State of Washington v. Samuel Miller ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                                                                       FILED
    JUNE 4,2015
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    W A State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                           )         No. 32043-0-III
    )
    Respondent,               )
    )
    v.                               )         PUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    SAMUEL MILLER,                                 )
    )
    Appellant.                )
    LA WRENCE-BERREY, J. - A Yakima County District Court dismissed charges
    against Samuel Miller, concluding that Mr. Miller's CrRLJ 3.3 right to a speedy trial was
    violated. The district court found that the State failed to bring Mr. Miller to trial within
    90 days of the issuance of the citation, as required by City o/Seattle v. Bonifacio, 127
    Wn.2d 482,900 P.2d 1105 (1995). The State appealed to Yakima County Superior Court.
    The superior court reversed and remanded the matter on the grounds that Bonifacio was
    superseded by the 2003 revisions to CrRLJ 3.3. We granted discretionary review, and we
    now affirm the superior court.
    No. 32043-0-III
    State v. Miller
    FACTS
    On September 29,2012, a Yakima County Sheriffs Officer issued Samuel Miller
    a uniform criminal citation for driving with a suspended license and without an ignition
    interlock device. The officer checked the box for a mandatory court appearance;
    however, he did not enter an appearance date on the citation. The back of the citation
    instructed that if the appearance date box was blank, the court would give written
    notification of when to appear. And, if notice was not received within 15 days, the
    citation instructed the person to call the court immediately. Mr. Miller called the court to
    find out the date and was told that there was no record.
    On December 5, the State filed a complaint alleging the same offenses. Mr. Miller
    appeared at his first court appearance on January 3,2013. The district court entered an
    order setting conditions of release and released Mr. Miller on his own recognizance.
    On January 17, at Mr. Miller's arraignment, Mr. Miller objected pursuant to
    CrRLJ 2.1, CrRLJ 3.3, and Bonifacio. On February 8, he contended that the State
    violated CrRLJ 2.1 by waiting over three months fromthe date of the citation to file a
    complaint and that the delay caused the issuance of the citation to initiate the criminal
    proceedings under Bonifacio. Further, he contended that the criminal proceedings
    triggered the time-for-trial clock under CrRLJ 3.3 and, because he was not brought to trial
    2
    No. 32043-0-111
    State v. Miller
    within 90 days, the charges against him must be dismissed. The State argued that
    Bonifacio was no longer good law, considering the 2003 amendments to the time-for-trial
    rules in CrRLJ 3.3. The State maintained that Mr. Miller's time-for-trial clock began at
    the time of his arraignment on January 17 and that his speedy trial right under CrRLJ 3.3
    was not violated.
    The district court concluded that Bonifacio controlled because it was never
    overruled. The court also concluded that the officer's failure to file the citation within
    two days violated CrRLJ 2.1 (d), the issuance of the citation initiated criminal proceedings
    and triggered the speedy trial clock, and Mr. Miller's speedy trial date had expired on
    January 17. The district court dismissed the charges with prejudice because of the
    violation of Mr. Miller's right to a speedy trial.
    The State appealed to the superior court. The superior court held that the district
    court erred in dismissing the case. The court generally concluded that the 2003
    amendments to the time-for-trial rules were rewritten since the holding in Bonifacio and
    that no violation occurred based on the amended rules. The superior court remanded the
    case back to district court. Mr. Miller appealed the superior court's ruling, and this court
    granted discretionary review.
    3
    No. 32043-0-III
    State v. Miller
    ANALYSIS
    "We interpret a court rule as though it were enacted by the legislature, giving
    effect to its plain meaning as an expression oflegislative intent." State v. Chhom, 162
    Wn.2d 451,458, 
    173 P.3d 234
    (2007). "Plain meaning is discerned from reading the rule
    as a whole, hannonizing its provisions, and using related rules to help identify the
    legislative intent embodied in the rule." ld.
    Mr. Miller argues that his right to a speedy trial was violated because the State
    failed to bring him to trial within 90 days of the filing of the criminal proceedings against
    him. Relying on Bonifacio, Mr. Miller contends that issuance of a citation begins the
    criminal process. Accordingly, a defendant's time-for-trial calculation begins either once
    the citation is filed or 48 hours after it is issued if the State fails to follow the two-day
    time limit for filing as prescribed by CrRLJ 2.1 (d)(2). 
