City Of Seattle v. Derek Makasini ( 2021 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    CITY OF SEATTLE,                            )         No. 80745-5-I
    )
    Petitioner,            )         DIVISION ONE
    )
    v.                            )         PUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    DEREK KEVIN MAKASINI,                       )
    )
    Respondent.            )
    )
    HAZELRIGG, J. — On January 31, 2011, Derek Makasini was sentenced in
    Seattle Municipal Court for a gross misdemeanor offense. The court suspended
    a portion of his sentence for a period of five years, placed him on probation and
    ordered him to comply with numerous conditions. More than four years after the
    date of the first alleged violation of the terms of his sentence, and more than three
    years after an alleged new criminal offense, the probation office sought a bench
    warrant ex parte. The bench warrant was granted on October 14, 2015 and served
    on May 6, 2018, over seven years after sentencing. The City claimed that the
    period of supervision was tolled by the issuance of the bench warrant in 2015 and
    defense objected based on the plain language of RCW 35.20.255.
    The municipal court ruled that the warrant issued ex parte tolled the period
    of probation and imposed a jail sanction for the violations. Makasini appealed to
    the superior court, which reversed the municipal court.         The superior court
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    concluded the statute is not ambiguous and only provides for tolling if a probationer
    fails to appear at a hearing. This court accepted discretionary review and we affirm
    the superior court.
    FACTS
    Derek Makasini entered a guilty plea in Seattle Municipal Court to one count
    of physical control of a motor vehicle while under the influence on January 31,
    2011. He was sentenced to 365 days jail, of which 363 days were suspended for
    a period of five years on conditions which included: obtaining a drug and alcohol
    evaluation and completing any recommended treatment, attending a victim impact
    panel, compliance with supervision by the probation department, and not having
    any new criminal law violations. The order also required Makasini to report to the
    probation department within 36 hours of his release from jail.
    On October 12, 2015, the Probation Services Division submitted a request
    for bench warrant based on allegations that Makasini never reported to the
    probation office after release in 2011 and had been charged with misdemeanor
    harassment for an incident on February 10, 2012. The next day, the trial court
    issued a bench warrant for Makasini ex parte. Makasini was arrested on the
    warrant on May 6, 2018. The following day, the City of Seattle (City) filed a notice
    of probation violation alleging Makasini had failed to report to probation and that
    he had committed a new criminal law violation (the February 2012 offense). The
    probation department later reported additional alleged violations including failure
    to complete treatment, failure to attend a victim impact panel, and that Makasini
    had committed other new criminal law violations. Makasini was released from
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    custody. The court set a review hearing that was ultimately continued four times
    before the alleged violations were addressed.
    On December 11, 2018, the City filed an amended notice of probation
    violations which alleged Makasini had failed to report to probation, did not complete
    treatment, had not attended the victim impact panel, and committed another new
    criminal law violation in addition to the February 2012 offense. A hearing was held
    January 29, 2019 to address concerns raised by Makasini that he framed as
    jurisdictional.1 The municipal court ruled that RCW 35.20.255 authorized tolling
    between the date that the bench warrant issued in 2015 and the date Makasini
    was booked into jail on the warrant in 2018. Thus, the court determined it still had
    authority to revoke Makasini’s probation if the alleged violations were found to have
    occurred. On March 1, 2019, the trial court found that Makasini had committed all
    of the violations alleged by the City and revoked 60 days of his suspended
    sentence as a sanction.
    Makasini brought a RALJ2 appeal to the superior court, arguing the
    municipal court did not have authority to revoke his suspended sentence as tolling
    was never properly triggered.              The superior court agreed, concluding RCW
    1   Defense, the City, and the Municipal Court all termed the issue as one of jurisdiction in
    the proceedings in the trial court. Jurisdiction of municipal and district courts is established by a
    number of other statutes. See Titles 3, 35 and 35A RCW. Similarly, the power of courts of limited
    jurisdiction to suspend criminal sentences is also statutory. See RCW 3.66.067-069 and RCW
    3.50.320-.340.
