FILED MAY 2, 2023 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
STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 38471-3-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) ANTHONY RENE VASQUEZ, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )
FEARING, C.J. — Anthony Vasquez sought resentencing a second time based on
State v. Blake, 197 Wn.2d 170, 481 P.3d 521 (2021). The sentencing court and the first
resentencing court had included Vasquez’s conviction for possession of a controlled
substance in his offender score. Vasquez appeals from the second resentencing with the
argument that the superior court failed to conduct a de novo sentencing that included
consideration of his youth at the time of his crime. We agree and remand for another
third resentencing or a fourth sentencing hearing. No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
FACTS
This appeal is Anthony Vasquez’s third. His prosecution arises from the shooting
death of Juan Garcia on September 17, 2013. Vasquez was then 23 years old. This
appeal only concerns sentencing, not the underlying facts of the murder. Nonetheless, we
briefly recount the facts of the crime as previously narrated in State v. Vasquez, 2 Wn.
App. 2d 632, 415 P.3d 1205 (2018).
Juan Garcia, his girlfriend, and his five-year-old child sat in a parked car outside a
grocery mart in Moses Lake, Washington. Garcia sat in the front passenger seat, his
girlfriend sat in the driver’s seat, and his child sat in the back seat of the vehicle.
Anthony Vasquez arrived on the market’s premises in his own vehicle, parked that
vehicle, and exited it. He momentarily hid behind a fence before rushing towards
Garcia’s parked car. Vasquez approached the front passenger door of Garcia’s vehicle,
shot and killed Garcia at point-blank range, and fled in his own vehicle. The one shot did
not physically injure Garcia’s girlfriend or child.
A jury found Anthony Vasquez guilty of one count of aggravated murder in the
first degree with a firearm enhancement, three counts of drive-by shooting, and one count
of tampering with a witness. The three counts of drive-by shooting resulted from Juan
Garcia, his girlfriend, and the child being deemed discrete victims. Based on the offender
score calculated by the original sentencing court, which included a conviction later
2 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
invalidated by State v. Blake, the court sentenced Vasquez to an exceptional sentence of
life in confinement plus sixty months.
In his first appeal filed in 2017, Anthony Vasquez requested that this court reverse
his drive-by shooting convictions, strike the aggravated element attached to his first
degree murder charge, and resentence him accordingly. In Vasquez I, issued in 2018, this
court reversed Vasquez’s drive-by shooting convictions, struck the sentence aggravator
for aggravated murder, affirmed the remainder of his convictions, and remanded the
matter for resentencing. State v. Vasquez, 2 Wn. App. 2d 632, 637 (2018).
The first resentencing court conducted a hearing and resentenced Anthony
Vasquez to 660 months, or fifty-years, in confinement. The court ordered that the
sentences for all three of Vasquez’s convictions run concurrently within this period of
time and that the sixty-month sentence for a firearm enhancement run consecutively.
This 660-month sentence constituted an exceptional sentence based on Vasquez’s
recalculated offender score of 9+, which score no longer included points for aggravated
enhancement to the first degree murder conviction and his drive-by shooting convictions.
The resentencing court, however, counted in the offender score Vasquez’s earlier
conviction for possession of a controlled substance.
In a second appeal filed in June 2018, Anthony Vasquez contended that this court
should remand for a second resentencing to correct a clerical error in his first
resentencing’s judgment and sentence. Vasquez faulted the first resentencing court’s
3 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
failure to include the number of months of total confinement in his judgment and
sentence. As part of a statement of additional grounds, in that second appeal, Vasquez
contended that the sentencing and first resentencing courts failed to consider his youth
when sentencing him in violation of the cruel and unusual punishment clause.
In Vasquez II, issued in 2019, this court remanded to the superior court solely for
the purpose of inserting the total length of commitment in the judgment and sentence.
State v. Vasquez, No. 36123-3-III, slip op. at 8 (Wash. Ct. App. June 20, 2019).
