Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two
May 14, 2024
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
DIVISION II MICHAEL DYLAN PEEDE, No. 57902-2-II
Appellant,
v.
STATE OF WASHINGTON, UNPUBLISHED OPINION
Respondent.
GLASGOW, J.—Michael D. Peede petitioned the trial court to restore his firearm rights. The
trial court denied the petition, relying on at least one of Peede’s sealed juvenile adjudications of
guilt for a disqualifying felony. Peede appeals.
Peede argues that the trial court erred by misapplying Barr v. Snohomish County Sheriff 1
and that under RCW 13.50.260(6)(a), his sealed juvenile adjudications of guilt must be treated as
though they never occurred. Following the Washington Supreme Court’s reasoning in Barr II, we
hold that the trial court properly considered Peede’s sealed juvenile adjudications to determine
Peede’s eligibility to restore his firearm rights. Thus, the trial court properly denied Peede’s
petition. We affirm.
FACTS
Neither party disagrees with the trial court’s finding that Peede was adjudicated guilty of
1 193 Wn.2d 330, 440 P.3d 131 (2019) (Barr II). 57902-2-II
at least one offense that would disqualify him from restoration of his firearm rights.2 The parties
also agree that records of this juvenile offense have since been sealed.
After the relevant juvenile offense was sealed, Peede filed a petition to restore his firearm
rights. The State objected to Peede’s petition on the grounds that Peede’s sealed juvenile
adjudication for a sex offense or class A felony prohibited him from restoring his firearm rights
under Washington law. Peede responded that because the records of his offense are sealed, the
offense should be treated as if it never occurred and, thus, it should not bar restoration of his firearm
rights. The trial court agreed with the State and denied Peede’s petition. Peede appeals.
ANALYSIS
Peede argues that under RCW 13.50.260(6)(a), his juvenile offense should be treated as if
it never occurred for purposes of restoring his firearm rights. The State responds that in Barr II,
the Washington Supreme Court held that sealing under RCW 13.50.260(6)(a) merely hides
Peede’s adjudication from public view and therefore Peede’s sealed juvenile offense still precludes
him from petitioning to restore his firearm rights. We agree with the State and follow our recent
opinion in McIntosh v. State, ___ Wn. App. 2d ___, 544 P.3d 559 (2024).
I. FIREARM RESTORATION
Former RCW 9.41.040(1)(a) (2022) prohibited a person convicted of any serious offense
from possessing a firearm.3 Under former RCW 9.41.010(33) (2022), serious offenses included
2 It is not clear from our record whether Peede has more than one disqualifying juvenile offense. Below, we refer to a single disqualifying offense because it appears the parties agree there was at least one disqualifying offense. 3 In 2023, the legislature recodified the provisions for restoration of firearm rights from former RCW 9.41.040(4) to RCW 9.41.041. LAWS OF 2023, ch. 295, § 4.
2 57902-2-II
violent or sexually motivated felonies. While a person who has been convicted of a serious offense
could petition to have their right to possess firearms restored under former RCW 9.41.040(4)(a),
they were disqualified from doing so if that serious offense was a sex offense or a class A felony.
Id. Further, a person could not petition to restore their firearm rights if a prior felony conviction
would be counted as part of their offender score. Former RCW 9.41.040(4)(a)(ii)(A).
RCW 13.50.260 provides that juvenile records can be sealed. RCW 13.50.260(6)(a) states
that once a juvenile conviction is sealed, “the proceedings in the case shall be treated as if they
never occurred.”
Whether the superior court properly applied former RCW 9.41.040(4) to the facts, is a
question we review de novo. McIntosh, 544 P.3d at 561. We must also interpret the juvenile sealing
statute, RCW 13.50.260. Questions of statutory interpretation are also reviewed de novo. Id.
II. SEALED JUVENILE CONVICTIONS AS DISQUALIFYING OFFENSES
The parties agree that Peede’s juvenile offense is one that would ordinarily disqualify him
from firearm right restoration. They dispute whether the sealing of his offense under RCW
13.50.260(6)(a) prohibited the trial court from considering the offense when determining whether
to grant his petition to restore his firearm rights. We recently answered this question in McIntosh.
In McIntosh, we relied on the Washington Supreme Court’s reasoning in Barr II.
A. Barr II
In Barr II, the Snohomish County Sheriff denied Barr’s application for a concealed pistol
license based on Barr’s two sealed juvenile adjudications for class A felonies. 193 Wn.2d at 333.
