S.t. v. State Of Washington

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 4, 2019
Docket77656-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of S.t. v. State Of Washington (S.t. v. State Of Washington) 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
S.t. v. State Of Washington, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

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

In the Matter of the Detention of ) No. 77656-8-1

S.T., ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant. ) FILED: March 4, 2019

SCHINDLER, J. — S.T. filed a notice of appeal more than 50 days after the court

entered a 14-day order of commitment for involuntary treatment. We deny the motion to

enlarge the time to file the notice of appeal and grant the motion to dismiss the appeal

as untimely.

14-Day Involuntary Treatment Commitment Order

On September 27, 2017, 21-year-old S.T. ran into a local business to hide

because "someone is going to kill him." The police took S.T. to Overlake Medical

Center emergency room for evaluation and treatment. S.T. told the social worker he

"bought a gun to kill himself with." On September 28, S.T. was transferred to Fairfax

Health hospital.

The State filed a "Petition for 14 Day Involuntary Treatment." The petition

alleged S.T. presents "a likelihood of serious harm to self' and is "gravely disabled . .

as a result of a mental disorder." The petition states, "[T]here are no less restrictive

alternatives to detention in the best interest of the respondent or others because the

respondent requires the monitoring and stabilization of an inpatient psychiatric hospital." No. 77656-8-1/2

Licensed clinical psychologists Dr. Richard Thomas and Dr. Sonja Kottke

testified at the probable cause hearing on October 2.

Dr. Thomas testified that S.T. told Overlake hospital social worker Jenny

Donovan that "someone is trying to kill him." S.T. said he "almost killed himself last

week when he purchased [a] gun and was going to shoot himself." S.T. said the "gun

and bullets are stored in the car."

Dr. Kottke testified that she evaluated S.T. and reviewed his medical records.

On September 28, S.T. presented as "tangential, difficult to redirect, stuck on one

subject, repeating himself over and over." S.T. "described visual hallucinations" but was

"much calmer than described while in the E.D."1 S.T. denied "feeling suicidal" and

"does not believe he has a mental health issue." On September 30, S.T. "presented

with anxious mood, congruent affect, and linear thought process." S.T."seemed to be

confused and disorganized" and his "mood is very unstable." On October 1, S.T. said

he "feels paranoid at times." S.T. was "anxious and afraid of the surroundings. States

others might attack him while in bed at night. Needs repeated, constant reminder that

his is safe." S.T. was "loose, disorganized, with grandiose delusions. His affect is

suspicious and withdrawn." S.T. "has been compliant with medications and sleeping

and eat adequately."

Dr. Kottke testified that S.T. has a "working diagnosis [of] psychosis unspecified"

that requires "additional time to monitor." Dr. Kottke testified S.T. "presents a

substantial risk of physical harm to himself" because he said he "had purchased a gun

and had a gun and bullets in his car. He was living in his car. That he had felt suicidal

. . .[a]nd that he had thought about killing himself." Dr. Kottke testified that S.T. is

I Emergency department.

2 No. 77656-8-1/3

"gravely disabled as a result of his mental disorder." Dr. Kottke recommended

"[Unpatient psychiatric hospitalization" and said S.T. "needs monitoring in the hospital on

medications to work on stability and medication management."

On October 2, 2017, the court entered the 14-day involuntary treatment

commitment order. Two days later on October 4, Fairfax hospital released S.T.

On November 22, S.T. filed a notice of appeal of the October 2 order. On April

16, 2018, S.T. filed the brief of appellant arguing his attorney provided ineffective

assistance of counsel by stipulating to the admission of medical records.

On June 15, the State filed the brief of respondent. The State argued the court

should dismiss S.T.'s appeal as untimely. If the court reached the merits, the State

argued S.T. could not establish ineffective assistance of counsel.

On July 16, S.T.'s appellate attorney requested a 15-day extension to file the

reply brief. We granted an extension to July 31. On July 31, the attorney requested a

1-week extension to file the reply brief. We granted an extension to August 7. On

August 7, S.T.'s attorney requested "an additional two weeks" to file the reply brief to

obtain information about why the appeal was not timely filed and a motion to enlarge

time to file the notice of appeal. We granted the motion for an extension to August 21

but stated, "[N]o further extensions" would be granted. The appellate attorney did not

file a reply brief or a motion to enlarge the time to file the notice of appeal by the August

21 deadline.

Motion to Dismiss and Motion to Enlarge Time to File Appeal

On November 26, 2018, the State filed a motion to dismiss review of the case

"for failure to file a timely notice of appeal" under RAP 5.2(a). The State argued S.T. did

3 No. 77656-8-1/4

not establish grounds to enlarge the time to file a notice of appeal under RAP 18.8(a)

and "abandoned review" by not timely filing a reply brief or motion to enlarge time to file

the appeal.

On December 10, more than 12 months after he filed the notice of appeal, S.T.

filed a motion to enlarge time to file the notice of appeal and an answer to the State's

motion to dismiss. S.T. conceded the notice of appeal was untimely. S.T. did not

address the failure to comply with the August 21 deadline to file a reply brief or a motion

to enlarge time to file a notice of appeal.

S.T. contends the court should deny the State's motion to dismiss and grant his

motion to enlarge the time to file the notice of appeal "based on extraordinary

circumstances and to prevent a gross miscarriage of justice."

RAP 5.2(a) provides that a party must file a notice of appeal within "30 days after

the entry of the decision of the trial court that the party filing the notice wants reviewed."

RAP 18.8(a) allows the appellate court to "enlarge. .. the time within which an act must

be done in a particular case in order to serve the ends of justice." RAP 18.8(b),

"Restriction on Extension of Time," states:

The appellate court will only in extraordinary circumstances and to prevent a gross miscarriage of justice extend the time within which a party must file a notice of appeal, a notice for discretionary review, a motion for discretionary review of a decision of the Court of Appeals, a petition for review, or a motion for reconsideration. The appellate court will ordinarily hold that the desirability of finality of decisions outweighs the privilege of a litigant to obtain an extension of time under this section. The motion to extend time is determined by the appellate court to which the untimely notice, motion or petition is directed.

Under RAP 18.8(b), "the time for filing a notice of appeal will be extended only in

extraordinary circumstances and to prevent a gross miscarriage of justice." State v.

4 No. 77656-8-1/5

Hand, 177 Wn.2d 1015, 308 P.3d 588, 589 (2013). "Extraordinary circumstances"

include instances in which "the filing, despite reasonable diligence, was defective due to

excusable error or circumstances beyond the party's control." Reichelt v. Ravmark

Indus., Inc., 52 Wn. App. 763, 765,

Related

Strickland v. Washington
466 U.S. 668 (Supreme Court, 1984)
Reichelt v. Raymark Industries, Inc.
764 P.2d 653 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1988)
Beckman v. STATE, DEPT. OF SOCIAL SERV.
11 P.3d 313 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2000)
State v. Kyllo
215 P.3d 177 (Washington Supreme Court, 2009)
State v. Kyllo
166 Wash. 2d 856 (Washington Supreme Court, 2009)
State v. Grier
171 Wash. 2d 17 (Washington Supreme Court, 2011)

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