Although the court only corrected an error, we label this correction as the second
resentencing. This court wrote, when addressing any failure of the trial court to consider
Anthony Vasquez’s youth:
Anthony Vasquez requests a remand for the sentencing court to consider whether his youthfulness at the time of the crime justifies an exceptional sentence below the standard range. But he neither requested an exceptional sentence below the standard range nor asserted his age as a mitigating factor at his resentencing hearing. Thus, Anthony Vasquez waived the contention.
State v. Vasquez, No. 36123-3-III, slip op. at 6-7.
PROCEDURE
We arrive at the events that give rise to this third appeal. We call this appeal
Vasquez III. In Vasquez III, Anthony Vasquez appeals his second resentencing or third
sentence.
The Washington Supreme Court, in 2021, declared unconstitutional Washington’s
4 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
strict liability drug possession statute, under which Anthony Vasquez had been convicted
years earlier. State v. Blake, 197 Wn.2d 170 (2021). Vasquez thereafter filed a motion
for relief from judgment because his sentence was no longer valid since the sentencing
court and first resentencing court based his offender score in part on his conviction for
possession of a controlled substance.
At the beginning of Anthony Vasquez’s second resentencing hearing, Vasquez
requested that the court, under State v. O’Dell 183 Wn.2d 680, 358 P.3d 359 (2015),
consider his youth as a mitigating factor when assessing his resentence in addition to
removing his possession of a controlled substance conviction from the offender score.
Nevertheless, Vasquez’s counsel objected to the consideration of any aggravating factor,
while arguing the resentencing hearing was limited to correcting the offender score in
light of State v. Blake. Counsel asked that, if the court consider aggravating factors, the
court also consider mitigating factors. The State contended that, under the law of the
case, Vasquez could not request resentencing based on his youth because of our decision
in Vasquez II that held Vasquez waived the argument by failing to raise it before the
resentencing court at the first resentencing hearing.
During the second resentencing hearing, the superior court initially commented
that its authority to resentence Anthony Vasquez was limited to correcting his offender
score after Blake. Vasquez’s counsel agreed that the only task for the resentencing court
was to resentence with the possession of a controlled substance conviction removed from
5 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
the offender score. His counsel further concurred that the court lacked authority to
impose a mitigating sentence based on Vasquez’s youth at the time of the crime.
Later during the second resentencing hearing and during Anthony Vasquez’s
allocution, Vasquez mentioned his desire to argue the mitigating factor of his youth. The
following colloquy transpired:
THE DEFENDANT: Well, I did want to argue late (as heard), but I guess you got me. I wanted to argue the O’Dell mitigating factors. But I guess you guys don’t want to hear that today. I just know that last time in my appeal they said that if I didn’t bring it up during sentencing then I have no right and I waive my contention. So, I’m here at another resentencing and I would like to bring it up. But if you’re not trying to hear it, then, I mean. . . THE COURT: Well, this is still—you have the right to allocution, so whatever it is that you want to say for the Court to consider you are welcome to say it. We just won’t essentially be taking a more formal— THE DEFENDANT: Yeah. THE COURT: —argument or maybe a legal— THE DEFENDANT: And that’s why I didn’t ask my attorney to— THE COURT: —analysis on it. THE DEFENDANT: —to bring it up. I—I wanted to bring it up myself. And just, like I said, I just ask that the judge, the Court, is willing to consider maybe that this is a—this justifies an exceptional sentence below the standard range because of my youth. I was 23 when I committed the crime. And, I mean, I—I apologize for the family and their loss. And yeah, I’ve been in and out of this life my whole life. And I’ve never actually had a chance to mature. I’ve been locked up since the age of 14. And I haven’t really stopped. My mom’s in the courtroom. She can vouch for that. You know what I’m saying? I’ve never actually had a chance to be out there long enough to mature. I went to prison at 25, and I’ve been locked up for the last six years. I’ve t[a]ken classes. I’ve gone to school and got a job. I mean, I’m trying to better my life for the future if someday I—I have a future on the outside because as of right now at 50 years I’m not gonna—I’m not gonna have a life out there. I’m 31 already. So I’d just ask that the ju—the judge
6 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
is willing to consider my youth at the time of the crime as a mitigating factor and just— You know, I don’t want to come back on appeal every other year and have everyone have to relive this. If we can just get a—a decent sentence we can be done here and I don’t have to come back anymore and we can just—everyone will be done and it will bring closure for everyone on this matter. And that’s all I ask is that you—you know, if you can consider my age at the time and hopefully to give me an exceptional sentence downwards. Thank you, Your Honor. THE COURT: Okay. Thank you.
