Speedy
Trial
7215- Penalties for
Failure to Deposit Withheld Taxes in Government Account: Speedy Trial
[78-2
USTC ¶9491]
United States of America
, Plaintiff-Appellee v. Louis Carini, Defendant-Appellant
(CA-2),
U. S. Court of Appeals, 2nd Circuit, Docket No. 77-1167,
8/30/77
, Rev'g and rem'g unreported District Court decision
[Code Secs. 7215 and 7512(b) and 18 U. S. C. §§ 3161-74--result
unchanged by '76 Tax Reform Act]
Crimes: Failure to deposit withholding taxes: Defenses: Speedy trial:
Factors: Statutory violation.--A conviction of having failed to
collect and pay over withheld taxes was reversed and the information was
ordered dismissed with prejudice. The defendant had been denied his
right to a speedy trial. The delay was lengthy--34 months between the
filing of the information and the start of the trial--and it was largely
chargeable to the government. The defendant timely asserted his rights.
Although he was not significantly prejudiced by the delay, the balance
was tipped by the fact that the delay violated the Speedy Trial Act.
Richard
J. Arcara, United States Attorney, Gerald J. Houlihan, Assistant United
States Attorney, Buffalo, N. Y. 14202, for plaintiff-appellee. David G.
Larimer, Beckerman, Davidson, Cook & Fink, 240 Reynolds Arcade
Bldg., 16 Main St., East, Rochester, N. Y. 14614, for
defendant-appellant.
Before
WATERMAN and MESKILL, Circuit Judges and COFFRIN, District Judge. *
WATERMAN,
Circuit Judge:
This
is an appeal from a judgment order of the United States District Court
for the Western District of New York, Burke, J., convicting appellant
Carini, following a jury trial, of having violated 26 U. S. C. §7512(b)
by failing to deposit into a trust account, taxes which had been
withheld from the paychecks of employees of Carini Construction Company,
a corporation of which Carini is president. There are only two issues
raised on appeal here. The first is whether the government's failure to
comply with the requirements of the recently enacted Speedy Trial Act,
18
U. S.
C. §§ 3161-74, requires or justifies dismissal of the information. If
dismissal is not so required or justified under the Speedy Trial Act, we
reach the second issue and must decide whether the 34-month delay
between the filing of the information and the commencement of trial
violated Carini's Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial. We reach the
constitutional question, and we hold that Carini was deprived of his
Sixth Amendment right to a speedy trial and, as a consequence, the
information against him must be dismissed with prejudice. 1
The
ten-count information which initiated this case was filed on
March 15, 1974
. Carini was arraigned ten days later, on
March 25, 1974
, at which time he pleaded "not guilty" to each of the counts
and was released on his own recognizance. Shortly thereafter, on
May 13, 1974
, the government moved to have a trial date set. About two weeks later,
however, the government advised the district court that plea
negotiations were being conducted with the defendant and that there was
a possibility of an agreement being reached with him. Under the terms of
the contemplated agreement, a guilty plea to misdemeanor tax charges
would eventually be entered by Carini's corporation, but not by Carini
personally. It was expected that the corporation would satisfy all
outstanding tax liabilities and that over a period of time before the
agreement was actually consummated Carini, as his part of the bargain,
would demonstrate his good faith by a scrupulous compliance with the tax
withholding requirements of the Internal Revenue Code. Presumably
because Carini expressed an interest in obtaining the obvious benefits
to him of such an arrangement and presumably because the government
desired to have Carini make the necessary showing of good faith
compliance, the government made no effort to bring the case on for
trial. However, in July of 1975, the federal prosecutors in the Western
District of New York were forced to withdraw their offer, for, at least
as of that time, offers allowing corporations to plead guilty in lieu of
similar pleas by corporate officers were not being approved by the
Justice Department.