    Bonifacio, 127 Wash. 2d at 488-89
    . 1
    In response, the State argues that Bonifacio was displaced by the 2003
    amendments to the time-for-trial rules and is no longer good law. The question before
    this court is whether the 2003 time-for-trial rules supersede the holding in Bonifacio.
    I  Mr. Miller was given the citation on September 29,2012. The officer failed to
    file the citation in 48 hours. Thus, Mr. Miller contends his constructive filing date was
    October 1. Then, he uses CrRLJ 4.1 (a)( 1) to calculate his time-for-trial commencement
    date to be 14 days after filing, or October 14. Based on this commencement date, he
    alleges that his time-for-trial clock expired on January 12.
    4
    No. 32043-0-III
    State v. Miller
    According to CrRLJ 2.1 (a)( 1), all criminal proceedings shall be initiated by a
    complaint, except as otherwise provided by the rule. A citation is deemed a lawful
    complaint for the purpose of initiating criminal prosecution of the charged offense when
    the citation is signed by the citing officer and filed with a court of competent jurisdiction.
    CrRLJ 2.1(b)(5).
    An arresting officer may serve a citation and notice to appear in court to a person
    who is arrested or could have been arrested for a misdemeanor violation.
    CrRLJ 2.1 (b)( 1). The officer makes a determination whether to release a person
    or hold the person in custody after the consideration of the enumerated factors in
    CrRLJ 2.1(b)(2). The citation and notice to appear includes the time and place a person is
    to appear in court. CrRLJ 2.1 (b)(3)(iv). The citation and notice must be filed with the
    court within two days after issuance, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, or holidays.
    CrRLJ 2. 1(d)(2). "A citation and notice not filed within the time limits of this rule may
    be dismissed without prejudice." CrRLJ 2.1(d)(2).
    In 1995, the Washington Supreme Court in Bonifacio, addressed whether the mere
    issuance ofa citation starts the time-for-trial 
    clock. 127 Wash. 2d at 483
    . Seattle police
    officers detained Mr. Bonifacio for an alleged weapons violation and issued a citation
    before release. 
    Id. at 483-84.
    The citation informed Mr. Bonifacio of his promise to
    5
    No. 32043-0-111
    State v. Miller
    appear in court, but the citation was blank in respect to the date and time of the required
    appearance. 
    Id. at 484.
    Afterwards, the officers did not file the citation with the court,
    but instead forwarded it to the city attorney's office for screening and a filing decision.
    
    Id. About four
    months later, the city attorney filed a complaint in municipal court against
    Mr. Bonifacio. 
    Id. The municipal
    court dismissed the complaint on the grounds that
    criminal proceedings were initiated against Mr. Bonifacio when the citation was issued,
    and as a consequence, the time-for-trial rule in CrRLJ 3.3 was violated. 
    Id. On appeal,
    the Supreme Court was persuaded by State v. Dolman, 
    22 Wash. App. 917
    , 
    594 P.2d 450
    (1979) that the issuance of a citation in lieu of arrest was "'in effect
    ... a release of [a] defendant on his personal recognizance,' and as a result, a citation and
    notice to appear [were] process issued by the court named in the citation." 
    Bonifacio, 127 Wash. 2d at 487
    (footnote omitted) (some alteration in original) (quoting Dolman, 22 Wn.
    App. at 921). The Bonifacio court held that the issuance of a citation, regardless of
    whether it is subsequently filed, commences the time-for-trial clock. 
    Id. at 488.
    The
    court also held that CrRLJ 2.1 required filing within 48 hours because "[t]he issuance and
    receipt of a citation is not an insignificant intrusion on one's liberty" and an officer's
    consequences for failing to file could not be ignored. 
    Id. at 488-89.
    Initiating
    proceedings within 48 hours provides fairness and efficiency in addressing criminal
    6
    No. 32043-0-III
    State v. Miller
    citations. ld. at 489. "The significant aspect of our holding is that the time for trial
    computation relates to the date the citation is filed or forty-eight hours after its issuance, if
    it is not filed." ld.