Resentencing RP at 27-29 (alteration in original).
At the conclusion of Anthony Vasquez’s second resentencing hearing, the superior
court resentenced Vasquez using an offender score that no longer accounted for his
possession of a controlled substance conviction. The offender score remained, however,
at 9+. The court resentenced Vasquez to 620 months in confinement. Thus, the court, on
the second resentencing, reduced the sentence by forty months. The sentence still
exceeded the standard range.
During the second resentencing hearing, the resentencing court commented about
I have gone over the hearing transcript from that hearing [the first resentencing hearing] and felt that he [Judge John Antosz, the sentencing hearing and first resentencing hearing judge] analyzed the situation well and felt that there really wasn’t anything that had changed other than the Blake issue. For the Court now to suddenly take a different approach, there really wasn’t a reason. I feel that Judge Antosz took into account, Mr. Vasquez, your—your age at that hearing. I think he took into account how old you were, the circumstances of your life and what was going on. And to an extent I’m doing that as well. And so I just—I feel that on balance, though, regardless,
7 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
it doesn’t appear that a downward departure is warranted based on the information at least that the Court has had. So I just wanted you to know that I was at least taking that into account in my mind. I believe that Judge Antosz was at least looking into that. But I do want to follow what Judge Antosz I believe was trying to—trying to impose at the last hearing. So what the Court is doing, the Court is signing the Findings of Fact and Conclusions that show that there is a substantial and compelling reason for an exceptional sentence based on the—essentially the unpunished crimes.
Resentencing RP at 32-33.
The second resentencing court entered written findings of fact and conclusions of
law that supported its finding that substantial and compelling reasons justified Anthony
Vasquez’s exceptional sentence above the standard range. Under finding of fact 1, the
court wrote: “Anthony Vasquez has a criminal history of 9 points prior to the commission
of this offense and was on [Department of Correction] supervision” at the time of the
murder. Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 132. Under finding of fact 2, the court wrote: “Anthony
Vasquez’s high offender score results in some of the offenses committed in this case
going unpunished.” CP at 132.
LAW AND ANALYSIS
Anthony Vasquez asserts twin assignments of error on appeal. First, the second
resentencing court deemed itself unauthorized to consider Vasquez’s age as a mitigating
factor and erroneously refused to consider this factor. Second, the second resentencing
court followed what it believed the first resentencing court would have done rather than
exercising its own discretion. Vasquez asserts other assignments of error that include
8 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
entry of an exceptional sentence above the standard range, judicial factfinding in
violation of constitutional restraints, and failure to conduct a same criminal conduct
analysis as to some of his convictions. We only address Vasquez’s first two assignments
of error.
Anthony Vasquez’s assignments of error implicate the role played by a
resentencing court. We must decide if the resentencing is limited to those arguments
previously raised before the superior court or whether, conversely, the resentencing court
may hear new evidence and entertain new arguments by the parties. We must also
resolve whether the resentencing court should sentence based on his or her view of how
the sentencing judge would have ruled.
In State v. Edwards, 23 Wn. App. 2d 118, 514 P.3d 692 (2022), this court
addressed resentencing under State v. Blake, when the resentencing court must reduce the
offender score of the accused because of earlier convictions for possession of a controlled
substance. We wrote:
We remand for resentencing pursuant to Blake. Resentencing shall be de novo, with the parties free to advance any and all factual and legal arguments regarding Mr. Edwards’s offender score and sentencing range.