    The question before us is not whether the municipal court had jurisdiction to hear a
    physical control probation matter, but whether its authority to impose sanction had expired or
    been extended by function of tolling under RCW 35.20.255.
    2 Under the Rules for Appeal of Decisions of Courts of Jurisdictions (RALJ), an aggrieved
    party may appeal a final decision of a court of limited jurisdiction to the superior court of the county
    in which the court of limited jurisdiction is located. RALJ 1.1, 2.1-2.3.
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    35.20.255 is unambiguous and only allows tolling when a probationer fails to
    appear at a court hearing. This court granted discretionary review.
    ANALYSIS
    Washington courts of limited jurisdiction are established by the legislature.
    See Young v. Konz, 
    91 Wn.2d 532
    , 540-42, 
    588 P.2d 1360
     (1979). “Therefore, a
    municipal court’s jurisdiction must be granted by statute.” City of Spokane v.
    Marquette (Marquette II), 
    146 Wn.2d 124
    , 129, 
    43 P.3d 502
     (2002). Superior
    courts and inferior courts do not have inherent authority to suspend or defer a
    sentence. 
    Id.
     “This power derives entirely from the legislature.” City of Spokane
    v. Marquette (Marquette I), 
    103 Wn. App. 792
    , 798, 
    14 P.3d 832
     (2000), reversed
    by, 
    146 Wn.2d 124
    . There are four grants of probationary power in our state.
    Marquette II, 
    146 Wn.2d at 129
    . The statute at issue here, RCW 35.20.255,
    applies to municipal courts of cities with a population above 400,000.
    The parties’ dispute focuses on the following sentence from RCW
    35.20.255, which was added through legislative amendment in 2001:
    A defendant who has been sentenced, or whose sentence has been
    deferred, and who then fails to appear for any hearing to address the
    defendant’s compliance with the terms of probation when ordered to
    do so by the court, shall have the term of probation tolled until such
    time as the defendant makes his or her presence known to the court
    on the record.
    This case may be resolved exclusively by means of statutory interpretation which
    is a question of law reviewed de novo. State v. Ervin, 
    169 Wn.2d 815
    , 820, 
    239 P.3d 354
     (2010). The court’s objective when interpreting a statute is to determine
    the legislature’s intent. State v. Jacobs, 
    154 Wn.2d 596
    , 600, 
    115 P.3d 281
     (2005),
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    superseded by statute, State v. Conover, 
    183 Wn.2d 706
    , 
    355 P.3d 1093
     (2015).
    The best indication of legislative intent is the language enacted by the legislature,
    so if the meaning of a statute is plain on its face, the interpreting court “‘give[s]
    effect to that plain meaning.’” Ervin, 
    169 Wn.2d at 820
     (quoting Jacobs, 
    154 Wn.2d at 600
    ). The plain meaning of a statute is to be discerned from the ordinary
    meaning of the language under scrutiny, in addition to the context of the statute in
    which the language is found, related provisions, and the statutory scheme as a
    whole. Jacobs, 
    154 Wn.2d at 600
    .
    If there are multiple reasonable interpretations of a statute’s plain meaning,
    it is ambiguous. State v. Swanson, 
    116 Wn. App. 67
    , 70, 
    65 P.3d 343
     (2003). In
    instances of ambiguity as to a statute’s meaning, then the court relies on principles
    of statutory construction, legislative history, and relevant case law to decipher the
    legislative intent. State v. Manuel, 14 Wn. App. 2d 455, 461, 
    471 P.3d 265
     (2020).
    “After such analysis, if a criminal statute still remains ambiguous, the rule of lenity
    requires courts to construe the statute strictly in favor of the defendant.” 
    Id.