Following
the collapse of the contemplated plea bargain, there was little progress
in the case. The district court took its usual summer recess in August
of 1975 and therefore no progress was made during that month. The only
activity in the next month and a half (i. e., from
September 1, 1975
through
October 14, 1975
) was the government's motion, made on
September 18, 1975
, seeking to have a trial date set. During the next month (i. e., from
October 14, 1975
until
November 10, 1975
) no progress was made because on October 14 and on October 28 the
defense had been granted adjournments so that it might prepare and
present a motion to dismiss based upon an alleged deprivation of
Carini's right to a speedy trial. The hearing on the defendant's motion
to dismiss the information was further postponed for another one-half
month (i. e., from
November 10, 1975
until
November 24, 1975
) because Judge Burke was hospitalized.
After
Carini's motion to dismiss was submitted on
November 24, 1975
, the matter was taken under advisement and remained sub judice
from
November 24, 1975
until
March 3, 1976
, a period of slightly over three months. On
March 3, 1976
, Carini's motion to dismiss the information was denied in an
unenlightening decision which reads as follows:
By
motion filed
October 28, 1975
the defendant moved to dismiss the indictment [sic]. On
November 7, 1975
the government filed its response.
The
motion is in all respects denied.
SO
ORDERED.
For
the next two months (i. e., from March 3, 1976 until May 10, 1976) there
was no progress in the case. Finally, on May 10, 1976, the government
again moved to have a trial date set. At this time the defendant's
attorney moved to withdraw from the case, and, shortly thereafter, on
May 27, 1976, a new attorney was appointed to represent Carini. When and
whether the new attorney was prepared to go to trial is not evident from
the record now before us. In any event, the five-month period from June
13, 1976 until November 8, 1976 saw no progress because of Judge Burke's
further hospitalizations and convalescences and the court's usual
one-month summer recess. The government, however, concerned that it
might not meet the Speedy Trial Act December 27, 1976 deadline for trial
2 of this
case, moved on October 4, 1976 to have a new judge assigned to hear this
and 43 other cases which were then awaiting trial in the Western
District of New York. Despite the government's concern and its attempt
to instigate some progress, there is no indication that any progress was
made from November 8, 1976 until December 13, 1976. On December 13,
inasmuch as Judge Burke had resumed his judicial activities, the
government, apparently having abandoned its efforts to have a new judge
assigned to hear the case, again moved to have a trial date set. Because
there were serious scheduling problems resulting from the recent death
of Judge Henderson and various disqualifications of Judge Elfvin, who
had been the United States Attorney in the district when many of the
pending prosecutions had been instituted, the earliest the case could be
heard was January 27, 1977. This is when trial did, in fact, commence.
[Preliminary
Observations]
I.
It is clear, and indeed the government concedes, that, inasmuch as trial
in this case did not commence by
December 27, 1976
(i. e., 180 days from
July 1, 1976
) there was a violation of the Speedy Trial Act. See 18 U.S.C.
§§ 3161(g), 3163(b)(2). Yet, as the government correctly points out,
the mandatory dismissal of the information or indictment which
eventually will be required, upon appropriate motion by the defendant,
as a sanction for a failure to comply with the provisions of the Act, see
18 U.S.C. §3162(a)(2), is not yet effective, 18 U.S.C. §3163(c). In
the presence of a conceded violation of the Act it might be argued that
during the transition period, although dismissal of the information
might not as yet be mandated, the imposition of such a drastic sanction
lies within the sound exercise of our discretion. The trouble with this
plausible approach is that it seems to conflict with an apparent
congressional understanding that "no sanction [for violation of the
Act itself] is in effect during the phase-in period." H. R. Rep.
No. 1508, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 32 (1974); see H. R. Rep. No. 1508,
93d Cong., 2d Sess. 9, 31 (1974). We thus conclude that the violation of
the Speedy Trial Act is not, in and of itself, a sufficient reason for
dismissing the information here. This is not to say, however, that there
are not other reasons justifying the dismissal of the
information. Indeed there are, for the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U. S. C. §3173,
expressly establishes rights in addition to, and not in lieu of, those
conferred by the Sixth Amendment upon defendants in criminal cases.