Washington’s concealed pistol license statute required that issuing authorities, like the sheriff,
deny a concealed pistol license to “anyone who is found to be prohibited from possessing a firearm
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under federal or state law.” RCW 9.41.070(2)(b). The federal law at issue in Barr II prohibited
firearm possession if a person had been convicted of a crime that was punishable by a prison term
exceeding one year unless subsequent action, such as expungement, caused the conviction to no
longer be “‘considered a conviction.’” 193 Wn.2d at 335-36 (quoting 18 U.S.C § 921(a)(20)(B)).
The prison terms for Barr’s two adjudications exceeded one year. Id. at 336 n.4. Thus, if sealed
adjudications were considered convictions under federal law, Washington’s statute required the
sheriff to deny Barr’s license application. The sheriff concluded that Barr’s offenses were
considered convictions under federal law regardless of whether they were sealed. Id. at 333-34.
Barr challenged the denial of his license application. Id. at 334. The federal law at issue
relied on the definition of “conviction” under state law, id. at 335, and Washington’s sealing statute
stated that after a juvenile adjudication is sealed, “the proceedings in the case shall be treated as if
they never occurred.” RCW 13.50.260(6)(a). Therefore, according to Barr, this language meant
that his sealed adjudications were not “convictions” for purposes of the federal statute. Barr II,
193 Wn.2d at 336-37.
The Washington Supreme Court disagreed. It held that Washington’s sealing statute did
not determine whether Barr’s sealed adjudications constituted “convictions” for purposes of the
federal statute. Id. at 337. The court explained that under federal law, the mere existence of a
conviction prohibited firearm possession, regardless of whether the adjudication or conviction was
sealed. Id. Instead, the court considered only whether the adjudications existed, and whether a
subsequent event like expungement had since rendered them “no longer ‘considered a
conviction.’” Id. (quoting 18 U.S.C § 921(a)(20)(B)).
4 57902-2-II
Relevant here, the court explained that sealing orders only hide a record from public
view—they do not cause a conviction or adjudication to cease to exist. Id. at 337. The court pointed
to the fact that a sealing order will be nullified if a person is charged with an adult felony after
their record has been sealed. Id.; see also RCW 13.50.260(8)(b). If an adjudication can be
automatically unsealed and if it can then have consequences in future sentencings, then it must
continue to exist despite the sealing. Barr II, 193 Wn.2d at 337.
The court went on to distinguish sealing from the other events that would render an
adjudication no longer “‘considered a conviction’” under federal law. Id. at 338 (quoting 18 U.S.C
§ 921(a)(20)(B)). The federal law at issue stated that “[a]ny conviction which has been expunged
. . . shall not be considered a conviction for purposes of this chapter.” 18 U.S.C. § 921(a)(20)(B).
The Barr II court then rejected prior cases that stated or suggested that sealing was equivalent to
expungement. 193 Wn.2d at 339. Unlike expungement, where records are destroyed, sealing
“merely hides a record from view of the general public.” Id. Thus, although they were hidden,
there were still official records of Barr’s juvenile adjudications. Id. Therefore, they were still
considered convictions for the purposes of application of the concealed pistol license statutes. Id.
at 339-40.
Throughout its opinion, the Barr II court limited its decision to only the application of
federal firearm possession laws. It “express[ed] no opinion on Barr’s right to possess firearms as
a matter of state law,” and emphasized that Barr II posed “a narrow question to which [the court]
provide[d] a narrow answer. The sheriff was not required to issue Barr a [concealed pistol license]
because . . . Barr’s class A felony adjudications are predicate, disqualifying convictions for
purposes of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g).” Id. at 340.
5 57902-2-II
Nevertheless, the Supreme Court’s analysis in Barr II is informative to the extent the court
opined about issues that also arise under state law when a person asks a court to restore their
firearm rights.
B. Caselaw Prior to Barr II
Despite the Barr II court’s statements that its narrow holding impacted only federal firearm
laws, the court’s reasoning plainly undermined our previous holdings addressing how
Washington’s sealing statute interacts with Washington’s firearm possession laws—especially
how we applied the phrase “the proceedings in the case shall be treated as if they never occurred.”
RCW 13.50.260(6)(a).
Before Barr II, we relied primarily on that phrase to determine how we treated sealed
juvenile adjudications under state law. For example, in Nelson v State, 120 Wn. App. 470, 85 P.3d
912 (2003), Division One held that juvenile adjudications that had been both sealed and expunged
did not bar petitions to restore firearm rights. The fact that Nelson’s juvenile adjudications had
been expunged was a factor. Id. at 480-81. However, the Nelson court also explained that “even if
the fact of Nelson’s juvenile convictions is undisputed, legally the [trial] court could not conclude
he had been ‘convicted’ for purposes of the firearm statute[,] because the court was obligated to
treat the juvenile proceedings as if they never occurred.”4 Id. at 480.
