State of Washington v. Rickey Lee Kitchens

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 18, 2015
Docket32999-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Rickey Lee Kitchens (State of Washington v. Rickey Lee Kitchens) 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. Rickey Lee Kitchens, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

.. ..

FILED

JUNE 18,2015

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STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 32999-2-111 Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) RICKEY LEE KITCHENS, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

FEARING, J. Rickey Kitchens appeals from his conviction for felony driving

under the influence. He argues that the trial court violated his constitutional right to a

public trial when it allowed peremptory juror challenges by paper and for-cause

challenges outside the hearing of the jury. He further contends that the trial court

admitted testimonial hearsay in violation of his right to confront witnesses against him.

Finally, Kitchens argues that, to the extent defense counsel failed to object to the

testimonial hearsay, Kitchens received ineffective assistance. We agree the trial court

permitted inadmissible hearsay, but conclude the admission is harmless. We reject

Kitchens' other arguments and affirm his conviction. .. "

No. 32999-2-III State v. Kitchens

FACTS

During the early afternoon of September 1,2012, a Jeep Cherokee pulling a

camper trailer fishtailed and flipped on four lane Washington Highway 167. The Jeep

landed upside down. Many who saw the accident rushed to the Jeep to provide

assistance. The rescuers encountered difficulty opening the jammed Jeep's passenger and

driver doors, but the driver's side door unsealed first. The responders pulled Rickey

Kitchens and Marcia Howard, in that order, from the Jeep through its upside down

driver's side door. Rickey Kitchens' main defense at trial was that Howard, not him,

drove the Cherokee.

Brenda Petersen, Gary Hillin, and Tiffany Stewart, among others, observed the

accident. Brenda Petersen drove behind the Jeep in the other lane. From a car length

away, Petersen saw the trailer veer off the road, fishtail, and flip.

Gary Hillin witnessed the accident from opposing traffic. Hillin stopped his car on

the opposite shoulder parallel to where the Jeep Cherokee landed after it overturned.

Hillin crossed the road to assist. He went to the driver's side door of the upside down

Jeep and saw a male driver and a female occupant. Hillin and others pulled Kitchens out

of the vehicle first. Upon exiting the rolled Jeep, Rickey Kitchens told Hillin that he was

not driving. Gary Hillin smelled alcohol on Kitchens' breath.

Tiffany Stewart saw the Jeep and trailer fishtail and accelerate further, .

No. 32999-2-111 State v. Kitchens

exacerbating the fishtail. The Cherokee hit the gravel on the right-hand side of the

freeway causing the trailer to flip and slingshot the Jeep over the top. Stewart stopped

her vehicle, dialed 911, handed her fiancee the phone, and ran to the Jeep to help.

Stewart was the third person to arrive at the vehicle. She concluded Rickey Kitchens

drove the Jeep.

Two other people pulled Rickey Kitchens from the Jeep, after which Tiffany

Stewart helped Kitchens to his feet. Kitchens immediately looked at Stewart and said: "I

wasn't driving. She was driving." Report of Proceedings (RP) at 244. Stewart observed

Kitchens swaying. Kitchens smelled profusely of alcohol. Kitchens rambled further that

he did not drive and he was not drunk. Stewart politely agreed with him.

Washington State Patrol Trooper Raymond Seaburg responded to the scene.

Trooper Kyle Burgess later arrived to assist Trooper Seaburg. Seaburg and Burgess

distributed statement forms to witnesses. Burgess observed Rickey Kitchens as

belligerent. Kitchens' eyes were bloodshot and watery, his face flushed, and his speech

slurred.

At the scene, Trooper Kyle Burgess examined the relative positions of the Jeep

Cherokee driver and passenger seats. He testified at trial:

If we have two people and we're not sure which one is driving, one is tall and one is short, we should be able to look at the seat and tell who was driving just based on the positioning of the seats. In this case, Mr. Kitchens is 5 foot 11. His seat was adjusted for someone 5 foot 11. The passenger is 5 foot 6 and her seat was forward and adjusted for someone

shorter.

RP at 282.

PROCEDURE

The State of Washington charged Rickey Kitchens with felony driving under the

influence in violation ofRCW 46.61.502(6)(a). Kitchens stipulated to four prior DUls

within the last ten years, an element of the felony. See RCW 46.61.5055(14)(a).

Rickey Kitchens contends on appeal that the voir dire in his case violated his right

to a public trial. Therefore, we reproduce the relevant portion of the voir dire transcript:

THE COURT: Folks, we're going to let the attorneys do their final selection here in writing. It will take a few minutes for them to do that. While they're doing that, you can talk quietly among yourselves over anything other than this case. You can't talk about this case. If you want[,] stand up and stretch, feel free to do that as well, and we'll be back to you here shortly. If any of you have an urgent need to use the restroom, you can use the restroom on this floor only. The same instruction applies on not talking to anybody about the case and not allowing anyone to discuss it in your presence. Use the restroom and come right back to your same seat, so the lawyers can match up your number and your face when they're doing their final selections. Okay? (Attorneys doing their peremptory challenges.)

THE COURT: Counsel.

(Sidebar held, but not reported.)

RP at 2-3. The trial court then directed jurors and alternates to sit in the jury box.

The trial court filed the written peremptory challenges that day. The filing listed

Rickey Kitchens' and the State's respective peremptory challenges by jury number and

name. The trial court made a record of what occurred during the unreported sidebar:

THE COURT: We did have a discussion at sidebar regarding challenges for cause. The defense asked to excuse No.5 and No. 18. 1 indicated that 1 believed that both of those jurors had rehabilitated themselves sufficiently so that they could remain on this case, and I denied those challenges. There was also an agreed challenge to Juror No.-an agreed excusal of Juror No. 29, and we excused her.

Anything else you want to make a record of, counsel?

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Not at this time, Your Honor.

RP at 138.

The critical issue at trial was whether Rickey Kitchens or Marcia Howard drove

the Jeep at the time of the September 1,2012 accident. The State called eyewitnesses

Brenda Petersen, Gary Hillin, and Tiffany Stewart and Troopers Raymond Seaburg and

Kyle Burgess to testify on this subject. Petersen testified, "I watched them pull a male

and a female out of the vehicle." RP at 148. At trial, Petersen could not remember who

was pulled out bfthe Jeep first. Therefore, at the request of the State, Petersen read to the

jury the statement she provided the police on the day of the accident:

The involved vehicle was in front of me and the attached trailer started to fishtail. Driver lost control and flipped. 1 watched another witness pull the driver out, which was the male.

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