Moreover, we believe that under the circumstances here the violation of
the Speedy Trial Act is a proper factor to be weighed in our analysis of
whether Carini was denied his constitutional right to a speedy trial,
the issue to which we now turn.
[Factors
Applied]
II.
"[T]he right to speedy trial is a more vague concept than other
procedural rights. It is, for example, impossible to determine with
precision when the right has been denied." Barker v. Wingo,
407
U. S.
514, 521 (1972). As we have frequently stated, see United States v.
Vispi [77-1 USTC §9420], 545 F. 2d 328, 333 (2d Cir. 1976); United
States v. Roberts, 515 F. 2d 642, 645 (2d Cir. 1975); United
States v. Fasanaro, 471 F. 2d 717 (2d Cir. 1973) (per curiam); United
States v. Saglimbene, 471 F. 2d 16, 17 (2d Cir. 1972), cert.
denied, 411 U. S. 966 (1973), the usual factors to be evaluated in
determining whether the defendant has been denied his Sixth Amendment
right to a speedy trial are clearly delineated in Barker v. Wingo,
supra. Under Barker, the four factors which should generally
be considered are: (1) the length of the delay; (2) the reason for the
delay; (3) whether and when the defendant has asserted his right to a
speedy trial; and (4) the prejudice resulting to the defendant from the
delay. Barker v. Wingo, supra at 530. These four factors are the
primary components of a "balancing test [which] necessarily compels
courts to approach speedy trial cases on an ad hoc basis."
Id.
at 530. No one "of the four factors [is, however,] either a
necessary or sufficient condition to the finding of a deprivation of the
right of speedy trial."
Id.
at 533;
United States
v. Vispi, supra at 333. Rather, and perhaps most critical for
purposes of the case presently before us, the four factors "must be
considered together with such other circumstances as may be
relevant." Barker v. Wingo, supra at 533 (emphasis supplied; accord,
United States
v. Vispi, supra at 333. We believe that the case before us now
presents such an additional relevant circumstance, namely, the
acknowledged violation of the Speedy Trial Act, which, in view of the
closeness of the case here, we consider to be pivotal.
The
length of the delay here--34 months--is, indeed, disturbing and,
although, as emphasized in Barker v. Wingo, supra at 521, 530-31
and demonstrated in our own cases, see United States v. Vispi, supra;
United States v. Roberts, supra, length alone is not dispositive,
the length of the delay here does unquestionably "trigger", see
Barker v. Wingo, supra at 530, our review of the three other factors
enumerated in Barker and our consideration of "such other
circumstances as may be relevant."
Id.
at 533.
Next
to be considered are the reasons for the delay in bringing Carini to
trial. We think, on balance, that the great bulk of the 34-month delay
here must be assessed against the government. For instance, the initial
16-month delay (i. e., from March of 1974 through July of 1975) must be
charged directly to the government. During this period plea negotiations
were being conducted and the defendant was being given an opportunity to
demonstrate his good faith, and, as we have recently explained in United
States v. Roberts, supra at 647, when the prosecution enters into
negotiations looking toward a plea bargain "in which a defendant's
faithful performance of his part of the agreement is made a condition
precedent to the prosecution's consent, at the time of pleading, to a
reduction in [, or an elimination of,] the charges [, we] reject any
notion that a defendant in effect waives his right to a speedy trial by
consenting to such an agreement. Thus, if the government wishes to
bargain for this condition, it may but it should do so mindful of the
risks which it thereby assumes of dismissed indictments for
unconstitutional delay." 3 Moreover, it
also seems clear to us that the defendant here, though certainly not by
an evil intent on the part of the prosecutors, was misled and lulled
into not pressing for trial during this 16-month period because of his
justifiable belief that the prosecution had the authority to offer him
the attractive plea bargain it was then proposing. Yet, after the offer
had been pending for more than a year, the local prosecutor was forced
to withdraw it because he had learned that under the Justice Department
ground rules he lacked the authority to make such an offer. 4
It
is clear, furthermore, and the government concedes, that the so-called
"institutional" delays here--the lengthy delays occasioned by
Judge Burke's illnesses, the court's summer recesses, and the otherwise
unexplained inaction of the District Court, caused, no doubt, by an
overloaded docket, Judge Elfvin's disqualifications and the vacancy on
the District Court bench created by Judge Henderson's death--are
properly chargeable against the government under prevailing case law,
see e.g., Barker v. Wingo, supra at 531; United States v.
