MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), FILED
this Memorandum Decision shall not be Nov 04 2016, 8:37 am
regarded as precedent or cited before any CLERK
court except for the purpose of establishing Indiana Supreme Court
Court of Appeals
and Tax Court
the defense of res judicata, collateral
estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Joseph W. Eddingfield Gregory F. Zoeller
Wabash, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
Eric P. Babbs
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Bryan N. Myers, November 4, 2016
Court of Appeals Case No.
Appellant-Defendant, 17A04-1510-CR-1688
v. Appeal from the DeKalb Superior
Court
The Honorable Monte L. Brown,
State of Indiana,
Judge
Appellee-Plaintiff Trial Court Cause Nos.
17D02-1406-FA-16, -17
Crone, Judge.
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Case Summary
[4] Earlier this year, we issued a memorandum decision in Myers v. State, No.
17A04-1510-CR-1688 (Ind. Ct. App. Apr. 26, 2016). In that interlocutory
appeal, Bryan N. Myers challenged the trial court’s denial of his motion for
discharge of his four class A felony drug dealing charges pursuant to Rule 4(C)
of the Indiana Rules of Criminal Procedure. We held that the trial court erred
in summarily denying his motion where both he and the State had requested a
hearing. We reversed and remanded for an evidentiary hearing on Myers’s
motion for discharge. The trial court conducted the hearing and issued an order
with findings of fact and conclusions thereon, again denying Myers’s motion
for discharge. Having retained jurisdiction, we now conduct our review with
the aid of the hearing transcript, exhibits, and amended briefs. Concluding that
the trial court did not err in denying Myers’s motion for discharge, we affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[5] In May 2014, Myers was charged in Wabash County with class D felony
possession of methamphetamine (“Wabash County Cause”). He was released
on bond and was residing at his Pike Street home in Wabash.
[6] On June 4, 2014, the DeKalb County prosecutor charged Myers with four class
A felony drug dealing offenses in two separate two-count causes, 17D02-1406-
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FA-16 (“Cause 16”) and 17D02-1406-FA-17 (“Cause 17”). 1 The following day,
the DeKalb Superior Court made a probable cause finding and directed that
arrest warrants be issued to the DeKalb County sheriff. At 9:00 a.m. on Friday,
June 6, 2014, the arrest warrants were issued under both cause numbers. That
same day, the warrants were faxed to the Wabash County Sheriff’s Department
and stamped received at 1:01 p.m. See Defendant’s Ex. A (arrest warrants on
Causes 16 and 17, identifying Myers and his Wabash address, each including
file stamp indicating date and time of receipt by DeKalb County sheriff and
date of fax receipt by Wabash County sheriff). That same afternoon, with the
DeKalb County warrants in hand, Wabash City Police Officer Kevin Evenson
detained and arrested Myers shortly after Myers left his Wabash home. After
presenting the warrants to Myers, Officer Evenson signed and dated them as
having been served on Myers on June 6, 2014. Id. The date of return of the
arrest warrants was left blank. Id.
[7] Myers was jailed in Wabash County over the weekend. On Monday, June 9,
2014, he appeared in court in Wabash County, where his bond was revoked on
the Wabash County Cause and he was charged with a new class C felony
possession offense. That same day, Auburn City Police Officer Cory
Heffelfinger, a drug interdiction officer, went to the Wabash County Jail hoping
1
In both causes, the State charged Myers with class A felony dealing in methamphetamine and class A
felony dealing in a controlled substance (heroin). As such, we address them together unless otherwise
indicated.
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to interview Myers. Auburn is in DeKalb County. Myers refused the
interview, and Officer Heffelfinger returned to DeKalb County.