State v. Edwards, 23 Wn. App. 2d 118, 122 (2022). Division One of this court employed
identical language with regard to Blake resentencing in three unpublished decisions. In
re Personal Restraint of Taylor, No. 84036-3-I-I (Wash. Ct. App. Jan. 23, 2023)
(unpublished), https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/840363.pdf; In re Personal
9 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
Restraint of Priebe, No. 84280-3-I (Wash. Ct. App. Jan. 23, 2023) (unpublished)
https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/842803.pdf; In re Personal Restraint of Cratty,
No. 83670-6-I (Wash. Ct. App. Oct. 24, 2022) (unpublished),
https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/836706.pdf. In none of the decisions did this
court elucidate why it deemed de novo sentencing appropriate. We now take the
opportunity to do so.
We hold that, unless this court restricts resentencing to narrow issues, any
resentencing should be de novo. During the resentencing, the resentencing judge may
consider rulings by another judge during the sentencing of the offender, but the
resentencing judge should exercise independent discretion. In this context we employ the
terms “resentencing court” or “resentencing judge” regardless of the number of
resentencings.
Generally, the law wishes to prevent relitigation of an issue after the party enjoyed
a full and fair opportunity to litigate the question. State v. Harrison, 148 Wn.2d 550,
561, 61 P.3d 1104 (2003). But in criminal cases, the court does not wish to strictly apply
this principle. Ashe v. Swenson, 397 U.S. 436, 444, 90 S. Ct. 1189, 25 L. Ed. 2d 469
(1970); State v. Harrison, 148 Wn.2d 550, 561 (2003). In the interest of truth and fair
sentencing, a court on a sentence remand should be able to take new matters into account
on behalf of either the government or the defendant. United States v. Kinder, 980 F.2d
961 (5th Cir. 1992).
10 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
Remarkably, no court rule addresses the extent of resentencing in Washington
court, other state courts, or federal courts. Nevertheless, most jurisdictions have
assembled a body of law concerning the arguments that a party may raise on
resentencing. Washington decisions have yet to thoroughly address the extent of
resentencing. Therefore, we also review foreign decisions.
The resentencing court is not bound by collateral estoppel when the original
sentence is no longer a final judgment on the merits. State v. Brown, 193 Wn.2d 280,
284-88, 440 P.3d 962 (2019); State v. Harrison, 148 Wn.2d 550, 561 (2003). Also, the
law of the case doctrine applies only when an earlier sentencing court decided the merits
of the question. State v. Harrison, 148 Wn.2d 550, 562 (2003). Neither a sentencing
court nor this reviewing court has addressed the merits of Anthony Vasquez’s request for
a reduced sentence because of his youth at the time of the commission of the crime.
When a reviewing court reverses or vacates a sentence, resentencing is de novo in
nature. Bruce v. State, 311 So.3d 51, 53 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2021); State v. D.H., 2019-
Ohio-1017, 133 N.E.3d 922, 928; State v. Hardy, 250 N.C. App. 225, 792 S.E.2d 564,
567 (2016). Resentencing must proceed as an entirely new proceeding when all issues
bearing on the proper sentence must be considered de novo and the defendant is entitled
to the full array of due process rights. Bruce v. State, 311 So.3d 51, 53-54 (Fla. Dist. Ct.
App. 2021).
11 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
In Bruce v. State, the State contended, on appeal from resentencing, that defense
counsel stipulated to the offender prison release reoffender. The Florida Court of
Appeals returned the case to the trial court for resentencing anyway because the trial
court had failed to verify the offender’s consent to the stipulation.
In Betty v. State, 233 So.3d 1149 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 2017), Ricarlo Betty, on
resentencing, asked the court to consider his youth. The resentencing judge refused to
conduct a de novo resentencing because it believed the original sentencing judge would
not have sentenced Betty as a youthful offender. The Court of Appeals remanded for de
novo resentencing.
If the court of appeals mandate limits the questions for resolution by the
resentencing court, the court must limit its review. United States v. Cannady, 63 F.4th
259 (4th Cir. 2023); State v. Kilgore, 167 Wn.2d 28, 42, 216 P.3d 393 (2009).
