.
    The Speedy Trial Act’s structure also suggests that
    §3161(h)(1)(D) is meant to apply automatically and is not
    dependent on predicate findings of postponement. Section
    3161(h) lists various types of delay that may be excluded,
    the first six of which (including §3161(h)(1)(D)) make no
    reference to any required findings. But the seventh, which
    excludes “delay resulting from a continuance granted by
    any judge,” conditions that exclusion upon certain find
    ings, §3161(h)(7)(A). In light of this difference in formula
    tion, we have held that the first six exclusions are “ ‘auto
    matic,’ ” apply “regardless of the specifics of the case,” and
    require no district-court findings. Bloate v. United States,
    559 U. S. ___, ___, n. 1, ___ (2010) (slip op., at 1, n. 1, 6);
    see also Henderson v. United States, 
    476 U. S. 321
    , 327
    (1986). Tinklenberg’s incorporation of a threshold inquiry
    into §3161(h)(1)(D) would make it none of these things.
    Delay of trial is also ruled out by the fact that the text
    is forward looking. It says that the “following periods of
    delay shall be excluded in computing . . . the time within
    which the trial . . . must commence.” §3161(h) (emphasis
    added). This is designed to enable the determination in
    advance of the date by which the trial “must commence.”
    Quite obviously, if the specified delays did not count
    unless and until they delayed the trial, one could not know
    whether they counted until after the fact. And on that
    interpretation the provision should have read, not “the
    time within which the trial . . . must commence,” but
    rather “the time within which the trial . . . should have
    commenced.”
    4              UNITED STATES v. TINKLENBERG
    Opinion of SCALIA, J.
    And finally, there are the administrative difficulties
    that arise when “delay” is taken to mean “delay in trial,”
    discussed in the Court’s opinion at pages 9–10. These are
    not relevant on their own, but only because they bear upon
    the meaning of the text. When one of two possible mean
    ings yields impracticable results, the other meaning is
    more likely correct.
    Tinklenberg would invent a threshold inquiry applicable
    only to §3161(h)(1)(D): If, he says, at least some delay of
    the trial date has occurred, then the entire period specified
    in §3161(h)(1)(D) may be excluded. This makes no sense.
    First, nothing in the statute supports treating the word
    “delay” as a trigger for an exclusion of an unrelated period
    of time; quite the opposite, §3161(h)(1)(D) treats the period
    of “delay” and the pendency of the pretrial motion equiva
    lently. Second, that interpretation would ascribe different
    meanings to the word “delay” as it is used throughout the
    Speedy Trial Act. “[D]elay resulting from any interlocu
    tory appeal,” §3161(h)(1)(C), for example, would refer to
    the number of days a trial was postponed; but “delay
    resulting from any pretrial motion,” §3161(h)(1)(D), would
    refer to the different period specified in that paragraph.
    Identical words used in different parts of a statute are pre
    sumed to have the same meaning absent indication to
    the contrary, and here no such indication exists. See IBP,
    Inc. v. Alvarez, 
    546 U. S. 21
    , 34 (2005).
    Tinklenberg also argues that his interpretation draws
    support from the phrase “resulting from,” which appears
    after the word “delay” in §3161(h)(1)(D). He asserts that
    this phrase “underscores that Subsection (D) excludes
    periods of delay that occur as a consequence of pretrial
    motions, not merely the time during which such motions
    are pending.” Brief for Respondent 17. That is true
    enough, but it sheds no light on the meaning of the word
    “delay.” Cf. Bloate, supra, at ___, n. 9 (slip op., at 8, n. 9).
    There is nothing odd in saying that an interval of exclud
    Cite as: 563 U. S. ____ (2011)           5
    Opinion of SCALIA, J.
    able time under §3161(h)(1)(D) arises “as a consequence”
    of a party’s having filed a pretrial motion; if no pretrial
    motion is filed, no delay results.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 09-1498

Citation Numbers: 179 L. Ed. 2d 1080, 131 S. Ct. 2007, 563 U.S. 647, 2011 U.S. LEXIS 4017

Judges: Breyer, Kennedy, Ginsburg, Alito, Sotomayor, Roberts, Scalia, Thomas, Kagan

Filed Date: 5/26/2011

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024

Authorities (19)

Howeisen v. Chapman , 195 Ind. 381 ( 1924 )

United States v. Nobles , 95 S. Ct. 2160 ( 1975 )

United States v. Fifty-Three (53) Eclectus Parrots, and ... , 685 F.2d 1131 ( 1982 )

United States v. John Anthony Robinson , 887 F.2d 651 ( 1989 )

United States v. Gregory Donnell Stafford, United States of ... , 697 F.2d 1368 ( 1983 )

United States v. Elliott Van Brandy, Gardie Shine, and ... , 726 F.2d 548 ( 1984 )

United States v. Donald Edward Miles , 290 F.3d 1341 ( 2002 )

IBP, Inc. v. Alvarez , 126 S. Ct. 514 ( 2005 )

United States v. Pete , 525 F.3d 844 ( 2008 )

United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co. , 26 S. Ct. 282 ( 1906 )

United States v. Vogl , 374 F.3d 976 ( 2004 )

united-states-v-kathleen-novak-charles-kierecki-richard-ware-debra , 715 F.2d 810 ( 1983 )

United States v. Green , 508 F.3d 195 ( 2007 )

United States v. William Montoya , 827 F.2d 143 ( 1987 )

United States v. John Malcolm Cobb, IV , 697 F.2d 38 ( 1982 )

united-states-v-philippe-dorlouis-aka-terrance-united-states-of , 107 F.3d 248 ( 1997 )

United States v. Ronald Titlbach , 339 F.3d 692 ( 2003 )

Taylor v. United States , 110 S. Ct. 2143 ( 1990 )

United States v. Hood , 469 F.3d 7 ( 2006 )

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