    The plain meaning of RCW 35.20.255 is clear and not subject to numerous
    interpretations. It is common in a case of statutory interpretation to have two (or
    more) competing interpretations presented to demonstrate the ambiguous nature
    of the statute. See State v. Evans, 
    177 Wn.2d 186
    , 
    298 P.3d 724
     (2013); see also
    State v. Dennis, 
    191 Wn.2d 169
     (2018); State v. Engel, 
    166 Wn.2d 572
    , 
    210 P.3d 1007
    , 
    421 P.3d 944
     (2009). However, the City has not put forth an alternative
    interpretation of the plain meaning of the statute, but rather argues that case law
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    does not support Makasini’s interpretation, despite its acceptance by the superior
    court.
    In his briefing, Makasini advances the interpretation that the plain meaning
    of the statutory language “fails to appear for any hearing to address the
    defendant’s compliance with the terms of probation when ordered to do so by the
    court” is that tolling only begins “when a court orders a defendant to appear at a
    hearing to address the allegations of a probation violation, and then the defendant
    fails to appear.” The City did not engage in a plain meaning analysis of the statute
    and instead focused its argument on case law. Its arguments to the superior court
    on RALJ appeal were similarly limited.
    The City avers that numerous cases indicate supervision is tolled while a
    probationer is on warrant status. However, those cases are not controlling as they
    deal with different courts and distinct statutes entirely, all of which are silent on
    tolling. See State v. V.J., 
    132 Wn. App. 380
    , 
    132 P.3d 763
     (2006) (holding Juvenile
    Justice Act of 19773, which had no express tolling provision, confers statutory
    authority to toll juvenile probation while on warrant status); State v. D.D.-H., 
    196 Wn. App. 948
    , 
    385 P.3d 283
     (2016) (holding Juvenile Justice Act of 1977 provides
    a juvenile’s probation tolled while on warrant status by operation of law); State v.
    Robinson, 
    142 Wn. App. 649
    , 
    175 P.3d 1136
     (2008) (holding it was proper to toll
    a 10-year suspended sentence when the defendant had absconded from the
    jurisdiction).
    3   Ch. 13.40 RCW.
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    The City’s primary argument is that Marquette II is binding authority on the
    question presented on appeal. 
    146 Wn.2d 124
    . However, Makasini correctly
    points out that Marquette II dealt with a prior version of RCW 35.20.255 which did
    not include the amended language at the heart of this case. Id. at 130. The
    Supreme Court acknowledged in Marquette II that the legislature’s amendment of
    RCW 35.20.255, which was prompted by the earlier court of appeals opinion in the
    case, effectively limited the applicability of its holding to a very small class of
    probationers. Id. “The Court of Appeals decision in this case prompted the
    legislature to add . . . [the language at issue in the instant appeal] to the statutory
    provisions applicable to courts of limited jurisdiction.” Id. at 130. The court then
    focused its analysis on interpretation of another statute.
    After careful review of the procedural history of Marquette’s case and the
    various holdings of the two opinions, Makasini’s argument is the more persuasive
    of the two before us.     Specifically, in briefing on the RALJ appeal, Makasini
    provided the following discussion of Marquette II:
    [Marquette II] has broader language but it is not applicable to this
    situation. First, the case cites to the above [amended version of the]
    statute and says that it does not apply because it post-dated the
    events of the case. 
    146 Wn.2d 124
    , 130, 
    43 P.3d 502
    , 505 (2002).
    Second, [Marquette II] noted a tolling absent a statutory directive, Id.
    at 134. However, because the power to suspend sentence, impose
    terms and punish violations of those terms derives from statute and
    must be granted to courts of limited jurisdiction by the legislature, Id.
    at 129, a statutory change would nullify this holding to the extent that
    it was inconsistent. Because the power to suspend sentence, impose
    terms and punish violations of those terms derives from statute and
    must be granted to courts of limited jurisdiction by the legislature, Id.
    at 129, a statutory change essentially nullified this holding to the
    extent that is was inconsistent.