    Since Bonifacio was decided in 1995, the time-for-trial rules in CrRLJ 3.3 and
    CrRLJ 4.1 were revised. In the years leading up to 2002, a number of issues surrounding
    the time-for-trial rules had surfaced. WASH. COURTS TIME-FOR-TRIAL TASK FORCE,
    FINAL REpORT, § II.A, at 10. (Oct. 2002) (FINAL REpORT) (on file with Admin. Office of
    Courts, available at http://www.courts.wa.gov/programs_orgs/pos_tft/index.cfm?
    fa=pos_tft.reportHome (last visited May 19,2015). Questions arose regarding the
    appropriate remedy for a violation, the length of the deadlines, and appellate court
    interpretation of the rules. FINAL REpORT § II(A) at 10. In response, the Washington
    Supreme Court created the Time-For-Trial Task Force to conduct a comprehensive
    review of the time-for-trial rules and make recommendations for review. FINAL REpORT,
    § II(A) at 10. The Task Force recommended revisions that included simplifYing and
    clarifYing the rule, stating more simply and specifically the beginning and ending points
    for various time periods, and eliminating the need for extensive judicial interpretation.
    FINAL REpORT, § I(B) at 5-6.
    7
    No. 32043-0-III
    State v. Miller
    One concern addressed by the Task Force was that the time-for-trial standards
    were moving away from the express language of the rules and were more directed by
    judicial opinions. FINAL REpORT, § I(B) at 6. To limit the expansion of the rule by
    judicial interpretation, the Task Force added CrRLJ 3.3(a)(4), which required
    computation of time for trial in accordance with the rule and prohibited dismissal if a trial
    was timely under the rule but delayed by circumstances outside of the rule. The Task
    Force believed that the revised rule covered the necessary range of time-for-trial issues to
    the extent that additional provisions did not need to be interpreted into the rule. FINAL
    REpORT, § nCB) at 12-13.
    Another significant and related issue addressed by the 2003 amendments was the
    problem created by the Striker2 and GreenwoocP holdings. FINAL REpORT, § n(C)
    at 21-24. Striker/Greenwood dealt with pre-arraignment delay and presented a problem in
    determining a commencement date for the time-for-trial period. The Striker/Greenwood
    rule imposed a constructive arraignment date of 14 days after charges were filed if there
    was any unnecessary delay by the State in bringing the defendant before the court for
    arraignment. 
    Greenwood, 120 Wash. 2d at 614-15
    . Periods that the State acted in due
    2 State   v. Striker, 87 Wn.2d 870,557 P.2d 847 (1976).
    3   State v. Greenwood, 120 Wn.2d 585,845 P.2d 971 (1993).
    8
    No. 32043-0-111
    State v. Miller
    diligence in bringing the defendant to trial were excluded from the time-for-trial
    calculation. 
    Id. at 604-05.
    The Task Force was concerned with the Striker/Greenwood
    vague due diligence standards and the delay caused by the related hearings and thought
    law enforcement would benefit from more precise guidelines. FINAL REpORT, § I(C)(1)
    at 21.
    In addressing the Striker/Greenwood constructive rule, the Task Force recognized
    that "[t]he time for trial should not begin until the actual arraignment. The filing of the
    information or complaint should not begin the running of the rule." FINAL REpORT,
    App. C at 2. The revision of CrRLJ 3.3 included a new provision that set the
    commencement date as the date of arraignment as determined in CrRLJ 4.1. FINAL
    REpORT, § III(D) at 47. In CrRLJ 4.1 (a)(2), the Task Force added the provision that no
    delay in bringing an out-of-custody defendant before the court shall affect the allowable
    time for arraignment. FINAL REpORT, § II( C)( 1) at 23. The Task Force also
    recommended incorporating the due diligence standards into CrRLJ 2.2, the rule on
    issuing warrant of arrest requirements and recommended relying on the remedy in that
    rule to address violations of due diligence. FINAL REpORT, § II(C)(I) at 21-24. "The
    proposal still requires the State to act with due-diligence, but does so without exacting the
    social sacrifice inherent in dismissals with prejudice." FINAL REpORT, § 1I(C)( 1) at 24.
    9
    No. 32043-0-II1
    State v. Miller
    The new rules as proposed by the Task Force for CrRLJ 3.3 were adopted in 2003.
    The underlying time-for-trial periods remained unchanged. Generally speaking, a
    defendant must be brought to trial within 60 days of the commencement date if the
    defendant is detained in jail or within 90 days of the commencement date if the defendant
    is not detained in jail. CrRLJ 3.3(b)(I), (2).
    A defendant's initial commencement date is the date of arraignment as determined
    under CrRLJ 4.1. CrRLJ 3.3(c)(l). The arraignment date depends on the status of the
    defendant. CrRLJ 4.1 (a). For a defendant detained in jail or subject to conditions of
    release imposed in connection with the charges at hand, the defendant shall be arraigned
    no later than 14 days after the date of the complaint or citation and notice is filed in court.
