State Of Washington, V Jeffrey S. Moore And Mario Gadea-rivas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 20, 2013
Docket42707-9
StatusPublished

This text of State Of Washington, V Jeffrey S. Moore And Mario Gadea-rivas (State Of Washington, V Jeffrey S. Moore And Mario Gadea-rivas) 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 Jeffrey S. Moore And Mario Gadea-rivas, (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

FILED R 0T OF APPEALS

20130E 0 Ai 8: 5

S1 SH1l'4G' 0,

P61 DF-PU

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 42707 -9 -II

Respondent,

AIM

Consolidated with JEFFREY S. MOORE,

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 42715 -0 -II

V.

MARIO GADEA- RIVAS, PUBLISHED OPINION

HUNT, J. — Jeffrey S. Moore and Mario Gadea - Rivas appeal the superior court' s

affirmance of the district court' s denial of their motions to dismiss their driving under the

influence ( DUI) charges for failure to comply with CrRLJ 3. 3 time for trial rules. Both argue

that the superior court erred in ruling ( 1) that the district court' s failure to set a timely trial date

was cured under CrRLJ 3. 3( a)( 4); and ( 2) that Moore' s failure to appear at motion hearings reset

1 the time within he must have been brought to trial under CrRLJ 3. 3. Holding that failure to set

1 Moore also assigns error to the superior court' s ruling that his attorney had an ethical duty to notify him of court hearings under the Washington Rules of Professional Conduct. Consolidated Nos. 42707 -9 -II and 42715 -0 -11

trial within the time limits of CrRLJ 3. 3 requires dismissal, we reverse the superior court and

remand to the district court to dismiss these charges with prejudice.

FACTS

Both Jeffrey S. Moore and Mario Gadea -Rivas were arrested for driving under the

influence of alcohol in 2009, a violation of former RCW 46. 61. 502 ( 2008). Moore submitted to

a breathalyzer test.2

1. DISTRICT COURT

A. Moore

Moore, who was out of custody, was arraigned in district court on May 11, 2009; the

court scheduled a pretrial hearing for June 11. The next few months involved several pretrial

hearing reschedulings and Moore' s multiple waivers of his time for trial rights under CrRLJ 3. 3.

On July 2, 2009, Moore filed his first waiver of his time for trial rights, effective through

December 1, 2009; at the October 6 pretrial hearing, the district court set his trial for November

30 but later cancelled it without setting a new trial date. Thus, when Moore filed his last time for

trial waiver at the May 24, 2010 pretrial hearing, the district court had not set a trial date.

Docket entries reflect that Moore was present with his attorney for some, but not all, of

the numerous hearings and scheduling conferences leading up to this May 24 pretrial hearing.

The State never objected to Moore' s absence from hearings he did not attend. And the district

2 The record before us does not specifically reflect that Gadea -Rivas also submitted to a breathalyzer test. Nevertheless, we infer from his motion to suppress that this was the case. This fact, however, is not relevant to the time for trial issues in the instant appeal.

2 Consolidated Nos. 42707 -9 -II and 42715 -0 -II

court neither issued any bench warrants for Moore' s " failure to appear" nor otherwise required

his presence.

On May 14, ten days before his May 24 pretrial hearing, Moore filed a second motion to

suppress —part of the joint " Vosk Uncertainty Motion" ( Vosk Motion) to suppress brought by

approximately 114 defendants and multiple defense attorneys. Clerk' s Papers ( CP) ( Moore) at

43. Moore and his counsel were present for the May 24 pretrial hearing, at which the district

court scheduled the Vosk Motion hearing ( including Moore' s second motion to suppress) for

June 25. Also on May 24, Moore filed his fourth and final time for trial waiver, resetting his

commencement date to June 1 and his expiration date 90 days later, on September 1. 3

Apparently expecting that the Vosk Motion would be resolved before this September 1

expiration date, the district court did not set a new trial date for Moore.

On June 2, 2010, the district court accepted Moore' s waiver of his right to appear at the.

Vosk Motion hearing. The court' s docket reflects that Moore was not present at any additional

hearings until his February 17, 2011 pretrial hearing. Again, the record includes no orders

requiring Moore' s presence at these interim hearings or any bench warrants for his failures to

appear. Instead, the district court sent notices of continued Vosk Motion hearing dates to only

3 The record before us on appeal shows that Moore filed his last time for trial waiver on May 24, 2010, which reset his commencement date to June 1, 2010, and reset his 90 -day time for trial expiration date to September 1, 2010. We note, however, that other parts of the record are unclear about the expiration of Moore' s last time for trial waiver: ( 1) The court docket says that Moore " WAIVES SPEEDY TRIAL TO SEPTEMBER 1, 2010," CP ( Moore) at 10; ( 2) in his district court motion to dismiss, Moore argued that he had " extended his speedy trial time limit to December 10, 2010," CP ( Moore) at 31; ( 3) in his Application for Writ of Prohibition to the superior court, Moore stated that " he waived speedy trial through December 1, 2010," CP Moore) at 39; and ( 4) Moore' s counsel listed December 1 and December 10 deadlines in his brief, the bases for which are not clear.

3 Consolidated Nos. 42707 -9 -II and 42715 -0 -II

the defense attorneys, not to the defendants themselves. Thus, the district court sent notice to

only the defense attorneys when it bifurcated the Vosk Motion hearing, set defense arguments

for June 25, and set the State' s arguments 40 days later.

On June 15, the State moved to continue the Vosk Motion; the district court scheduled a

hearing on this continuance motion for August 27. Moore was not present at the August 27

hearing, at which ( 1) the district court granted the State' s request to continue the Vosk Motion

hearing and set another status hearing in Moore' s case for September 24; ( 2) Moore' s counsel

did not object to resetting the status hearing beyond the September 1 time for trial expiration

date; ( 3) Moore did not again waive his time for trial; and ( 4) the district court did not reset

Moore' s trial date to commence before the existing September 1 expiration date.

A month later, at Moore' s September 24 status hearing, the district court reset the Vosk

Motion hearing for November 5. The record does not show that Moore' s defense counsel

objected to this hearing date, which was beyond the expiration of Moore' s last time for trial

expiration date, September 1. Again, Moore filed no additional time for trial waiver, and the

district court did not set a new trial date. On October 27, the State again moved to continue the

Vosk Motion hearing. At a November 3 teleconference hearing on this continuance motion, 4, Moore' s counsel raised general concerns about " speedy trial" rights for all defendants

nevertheless, the district court granted the State' s requested continuance and set the Vosk Motion

4 Moore' s defense counsel declared that he had filed a written objection to Moore' s trial continuance from November 5 to December 13, but only in the lead case on the Vosk Motion, State v. Gunderson, 8Y6054725. See CP at 45, n. 1. The record does not show that Moore filed a separate objection in his case.

V Consolidated Nos. 42707 -9 -II and 42715 -0 -II

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