State v. Chichester

170 P.3d 583
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 29, 2007
Docket57750-6-I
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 170 P.3d 583 (State v. Chichester) 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. Chichester, 170 P.3d 583 (Wash. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

170 P.3d 583 (2007)

STATE of Washington, Appellant,
v.
Ronald CHICHESTER, Respondent.

No. 57750-6-I.

Court of Appeals of Washington, Division 1.

October 29, 2007.

Heidi Joanne Jacobsen-Watts, King County Prosecuting Attorney's Office, Seattle, WA, for Appellant.

Edward A. Nelson, Edward Nelson Law Offices, Federal Way Office Center, Federal Way, WA, for Respondent.

*584 BECKER, J.

¶ 1 When Ronald Chichester appeared for his confirmed trial date, the State was not ready to try the case. The court denied the State's motion for a continuance and dismissed the case. Dismissal of a criminal prosecution is a remedy of last resort. But where the trial court acts within its discretion to deny a continuance and the State fails to propose an alternative to dismissal, the court's ruling rests on tenable grounds.

FACTS

¶ 2 The State charged respondent Ronald Chichester with driving under the influence in 2003. The case was filed and docketed in the East Division of King County District Court located in Bellevue. Each division of the district court has one jury week per month.[1] Chichester's case was originally set for trial in November 2003. The trial was continued a number of times for various reasons. In July 2004, it was set over to the September term. Chichester signed a waiver of speedy trial through October 31, 2004.[2]

¶ 3 On the Friday before the September jury week, presiding Judge Janet Garrow held a readiness hearing to solidify the jury trial schedule.[3] When Chichester's case was called, defense counsel Edward Nelson stated he was available to try the case on Wednesday and Thursday of the upcoming week. The State responded that those two days "are actually our available days as well."[4] At the end of the hearing, the court set the trial calendar for eight cases based on the stated availability of the parties and witnesses. The court set Chichester's trial and two other cases to begin on Wednesday.

¶ 4 After the court announced the schedule, deputy prosecutor Christine Wendt informed the court that the State had only one prosecutor available to proceed with the trials set on Wednesday and Thursday:

PROSECUTOR: Your Honor, one matter from the State — I noted that the court set uh I think two matters on Wednesday and two matters on Thursday which are both State cases and the State has only one prosecutor available so I don't know how the court handles that.
JUDGE: Well if you've got lots of cases you're going to need to get coverage.
PROSECUTOR: And unfortunately I don't know that we're going to be able to do that. We've got a number of people out.[[5]]

¶ 5 Judge Garrow recalled that the trial schedule had been set according to the dates the State indicated it was available. She said the court would not be inclined to find good cause for a continuance in this situation:

JUDGE: Those were the — I was able to accommodate everybody's schedule on the dates everyone said they were available. People were not available on Tuesday so I couldn't set dates Tuesday so those are the dates that have been set. So the State is going to have to (unintelligible).
PROSECUTOR: And uh I will do everything I can. I'll notify the court that based on the fact that the prosecutor is in trial in another case we may be requesting a good cause continuance.
JUDGE: Counsel I'm not bound at this point that would be a good cause. So I think you could work with the prosecutor's office and find some alternatives, okay. All right.[[6]]

¶ 6 Chichester appeared with Mr. Nelson, his attorney, on the following Wednesday, the date set for trial. Mr. Holland, the prosecutor assigned to Chichester's case, was present along with Ms. Wendt. Ms. Wendt moved to continue the case. She explained that Mr. Holland was not available because he was assigned to try another case that same day. Ms. Wendt argued that Chichester *585 would not be prejudiced because the continuance would still be within the speedy trial limit of October 31, 2004. She submitted a brief asserting that under these circumstances, the court would commit legal error by refusing a continuance.

¶ 7 Mr. Nelson opposed the motion, reminding the court that the State had confirmed Mr. Holland's availability for trial the previous week at the readiness hearing. The State had not contacted him to give notice that it would be unable to proceed as scheduled.[7] Mr. Nelson suggested that Ms. Wendt could try the case if Mr. Holland was not available. Ms. Wendt responded that the State had "one prosecutor and one prosecutor only" available for each trial day.[8]

¶ 8 The court was not receptive to the State's position. "We've had other prosecutors here besides the one who has been assigned."[9] The court asked Ms. Wendt what she was doing that day. Ms. Wendt said she was there to supervise Mr. Holland based on an office policy that new attorneys be supervised in their first trials. The court asked why Ms. Wendt had not assigned the case to another prosecutor. Ms. Wendt said she "spoke with" two other prosecutors, including a Ms. Nave, but was unable to find a replacement: "There are no other prosecutors. As I informed the Court on Friday."[10] In response to further inquiry, Ms. Wendt acknowledged that Ms. Nave was not engaged in another trial, but claimed that this was immaterial because Mr. Holland was the prosecutor who had prepared the case.

PROSECUTOR: And the case law specifically states that as long as there has been no mismanagement, which there has not been in this case, the prosecutor's office is not required to reassign the case. So even if we assume for the sake of argument that the State had ten other prosecutors waiting in the wings, Mr. Holland is the prosecuting attorney and we are not required to reassign this case.[[11]]

The court persisted with the suggestion that Ms. Wendt conduct the trial:

JUDGE: It would seem that both of you could be trying cases today in this court.
PROSECUTOR: And Your Honor, I'm not prepared to try cases today.
JUDGE: Counsel, as you know, I raised this issue on Friday. And so that if there was a need for a prosecutor to get this case prepared over the weekend for the first two days of this week, I would say there would have been ample time to reassign this case. A DUI case is a pretty standard case to prosecute on in District Court.[[12]]

¶ 9 Ms. Wendt stated that she personally was not prepared to go to trial as the trial attorney on the case and had no intention of doing so. "There is certainly time between now and the end of October, at least as far as the State is aware at this point, to try this case. Today is not that day."[13]

¶ 10 Defense counsel repeated that he was available to try the case that day. He explained that Chichester was missing work in order to be present for the confirmed trial date. Because Chichester's license was suspended, he had recruited a friend to drive him up from Toledo in southwestern Washington. "If they don't have someone here, that is mismanagement and the case should go forward or be dismissed."[14]

¶ 11 The trial court then made an extensive oral ruling denying the State's request for a continuance. The court was particularly *586

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State Of Washington, V. Tynan Quade Short
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2023
State Of Washington, V. David C. Calhoun
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2022
State of Washington v. Shane Michael Curtiss
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2021
Estate Of Hung Nguyen v. Franciscan Health System
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2020
State Of Washington v. Bryant Jieta
457 P.3d 1209 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2020)
State Of Washington v. Daryl H. Rhodes
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2019
State Of Washington, V John Arthur Amble
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2019
State of Washington v. Mahadi H. Aljaffar
392 P.3d 1070 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2017)
State Of Washington v. Kenneth Allen Clark
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2017
John Urquhart v. $6,510.00 And Richard Mendall
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2016
State Of Washington, V Jose Flores-rodriguez
Court of Appeals of Washington, 2016
City of Kent v. Sandhu
159 Wash. App. 836 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)
City of Seattle v. Clewis
159 Wash. App. 842 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)
State v. Brooks
149 Wash. App. 373 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 P.3d 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-chichester-washctapp-2007.