State v. Salgado-Mendoza

CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 2017
Docket93293-0
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Salgado-Mendoza (State v. Salgado-Mendoza) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Salgado-Mendoza, (Wash. 2017).

Opinion

This opinion was fiied for record

riTE OMK onOt|-.12,20n IN CLERKS OFFICE WFRaE COURT,81RIE OF mSHR^QTON DATE QCT I 2 2517 SUSAN L CARLSON ^ClAAl/UA4Slir , C/ SUPREME COURT CLERK CHIEF JUSTICE

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, NO. 93293-0 Petitioner,

V. EN BANC

ASCENCION SALGADO-MENDOZA, Filed OCX 1 2 Respondent.

STEPHENS, J.—We are asked to decide whether the district court in

Ascencion Salgado-Mendoza's 2013 trial for driving under the influence abused its

discretion by refusing to suppress the testimony ofthe State's toxicology witness. The

State initially disclosed the names of nine toxicologists from the Washington State

Patrol toxicology laboratory,indicating its intent to call "one ofthe following." Clerk's

Papers (CP) at 6. It whittled the list to three names the day before trial, but did not

specify which toxicologist it would call until the morning oftrial, noting that it provided

the witness's name "as soon as we had it and that's all that we can do in terms of

disclosure." Verbatim Report of Proceedings (YRP)(May 9, 2013) at 31. Salgado- State V. Salgado-Mendoza (Ascencion), 93293-0

Mendoza moved to suppress the toxicologist's testimony under CrRLJ 8.3(b)based on

late disclosure, asking the court to "send a message to the state patrol crime lab and

say this isn't okay anymore." Id. at 27. The court refused, finding no actual

prejudice to the defense and observing that the practice ofdisclosing a list ofavailable

toxicologists rather than a specific witness was driven more by underflinding of the

crime labs than by mismanagement.

Salgado-Mendoza appealed to the superior court, which found the district

court had abused its discretion. The Court of Appeals affirmed, reasoning that the

delayed disclosure violated the discovery rules and caused prejudice. We disagree.

While the State's disclosure practice amounted to mismanagement within the

meaning of CrRLJ 8.3(b), Salgado-Mendoza has not demonstrated actual prejudice

to justify suppression. The trial court considered all the circumstances, including

the nature ofthe witness's testimony and the five months that counsel had to prepare

following the State's initial disclosure. On this record, we cannot say the district

court's ruling was "manifestly unreasonable" and thus an abuse of discretion. We

reverse the Court of Appeals.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

In August 2012, Salgado-Mendoza was arrested on suspicion of driving under

the influence(DUI), Salgado-Mendoza consented to a breath test, which revealed his

-2- State V. Salgado-Mendoza (Ascencion), 93293-0

blood alcohol concentration to be above the legal limit. The State charged Salgado-

Mendoza with DUI,and trial was set in the district court of Jefferson County for May

9,2013.

At trial, the State planned to call a toxicologist as an expert witness to testify

regarding DUI testing procedures in Washington. Five months before trial, the State

disclosed a list ofnine potential toxicologist witnesses,only one ofwhom would testify.

Two weeks before trial, Salgado-Mendoza filed a supplemental discovery request

demanding,in part,that the State identify which toxicologist it actually intended to call.

The State asserts that it attempted to comply. Salgado-Mendoza still had not received

this information by May 6, 2013, three days before trial. Alleging governmental

misconduct, he filed a CrRLJ 8.3(b) motion to dismiss the case or suppress the

toxicologist's testimony. The day before trial, the State narrowed the list to three

names. At 9:00 a.m. on the morning of trial, the State identified the toxicologist who

would testify, indicating it had just received the name that morning.

Salgado-Mendoza asserted that the State's delayed disclosure was "a classic

form ofgovernmental misconduct." VRP at 25. Arguing that the need to interview and

prepare for cross-examination of nine witnesses when only one will testify placed an

undue bmfien on the defense, Salgado-Mendoza urged the court to dismiss—or at least

-3- State V. Salgado-Mendoza (Ascencion), 93293-0

to preclude the toxicologist's testimony.^ In opposition, the State argued that five

months was adequate time to prepare for each possible witness, the late disclosure was

a result of the toxicology lab being "overworked and understaffed,"^ and the

prosecution had repeatedly contacted the toxicology lab to request that a specific

toxicologist witness be identified. VRP at 30. The trial judge denied the motion and

allowed the toxicologist's testimony. Id. at 35-36(citing the toxicology lab's perennial

staffing shortages and the five months Salgado-Mendoza had to prepare). The case

proceeded to trial, where ajuiy found Salgado-Mendoza guilty.

Salgado-Mendoza appealed his DUI conviction to the superior court for

Jefferson County. Finding that the State's late disclosure constituted governmental

mismanagement and a violation ofdiscovery rules, that court held that the district court

abused its discretion by failmg to suppress the toxicologist's testimony. The superior

court additionally held the trial court abused its discretion by suppressing a portion of

^ Salgado-Mendoza further argued that the need to review nearly 200 pages of available background materials (roughly 20 pages per toxicologist) represented a "tremendous and needless waste of[counsel's] time." CP at 40. He conceded that the 60 pages associated with the three short-list names would have been reasonable had he been given more than one day's notice. See VRP at 28. ^ Because the lab serves the entire state, its toxicologists are sometimes asked to testify at multiple trials at the same time. The toxicology lab's staff shortage was particularly acute here because at the time oftrial, three ofthe nine disclosed toxicologists were on maternity leave. Although this suggests that there were actually only six toxicologists who might testify, the State apparently did not remove the unavailable toxicologists from the list until May 8, 2017.

-4- State V. Salgado-Mendoza (Ascencion), 93293-0

the defense expert's testimony regarding the breath alcohol testing machine used in

testing Salgado-Mendoza. The superior court reversed the conviction and remanded

the matter for a new trial.

The State moved for discretionary review. The Court of Appeals, accepting

review only with respect to the trial court's decision not to suppress the toxicologist's

testimony, affirmed the superior court. See State v. Salgado-Mendoza, 194 Wn. App.

234,238,373 P.3d 357,review granted, 186 Wn.2d 1017,383 P.3d 1028(2016). The

Court ofAppeals held that(1)the prosecutor's failure to "obtain the name ofits witness

in a timely manner" violated discovery rules and constituted governmental

mismanagement, (2) this misconduct prejudiced Salgado-Mendoza, and (3)

suppression ofthe toxicologist's testimony was the proper remedy. Id. at 243. Writing

in dissent. Judge Worswick argued that the trial court's denial of Salgado-Mendoza's

CrRLJ 8.3(b) motion did not constitute an abuse of discretion. Because Salgado-

Mendoza's"bald assertion that he would have preferred to request a continuance"rather

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