[8] Myers remained incarcerated in Wabash County for the ensuing eleven
months. Sometime around May 15, 2015, DeKalb County Prosecutor
ClaraMary Winebrenner learned from conversations with law enforcement
personnel (including Officer Heffelfinger) that “Myers was incarcerated or
arrested on our cases.” State’s Ex. 3 (Winebrenner’s affidavit). On May 19,
2015, Prosecutor Winebrenner filed a motion for an order to transport Myers
from Wabash County to DeKalb County, which the trial court granted on May
20, 2015.
[9] On June 8, 2015, Myers was transported from the Wabash County Jail to
DeKalb County for an initial hearing on Causes 16 and 17. On June 26, 2015,
Myers filed a Rule 4(C) motion for discharge. On July 27, 2015, the State filed
its objection to Myers’s discharge motion, and both parties requested that the
motion be set for hearing. The trial court set dates for pretrial conferences and
for a February 2016 trial.
[10] The trial court did not hold an evidentiary hearing on Myers’s motion for
discharge. On August 7, 2015, the trial court issued an order summarily
denying Myers’s motion. Thereafter, Myers sought and received certification of
the order for interlocutory appeal. The motions panel of this Court granted his
petition for interlocutory appeal. We reversed and remanded, finding that the
trial court should have held a hearing on Myers’s motion for discharge.
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[11] On May 23, 2016, the trial court conducted an evidentiary hearing on Myers’s
motion. Shortly thereafter, the court issued an order with findings of fact and
conclusions thereon, denying Myers’s motion. Having retained jurisdiction, we
now address the merits of Myers’s appeal.
Discussion and Decision
[12] Myers asserts that the trial court erred in denying his motion for discharge
pursuant to Criminal Rule 4(C), which states,
No person shall be held on recognizance or otherwise to answer
a criminal charge for a period in aggregate embracing more than
one year from the date the criminal charge against such
defendant is filed, or from the date of his arrest on such charge,
whichever is later; except where a continuance was had on his
motion, or the delay was caused by his act, or where there was
not sufficient time to try him during such period because of
congestion of the court calendar; provided, however, that in the
last-mentioned circumstance, the prosecuting attorney shall file a
timely motion for continuance as under subdivision (A) of this
rule. Provided further, that a trial court may take note of
congestion or an emergency without the necessity of a motion,
and upon so finding may order a continuance. Any continuance
granted due to a congested calendar or emergency shall be
reduced to an order, which order shall also set the case for trial
within a reasonable time. Any defendant so held shall, on
motion, be discharged.
[13] In reviewing a challenge to a trial court’s ruling on a Criminal Rule 4 motion
for discharge, the standard of review depends upon whether the case involves
application of the law to undisputed facts or the trial court’s issuance of findings
resolving disputed facts. Austin v. State, 997 N.E.2d 1027, 1039-40 (Ind. 2013).
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We review the former cases de novo and the latter cases using a clearly
erroneous standard. Id. In reviewing for clear error, we neither reweigh
evidence nor determine witness credibility. Id. at 1040. Rather, we consider
only the probative evidence and reasonable inferences supporting the judgment
and reverse only on a showing of clear error, which is error that “leaves us with
a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.” Id. (citation
omitted).
[14] The purpose of Criminal Rule 4(C) is to promote early trials, not to discharge
defendants. Fuller v. State, 995 N.E.2d 661, 665 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013), trans.
denied (2014). Subject to the exceptions listed in Rule 4(C), the State has an
affirmative duty to bring the defendant to trial within one year of being charged
or arrested. Wood v. State, 999 N.E.2d 1054, 1060 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013), trans.
denied (2014), cert. denied. The defendant is neither obligated to remind the
court of the State’s duty nor required to take affirmative steps to ensure that he
is brought to trial within the statutory time period. Id. At the same time,
Criminal Rule 4 is not intended to be a mechanism for providing defendants a
technical means to escape prosecution. Austin, 997 N.E.2d at 1037. When a
defendant moves for discharge, he bears the burden of showing that he has not
been timely brought to trial and that he is not responsible for the delay. Wood,
999 N.E.2d at 1060. Where the record is silent concerning the reason for delay,
such delay is not attributable to the defendant. Caldwell v. State, 922 N.E.2d
1286, 1290 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010), trans. denied.
