In re Postsentence Review of: Leanne Marie Hardy

442 P.3d 14
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 23, 2019
Docket36086-5
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 442 P.3d 14 (In re Postsentence Review of: Leanne Marie Hardy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Postsentence Review of: Leanne Marie Hardy, 442 P.3d 14 (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FILED MAY 23, 2019 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

In the Matter of the Postsentence Review ) of ) No. 36086-5-III ) LEANNE MARIE HARDY. ) PUBLISHED OPINION )

SIDDOWAY, J. — The Department of Corrections (DOC) petitions pursuant to

RCW 9.94A.585(7) for review of the drug offender sentencing alternative (DOSA)

imposed on Leanne Marie Hardy as a result of her March 2018 conviction of three

counts, two of which the DOC contends were DOSA-ineligible, having standard sentence

ranges less than one year.

The petition requires us to construe RCW 9.94A.660 and to re-examine an

assumption made in this court’s 2007 decision in State v. Smith, 142 Wn. App. 122, 173

P.3d 973. We reject Smith’s assumption that an offense-based evaluation of DOSA

eligibility being used by the DOC was correct. We construe eligibility for DOSA as

offender-based, not offense-based, and identify how RCW 9.94A.660(1)(d) and (f)

should be applied to the sentencing of multiple current offenses consistent with the

purposes of those provisions. No. 36086-5-III In re Postsentence Review of Hardy

We conclude that Ms. Hardy’s DOSA sentence is valid and deny the DOC’s

petition.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Leanne Hardy pleaded guilty to two counts of unlawful possession of a controlled

substance (methamphetamine and heroin) and one count of bail jumping. She had an

offender score of 5. We reproduce the “Sentencing Data” section of her judgment and

sentence, which sets forth the standard range sentences for the three offenses under RCW

9.94A.510 and former RCW 9.94A.517 (2015).1 Counts I and III are the controlled

substance offenses and count II is the bail jumping count:

Postsentence Pet., Ex. 1, at 2.

1 Effective July 1, 2018—four months after Ms. Hardy’s sentence was imposed— the standard range sentence for the controlled substance violations, given her offender score of 5, became 6+ to 18 months. The revised end of the sentence range would have avoided the issue presented in the petition for postsentence review.

2 No. 36086-5-III In re Postsentence Review of Hardy

The Douglas County Superior Court granted a residential DOSA, waiving

imposition of a standard range sentence and requiring Ms. Hardy to serve 24 months in

community custody, on the condition that she enter and remain in residential chemical

dependency treatment certified under chapter 70.96A RCW for 3 to 6 months.

Upon receiving Ms. Hardy’s judgment and sentence, DOC personnel concluded

that because counts I and III had a standard range of 6+ to 12 months, they were not

DOSA eligible. After unsuccessfully trying to resolve the issue at the trial court level,

the DOC timely filed this petition in accordance with RCW 9.94A.585(7) and RAP

16.18. Since Ms. Hardy is indigent, we appointed counsel to represent her. RAP

16.18(c).

ANALYSIS

At issue is the purely legal issue of whether the sentencing court exceeded its

statutory sentencing authority when it granted Ms. Hardy a DOSA sentence. RCW

9.94A.585(7) (limiting our review to “errors of law”). We review the issue de novo.

State v. Murray, 118 Wn. App. 518, 521, 77 P.3d 1188 (2003). The parties’ dispute

implicates issues of statutory construction, which we also review de novo. In re Det. of

Williams, 147 Wn.2d 476, 486, 55 P.3d 597 (2002).

The parties’ dispute also requires us to consider the application of this court’s

decision in Smith. In July 2006, when Beau Smith was being sentenced at the same

hearing for offenses charged in two criminal cases, he asked the court to impose a DOSA

3 No. 36086-5-III In re Postsentence Review of Hardy

in both. 142 Wn. App. at 125. The trial court asked defense counsel to find out how the

DOC would treat Mr. Smith’s sentences if the court sentenced him to 57 months’

confinement in one case but granted a prison-based DOSA of 25 months/25months in the

other, to run concurrently. Id. Counsel reported back that he was told

if the Court passes sentence as described, the [sic] Mr. Smith would serve the 57 months on the first case (minus good time), and the 25 month in- custody portion of the second case, concurrent, for a total in-custody period of 57 months minus good time. Upon release, Mr. Smith would serve the 25 month out-of-custody portion of the DOSA. In short, the 57 months in custody would not “eat up” the out of custody portion of the DOSA. The chemical dependency treatment that is a mandatory portion of the DOSA would be completed while the offender is in custody.

Id. (alteration in original).

The court ultimately imposed a shorter non-DOSA sentence in one case (43

months rather than 57) and concurrent prison-based DOSAs of 25months/25 months and

9 months/9 months in the second. Id. at 126. Defense counsel objected to the fact that

Mr. Smith would finish serving the in-custody portion of his DOSA sentence in 25

months, but would then have to complete his 43-month non-DOSA sentence before being

released to serve the 25-month community custody portion of his DOSA sentences. He

argued that this was a de facto consecutive sentence.

On appeal, Mr. Smith contended that the DOSA and non-DOSA sentences in a

multiple current offense setting created an illegal hybrid sentence. In an effort to

dissuade the court from reaching that conclusion, the State argued that it was common for

4 No. 36086-5-III In re Postsentence Review of Hardy

defendants to receive a DOSA sentence in combination with a non-DOSA sentence,

providing as an example, drug prosecutions in which possession of a large amount of one

controlled substance makes that count DOSA-ineligible, yet a charge of possessing a

small amount of another controlled substance would be DOSA-eligible. “The State

warn[ed] that ‘if such sentences were unlawful, every time a defendant is statutorily

eligible for a DOSA on a current offense, but not another, a sentencing court could not

lawfully order a DOSA for the eligible offense.’” Id. at 128 (quoting the State’s brief).

Importantly, this court was not asked to decide in Smith whether the DOC and the

State were correct about the operation of the DOSA statute. It assumed they were. But it

held, “even if Smith’s sentence is consistent with the DOSA statute, it is still a hybrid

sentence in violation of RCW 9.94A.589(3),” which provides for concurrent sentencing

or consecutive sentencing, but not a hybrid model. Id. at 128-29. 2

The DOC’s petition in this case argues, consistent with the State’s position in

Smith, that courts “impose sentences on a per-count basis” and that eligibility for DOSA

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