State v. Taylor

649 P.2d 633, 97 Wash. 2d 724, 1982 Wash. LEXIS 1513
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1982
Docket48523-2
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 649 P.2d 633 (State v. Taylor) 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. Taylor, 649 P.2d 633, 97 Wash. 2d 724, 1982 Wash. LEXIS 1513 (Wash. 1982).

Opinion

Utter, J.

Was felony flight (RCW 46.61.024) decriminalized by RCW 46.63.020 during the period from the latter statute's effective date on January 1, 1981, until it was amended on April 16, 1981? We hold that it was.

On January 12, 1981, James Taylor was arrested for attempting to elude a pursuing police officer ("felony flight"), in violation of RCW 46.61.024. He was subsequently charged by information with that offense. Taylor first moved to dismiss the information on the ground that "felony flight" had been decriminalized by RCW 46.63.020. This motion was denied May 11, 1981. Taylor then moved to dismiss the information on the ground that enforcement of the felony penalty provided in RCW 46.61.024 would constitute a denial of due process and equal protection guaranties. This motion was denied May 22.

Taylor stipulated to the allegations contained in the police reports and was found guilty as charged. Sentencing was continued for 6 weeks, with the understanding that Taylor would seek discretionary review of the trial court's orders denying his motions to dismiss. The Court of Appeals granted his petition for review and affirmed Taylor's conviction. After his motion for reconsideration was denied we granted his petition for review. We reverse the Court of Appeals.

The act which became RCW 46.61.024 and which defined as a class C felony the crime of "felony flight" was signed *726 by the Governor and filed in the Secretary of State's office on April 26, 1979. The act did not specify an effective date. See Laws of 1979, 1st Ex. Sess., ch. 75, § 1. Subsequently, on May 7, 1979, the Governor signed the act which became RCW 46.63.020 and which decriminalized many traffic-related offenses. Laws of 1979, 1st Ex. Sess., ch. 136, § 2. The effective date of this act was amended to January 1, 1981. See Laws of 1980, ch. 128, § 9.

RCW 46.63.020 provides that the violation of any law "relating to traffic including parking, standing, stopping, and pedestrian offenses, is designated as a traffic infraction and may not be classified as a criminal offense". The statute then lists a number of statutory exceptions to this decriminalization (there are now 38), which may continue to be punished as crimes. "Felony flight" was not included in this list when RCW 46.63.020 was originally enacted, nor was it added when the statute was twice amended in 1980. See Laws of 1980, ch. 128, § 9; ch. 148, § 7. After the commission of petitioner's offense, the Legislature amended RCW 46.63.020 to include "felony flight" in the list of statutory exceptions that are not decriminalized. Laws of 1981, ch. 19, § 1(24) (April 16, 1981).

Both parties and the Court of Appeals rely on RCW 1.12.025 to resolve the dispute concerning the relationship of RCW 46.61.024 and RCW 46.63.020. Unfortunately, such reliance is misplaced. The statute provides:

If at any session of the legislature there are enacted two or more acts amending the same section of the session laws or of the official code, each amendment without reference to the others, each act shall be given effect to the extent that the amendments do not conflict in purpose, otherwise the act last filed in the office of the secretary of state in point of time, shall control. . .

(Italics ours.) Petitioner argues that since RCW 46.61.024 and RCW 46.63.020 conflict in purpose, "the act last filed" (which was RCW 46.63.020) should control. On the other hand, respondent contends and the Court of Appeals held that both statutes should be given effect since they do not *727 conflict in purpose.

These two acts do not amend the same section, however. The felony flight statute defined a new offense — it amended nothing and purported to amend nothing. See generally State v. Frazier, 81 Wn.2d 628, 632, 503 P.2d 1073 (1972). The decriminalization statute changed the effect of all criminal statutes which defined traffic-related offenses by changing the penalty which could be imposed. Neither is this an amendment as contemplated by RCW 1.12.025. Article 2, section 37 of the Washington State Constitution requires an amended section to be set out in its entirety. RCW 46.63.020 does not incorporate RCW 46.61.024, and does not amend it. It changed only the punishment available under the statute.

RCW 1.12.025 properly relates to the situation where "the same section" is amended twice in one session, such as occurred to RCW 46.63.020 in 1981 (see Reviser's note) and in Copeland Lumber Co. v. Wilkins, 75 Wn.2d 940, 454 P.2d 821 (1969) (twice amending Laws of 1957, ch. 214, § 1) cited by respondent. We do not have that situation here.

By its own unambiguous terms, RCW 46.63.020 decriminalizes all offenses under RCW Title 46 except those which it enumerates.

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Bluebook (online)
649 P.2d 633, 97 Wash. 2d 724, 1982 Wash. LEXIS 1513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-taylor-wash-1982.