State v. Duggins

844 P.2d 441, 68 Wash. App. 396, 1993 Wash. App. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 11, 1993
Docket29094-1-I
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 844 P.2d 441 (State v. Duggins) 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. Duggins, 844 P.2d 441, 68 Wash. App. 396, 1993 Wash. App. LEXIS 6 (Wash. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

Forrest, J.

Demeco Martinez Duggins, a juvenile, appeals his conviction of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance. Duggins contends that his conviction must be vacated and the case dismissed solely because the trial court granted a 2-day continuance when the police officer was unavailable on the date of the fact-finding hearing. 1 We disagree and affirm.

On May 24, 1991, Duggins was charged in juvenile court with one count of possession of a controlled substance (cocaine) with intent to deliver.

The hearing was originally scheduled for August 7, 1991. On that day, the State moved for a continuance of 1 or 2 days because one of the State's witnesses, Officer Lone, had not responded to the subpoena and was not present to testify. 2 The State served Officer Lone's subpoena on the police department and claimed that it left messages at the department and with the officer's colleagues directing Officer Lone to appear at the hearing.

*398 Defense counsel objected to the continuance and moved to dismiss on the ground that Officer Lone had not been personally served with the subpoena. Noting that the continuance would not extend the hearing beyond the speedy trial period, the court granted a 2-day continuance. The court reserved ruling on Duggins's motion to dismiss pending a determination of whether Officer Lone had actually received the subpoena. At the hearing the following day, the State informed the court that Officer Lone never received the subpoena. The court denied the motion to dismiss.

Duggins was tried well within the speedy trial time provided by JuCR 7.8 so the speedy trial period was not violated. He argues, however, that there is no distinction between a continuance within the speedy trial time limit and a continuance outside it, relying on the language of JuCR 7.8(e)(2)(ii):

Continuances or other delays may be granted as follows:
(2) On motion of the prosecuting attorney if:
(ii) the State's evidence is presently unavailable, the prosecution has exercised due diligence, and there are reasonable grounds to believe that it will be available within a reasonable time[.]

We disagree. No case has explicitly held that the limitations on continuances contained in JuCR 7.8 apply equally to continuances within and without the speedy trial period. 3 Nor do we find any compelling policy reason to ignore this distinction. Indeed, there are compelling reasons to treat the two situations differently.

Dismissal with prejudice of charges against a defendant convicted in a fair trial is a Draconian penalty. It frustrates the public interest in punishing those otherwise duly convicted of crimes and can only be justified by a compelling public policy. There is no more authoritative statement of *399 public policy than the federal and state constitutions. However, even constitutional errors at trial need not result in reversal if the error is harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. This doctrine was developed to protect the central purpose of a criminal trial, determining a defendant's guilt or innocence, and to promote "public respect for the criminal process by focusing on the underlying fairness of the trial rather than on the virtually inevitable presence of immaterial error." Delaware v. Van Arsdall, 475 U.S. 673, 681, 89 L. Ed. 2d 674, 106 S. Ct. 1431, 1436 (1986).

For example, in Griffin v. United States, 4 the Supreme Coin! held that an instruction which permitted conviction on an alternative means of committing a crime that was not supported by the evidence did not require reversal. In Arizona v. Fulminante, 5 the Court found that even a coerced confession did not necessarily require reversal of the conviction.

The Washington Supreme Court has affirmed convictions involving substantial errors. For example, in State v. Whelchel, 6 the court affirmed a conviction of first degree murder even though the trial court admitted self-serving, tape-recorded statements of two codefendants that were not admissible as statements against penal interest under ER 804(b)(3) or the confrontation clause. In State v. Wheeler, 7 the court affirmed a conviction where the trial court admitted the defendant's answer to a detective's question concerning his acquaintance with a codefendant given after the defendant had twice asserted his right to remain silent.

These cases illustrate the courts' concern to avoid retrials. Dismissal with prejudice is obviously far more damaging to the public interest in punishing the guilty than a retrial. Nonetheless, the Supreme Court as a matter of public policy has chosen to establish speedy trial time limits by court rule *400 and to provide that failure to comply therewith requires dismissal of the charge with prejudice. Clearly, violation of the speedy trial rule is not subject to the constitutional harmless error analysis by virtue of the explicit terms of the rule. 8 This is one of the rare classes of cases where a trial court error cannot be remedied by a retrial nor found to be harmless error. Therefore, this court should not impose the same Draconian consequences on a continuance within the speedy trial period that are required by a continuance beyond the speedy trial period unless the Supreme Court has unequivocally so provided. There is simply no rational public policy requiring such an indefensible result.

The establishment of speedy trial limits by rule was designed to insure the prompt disposition of criminal cases in the interest of both the public and the defendant. 9 Obviously, that policy is not violated by a continuance within the speedy trial period. Accordingly, a dismissal for even an improper continuance should be confined to those situations where that consequence is necessary to effectuate the policy of the speedy trial rule. Plainly, in adopting the rule, the Supreme Court wanted to avoid situations where a prosecutor comes into court and says "I'm not ready for trial" and the court routinely grants a continuance that extends the *401 trial beyond the speedy trial period, thus frustrating the purpose of the rule. We are not persuaded that in adopting the rule the Supreme Court meant to abolish the trial court's traditional discretion to grant continuances within the speedy trial time limits so long as the defendant is not unduly prejudiced thereby.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
844 P.2d 441, 68 Wash. App. 396, 1993 Wash. App. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-duggins-washctapp-1993.