State of Washington v. Jaime Salvador Silva-Gonzalez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 9, 2015
Docket31579-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Jaime Salvador Silva-Gonzalez (State of Washington v. Jaime Salvador Silva-Gonzalez) 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. Jaime Salvador Silva-Gonzalez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

FILED

JUNE 9,2015

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STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 31579-7-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) JAIME SALVADOR SILVA GONZALES, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

KORSMO, J. - Jaime Salvador Silva-Gonzales appeals from the denial of his

motion for a new trial, contending that his counsel labored under a conflict of interest

because he was a necessary witness at trial. Since he did not establish that claim before

the trial court, we affirm.

FACTS

Mr. Silva-Gonzales was convicted by a jury of first degree unlawful possession of

a firearm and attempting to elude. The jury acquitted him of felony harassment. He was

represented at trial by attorney Etoy Alford. The firearm possession charge was based on

a gun found in the trunk of the defendant's car. Co-defendant Marisela Mora, a

passenger in the car, pleaded guilty to unlawful possession of a firearm shortly before

trial and testified in Mr. Silva-Gonzales' defense. No. 31579-7-111 State v. Silva-Gonzales

At the beginning of trial on March 25, 2013, defense counsel moved to exclude

recordings of telephone calls made by Mr. Silva-Gonzales on the basis that they were

unduly prejudicial. The court directed the prosecutor to specify the portions of the

records that he was intending to use and ultimately admitted those portions after finding

that the probative value of the records outweighed their prejudicial impact. Segments of

two different recordings are at issue in this appeal.

The first conversation occurred July 19, 2012. There Mr. Silva-Gonzales

expressed to his girlfriend a desire to know what was in the police reports of Ms. Mora's

case. He needed to "take care of her" and send her money because "she's saying

everything was hers." Report of Proceedings (RP) at 265-66. Another conversation,

from the following day, eventually made its way, in part, before the jury:

MR. SILVA: It was my vehicle. I knew I shouldn't have put that fucking car in my name. Anyway, urn, the only thing just looking back the car was in your name, I said yeah, but I said that we both know that the reason that it's locked up with something, it's not in the -- it's not the same thing as it being in a common area.

RP at 266.

Defense counsel renewed his objection to the use of the recordings on the third

day of trial, March 27. He argued the prejudicial nature of the comments and the general

unfairness of recording j ail conversations. He concluded his argument with a

condemnation of the July 20th call:

No. 31579-7-111 State v. Silva-Gonzales

Your Honor, the one that is the most troubling to me is the one about with my client supposedly talking about what was locked away in a trunk. It puts him in such a position where he needs to testify or has to testify as to where he got this information, when he got that information, and then talking about conversations that he had with me. 1 hate to say this again, Judge, and I'll say it and it happens so often, but this taint [sic] fair.

RP at 191.

The two noted conversations were admitted later that day during the testimony of

the State's final witness. Shortly after the witness began to testify, defense counsel

moved to withdraw on the basis that he was a necessary witness. The court denied the

motion and allowed the testimony to continue. The State rested and the court took its

noon break.

The afternoon session began with defense counsel renewing his argument that he

was now a witness. The trial court disagreed, stating:

And, again, and I'll elaborate, 1 guess on why 1 did is that these issues, if it is an issue, and 1 don't think it is an issue, it's an innocuous portion of the conversation that was recorded and then played subsequently for the jury this morning, has been part of this case since Mr. Silva Gonzalez [sic] first had that conversation last summer and obviously the State's been aware of it and the defense has been aware of it and all of a sudden it becomes an issue requiring that Mr. Alford withdraw and that the Court declare a mistrial on the third day of trial, okay, after the State is about to rest, just before the State is about to rest. 1 think it's too late and even if it was, and 1 don't think -- 1 think it's innocuous in the extreme.

RP at 271. The judge went on to finalize his thoughts:

... but in any event it still -- the issue is whether this is something that all of a sudden arose this afternoon -- or this morning or something that has been within the knowledge of the defense for weeks or months on end and 1

No. 31579-7-II1 State v. Silva-Gonzales

don't think in getting back -- I don't think you can --plainly what it looks like is you hid in the weeds and then sprung this at the last moment when you think it would -- when you thought it would have the most impact and I don't think that that's appropriate.

RP at 272.

The court denied the motion and the defense called its only witness, Ms. Mora.

She claimed ownership of the gun and told jurors that she had put the weapon in the trunk

without Mr. Silva-Gonzales' knowledge. She explained that was why she had pleaded

guilty and was testifying on Mr. Silva-Gonzales' behalf.

The parties argued the case on competing theories, with the State contending it

was Mr. Silva-Gonzales' car and he had knowledge of the gun's presence in the trunk,

while the defense argued that Ms. Mora was responsible. However, the jury did not

accept her testimony and convicted Mr. Silva-Gonzales of the two noted counts. His

counsel then brought a motion for a new trial, renewing his argument that he had a

conflict of interest resulting from the fact that he was a necessary witness in the case.

After hearing argument, the trial judge again disagreed:

The one issue, I guess, that Mr. Alford -- or actually I would clarify and would say the defendant, wishes to present relates to the issue of whether Mr. Alford was a witness or became a witness in the course of the trial. The circumstances of the second j ail phone call were obvious to all from the point where it was first recorded and first disseminated both for the State as well as to the defense. However, and for reasons that I can speculate about, that the issue of Mr. Alford needing to withdraw and be -­ make himself available to be a witness which would have obviously resulted in a mistrial on the third day of trial immediately before the State was intending to rest its case, appears to me to be an attempt on the defendant's

No. 31579-7-111 ­ State v. Silva-Gonzales

part because the conversation at sidebar was my client wants me to testify as I recall, it's when Mr. Alford (inaudible), that there was an obvious attempt to cause a mistrial and to get a do over. I don't think the defendant can wait until that point in the proceeding to spring the trap, as it were, and I think that that is in fact what the case of what happened in this particular case.

The other part of it is that if there was any type of prejudice, and I don't see how there possible [sic] could have been any prejudice, it was mitigated or eliminated through Mr. Alford's final argument and Mr. Hintze's agreement in final argument that in fact that Mr. Alford could have been the source of the information. So, it clearly is a non-issue and it is an attempt, I believe, on Mr.

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