Lane, No. 77-1082, slip op. at 5198 (2d Cir. August 8, 1977); United
States v. Vispi, supra at 333-34; United States v. Roberts, supra
at 646; United States v. West, 504 F. 2d 253, 256 (D. C. 1974),
"since the ultimate responsibility for such circumstances must rest
with the government rather than with the defendant." Barker v.
Wingo, supra at 531. While it is equally true that
"institutional" delays are not counted as heavily against the
government as are delays caused or encouraged by the prosecution for
tactical reasons, e.g., id. at 531; United States v. Lane,
supra at 5198; United States v. Roberts, supra at 646, it
remains that delays of this sort, which seem to comprise virtually all
of the 18 months (i. e., from August of 1975 through January of 1977) of
delay following the collapse of the plea bargaining discussions, are
chargeable against the government. Thus, most of the nearly three-year
delay in bringing Carini to trial must technically be assessed against
the government. Finally, we stress that no part of the delay here is
attributable to the complexity of the charges against Carini. To the
contrary, the length of the delay here is exacerbated by the fact that
the case against Carini was, as was the case against the defendant in
United States
v. Vispi, supra at 333, "simple and uncomplicated."
See Barker v. Wingo, supra at 531. The government's case was
principally documentary in character and was more or less prepared by
the time the information against Carini was filed. When it was
eventually tried the case took only three days to try, there was only
one defendant and there were only a few live witnesses.
We
do not think it significant that Carini waited approximately 20 months
before claiming that he had been denied his constitutional right to a
speedy trial. During most of this time he was operating under the
impression, eventually proved to be an erroneous one, that the
prosecutor in the Western District of New York had the authority to
offer him the attractive plea bargain proposal which had originally been
made and pursuant to which Carini was attempting to demonstrate good
faith compliance with tax withholding requirements. Moreover, as already
discussed, we stated quite clearly in
United States
v. Roberts, supra at 647, that a defendant does not waive his
constitutional right to a speedy trial merely by attempting to make such
a sustained demonstration of good faith compliance. We also pointed out
in Roberts that the time that accrues during this period is to be
weighed against the prosecution. 5 Within a
very short time after it had become apparent here that there was no
longer (if there ever were) 6 any
opportunity for Carini to avail himself of the attractive arrangement
which had been proposed, Carini seasonably began to assert that he had
been denied his right to a speedy trial. We find it to be of especial
importance that, even after Carini had clearly warned the government
that he was not waiving his Sixth Amendment rights, there was an
additional 14-month delay, a substantial portion of which was
attributable to the government. This additional delay was, it should
also be noted, substantially more serious than the five months it took
to bring Vispi to trial after he had moved to dismiss the information
against him on the ground that he had been denied his right to a speedy
trial. See
United States
v. Vispi, supra at 334. While Carini's position is certainly
weakened by the fact that Carini, unlike Vispi, see id., had not
previously made a motion for an immediate trial, once Carini had clearly
raised the issue of his right to a speedy trial the government surely
had fair warning that it would be held strictly accountable for the
passage of time after the motion to dismiss for want of a speedy
trial had been made. Finally, as to the 20 months that elapsed before
the motion to dismiss was brought, we reiterate that it ill-behooves the
government to argue here that the defendant should be considered as
having sat on his right to speedy trial during the 16-month plea
bargaining period, for if the government had not made a proposal which
could never have been consummated, Carini would likely not have been
interested and might have asserted his rights at a much earlier date.
