State v. Bourgeois

866 P.2d 43, 72 Wash. App. 650, 1994 Wash. App. LEXIS 38
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 24, 1994
Docket32242-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 866 P.2d 43 (State v. Bourgeois) 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 v. Bourgeois, 866 P.2d 43, 72 Wash. App. 650, 1994 Wash. App. LEXIS 38 (Wash. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

Pekelis, A.C.J.

Bernard Bourgeois, a juvenile, moved for accelerated review of a 290-week manifest injustice disposition imposed after he was convicted of two counts of first *652 degree assault. On July 20, 1993, a panel of this court accelerated review, and we now reverse.

Bourgeois, a 15-year-old, was charged with two counts of first degree assault. The charges arose from the shooting and injury of two men in the High Point area of Seattle.

Bourgeois was convicted of both counts. The juvenile court found that Bourgeois had threatened the victims, co-owners of a grocery store, earlier on the day of the incident. Bourgeois then returned, lured the victims outside, and shot them with a handgun from across the street. After the victims "managed to call 911", they were rushed to the hospital. The juvenile court found that both victims "would have died as a result of the gunshot wounds had they not received' emergency care". One of the victims had "portions of [his] pancreas, colon, and his entire spleen [removed] due to the gunshot would [sic]." Accordingly, the court found that both assaults were committed "with a deadly weapon and force and means likely to produce great bodily harm of death". On count 1, the court also found that Bourgeois "did inflict great bodily [harm]".

A disposition hearing took place on May 29,1992. Because Bourgeois was classified as a serious offender, the standard range for each count of this offense was 103 to 129 weeks. See ROW 13.40.0357. The probation counselor recommended a standard range sentence on each count. The State urged a manifest injustice disposition of 130 weeks on each count. The State argued that owing to the respondent's recent criminal history and dangerousness to society, he should be confined until his 21st birthday; according to the State, only a manifest injustice disposition would ensure "confinement up to the maximum of 21". 1 The prosecutor explained that he

spoke with a screening person about the likelihood that the respondent would receive an actual commitment of 129 weeks, were he to be given the standard, and she reported that that is most unlikely, that the vast majority of people at DJR do not *653 receive the maximum, it is very rare, indeed. A person would have to act out quite uncontrollably to be held by DJR for the full range of a standard range sentence.

A lengthy colloquy ensued, dining which it was explained to the court that if it imposed a standard range disposition, Bourgeois would be eligible for release, subject to the discretion of the Department of Juvenile Rehabilitation (DJR), after he had served the statutory minimum, i.e., 103 weeks on each count. Both parties agreed, however, that if the court imposed a manifest injustice disposition, then the minimum sentence would be calculated at 80 percent of the specified term. The State asked the court to impose a disposition which, applying the 80 percent rule, would ensure a minimum term of confinement through Bourgeois's 21st birthday. The court summarized this issue as follows:

[T]he real consideration in all of this is, do we take away discretion? . . .
. . . [fit's a manifest injustice finding that's being asked in order to do that ....
. . . [T]he adult system lets me pick a specific point in the range, and then I make the decision. Here, I just give a range, and then someone else exercises discretion. The real question is, should the Court eliminate that discretion that says it doesn't it [sic] trust it to be adequately used or is afraid it will be used for reasons that are not as relevant to the appropriate disposition, like maybe overcrowding or a desire to move him out.

The court sought further assurance that the criteria used by DJR to determine whether a juvenile serves the minimum or maximum would be based on "performance on his part while he was there" rather than "the egregious facts of the case". The probation officer and the prosecutor agreed that the juvenile offender's behavior at the institution determines the length of incarceration. The prosecutor added that "the vast majority of people are not held to the maximum". The court seemed satisfied at this point that "the only thing that gets him his maximum is bad behavior . . ., and that doesn't happen very often."

The balance of the argument was spent on the issue of whether the egregiousness of the victims' injuries could be *654 considered as a basis for a manifest injustice finding, or whether the injuries inhered in the crime of first degree assault. 2 The court concluded that, in general, personal injuries do not necessarily inhere in the crime of first degree assault, and identified the issue as whether the injuries inflicted by Bourgeois were significantly egregious enough "to take it out of what the 'norm' of assault in the first degree is and make it a basis for a more serious sentence".

In rendering its disposition, 3 the court first concluded that "[t]he assaultive character of this offense was not evident from his recent criminal history, nor does [criminal history] . . . provide much of a basis from this Court's perspective to find this case one deserving of the manifest injustice."

As for the seriousness of the injuries, the court concluded that this factor did support a manifest injustice disposition because "accountability does have to be taken into consideration and is related to the egregiousness of the consequences or results of what happened during the course of the crime." The court found that

this is not a non-egregious case. This is a case where two men, in one event, pretty much, were separately assaulted, and both men suffered wounds which were, without treatment, capable of causing death. I speak primarily of . . . the gentleman who lost his spleen, half his pancreas, and had a colostomy. All three of those events, separately untreated, were productive of death.
. . . It's the fact that it wasn't simply an assault of a threatened act, but it was an assault with an accomplished act with significant injuries.

*655 The court also stated that Bourgeois is "at this point, a serious threat to the community" and "a public danger", and noted the "serious need to intervene in [Bourgeois's alcohol and drug abuse], to provide services and treatment that can help to deal with this problem."

As additional justification for imposing a manifest injustice disposition, the court reasoned as follows:

I am persuaded that ... no discretionary act on the part of the agency responsible for the incarceration would in any way be related to the facts in the case, but only to his performance while in DJR, that the Court should, in fact, design the sentence that it imposes to make sure that that accountability it [sic] taken care of as a part of the sentence that [Bourgeois] has . . .

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Bluebook (online)
866 P.2d 43, 72 Wash. App. 650, 1994 Wash. App. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bourgeois-washctapp-1994.