This language was also fundamental to our later opinion in Barr v. Snohomish County, 4
Wn. App. 2d 85, 419 P.3d 867 (2018) (Barr I), rev'd, 193 Wn.2d 330. In Barr I, we held that sealed
juvenile adjudications did not bar firearm possession under state law. Id. at 102-03. Notably, in
4 Nelson interpreted former RCW 13.50.050(14) (2001)—a prior version of our state’s sealing statute with nearly identical language to its modern counterpart.
6 57902-2-II
contrast with Nelson, Barr’s juvenile adjudications were not expunged—they were merely sealed.
Id. at 91. This difference did not change our analysis of how Washington’s sealing statute affected
people’s ability to possess firearms because “[t]he dispositive component of the sealing statute
here is the phrase ‘the proceedings in the case shall be treated as if they never occurred.’” Id. at
99.
Further, we rejected attempts to venture beyond the statute’s plain language—such as
arguments that criminal justice agencies’ access to sealed convictions permitted consideration of
the sealed adjudication in some contexts:
The Washington State Patrol must guarantee access to sealed records to criminal justice agencies, and the courts must ensure prosecutors have access to the information. However, these statutes do not authorize criminal justice agencies to treat these adjudications in a manner contrary to RCW 13.50.260(6)(a), which requires them to treat the adjudications “as if they never occurred.”
Id. at 102. Thus, before Barr II, we read Washington’s sealing statute to mean that a person’s
sealed juvenile adjudications did not prohibit them from owning a firearm. We treated sealed
juvenile adjudications “as if they never occurred.”
C. Barr II’s Impact on Our Previous State Law Analysis
Barr II did not explicitly overrule our conclusion in Barr I, that sealed adjudications did
not bar firearm possession under state law. But Barr II’s discussion of Washington’s sealing statute
diverged from the reasoning our conclusion depended on in multiple ways. As discussed above,
the Barr II court explained that sealed adjudications do continue to exist for purposes of federal
firearm possession statutes—they are just “invisible to most people.” 193 Wn.2d at 337. And the
court reasoned that when the legislature enacted the concealed pistol license statute, it intended
that law enforcement would use sealed adjudications to determine whether to grant concealed
7 57902-2-II
pistol license applications. Id. at 337-38. Specifically, the court pointed to RCW 9.41.070(2)(a),
which required the sheriff to check “‘the Washington state patrol electronic database’” and RCW
13.50.260(8)(d), which required that “the state patrol database must ‘provide criminal justice
agencies access to sealed juvenile records information.’” Id. at 337 (alteration omitted). The court
reasoned that if the sheriff was required to search a database that contained sealed adjudications,
“then the legislature must have intended that law enforcement use information about the sealed
convictions in determining whether to issue a [concealed pistol license].” Id. at 337-38. Thus,
according to the Supreme Court, the phrase “the proceedings shall be treated as if they never
occurred,” was not alone dispositive in circumstances where other statutes or provisions of RCW
13.50.260 suggested otherwise.
While this reasoning was part of the court’s federal statutory analysis, the court’s
description of sealing’s basic function undermined our conclusion that sealing essentially did
remove adjudications from existence. See Barr I, 4 Wn. App. 2d at 103 (“sealed juvenile records
shall be treated as if they never occurred, regardless of any agency access.”).
The Barr II court also gave little weight to the plain language analysis in Nelson. Instead,
the court pointed to the functional difference between expungement, where records are destroyed,
and sealing, where records are “merely” hidden. 193 Wn.2d at 338-39. In fact, the court explicitly
rejected the idea that sealing and expungement have the same effect on one’s ability to possess
firearms. Id. at 339. Due to the differences between sealing and expungement, the Supreme Court
declined to apply Nelson in cases where adjudications are merely sealed but not expunged. Id. This
emphasis on Nelson’s expungement undermined our reasoning in Barr I, which relied on Nelson
even though Barr’s adjudications had not been expunged. 4 Wn. App. 2d at 98-103.
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In sum, although the Barr II court limited its holding to an application of federal law related
to concealed pistol licenses, the court’s reasoning plainly undermined Nelson and Barr I’s reliance
on the language of the sealing statute alone to prohibit consideration of sealed adjudications.
Instead, the Barr II court’s reasoning established that sealed adjudications continue to exist under
state law even after they are sealed.
D. Post-Barr II Case Law
We resolved the incompatibility between our previous cases and Barr II with our holding
in McIntosh. In that case, the trial court denied McIntosh’s petition to restore his firearm rights.
