Kitsap County v. Moore
This text of 26 P.3d 931 (Kitsap County v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
KITSAP COUNTY and City of Bremerton, Appellants,
v.
Joanne MOORE, Director, Office of Public Defense, Respondent.
Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.
*932 Kevin Michael Howell, Port Orchard, Pamela Loginsky, Olympia, for Appellants.
Honorable Christine Gregoire, Attorney General, James Kendrick Pharris, Asst., Olympia, for Respondent.
CHAMBERS, J.
Indigent defendants have a right to appointed counsel on appeal from courts of limited jurisdiction to superior court. Traditionally, local governments pay those fees, as well as the other costs of representation. Kitsap County and the City of Bremerton (Kitsap and Bremerton) are seeking a writ of mandamus requiring the director of the Office of Public Defense to reimburse those expenses incurred since 1996 and requiring a commitment to pay those expenses in the future. Kitsap and Bremerton contend RCW 4.88.330 demonstrates a legislative intent to commit the state (as opposed to the local governments) to pay for appeals to superior court under the Rules for Appeal of Decisions of Courts of Limited Jurisdiction (RALJ). We conclude that the Legislature did not intend to bind the state to pay the cost of appeals unknown to the Legislature at the time the legislation was passed. We therefore deny the requested writ of mandamus.
ISSUE
The issue before this Court is whether the state or the local government is responsible for attorney fees and other costs incurred when indigent defendants appeal decisions of courts of limited jurisdiction to superior courts under the RALJ.
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Kitsap and Bremerton contend that the state, not local governments, should pay the costs of indigent misdemeanant appeals. To better explain Kitsap and Bremerton's arguments we must explain the relevant procedural and statutory history. In 1963, the United States Supreme Court stated clearly that indigent criminal defendants have the constitutional right to be provided an attorney on their first appeal as of right. Douglas v. California, 372 U.S. 353, 355-58, 83 S.Ct. 814, 9 L.Ed.2d 811 (1963). In 1965, the Washington Legislature enacted RCW 10.01.112, perhaps in an effort to meet the state's obligation under Douglas. RCW 10.01.112 provided that the state itself would pay the fees and costs of an indigent criminal defendant on appeal to the state court at the discretion of the trial judge. (RCW 10.01.112 predated the establishment of the Court of Appeals in 1969, and thus made no provision for payment of attorney fees at that level.) In 1970-71, the statute underwent changes not relevant here. Finally, in 1975, it was recodified in its final form, and currently reads:
When a party has been judicially determined to have a constitutional right to obtain a review and to be unable by reason of poverty to procure counsel to perfect the review all costs necessarily incident to the proper consideration of the review including preparation of the record, reasonable fees for court appointed counsel to be *933 determined by the supreme court, and actual travel expenses of counsel for appearance in the supreme court or court of appeals, shall be paid by the state. Upon satisfaction of requirements established by supreme court rules and submission of appropriate vouchers to the clerk of the supreme court, payment shall be made from funds specifically appropriated by the legislature for that purpose.
RCW 4.88.330.
At the time of the adoption of this statute, it applied only to review by the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals. Courts of limited jurisdiction were not courts of record and relief from their decisions was by trial de novo in superior court. The county or city paid the expense associated with a trial de novo. See generally State v. Badda, 66 Wash.2d 314, 402 P.2d 348 (1965). In 1980, the Legislature recodified much of the law governing courts of limited jurisdiction. See generally City of Seattle v. Hesler, 98 Wash.2d 73, 76, 653 P.2d 631 (1982).
The passage of chapter 3.02 RCW, which authorizes this Court to promulgate the RALJ, caused significant changes to the system of review; instead of receiving trials de novo in superior court and appeals as of right to the Court of Appeals, defendants receive review as of right in only superior court, and only of the record. RALJ 9.1.[1] Further review is available, but is discretionary. RALJ 9.1(h).
In 1996, the final relevant statutory change was made to the system of criminal appeals; the Legislature enacted chapter 2.70 RCW, creating the Office of Public Defense:
In order to implement the constitutional guarantee of counsel and to ensure the effective and efficient delivery of the indigent appellate services funded by the state of Washington, an office of public defense is established as an independent agency of the judicial branch.
RCW 2.70.005. The director of the Office of Public Defense, currently Joanne Moore, Respondent in this matter, is appointed by the Supreme Court and serves at its pleasure.
Although the RALJ have been with us since 1981, Kitsap and Bremerton urge that the failure of the state to reimburse counties and cities has been an oversight. Kitsap and Bremerton argue that the Legislature intended to be broad and inclusive in 1975 when it agreed to pay for the appeals of indigent accused to the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals. It was the Legislature's intent, according to Kitsap and Bremerton, to cover any expansion of review and therefore avoid the need for the Legislature to act each time review was extended to a new court or class of indigents. Accordingly, Kitsap and Bremerton filed a claim with the state for reimbursement of expenses associated with indigent appeals incurred since 1996. When their request was denied they sought a writ of mandamus. This Court referred the request to the Thurston County Superior Court where the writ was denied. Kitsap and Bremerton sought review of the superior court decision that this Court accepted.
DISCUSSION
The main thrust of Kitsap and Bremerton's argument is that the statute is unambiguous, and therefore this Court should give it a plain reading. Under this approach, Kitsap and Bremerton argue, the statute reduces to two elements: (1) a constitutional right of review[2] and (2) indigence. RCW *934 4.88.330. Once those threshold requirements are met, Kitsap and Bremerton argue, the state has obligated itself to pay costs and fees. Since defendants have a constitutional right of appeal from a court of limited jurisdiction, see Wash. Const. art.
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