Nevertheless, the remand must clearly convey the intent to limit the scope of
resentencing. State v. Hardy, 792 S.E.2d 564, 569 (2016). By ordering resentencing
without any specific instructions or any prohibitions, the reviewing court returns the case
to the trial court to consider every aspect of the offender’s sentences de novo. State v.
Morrisey, 2022-Ohio-3519, 198 N.E.3d 554, 561; People v. Lampe, 327 Mich. App. 104,
933 N.W.2d 314, 323 (2019). Without a limitation, the resentencing court should
consider sentencing de novo and entertain any relevant evidence that it could have heard
at the first sentencing. United States v. Cannady, 63 F.4th 259 (4th Cir. 2023); United
12 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
States v. Helton, 349 F.3d 295, 299 (6th Cir. 2003); United States v. Smith, 116 F.3d 857
(10th Cir. 1997); United States v. Atehortva, 69 F.3d 679 (2nd Cir. 1995); United States
v. Ponce, 51 F.3d 820 (9th Cir. 1995); United States v. Bell, 5 F.3d 64, 67 (4th Cir. 1993);
United States v. Cornelius, 968 F.2d 703 (8th Cir. 1992); State v. Hardy, 792 S.E.2d 564,
567 (2016); United States v. Stinson, 97 F.3d 466, 468-69 (11th Cir. 1996). A
resentencing remand order carries a presumption of de novo resentencing. United States
v. Helton, 349 F.3d 295, 299 (6th Cir. 2003).
Although the United States Supreme Court has not held that resentencing is de
novo in total, the court held that, when a reviewing court reverses and remands for
resentencing, the district court may consider evidence of rehabilitation since the earlier
sentencing. Pepper v. United States, 562 U.S. 476, 131 S. Ct. 1229, 179 L. Ed. 2d 196
(2011).
Three federal Circuit Court of Appeals reject the majority view of a presumption
of de novo resentencing. United States v. Marmolejo, 139 F.3d 528, 531 (5th Cir. 1998);
United States v. Whren, 111 F.3d 956 (D.C.Cir. 1997); United States v. Parker, 101 F.3d
527 (7th Cir. 1996). This view criticizes the majority approach as allowing an offender a
second bite of the proverbial pear. United States v. Whren, 111 F.3d 956 (D.C. Cir.
1997). This criticism, however, should be panned since de novo resentencing works both
ways. The State also gets a second opportunity to present evidence and argument not
earlier forwarded.
13 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
On remand, the sentencing court should be free to consider any matters relevant to
sentencing, even those that may not have been raised at the first sentencing hearing, as if
it were sentencing de novo. United States v. Crooked Arm, 853 F.3d 1065, 1069 (9th Cir.
2017). The offender, on resentencing, may even raise an argument which the appeals
court ruled waived in the initial appeal. United States v. Caterino, 29 F.3d 1390, 1395-96
(9th Cir. 1994) overruled on other grounds by Witte v. United States, 515 U.S. 389, 115
S. Ct. 2199, 132 L. Ed. 2d 351 (1995).
During resentencing, the trial court may impose the identical sentence or a greater
or lesser sentence within its discretion. State v. D.H., 2019-Ohio-1017, 133 N.E.3d 922,
928. The resentencing judge may not rely on a previous court’s sentence determination
and fail to conduct its own independent review. State v. Hardy, 792 S.E.2d 564, 567
(2016). Otherwise, the offender is deprived of de novo review. State v. Hardy, 792
S.E.2d 564, 567 (2016).
Some comments of Anthony Vasquez’s second resentencing court denote that the
court wished to impose a sentence that it deemed the earlier sentencing court would have
issued. We also note that, assuming the second resentencing court considered Vasquez’s
youth, Vasquez was not able to present all the evidence he wanted because the court told
him it was not going to consider his youth. Also, Vasquez’s counsel did not advocate for
a lower sentence due to Vasquez’s youth. In fairness to the second resentencing court
and Vasquez’s counsel, we had not decided State v. Edwards yet.