McIntosh, 544 P.3d at 560. Prior to his petition, McIntosh was adjudicated guilty of multiple class
A sex offenses in juvenile court. Id. The juvenile adjudications were sealed under RCW 13.50.260.
Id. McIntosh argued that these adjudications should not bar his petition relying on our pre-Barr II
caselaw that treated sealed adjudications “as if they never occurred.” Id. at 560-61.
We disagreed with McIntosh and relied on Barr II to depart from Nelson and Barr I. We
specifically abandoned Nelson’s reasoning. Like the Supreme Court, we distinguished Nelson on
its facts, noting that the destruction of records via expungement is markedly different than sealing
alone. Id. at 563. Once we departed from Nelson, we followed Barr II’s approach and looked to
other sections of RCW 13.50.260, as well as other state firearm statutes in context, to understand
the effect of the phrase, “the proceedings shall be treated as if they never occurred.” Id. at 563-64.
First, we reasoned that allowing sealed adjudications to have some remaining effect is
“consistent with other provisions of the [sealing] statute [that] clearly contemplate the conviction
remain accessible to certain agencies.” Id. at 563. For instance, under state law, prosecutors and
both in-state and out-of-state criminal justice agencies must have access to sealed juvenile records.
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RCW 13.50.260(8)(c)-(e). This reasoning also mirrored that of the Supreme Court in Barr II: “If
the legislature requires law enforcement to search a database that must contain information on
sealed convictions, then the legislature must have intended that law enforcement use information
about the sealed convictions in determining whether to issue a [concealed pistol license].” 193
Wn.2d at 337-38.
Second, we noted that sealing orders already permit additional use of adjudications.
McIntosh, 544 P.3d at 564. For instance, class A and prior felony convictions for sex offenses are
always included in offender scores, regardless of sealing. RCW 9.94A.525(2)(a). Finally, we
reasoned that the fact that sealing orders are automatically nullified by reoffending, RCW
13.50.260(8)(b), supported the fact that the basic function of a sealing order is to shield
adjudications from public view. McIntosh, 544 P.3d at 564. Thus, we held the trial court properly
denied McIntosh’s petition because his sealed adjudications could be considered. Id.
E. Peede’s Petition to Restore His Firearm Rights
Here, we follow Barr II and our holding in McIntosh. Just like the plaintiff in McIntosh,
Peede has a juvenile adjudication that prohibits the trial court from restoring his firearm rights
under former RCW 9.41.040(4). For the reasons discussed in McIntosh, the fact that Peede’s
adjudication is sealed does not change the fact that it disqualifies him from petitioning to restore
his firearm rights.
Our holding is further supported by former RCW 9.41.040(4)(a)(ii)(A), which provided
that an “individual may petition a court of record to have [their] right to possess a firearm restored
. . . . if the individual has no prior felony convictions that prohibit the possession of a firearm
counted as part of the offender score under RCW 9.94A.525.” As we noted in McIntosh, “‘[c]lass
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A and sex prior felony convictions shall always be included in the offender score.’” 544 P.3d at
564 (quoting RCW 9.94A.525(2)(a)). Thus, our firearm possession statute contemplates the
inclusion of sealed class A felony offenses and felony sex offenses in evaluating petitions to restore
firearm rights where they would be counted in an offender score. Peede has not established that he
has overcome this additional barrier to restoration of his firearm rights.
Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s denial of Peede’s petition to restore his firearm rights.
III. FIREARM POSSESSION
In addition to the question of whether Peede’s sealed juvenile adjudication allows
restoration of his firearm rights, in his brief, Peede also raises the question of whether his sealed
conviction bars him from possessing firearms under former RCW 9.41.040. However, we review
trial court decisions that are actually designated in the notice of appeal. RAP 2.4(a). In his notice
of appeal, Peede seeks review of “the trial[] court[’]s decisions and all written rulings or findings
reduced to the judgment and sentence entered herein.” Clerk’s Papers at 10. The only orders
attached to Peede’s notice of appeal, or at issue in this case, are the trial court’s order denying
firearm restoration and its order denying Peede’s motion for reconsideration of that order. There
are no other orders in our record that would implicate Peede’s right to possess firearms independent
from his right to petition to restore his firearm rights. Thus, whether Peede’s sealed juvenile
conviction independently impacts his ability to possess firearms under RCW 9.41.040 is outside
our scope of review.
CONCLUSION
We affirm.
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A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
2.06.040, it is so ordered.
Glasgow, J. We concur:
Maxa, P.J.
Che, J.