State of Washington v. David Joseph Brown

432 P.3d 1241
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 17, 2019
Docket35304-4
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 432 P.3d 1241 (State of Washington v. David Joseph Brown) 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 Joseph Brown, 432 P.3d 1241 (Wash. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

FILED JANUARY 17, 2019 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. 35304-4-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) PUBLISHED OPINION DAVID JOSEPH BROWN, ) ) Petitioner. )

FEARING, J. — RCW 46.61.305(2) declares that a driver must, “when required,”

continuously signal an intention to turn or cross lanes during at least the last one hundred

feet traveled before turning or moving lanes. This appeal asks if this statute compels a

driver, who moved left from a middle lane to a dedicated left turn lane while signally his

intention to change lanes, to reactivate his turn signal before turning left from the

reserved turn lane. We hold that the statute only requires use of a signal in circumstances

that implicate public safety. Because the circumstances surrounding David Brown’s left-

hand turn from a left-turn-only lane did not jeopardize public safety, we hold that

Trooper Mason Acheson lacked grounds to stop David Brown’s vehicle. We affirm the

district court’s ruling that suppressed evidence resulting from the stop of Brown and No. 35304-4-III State v. Brown

reverse the superior court’s reversal of the district court’s decision. In doing so, we

educate ourselves in turn signal technology.

FACTS

We borrow most facts from the district court’s findings of fact. On the evening of

March 22, 2015, Trooper Mason Acheson patrolled the streets of Kennewick. At 10:15

p.m., while traveling eastbound on Clearwater Avenue, Trooper Acheson saw appellant,

David Brown, driving a Toyota Tundra, turn right from Huntington Street onto

Clearwater Avenue, a four-lane arterial. During the turn, the left side tires of the Tundra,

a large pickup, crossed the white dashed divider line between the two eastbound lanes by

one tire width for a brief moment, after which the vehicle fully returned to its lane of

travel. Brown’s diversion across the dividing line did not endanger any travel. Acheson

observed Brown’s tires cross the white dashed divider line, and he continued to view

Brown’s driving thereafter.

Shortly after entering Clearwater Avenue, David Brown signaled his intent to

change lanes, and to move to the left or inner eastbound lane, by activating his left turn

signal that blinked numerous times. Brown entered the inner lane of the two lanes.

Soon David Brown approached the intersection of Clearwater Avenue and

Highway 395, where the eastbound lanes widen to three lanes. The innermost of the

three lanes becomes a designated left turn only lane. Brown again wished to change

2 No. 35304-4-III State v. Brown

lanes so he could turn left. Brown signaled his intent to move left into the dedicated turn

lane. Brown maneuvered his vehicle into the dedicated turn lane, at which point the left

turn signal cycled-off.

The parties employ and the district court incorporated the term “cycle off,” a term

with which we were not familiar, before this appeal, in the context of vehicle signal

lights. The turn signal for most cars includes a self-cancelling feature that returns the

horizontal signal lever to the neutral, or no signal, position as the steering wheel

approaches the straight forward position after completion of a turn. We assume “cycle

off” refers to the activation of the self-cancelling feature. Most cars now incorporate the

additional turn signal feature of a spring-loaded momentary signal position activated

when the driver partially depresses or raises the horizontal stalk. The signal then operates

however long the driver holds the lever partway toward the left or right turn signal detent.

A driver typically lowers or raises the spring-loaded momentary signal feature when

changing lanes as opposed to executing a turn from one street to another. The parties’

nomenclature and the district court’s findings of fact suggest David Brown did not

employ the momentary signal when changing lanes on the second occasion while

traveling east on Clearwater Avenue.

David Brown stopped his vehicle in the dedicated left turn lane while awaiting the

light to turn green. He did not reactivate his turn signal. Trooper Mason Acheson pulled

3 No. 35304-4-III State v. Brown

behind Brown. No other traffic was present on eastbound Clearwater Avenue. When the

light turned green, Brown turned left onto northbound Highway 395. Trooper Mason

Acheson then actuated his patrol vehicle’s emergency light and stopped Brown.

Trooper Mason Acheson stopped David Brown based on Brown’s crossing the

eastbound lanes’ divider line during his turn from Huntington Street onto Clearwater

Avenue. He did not stop Brown based on Brown’s failure to signal his left turn onto

Highway 395. After stopping Brown, Trooper Acheson investigated Brown for suspicion

of driving under the influence of intoxicants. Acheson arrested Brown for driving under

the influence.

PROCEEDINGS

The State of Washington charged David Brown with driving while under the

influence of intoxicants. Brown filed a motion to suppress evidence garnered from the

stop of his car by Trooper Mason Acheson. He argued that the state trooper lacked cause

to stop his vehicle. During the suppression hearing, the district court entertained

testimony from Mason Acheson.

The State principally contended, before the district court, that State Trooper

Mason Acheson possessed probable cause to stop David Brown because of Brown’s

crossing of the dashed dividing line between the two eastbound lanes on Clearwater

Avenue when turning right from Huntington Street. The district court concluded that,

4 No. 35304-4-III State v. Brown

because Brown, as reasonably as practical, kept his vehicle within his lane when turning

right onto Clearwater Avenue, the crossing of the dividing line on the avenue did not

violate the traffic code. Therefore, Trooper Acheson lacked probable cause to stop

Brown for crossing the line.

The State of Washington moved for reconsideration and added, based on the

suppression hearing testimony of Trooper Mason Acheson, that Acheson had additional

reason to stop David Brown since Brown violated RCW 46.61.305 when turning left onto

Highway 395. The statute references use, for a continuous one hundred feet, of a turn

signal before turning left or right.

With the motion for reconsideration, the district court needed to determine if

David Brown’s failure to activate his turn signal before turning left onto the highway

afforded probable cause. The district court reasoned:

3. Based upon the evidence presented, there was insufficient time and distance for the Defendant to comply with the signal statute while executing the lane change to enter the dedicated left turn lane at the intersection of Clearwater Ave. and SR 395. The Defendant complied with the signal statute as best he could and due to the impossibility to comply with the signal statutes requirement of signaling for 100 feet prior to making a lane change the Defendant cannot be in violation of said provision when it was impossible to comply with such. 4. The intent of turn signals is to notify other drive[r]s where the Defendant was intending to travel.

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432 P.3d 1241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-david-joseph-brown-washctapp-2019.