State of Washington v. Ernest James Sorrell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 25, 2018
Docket33032-0
StatusPublished

This text of State of Washington v. Ernest James Sorrell (State of Washington v. Ernest James Sorrell) 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. Ernest James Sorrell, (Wash. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

FILED JANUARY 25, 2018 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. 33032-0-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) ERNEST JAMES SORRELL, ) PUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

FEARING, C.J. — In two recent decisions, the Washington Supreme Court

announced a new regime for the imposition and remission of discretionary costs

imposed as legal financial obligations on convicted offenders. Beforehand, trial courts

routinely and rotely imposed sums of discretionary legal financial obligations and

appellate courts spurned review of the awards. In State v. Blazina, 182 Wn.2d 827, 344

P.3d 680 (2015), the state high court directed superior courts to conduct an

individualized inquiry into the financial circumstances of each offender before levying

any discretionary legal financial obligations. The Supreme Court also bestowed

discretion on this appeals court to review the superior court’s award of the financial

obligations regardless of whether the offender objected to their assessment before the

superior court. In City of Richland v. Wakefield, 186 Wn.2d 596, 380 P.3d 459 (2016), No. 33032-0-III State v. Sorrell

the state high court instructed lower trial courts to carefully review the pecuniary status

of the offender and consider the guidelines in GR 34 when resolving a motion for

remission of discretionary legal financial obligations based on manifest hardship.

Blazina and Wakefield departed from a long-standing jurisprudential view of legal

financial obligations as a form of punishment and from an appellate practice of avoiding

review of the obligations under the constructs of ripeness and waiver. The two decisions

lamented a broken financial obligations system that disables an offender from

successfully returning to society. Based on Blazina and Wakefield, financial obligations

must no longer behave as an obsessed and possessed Police Inspector Javert shadowing

the offender for the rest of his or her life.

Today, we must apply principles and guidelines from the two Supreme Court

landmark decisions when determining whether the trial court erred when failing to

directly address Ernest Sorrell’s motion for remission of financial obligations and when

convicting him of intractably refusing to pay the obligations. In fairness to the trial

court, the Supreme Court had yet to decide Blazina or Wakefield when it issued its

decisions. We reverse and remand for a new hearing.

FACTS

In 2009, a Douglas County jury found Ernest Sorrell guilty of two counts of third

degree child molestation as a result of sexually abusing his early teen daughter. Based

on an offender score of nine plus, the sentencing court imposed sixty months’

2 No. 33032-0-III State v. Sorrell

confinement for both counts, with the counts to run concurrently. In an August 10, 2009

judgment and sentence, the trial court also imposed $3,747.25 in legal financial

obligations. The discrete obligations included a $500.00 victim assessment fee, $200.00

for the criminal case filing fee, $747.25 for witness costs, $250.00 for the jury demand

fee, $450.00 for transcription costs, $1,000.00 for the cost of a court appointed attorney,

a $500.00 fine resulting from a purported violation of the controlled substance act, and a

$100.00 deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) collection fee. The sentencing court entered a

boilerplate finding that Sorrell had the ability or the likely future ability to pay the levied

legal financial obligations.

The August 2009 judgment and sentence ordered Ernest Sorrell to pay the legal

financial obligations at the rate of $25.00 per month beginning immediately. Consistent

with all other judgment and sentences, Sorrell’s sentence imposed interest at the rate of

twelve percent per annum on the financial obligations. Therefore, interest in the annual

amount of $449.67 and the monthly amount of $37.47 accrued on the $3,747.25 in

financial obligations. Payment at $25.00 per month would never retire the principal

owed.

The 2009 judgment and sentence directed Ernest Sorrell to report to the clerk of

the court any financial information requested. The judgment and sentence placed Sorrell

on monetary supervision until he paid all legal financial obligations, ordered Sorrell to

notify the clerk within two days of any change in his address, phone number or

3 No. 33032-0-III State v. Sorrell

employer’s name, and bade him to report to the superior court collections officer and to

appear before any financial review hearings.

Ernest Sorrell challenged his judgment and sentence. On July 14, 2011, this court

reversed and dismissed one of the child molestation convictions on double jeopardy

grounds, and this court remanded for resentencing. On May 7, 2012, the sentencing

court, on remand, imposed an exceptional sentence of sixty months for the remaining

conviction. The sentencing court also imposed the same amount of legal financial

obligations. In essence, the judgment and sentence did not change.

Ernest Sorrell appealed again by challenging his exceptional sentence. On

November 22, 2012, and before this court entertained the merits of Sorrell’s second

appeal, the State Department of Corrections (DOC) released Sorrell from prison. This

appeals court, therefore, granted the State’s motion to dismiss the appeal as moot. This

court added $2,169.35 in appellate costs to Sorrell’s financial obligations, despite

dismissal on mootness rather than on the merits.

Because of Ernest Sorrell’s release from prison on November 22, 2012, DOC

filed a closure report on December 18, 2012. The report stated that Sorrell had paid

$89.10 toward the $3,747.25 in legal financial obligations earlier imposed by the

sentencing court. Sorrell’s last payment, on October 4, 2012, amounted to the sum of

two cents. With accrued interest of $1,388.73, Sorrell owed, on November 22, 2012, the

total sum of $5,046.88, not including the costs imposed by this appeals court. The DOC

4 No. 33032-0-III State v. Sorrell

closure report omitted any reference to appellate court costs. The closure report declared

that the Douglas County clerk assumed the responsibility for collecting legal financial

obligations.

On December 24, 2012, the sentencing court confirmed and decreed the transfer

of Ernest Sorrell’s legal financial obligations collection from DOC to the Douglas

County Superior Court. The transfer order assessed $100 in collection costs on Ernest

Sorrell. The order read, in part:

NOTICE: The defendant is ordered to contact the Financial Collections Officer for Douglas County Superior Court within seven (7) days of the date of this order by calling (509) 745-8529 ext. 5 or Direct line and voicemail 509-888-6433. Failure to contact the Financial Collections Officer as ordered will result in the issuance of an Order to Show Cause for your appearance in Court. Failure to appear at any court ordered hearing could result in the issuance of an arrest warrant. Failure to make payments and notify of any change of address could result in the filing of a probation violation and imposition of up to sixty (60) days in jail per violation.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 92 (boldface omitted).

Tristen Worthen, financial collections officer for Douglas County, scheduled a

financial review hearing for Ernest Sorrell’s case for June 3, 2013. Sorrell had not paid

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