14 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
The second resentencing court did not review resentencing based on any mandate
from this court, but rather on a motion to resentence under State v. Blake. Although the
motion did not expressly ask for de novo resentencing and the motion asked for
resentencing under Blake, the motion did not expressly limit its scope. Therefore, we
apply the presumption of de novo resentencing.
In Vasquez II, we declined to address Anthony Vasquez’s youth because he did
not ask for an exceptional sentence before the first resentencing judge. Vasquez III
comes to us in a different posture because Vasquez requested that the second
resentencing judge consider his youth.
We note that, on review a second time, the appellate court need not address an
assignment of error not asserted on first review. State v. Barberio, 121 Wn.2d 48, 51,
846 P.2d 519 (1993). We do not consider this rule applicable when Anthony Vasquez
asked the second resentencing court to consider his youth and we now review the second
resentencing court’s ruling.
The dissent also relies on State v. Barberio, 121 Wn.2d 48 (1993) for the
proposition that a resentencing court has discretion to entertain new arguments or
evidence by either side, but may also exercise the discretion by precluding new
arguments or evidence. Barberio involved a distinct issue. Barberio limits an offender’s
ability to relitigate the legal basis for an exceptional sentence upward when he or she
enjoyed a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue during the original sentencing and
15 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
appeal. None of Anthony Vasquez’s resentencing courts have fully entertained the
possibility of an exceptional sentence downward. When the superior court conducts
resentencing because of the elimination of a count of conviction or the lowering of the
offender score, the parameters for resentencing change. An argument that the offender
deemed ineffective before may now seem viable. The law should not deem the offender
to have waived a viable sentencing argument when the context governing the first
proceeding differs in resentencing.
We also question any significant difference between the process envisioned by the
dissent and this court’s majority. The majority does not demand that the resentencing
court agree to the validity of any new arguments or the credibility or weight of any new
evidence. The majority only rules that, out of fairness to the offender, the resentencing
court should listen and decide anew the probity of the arguments and evidence.
CONCLUSION
We remand to the superior court for a third resentencing during which the court
will conduct sentencing de novo, including consideration of Anthony Vasquez’s youth at
the time of his crime. Because of de novo resentencing, Vasquez may raise, before the
superior court, other arguments asserted on this appeal.
16 No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
2.06.040.
_________________________________ Fearing, C.J.
I CONCUR:
______________________________ Pennell, J.
17 State v. Vasquez No. 38471-3-III
SIDDOWAY, J. (concurring/dissenting in part) — Given ambiguity about the third
resentencing court’s understanding of the discretion it had to entertain Anthony Rene
Vasquez’s evidence and argument of diminished responsibility because of his youth,
well-settled law supports remanding for a fourth, full, resentencing. On that, I concur.
I disagree that Mr. Vasquez is entitled to the “plenary” resentencing he requests, 1
that he and others who are resentenced because convictions have been vacated in light of
State v. Blake 2 are entitled to “de novo resentencing,” or with the majority’s holding in
this appeal that rather than having an option, a resentencing court “should exercise
independent discretion” on the new factual and legal arguments an offender is entitled to
raise at resentencing. Majority at 10, 16 (emphasis added). Particularly where
resentencing takes place before the same judge (which is not the case here), to require
rather than permit the exercise of independent judgment unduly burdens resentencing
courts and invites wasteful further appeals. I disagree with the de novo resentencing
required in Blake remands by State v. Edwards, 23 Wn. App. 2d 118, 122, 514 P.3d 692
(2022). On that score, I dissent.
I. MR. VASQUEZ HAS DEMONSTRATED A NEED FOR A FOURTH RESENTENCING
In his second, 2018 appeal to this court, Anthony Rene Vasquez complained in a
statement of additional grounds (SAG) that his new 660-month sentence, which he
1 Br. of Appellant at 1-3. 2 197 Wn.2d 170, 481 P.3d 521 (2021). No. 38471-3-III State v. Vasquez
characterized as a de facto life sentence, constituted cruel and unusual punishment. State
v. Vasquez, No. 36123-3-III, SAG at 7 (Wash. Ct. App. Mar. 18, 2019) (on file with
court). He asked that “this case be remanded back to [the] trial court for resentencing
with instructions to consider Vasquez[ʼs] youthfulness.” Id. at 8. Mr. Vasquez was 23
years old at the time of the crimes.
