State Of Washington v. David B. Coe

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 10, 2019
Docket77669-0
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. David B. Coe (State Of Washington v. David B. Coe) 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
State Of Washington v. David B. Coe, (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 77669-0-I Petitioner/Appellant, DIVISION ONE V. UNPUBLISHED OPINION DAVID BRUCE COE,

Respondent. FILED: June 10, 2019

CHUN, J. — A jury convicted David Coe of driving under the influence. On

RALJ appeal, the superior court reversed and dismissed Coes conviction based

on a nonconstitutional violation of his speedy trial rights. For the reasons

discussed below, we reverse the superior court and reinstate Coe’s conviction.

BACKGROUND

On November 25, 2015, the State charged Coe with driving under the

influence (DUI) in King County District Court. Coe was arraigned the same day.

The court set bail and took Coe into custody. At a pretrial review hearing on

December 7, 2015, the trial court set the case for trial to begin on January 4,

2016. Coe did not note any pretrial CrRLJ 3.6 motions. The parties agreed to

address the State’s CrRLJ 3.5 motion on the day of trial. No. 77669-0-1/2

At an administrative hearing on December 23, 2015, the court determined

that Coe’s 60-day speedy trial period was set to expire on January 25, 2016.1

The parties also discussed ongoing discovery and scheduling matters. The court

ruled that although the State was not ready, the trial would remain set for

January 4, 2016.

The parties appeared for trial on January 4, 2016. Counsel for Coe, Justin

Wolfe, announced that he was ready to proceed. Coe’s counsel also notified the

court that he might not be able to complete trial due to an upcoming job transfer.

The court reconfirmed January 25, 2016 as the speedy trial expiration date. The

court then asked defense counsel whether he had received all requested

discovery. Defense counsel asserted that he was missing two items of

requested discovery, including the audio of a 911 call and the audio of a warrant

call. Defense counsel also stated that he was bringing a motion to suppress

evidence or to dismiss the case.

The court stated that a motions hearing could be held on January 14,

2016, but defense counsel was not available on that day. The State asked the

court whether it was continuing the case, and if so, why. The court expressed

concern that the case had not been assigned to a courtroom that could have

heard motions prior to trial. The State pointed out that the only motion noted was

under CrRLJ 3.5 and asked to proceed on that matter or, in the alternative, to

continue the matter until the motions hearing. The State also asserted that

1The 60-day period expired on January 24, 2016. Because this date fell on a Sunday, the court ruled that speedy trial would expire on the next court day.

2 No. 77669-0-113

defense counsel’s trial brief raised several issues “that are actually pretrial

motions that would need to be heard and potentially even require testimony.”

The court responded “[t]hat’s why I’m going to do a motion [hearing].” The State

again asked the court’s reasoning for continuing the case. The court responded: Because, no fault of the defense.

And for some reason, it got put on some track that didn’t address the motion. Okay. So it got set for today. I know I don’t dismiss anything until comes speedy and people start getting substantially prejudiced, I guess. We don’t know that yet. This is my trial week. This is my trial week. I have a trial ready to go. So that’s why no, we put it on a motion so that I can hear these motions.

Another reason why I do it until January 14th is because, then, State, you’re on full notice on all this stuff, so when it comes to the 14th you can’t say, well, I didn’t know, and you’ve had two weeks until January 14th approximately, to go get whatever you’re going to get and bring whatever person you need to bring for those motions. The State expressed concern that defense counsel had not brought his

motion to suppress earlier. Defense counsel responded that he had not filed his

motion prior to trial because he had not yet received all the evidence when the

case was set at the December 7, 2015 pretrial hearing. After reviewing the

outstanding issues with the parties, the court reiterated that “[i]t was more an

administration of the case that created us having to do a motions calendar” and

that neither party was to blame. The State argued that Coe’s motions should be

waived because he failed to note them on the pretrial calendar, or in the

alternative, to continue the case to the new hearing date so both parties could

prepare. The court ruled that Coe could bring the motions because the fault lay

with the administration of the case rather than with defense counsel.

3 No. 77669-0-114

Discussion then turned to the nature and substance of the motions.

Defense counsel asserted that all were motions in limine with the exception of

the CrRLJ 8.3(b) motion to dismiss. The State disagreed on the ground that all

of the motions would require testimony. The court spontaneously ruled that trial

had commenced “because we started motions in limine.” The parties agreed that

trial had commenced and that speedy trial was a “non-issue.” The court

proceeded to set a date for the motions hearing. The two earliest options were

January 14 or February 26, 2016. Defense counsel requested the soonest

possible date. The court reasoned that February 26 was more realistic in light of

the parties’ caseloads and the complexity of the issues. The court also noted

that the later date would provide “ample time and opportunity in case there’s a

substitution of counsel.” After defense counsel indicated that he was unable to

articulate prejudice stemming from the later date, the court set the motion

hearing for February 26. The State then asked the court to rule on one motion in limine: And before we continue, if we could just belt and suspenders, on appeal, this case.

So I want to make sure that when we have commenced the trial, that we are doing that appropriately. Is the Court willing to rule on just one motion in limine so that we can make sure that when an appellate court looks at this, that we won’t have erroneously continued this trial after commencing speedy or after commencing —

the trial?

Can we just rule on one of them, such as exclusion of witnesses?

4 No. 77669-0-1/5

After defense counsel indicated that he had no problem with the State’s

request, the Court granted the parties’ joint motion to exclude witnesses. The

court then recessed until February 26, 2016.

At a scheduled status hearing on January 14, 2016, defense counsel

indicated that another attorney from his office would be taking over Coe’s

representation. The parties agreed to move the motions date to February 25,

2016 and to start trial testimony on March 7, 2016.

On February 25, 2016, Coe’s counsel announced that he and his office

were moving to withdraw due to an irreconcilable conflict of interest. Coe’s new

counsel, Dua Abudiab, objected to any continuances and asked the court for the

soonest possible motions hearing.

The parties appeared for motions on March 22, 2016. Counsel for Coe

filed a motion to dismiss for ineffective assistance of counsel and violation of

speedy trial rights under CrRLJ 3.3. The court initially denied the motion without

comment. The court then proceeded to rule on defense counsel’s other motions

without hearing testimony. The State then requested time to file a brief on

defense counsel’s motion to dismiss “U]ust to make sure there’s something on

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Related

State v. Carson
912 P.2d 1016 (Washington Supreme Court, 1996)
State v. Andrews
832 P.2d 1373 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1992)
State v. Carson
128 Wash. 2d 805 (Washington Supreme Court, 1996)

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State Of Washington v. David B. Coe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-david-b-coe-washctapp-2019.