STATE OF MISSOURI, )
)
Appellant, )
)
vs. ) No. SD33783
) Filed: March 30, 2016
RAYAN M. ALQABBAA, )
)
Respondent. )
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF GREENE COUNTY
Honorable Mark A. Powell, Associate Circuit Judge
REVERSED AND REMANDED
This is an appeal by the State of Missouri (“the State”) of an Order 1 entered by the trial
court on January 28, 2015, in Case No. 1431-CR04607 (Case Two), in which the charges filed
against Rayan M. Alqabbaa (“Alqabbaa”) were dismissed based on a previous judgment entered
by a separate trial court on August 19, 2014, in Case No. 1331-CR02478-01 (Case One). The
State, in one point on appeal, asserts the trial court in Case Two erred in relying on the judgment
in Case One because the trial court in Case One was without authority to dismiss the charges
against Alqabbaa with prejudice. Finding merit to the State’s point, we reverse and remand for
further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
1
Alqabbaa argues that because this Order was not a final judgment and was a dismissal “without prejudice,” this
Court cannot hear the State’s current appeal. However, as the State correctly points out, in a case such as this where
“the basis of the dismissal without prejudice places a substantial cloud on a party’s right to further litigate an issue
or claim[,]” State v. Smothers, 297 S.W.3d 626, 631 (Mo.App. W.D. 2009), the dismissal order is appealable
despite its explicit designation as having been entered “without prejudice.”
Factual and Procedural History
This matter arises out of allegations that during the evening of May 31, 2013, through the
early morning hours of June 1, 2013, Alqabbaa and another man abducted a young woman from
a local nightclub, transported her to an apartment, and sexually assaulted her.
The docket sheet reveals that on June 1, 2013, in Case One, the State charged Alqabbaa
with forcible sodomy (Count I), deviate sexual assault (Count II), and kidnapping (Count III).
The docket sheet also indicates the trial court in Case One found no probable cause to support
Count I, and it was later dismissed. Counts II and III were bound over for arraignment and trial.
On December 16, 2013, Alqabbaa filed a demand for speedy trial, but withdrew that
demand on January 15, 2014. The case was set for a jury trial on April 7, 2014, but Alqabbaa
filed a waiver of right to a jury trial on March 17, 2014. A bench trial was then set for June 19,
2014, but was continued at Alqabbaa’s request and ultimately reset for August 19, 2014.
On the morning of August 19, 2014, prior to the start of Alqabbaa’s bench trial in Case
One, the prosecutor entered an oral nolle prosequi. 2 Specifically, the prosecutor announced,
“Judge, I am going to be dismissing this at this time.” The trial court then inquired if the State
would be refiling the case and when informed that the State would be refiling, the trial court
stated, “Then it will be dismissed with prejudice to the defendant; it’s violated his constitutional
rights. I’m also going to order that the prosecutor’s office pay for all the expenses of the
defendant in this case, all deposition expenses, and the court costs.” The trial court did not
specify which of Alqabbaa’s constitutional rights had been violated. 3
2
Nolle prosequi is Latin for ‘“not to wish to prosecute”’ and is defined as “[a] legal notice that a lawsuit or
prosecution has been abandoned.” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 1074 (8th ed. 2004).
3
The State did file a notice of appeal in Case One challenging the trial court’s entry of a dismissal with prejudice,
but voluntarily dismissed that appeal on December 8, 2014.
2
Case Two was filed in coordination with the dismissal of Case One. Case Two refiled
the charges of sexual assault (Count I) and kidnapping (Count II). Alqabbaa was arraigned on
those charges.
On November 17, 2014, in Case Two, Alqabbaa filed a “Motion to Dismiss Counts I and
II for Double Jeopardy and Collateral Estoppel,” citing the trial court’s purported dismissal with
prejudice in Case One.
After hearing arguments on the motion to dismiss, the trial court took the motion under
advisement and solicited written suggestions from the parties. On January 28, 2015, the trial
court sustained the motion, in relevant part finding:
In a criminal case, a judgment is final when the trial court enters an order of
dismissal or discharge for the defendant prior to trial which has the effect of
foreclosing any further prosecution of the defendant on a particular charge. State
v. Burns, 994 S.W.2d 941 (Mo. banc 1999). A dismissal with prejudice purports
to do just that. The State certainly believed a final judgment had been entered on
August 19, 2014 based on its Notice of Appeal. This Court is mindful of State v.