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[15] Here, the trial court’s findings of fact and conclusions thereon include the
following:
FINDINGS OF FACT
….
11. That the Court was not provided with any evidence that the
DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department or the DeKalb County
Prosecutor’s Office was notified by any Wabash County Police
Agency that the Defendant had been arrested either on the
DeKalb County warrants or on a new Wabash County charge.
12. That on June 9, 2014, Officer Cory Heffelfinger an officer
with the Auburn Police Department, a city in DeKalb County,
Indiana, attempted to interview the Defendant at the Wabash
County Jail, but Defendant refused to speak with Officer
Heffelfinger. No evidence was presented to explain how Officer
Heffelfinger knew the Defendant was in the Wabash County Jail.
13. That Officer Heffelfinger did not arrest or otherwise
transport the Defendant to DeKalb County nor did he notify the
DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department of the fact that Bryan
Myers was being held in the Wabash County Jail or his arrest on
new charges in Wabash County or his arrest on the DeKalb
County warrants.
14. That between June 9, 2014, and May 15, 2015, it does not
appear that any action was taken with regard to either the
foregoing DeKalb County cases nor does it appear that any
information was received by the DeKalb County Sheriff’s
Department or the DeKalb County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office
about the Defendant in association with said cases.
15. That on or about May 15, 2015, in a conversation with
DeKalb County Chief Probation Officer, Katherine Cullum, and
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Officer Cory Heffelfinger, the DeKalb County Prosecuting
Attorney learned that the Defendant might be involved in other
drug related activities in the DeKalb County, Indiana, area and
that he may be in the Wabash County Jail.
16. That pursuant to [DeKalb County Prosecutor]
Winebrenner’s Affidavit admitted as State’s exhibit 3, a note
placed in the Defendant’s files memorializing said conversation,
stated that the conversation with Officer Heffelfinger occurred on
May 15, 2015.
17. That in response to the information received by Prosecutor
Winebrenner, she reviewed the Defendant’s files, observed that
the Defendant had not had his initial hearing on the DeKalb
County charges, and on May 19, 2015, filed her Motion for a
Transportation Order in the pending DeKalb County cases.
….
19. That Prosecutor Winebrenner’s Affidavit states that no
formal notice was ever given to the prosecutor that the Defendant
was incarcerated or that he had been arrested on the charges filed
in DeKalb County, rather, said information was generally
learned from conversations with Probation Officer Cullum and
Officer Heffelfinger on or about May 15, 2015.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
….
7. That following the Defendant’s arrest on June 6, 2014,
Wabash City Police Officer Kevin Evenson then partially
completed the Sheriff’s Return at the bottom of the arrest
warrants issued by the Clerk of DeKalb County.
8. That no evidence was presented that Officer Evenson ever
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provided a copy of said returns either to the DeKalb County
Sheriff’s Department, the DeKalb County Prosecuting Attorney,
DeKalb Superior Court II, or the Clerk thereof.
9. That prior to May 15, 2015, Officer Cory Heffelfinger never
informed the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department, the DeKalb
County Prosecuting Attorney, DeKalb Superior Court II, or the
Clerk thereof, of the Defendant’s incarceration in Wabash
County, Indiana.
10. That subsequent to June 6, 2014, the first occasion the
DeKalb County Prosecuting Attorney learned the Defendant
might be in jail in Wabash County, Indiana, was May 15, 2015,
when that information was relayed to her by Officer Cory
Heffelfinger.
11. That after receiving information from Officer Cory
Heffelfinger on May 15, 2015, that the Defendant might be in jail
in Wabash County, Indiana, on May 19, 2015, 4 days later,
Prosecutor Winebrenner filed her Motion For An Order Of
Transportation from Wabash County to DeKalb County for the
purpose of conducting an initial hearing on the pending DeKalb
County charges.