The relief granted in that appeal was remand with directions to make a clerical
change to Mr. Vasquez’s judgment and sentence, a remand that this court stated
“involves only a ministerial correction and no exercise of discretion,” such that
“Vasquez’s presence is not required.” State v. Vasquez, No. 36123-3-III, slip op. at 4
(Wash. Ct. App. June 20, 2019) (unpublished), https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions
/pdf/361233_unp.pdf. Mr. Vasquez’s challenge to the resentencing court’s failure to
consider his youth was rejected with the explanation that Mr. Vasquez “neither requested
an exceptional sentence below the standard range nor asserted his age as a mitigating
factor at his resentencing hearing. Thus, Anthony Vasquez waived the contention.” Id.
at 6-7.
Mr. Vasquez petitioned the Supreme Court to review this court’s opinion,
including its decision that his right to request consideration of his youth at resentencing
had been waived. Mot. for Pet. for Discretionary Rev., State v. Vasquez, No. 97459-4,
at 4 (Wash. Jul. 19, 2019) (on file with court). Review was denied. Order, Vasquez,
No. 97459-4 (Wash. Nov. 6, 2019) (on file with court).
Following the Washington Supreme Court’s decision in Blake, Mr. Vasquez filed
a motion for relief from judgment, since a conviction for simple possession of a
controlled substance had counted toward his offender score. The State responded with a
third resentencing memorandum in which it calculated his offender score without the
simple possession conviction as an 11.
As the majority opinion recounts, at the third resentencing hearing, defense
counsel announced at the outset that Mr. Vasquez would like the court to consider his
youth as a mitigating factor, citing State v. O’Dell. 3 The prosecutor took the position that
Mr. Vasquez could not request consideration of whether his age supported diminished
culpability because the rejection of that claim of error in his second appeal was law of the
case. Defense counsel conceded that the court lacked authority to consider youth as a
mitigating factor. While the court allowed Mr. Vasquez to speak to the issue to a certain
extent, and in announcing its sentence stated that it, “to an extent” was considering Mr.
Vasquez’s youth as well, it is not clear that the court fully understood its discretion to
permit mitigation to be argued, and to consider it. Rep. of Proc. at 32, 27-29.
Law of the case did not preclude hearing evidence and argument that youth was a
mitigating factor. A trial court, on remand, “‘may exercise independent judgment as to
decisions to which error was not assigned in the prior review, and those decisions are
subject to later review by the appellate court.’” State v. Barberio, 121 Wn.2d 48, 50, 846
3 183 Wn.2d 680, 358 P.3d 359 (2015).
P.2d 519 (1993) (quoting the advisory committee on the Rules of Appellate Procedure,
2 LEWIS H. ORLAND & KARL B. TEGLAND, WASHINGTON PRACTICE: RULES PRACTICE at
481 (4th ed. 1991)). Error had not previously been assigned to any decision that Mr.
Vasquez’s age was not a mitigating factor. This court, and the Supreme Court, had
merely rejected his request for resentencing where he had not asked that youth be
considered by the first resentencing judge. I agree with the majority that this appeal is in
a different posture.
Given the ambiguity whether the third resentencing court fully understood its
discretion, I agree that we should remand for a fourth resentencing.
II. REQUIRING RESENTENCING COURTS TO REVISIT PREVIOUSLY UNAPPEALED ISSUES IS CONTRARY TO CONTROLLING CASE LAW, UNDULY BURDENS RESENTENCING COURTS, AND INVITES WASTEFUL FURTHER APPEALS
The decision last year in Edwards requiring “de novo” resentencing on Blake
remands held that a defendant is entitled to raise any factual or legal challenge to the
judicial determinations that went into their prior offender score and sentencing range.
Under Edwards, a defendant can require the trial court to revisit any issue of validity,
comparability, wash out, or same criminal conduct that went into those determinations.