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    Makasini accurately asserts that Marquette II does not control the interpretation of
    the current amended version of RCW 35.20.255.
    The superior court was correct in its conclusion that RCW 35.20.255 is
    unambiguous. The language in question was added by the legislature in direct
    response to the Marquette I opinion while the case was pending review by the
    Supreme Court. The legislature addressed the concerns raised by prosecutors
    and other criminal justice stakeholders4 in response to Marquette I by providing a
    specific triggering event to begin tolling of a probationary period: failure to appear
    for a court ordered hearing. If the government5 wishes to preserve the period of
    supervision for a probationer by means of tolling, the procedure provided by the
    legislature requires that it first set a hearing and summon the probationer before
    the court. If the probationer appears for the hearing, the court may exercise its
    statutory authority as to the imposition of sanctions after the alleged deficiencies
    or violations are addressed. If the probationer fails to appear, a bench warrant is
    properly issued and tolling is triggered.
    4    Though we need not go beyond the plain meaning analysis to resolve the question before
    us, it is illuminating that the final bill report for the 2001 amendment to RCW 35.30.255 indicates
    the change was made in response to concerns raised by prosecutors. See FINAL B. REP. ON
    ENGROSSED SUBSTITUTE S.B. 5970, 57th Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash. 2001)
    5 The prosecuting and supervising authorities here and in Marquette are divisions of city
    government and the cases were heard in municipal court. The statute at issue in this appeal,
    chapter 35.20.255 RCW, applies to municipal courts in cities with population above 400,000.
    Statutes addressing the authority of municipal courts in cities smaller than 400,000 are found in the
    chapter on district courts. Title 3 RCW. The tolling language applicable to suspended sentences
    originating in district courts and municipal courts in cities with population below 400,000 is identical
    to the language in RCW 35.20.255. See RCW 3.66.068(3) and 3.50.320.
    As such, our analysis applies to all courts of limited jurisdiction, which includes district
    courts where the prosecuting authority is the state and the supervising entity may be a division of
    county government. Thus, we refer to the prosecuting and supervising authorities broadly as the
    government, lest there be any question as to the applicability of this opinion to district court matters
    or those arising in smaller cities addressed by RCW 3.66.068 and 3.50.320.
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    In Marquette II, the Supreme Court accepted the argument the City of
    Spokane had offered throughout the litigation that extension of the period of
    supervision by means of tolling serves the purpose of a suspended sentence: to
    ensure compliance with services intended to rehabilitate the defendant. The City
    of Seattle makes similar arguments here based on that holding. However, it fails
    to address how years of government inaction after easily identifiable incidents of
    alleged noncompliance is acceptable given that important legislative purpose.
    Here, the Probation Services Division waited over four years from the first alleged
    violation (failure to report to probation within 36 hours of release from jail) and over
    three years after the second alleged violation (February 2012 criminal charge)
    before notifying the sentencing court of Makasini’s purported failure to comply.
    The crux of the government’s argument in both Marquette cases was that,
    absent tolling, a probationer could simply avoid contact with the court or the
    supervising agency and effectively run down the clock on their suspended
    sentence as a means of evading sanction. This case demonstrates the corollary
    offense to the legislative purpose of RCW 35.20.255: government inaction
    impermissibly extending the period of supervision well beyond the timeframe
    intended by our lawmakers. If the government wishes to exercise its statutory
    authority to supervise a probationer’s completion of rehabilitative services, and
    seek sanctions for noncompliance, it is reasonable to expect that it must also bear
    the responsibility of complying with the process as set out by the statute. This
    means it must set and summon the defendant for the prerequisite court hearing
    before tolling may commence.
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    We find that RCW 35.20.255 is unambiguous and that the plain meaning
    interpretation presented by Makasini is proper. We affirm the superior court’s
    reversal of the municipal court ruling.
    WE CONCUR:
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