12. That following the Court’s Order of June 5, 2014, where the
Court found probable cause for the arrest of the Defendant in
[Causes 16 and 17], the Court first learned of the Defendant’s
possible whereabouts on May 20, 2016 [sic], when the Court
signed the Order that Defendant be transported from Wabash
County to DeKalb County for initial hearing.
13. That on June 8, 2015, Initial Hearing was held in DeKalb
Superior Court II at which time the Defendant appeared pro se,
which is the first date that DeKalb Superior Court II positively
knew of the whereabouts of the Defendant following its Order of
June 5, 2014.
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14. That between June 5, 2014, and May 15, 2015, Defendant
failed to present any evidence that the DeKalb County
Prosecuting Attorney, the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department,
or the DeKalb Superior Court II knew of the Defendant’s
whereabouts or otherwise had reason to know of the Defendant’s
whereabouts.
15. That the fact the DeKalb County Prosecutor’s Office knew in
June of 2014 that the Defendant was a Wabash county resident
did not put that office or the DeKalb County Sheriff’s
Department on notice of the Defendant’s specific whereabouts,
especially considering the fact that the return of the warrants
faxed to Wabash County on June 6, 2014, were not filed in
DeKalb County until well after May 15, 2015. Based on the
record, neither the DeKalb County Prosecutor’s Office nor the
DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department had actual notice of the
Defendant’s whereabouts until at least May 15, 2015.
16. That during the period of June 5, 2014, through May 15,
2015, the Defendant failed to provide the Prosecuting Attorney
of DeKalb County, the DeKalb County Sheriff’s Department, or
the DeKalb Superior Court II with any written notice of his
whereabouts.
17. That based on the foregoing findings and conclusions, the
Court finds that the clock for Criminal Rule 4 purposes did not
begin to run until May 15, 2015.
Supp. App. at 30-32, 36-39 (citations omitted).
[16] Myers maintains that the Rule 4 clock should have begun to run on June 6,
2014, the date when he was arrested in Wabash County and presented with the
DeKalb County warrants. He relies on Caldwell, 922 N.E.2d at 1287-88, in
which another panel of this Court reversed the denial of the defendant’s motion
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for discharge. There, the defendant had been released on recognizance after his
arrest for operating while intoxicated. Id. at 1288. A few days later, the State
filed a multiple-count information against him, but the clerk of the court did not
send the warrant to the county sheriff for execution. Id. Eighteen months later,
the State requested an initial hearing and summons for Caldwell to appear. Id.
Again, the clerk of the court failed to forward the summons to the sheriff for
service. Id. When the defendant heard that his name was on the docket, he
voluntarily appeared in court and subsequently moved for discharge. Id. We
find Caldwell distinguishable in that there all of the events took place in a single
county. Here, however, two counties were involved, and the record shows a
lack of awareness by the DeKalb County authorities that an arrest had been
made in Wabash County on their warrants.
[17] We find this case to be more factually similar to Feuston v. State, in which we
affirmed the trial court’s denial of the defendant’s motion for discharge. 953
N.E.2d 545, 551 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011). 2 There, the defendant had been arrested
in Jay County on a theft charge. He was released on bond and failed to appear
for his pretrial conference. Five months after his arrest in Jay County, he was
arrested and jailed in Delaware County on a burglary charge. Nearly eighteen
months after his Jay County arrest, he filed a motion for discharge, claiming
that upon his arrival at the Delaware County Jail, a jail employee had read him
2
In Austin, 997 N.E.2d at 1038-39, our supreme court declined to follow Feuston on the issue of the
appropriate standard of review in Criminal Rule 4 cases.