In this appeal, Mr. Vasquez assigns error not only to the trial court’s failure to consider
his youth as a mitigating factor, but also to its failure at his third resentencing to engage
in a new “same criminal conduct” analysis of his prior crimes. Br. of Appellant at 41-47.
He also raises a constitutional challenge for the first time to the court’s imposition of an
exceptional sentence based on the free crimes aggravator, arguing that the Washington
Supreme Court wrongly held in State v. Alvarado, 164 Wn.2d 556, 566-67, 192 P.3d 345
(2008), that application of the factor does not require prohibited judicial factfinding.
Br. of Appellant at 47-56. The majority does not address those issues, holding that
“[b]ecause of de novo resentencing” Mr. Vasquez will be able to address those issues to
the superior court. Majority at 16.
By requiring the exercise of independent judgment on all such issues at
resentencing, Edwards widely opened the door to further appeals, including the fourth
appeal we can anticipate in this case. And it did so in a huge class of resentencings that
can, in many cases, involve very little change to an offender score or sentencing range.
The majority now extends the requirement of de novo resentencing to “any
resentencing,” unless restricted by the appellate court. Majority at 10.
Thirty years ago, our Supreme Court held otherwise in Barberio. It held that at
resentencing the trial court “may” exercise independent judgment as to decisions to
which error was not assigned in the prior review. 121 Wn.2d at 50. It held “[c]learly the
rule is permissive . . . . It is discretionary for the trial court to decide whether to revisit an
issue which was not the subject of appeal.” Id. at 51. It spoke of the “necessity” of a rule
that denies review at a later stage of “clear and obvious issue[s] which could have been
decided . . . in the first appeal.” Id. at 52.
In State v. Kilgore, 167 Wn.2d 28, 216 P.3d 393 (2009), our Supreme Court
reaffirmed a resentencing court’s discretion whether to revisit decisions to which error
was not assigned in a first appeal, in a case illustrating the importance of that discretion
to finality. Rejecting Kilgore’s argument to adopt tests created by federal courts to
determine finality where cases have been remanded following partial reversals, the court
adhered to Barberio, holding that while “[t]he pendency of a case otherwise final under
RAP 12.7 can be revived pursuant to RAP 2.5(c),” 167 Wn.2d at 36-38 (emphasis
added),
We have interpreted RAP 2.5(c)(1) to allow trial courts, as well as appellate courts, discretion to revisit an issue on remand that was not the subject of the earlier appeal. This is consistent with RAP 12.2, which allows trial courts to entertain postjudgment motions authorized by statute or court rules, as long as the motions do not challenge issues already decided on appeal. If the trial court elects to exercise this discretion, its decision may be the subject of a later appeal, thereby restoring the pendency of the case.
Id. at 38-39 (citation and footnotes omitted).
The significance in Kilgore was that since the trial court on remand had merely
corrected Kilgore’s judgment to remove two reversed convictions that the State had
elected not to retry, he could not bring a post-Blakely 4 challenge to an exceptional
sentence he had not challenged in his first appeal. The court observed that “[t]he fact that
the trial court had discretion to reexamine Kilgore’s sentence on remand is not sufficient
4 Blakely v. Washington, 542 U.S. 296, 124 S. Ct. 2531, 159 L. Ed. 2d 403 (2004).
to revive his right to appeal. Our rules of appellate procedure require that the trial court
exercise its discretion in order to give rise to an appealable issue.” Id. at 43.
Giving resentencing courts discretion, but not the obligation, to entertain new
challenges to their prior sentencing determinations strikes the right balance, in my view.
More importantly, Barbiero and Kilgore provide controlling constructions of our
appellate rules and common law. The concept of a full resentencing as opposed to a
ministerial correction is addressed by a large body of case law. E.g., State v. Ramos, 171
Wn.2d 46, 246 P.3d 811 (2011) (per curiam). Presumably, the majority intends de novo
resentencing to supplant full resentencing. I disagree with Edwards and with its
extension by the majority in this case and therefore dissent in part.
Siddoway, J.