Whether,
and how, Carini was prejudiced by the delay is not so easily determined.
The government makes a persuasive argument here that Carini suffered
little, if any, actual prejudice. It points out that, inasmuch as his
own character witnesses were completely unaware until a few days before
trial that Carini had been charged with criminal conduct, Carini's
reputation in the community was apparently not damaged by the pending
criminal charges. At no point was Carini incarcerated. Carini's
business, it is true, encountered financial difficulties while the
charges against him were pending, but, as the government asserts, these
problems, in contrast to the pecuniary harm to the defendant-attorney in
United States v. Vispi, supra at 334-35, seem more likely to be
traceable to the existing public knowledge of the underlying financial
instability of Carini's business than to any public awareness of the
criminal charges then pending against him.
Carini
argues, however, that there were specific ways in which he was
prejudiced. Although he does not claim that the significant delay was
intentionally nurtured by the government to allow it to gain a tactial
advantage over him, Carini does argue that his sole defense at trial,
like Vispi's "lack of willfulness" defense in
United States
v. Vispi, supra at 335, was harmed by the inordinate delay.
Specifically, Carini, relying upon 26
U. S.
C. §7215(b)(2), defended at trial on the ground that his failure to
make the required bank deposits was "due to circumstances beyond
his control." Those circumstances were that numerous judgments
(seventeen in addition to the IRS action against him), attachments and
restraining orders destroyed any actual control he might have had over
the bank accounts from which he would have paid the withholding taxes he
owed the government. Thus, he argues, he was incapable of making the
special bank deposits the IRS was requiring of him. The long passage of
time between the time of these transactions and the time of trial had,
however, made it considerably more difficult for Carini to recall all
the details of the myriad legal proceedings which had been instituted
against him at about the time the IRS was actively pursuing him.
Carini's argument, while not entirely unpersuasive, is fairly weak,
because here, unlike the situation in Vispi, the information was
filed a short time after the crimes were committed while the facts were
still fresh in Carini's mind and Carini seemingly would have begun at
that point to develop his defense by committing to writing the various
"circumstances" which he claims made it impossible for him to
pay over to the government the taxes he had withheld from his employees.
In
further support of his claim that he was harmed by the long delay,
Carini urges, and we can safely accept the statement, that he suffered
the "anxiety [arising from] a public accusation of criminal
conduct," United States v. Vispi, supra at 335, which
constitutes, as we have stated, "substantial harm of [a] type which
the Sixth Amendment was intended to remedy."
Id.
at 334.
While
we think, on the whole, that the showing of prejudice here is not
particularly strong, we believe that the other three factors enumerated
in Barker lean generally against the government. The delay was a
patently long one and it was largely chargeable to the government. Even
if we were to disregard the time during which a mutually agreeable
termination of the case remained a possibility, 7 much of the
delay occurred after the defendant had forthrightly begun to
assert his right to a speedy trial. Yet, despite the fact that these
three factors favor appellant, we would hesitate without an additional
factor to conclude only on the basis of the factors set forth in Barker
that Carini was denied his constitutional right to a speedy trial. What
tips the scales in appellant's favor is the conceded violation of the
Speedy Trial Act resulting from the failure to have Carini's trial
commence by December 27, 1976. 8 Although the
deadline was exceeded by only thirty-one days, the resulting violation
of the Act, which might otherwise seem inconsequential, assumes much
greater importance when those thirty-one days are viewed against the
pre-existing background of protracted delay directly or constructively
chargeable to the government. The violation of the Act was clearly
foreseen, yet, despite the significant prior delays and Carini's timely
invocation of his Sixth Amendment rights, the violation was permitted to
occur.
The
judgment of conviction is reversed and the case is remanded with
instructions to dismiss the information with prejudice.