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the warrant from Jay County, which constituted a “hold” based on those
charges, and that because one year had passed since then, he was entitled to
discharge under Rule 4(C). Id. at 546. Emphasizing that the trial court and
prosecutor alone bear the responsibility of bringing a defendant to trial in a
timely manner, we held that Feuston was not entitled to discharge because he
failed to meet his burden of demonstrating that the Jay County trial court and
prosecutor had actual knowledge of his whereabouts during the time that he
was incarcerated in Delaware County. Id. at 553. Even though certain fax
communications indicated that employees from the Jay County Jail were aware
of Feuston’s incarceration in Delaware County, we concluded that “the
knowledge of a police or correctional officer should not be imputed to the trial
court or prosecutor.” Id. at 551.
[18] Myers argues that Feuston is distinguishable because there the defendant had
unclean hands due to his failure to appear for his pretrial conference. Id. at 552.
While this is certainly a factual distinction, it is not dispositive. In both cases,
the prosecutor and the trial court were unaware of the defendant’s incarceration
in the second county. To the extent that Myers equates the prosecutor’s and the
trial court’s lack of awareness of his whereabouts with a silence in the record
that cannot be attributed to him, we disagree.
[19] As the movant, Myers had the burden of demonstrating that he was not brought
to trial within the time limits of Rule 4(C) and therefore was entitled to
discharge. Yet, he failed to call witnesses to controvert Prosecutor
Winebrenner’s averments in her affidavit that she lacked knowledge of his
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whereabouts. 3 For example, he did not call any personnel from Wabash
County to ask why the warrants were not returned to DeKalb County. Nor did
he call Officer Evenson to clarify why the warrants were incomplete,
improperly filled out, and not returned to DeKalb County and to ask whether
he attempted to notify the DeKalb County prosecutor or trial court concerning
his detention and arrest of Myers. Nor did he call Officer Heffelfinger to testify
as to how he became aware of Myers’s incarceration in the Wabash County Jail
when he attempted to interview him and to determine whether the officer was
aware of the DeKalb County warrants or had simply heard about Myers’s
detention and pending revocation of his bond in the original Wabash County
Cause. We simply do not know how Officer Heffelfinger knew to find Myers in
the Wabash County Jail or why he did not attempt to return Myers to DeKalb
County.
[20] What we do know is that the trial court found that the DeKalb County
prosecutor did not become aware that Myers had been arrested on their
warrants until May 15, 2015, and that the court attested to its own lack of
awareness of Myers’s whereabouts between June 2014 and May 2015. In other
3
We acknowledge the very recent decision in Arion v. State, 56 N.E.3d 71, 72 (Ind. Ct. App. 2016), in which
another panel of this Court reversed the trial court’s denial of the defendant’s motion for discharge where the
defendant was incarcerated in Miami County on prior convictions. The Arion court emphasized that the law
enforcement officer’s failure to return a warrant to the Carroll County trial court after serving it on the
incarcerated defendant did not absolve the State of its responsibility to bring the defendant to trial in a timely
manner. Id. Arion is factually distinguishable in that there, “[b]oth the State and the trial court were well
aware of Arion’s whereabouts[.]” Id. at 75. Here, the DeKalb County prosecutor and trial court did not
know Myers’s whereabouts, and we consider Wabash County law enforcement’s failure to return the
warrants to DeKalb County only to the extent that the unreturned warrants have implications concerning the
lack of awareness of Myers’s arrest.
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words, as between Myers, the trial court, and the DeKalb County prosecutor,
Myers was the only one who knew that he had been arrested on the DeKalb
County warrants. To the extent that Myers argues that DeKalb County
authorities should have known his whereabouts based on his address in the city
of Wabash, thus equating knowledge of a person’s residence in a county with
knowledge that the person is housed in that county’s jail, he invites us to
reweigh evidence, which we may not and will not do.
[21] In sum, Myers has failed to provide us with a record that indisputably shows
that the DeKalb County prosecutor and/or the trial court became aware of his
incarceration before May 15, 2015. As such, he has failed to meet his burden of
demonstrating that the trial court clearly erred in denying his motion for
discharge. Accordingly, we affirm.
[22] Affirmed.
Najam, J., and Robb, J., concur.
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