Honeycutt, 96 S.W.2d 85 (Mo. banc 2003), but whether the Circuit Court’s ruling
was correct in dismissing the original case with prejudice is not for this Court to
determine. Therefore, because the Circuit Court dismissed the original case with
prejudice, this Court intends to sustain Defendant’s motion to dismiss in 30 days
unless instructed or prohibited otherwise.
(Emphasis in original). On January 29, 2015, and February 24, 2015, the State sought
extraordinary relief through applications for writs requiring the trial court to rescind its judgment
in Case One, and prohibiting the Order of the trial court in Case Two from being entered. Both
of those applications were denied. This appeal followed.
In its sole point relied on, the State asserts the trial court erred in dismissing Case Two
because the trial court improperly relied on the judgment of dismissal with prejudice in Case
One, which was in fact a nullity.
3
Standard of Review
Whether the trial court in Case Two could appropriately rely upon the judgment of the
trial court in Case One as a dismissal with prejudice is a question of law we review de novo.
State v. March, 130 S.W.3d 746, 748 (Mo.App. E.D. 2004).
Analysis
Section 56.087, RSMo Cum.Supp. (2006) is central to the resolution of the issue before
us and states:
1. The prosecuting or circuit attorney has the power, in his or her
discretion, to dismiss a complaint, information, or indictment, or any count or
counts thereof, and in order to exercise that power it is not necessary for the
prosecutor or circuit attorney to obtain the consent of the court. The dismissal
may be made orally by the prosecuting or circuit attorney in open court, or by a
written statement of the dismissal signed by the prosecuting or circuit attorney
and filed with the clerk of court.
2. A dismissal filed by the prosecuting or circuit attorney prior to the time
double jeopardy has attached is without prejudice. A dismissal filed by the
prosecuting or circuit attorney after double jeopardy has attached is with
prejudice, unless the criminal defendant has consented to having the case
dismissed without prejudice.
3. A dismissal without prejudice means that the prosecutor or circuit
attorney has complete discretion to refile the case, as long as it is refiled within
the time specified by the applicable statute of limitations. A dismissal with
prejudice means that the prosecutor or circuit attorney cannot refile the case.
4. For the purposes of this section, double jeopardy attaches in a jury trial
when the jury has been impaneled and sworn. It attaches in a court-tried case
when the court begins to hear evidence.
In State v. Honeycutt, 96 S.W.3d 85, 89 (Mo. banc 2003), our supreme court explained
the rationale for a prosecutor’s authority to dismiss charges without prejudice absent the consent
of the court:
4
[A] key reason for this rule is that the prosecutor may know far more about the
background of the case and the defendant than appears of record before the court,
and even if the record causes a judge to believe that a case should or should not be
dismissed, it should therefore be left to the prosecutor to exercise discretion to
dismiss a case or allow it to continue. Once a prosecutor dismisses a case without
prejudice, a court, thus, has no authority to convert the dismissal to one with
prejudice or to force the prosecutor to trial. . . . [T]his Court expressly affirms
that a trial judge does not have the inherent authority to dismiss a case with
prejudice for failure to prosecute in the absence of a speedy trial violation.[4]
Id. at 89 (internal citation omitted) (emphasis in original).
This Court further explained this principle in State v. Dozler, 455 S.W.3d 471 (Mo.App.
S.D. 2015):
Once a prosecutor enters a nolle prosequi, the trial court is without jurisdiction to
take any further action in the case. Any orders entered after a trial court loses
jurisdiction in a case are nullities. . . . Once a case is voluntarily dismissed . . .
there is no case or matter.
Id. at 473 (internal quotations and citations omitted) (reversing and remanding a dismissal with
prejudice that was antedated by prosecutor’s entry of nolle prosequi).
In Case One, the prosecutor exercised her discretion to dismiss the counts against
Alqabbaa by orally dismissing them in open court. As section 56.087, Honeycutt, and Dozler
indicate, the prosecutor’s entry of nolle prosequi terminated Case One—thereafter, there was no
case or matter properly before the trial court. Purported actions by the trial court as to Case One
after that time were, as a matter of law, nullities.
The trial court in Case Two was mistaken, therefore, in relying on a nullity arising out of
Case One—a purported dismissal with prejudice—as a final judgment with preclusive effect over
charges against Alqabbaa in Case Two. Such reliance was prejudicial and in error.
4
No issues as to a speedy trial violation are presented in this appeal.
5
The Order of the trial court in Case Two is reversed and the case is remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
WILLIAM W. FRANCIS, JR., J. – OPINION AUTHOR
DON E. BURRELL, JR., P.J. – CONCURS
NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, J. – CONCURS
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