*
Hon. Albert W. Coffrin of the District of Vermont, sitting by
designation.
1
The government's brief, but not the appellant's, also raises the issue
of whether the government failed to satisfy the standards of the Western
District of New York's Plan for the Prompt Disposition of Criminal
Cases, specifically Rule 5(a) of that plan. Inasmuch as appellant has
not advanced any argument that the government failed to comply with the
plan the requirements of which must be followed strictly, see United
States v. McDonough, 504 F. 2d 67 (2d Cir. 1974) (per curiam); United
States v. Flores, 501 F. 2d 1356 (2d Cir. 1974) (per curiam), we do
not address the issue.
2
December 27, 1976
was the 180th day, see 18
U. S.
C. §3161(g), after
July 1, 1976
, the date on which the Speedy Trial Act time limitations of 18
U. S.
C. §3161(c) began to run "as to all offenses charged in
information . . . filed prior to [July 1, 1976]," 18
U. S.
C. §3163(b)(2).
3
The government correctly points out that "Title 18," U. S. C.
§3161(h)(2) of the Speedy Trial Act recognizes that delay occasioned by
thd defendant attempting to demonstrate good conduct is a permissible
excludable period." Carini's attempted demonstration of good
conduct, occurred, however, before July 1, 1976, the date on which the
Speedy Trial Act time limitation of 180 days, see 18 U. S. C. §3361(g),
3163(b)(2), became applicable to his case. Thus, our conclusion (and the
government's concession) that there has been a violation of the Speedy
Trial Act is unaffected by 18
U. S.
C. §3161(h)(2). The government does not argue to the contrary but
rather appears to suggest that the statutory exclusion should influence
our determination of whether certain segments of the pre-Act
27-month period of delay (i. e., from March of 1974 to July of 1976)
should be assessed against the government when we decide whether
Carini's constitutional right to a speedy trial was violated. While the
government's argument is somewhat appealing, it is subject to two
objections. First, insofar as
United States
v. Roberts, supra is inconsistent with 18
U. S.
C. §3161(h)(2), we take Roberts as controlling on the
constitutional question. Second, even if the statutory exclusion did
control and if the technical requirements for obtaining the exclusion
were satisfied by the government, the plea proposal was impermissible
under Justice Department requirements, thereby rendering the government
directly responsible for and chargeable with the entire period of delay
occasioned by Carini's attempted demonstration of good faith compliance.
See note 4 infra.
4
It is unclear whether the local prosecutors lacked the authority to make
the offer ab initio or whether the offer, although inconsistent
with Justice Department policy when originally proposed in the spring of
1974, became impermissible only upon a subsequent change in Justice
Department policy. For present purposes, we discern no distinction
between the two situations. In either case the defendant, in attempting
to demonstrate good faith compliance, was acting in reliance upon a plea
bargain offer which could never be consummated.
5
See note 3 supra.
6
See note 4 supra.
7
See note 3 supra.
8
This factor, among others, renders the situation here readily
distinguishable from that before us in another recent case arising out
of the Western District of New York, United States v. Lane, No.
77-1082 (2d Cir.
August 8, 1977
). There, we rejected a defendant's claim that he had been deprived of
his constitutional right to a speedy trial. The most significant
distinction between Lane and the case now before us is that,
inasmuch as Lane's trial had commenced on
December 21, 1976
, we found there that he had not been denied any of his rights under the
Speedy Trial Act. Lane is also distinguishable in other important
ways. For instance, none of the delay there was attributable, as was a
significant portion of the delay here, to the defendant's attempt to
comply with an unfulfillable plea bargain offer extended by the
prosecution. Lane also differs from the case before us in that,
although it is true that Carini was responsible for some of the delay in
bringing him to trial, Lane "and his counsel were responsible for much
of [the delay there] with their repeated requests for
continuances." United States v. Lane, No. 77-1082, slip op. at
5198 (2d Cir.
August 8, 1977
) (emphasis supplied).