    CrRLJ 4.1(a)(I). For a defendant not detained in jail or subject to conditions of release,
    the defendant shall be arraigned not later than 14 days after the appearance
    that next follows the filing of the complaint or citation and notice. CrRLJ 4: 1(a)(2).
    "Appearance" means the defendant's physical presence in the trial court.
    CrRLJ 3.3(a)(3)(iii).4 "Any delay in bringing the defendant before the court shall
    4 The complete definition of "appearance" is the "defendant's physical presence in
    the trial court. Such presence constitutes appearance only if (A) the prosecutor was
    notified of the presence and (B) the presence is contemporaneously placed on the record
    under the cause number of the pending charge." CrRLJ 3.3(a)(3)(iii). There is no
    question here that Mr. Miller's physical presence in the courtroom on January 3 was an
    10
    No. 32043-0-III
    State v. Miller
    not affect the allowable time for arraignment, regardless of the reason for the delay."
    CrRLJ 4.1 (a)(2).
    CrRLJ 3.3(a)( 4) prohibits dismissal of a defendant's charges under the rule if the
    time for trial is delayed for reasons not addressed in CrRLJ 3.3 or CrRLJ 4.1. "The
    allowable time for trial shall be computed in accordance with this rule. If a trial is timely
    under the language of this rule, but was delayed by circumstances not addressed in this
    rule or CrRLJ 4.1, the pending charges shall not be dismissed unless the defendant's
    constitutional right to a speedy trial was violated." CrRLJ 3.3(a)(4).
    Here, based on the Task Force report and the subsequent revisions to CrRLJ 3.3
    and CrRLJ 4.1, we conclude that the 2003 amendments to the time-for-trial rule
    supersede the holding in Bonifacio. Bonifacio created a judicial interpretation of the
    time-for-trial rule prior to the 2003 enactment of the current version ofCrRLJ 3.3. The
    2003 amendments were created to do away with such interpretation. The current version
    ofCrRLJ 3.3 clearly states that the allowable time for trial "shall be computed in
    accordance with this rule." CrRLJ 3.3(a)(4).
    Mr. Miller's initial commencement date is tied to the date of his arraignment as
    determined by CrRLJ 4.1. Mr. Miller's arraignment date is calculated from his first
    appearance.
    11
    No. 32043-0-II1
    State v. Miller
    appearance in court under CrRLJ 4.1 (a)(2) because Mr. Miller was not in jail or subject to
    conditions ofrelease. 5 CrRLJ 4.1 (a)(2) provides that Mr. Miller's arraignment date shall
    be not later than 14 days after his appearance following filing of the complaint or citation
    and notice. Any delay in bringing Mr. Miller to court, such as an untimely filing, does not
    affect the allowable time for Mr. Miller's arraignment. CrRLJ 4.1 (a)(2). Mr. Miller's
    appearance occurred on January 3 and his January 17 arraignment date was timely within
    the rule. He had 90 days from his January 17 arraignment to be brought to trial.
    CrRLJ 3.3(b)(2)(i). His time for trial, therefore, had not expired at the time of the district
    court's dismissal.
    Bonifacio's judicial interpretation is no longer applicable after the revisions to the
    time-for-trial rules in CrRLJ 3.3 and CrRLJ 4.1. The rules were revised to address the
    judicial expansion of the right-to-trial rule. The revised rules provide the exclusive
    guidelines for determining the commencement date for a defendant's time-for-trial clock.
    According to these rules, Mr. Miller's CrRLJ 3.3 right to a speedy trial was not violated.
    5 Mr. Miller applies CrRLJ 4.1(a)(l) to calculate his arraignment date. However,
    CrRLJ 4.1 (a)(l) does not apply because Mr. Miller was not detained in jail or subject to
    conditions of release imposed in connection with the charges. While Bonifacio
    considered the issuance of a citation ,,' a release of [a] defendant on his personal
    recognizance,'" this does not mean that the citation imposes conditions of release or that
    CrRLJ 4.1 (a)(l) applies to Mr. Miller. 
    Bonifacio, 127 Wash. 2d at 487
    (alteration in
    original) (quoting 
    Dolman, 22 Wash. App. at 921
    ).
    12
    No. 32043-0-II1
    State v. Miller
    We affinn the superior court's decision to remand the matter to district court and reinstate
    the charges against Mr. Miller.
    Lawrence-Berrey, 1.
    WE CONCUR:
    Feanng, J.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 32043-0

Filed Date: 6/4/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/4/2015