State v. Toney
This text of 103 Wash. App. 862 (State v. Toney) 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.
Opinion
The State appeals the trial court’s use of a [863]*863new sentencing alternative when sentencing for a crime committed before the alternative’s effective date. Because of RCW 10.01.040, we reverse.
The 1995 legislature created a “drug offender sentencing alternative” (DOSA).1 It provided that an offender could be sentenced to substance abuse treatment and a reduced term of confinement if the offender had no prior felony convictions and met certain other conditions.2
The 1999 legislature amended DOSA.3 It provided, in general, that an offender could be sentenced to substance abuse treatment and a reduced term of confinement even if the offender had a prior felony conviction, so long as the offender had never been convicted of a sex offense or a violent offense. The amendment took effect July 25, 1999.
On June 22, 1999, Toney helped sell a small amount of cocaine to an undercover police officer. On June 24,1999, he helped sell another small amount of the same drug. On [864]*864October 22,1999, he pleaded guilty to two counts of delivery of a controlled substance.4
At sentencing, Toney acknowledged that he had a prior conviction for a felony that was not a sex offense or a violent offense.5 Nonetheless, he asked to be sentenced under the 1999 amendment to DOSA. The State argued that Toney was ineligible for DOSA because the 1999 amendment did not apply to offenses committed before its effective date. The trial court sentenced under the 1999 amendment, and the State then filed this appeal.
The only question on appeal is whether a trial court erred by applying the 1999 amendment to an offense committed before July 25, 1999.6 The State relies on RCW 10.01.040. Enacted in 1901, that statute provides:
Whenever any criminal or penal statute shall be amended or repealed, all offenses committed or penalties or forfeitures incurred while it was in force shall be punished or enforced as if it were in force, notwithstanding such amendment or repeal, unless a contrary intention is expressly declared in the amen-datory or repealing act, and every such amendatory or repealing statute shall be so construed as to save all criminal and penal proceedings, and proceedings to recover forfeitures, pending at the time of its enactment, unless a contrary intention is expressly declared therein.
By its plain terms, this statute says that when a criminal or penal statute is amended, its preamendment version applies to offenses before the amendment’s effective date, “unless a contrary intention is expressly declared in the amendatory . .. act[.]”7 DOSA is criminal and penal, and the 1999 amendments to it do not contain an express declaration on retroactivity. Accordingly, we are con[865]*865strained to hold that the 1999 amendment does not apply to crimes committed before its effective date.
Division One has reached the same result. It held in State v. Kane8 that the 1999 amendment did not contain an express declaration concerning retroactivity, and thus that RCW 10.01.040 prevented its application to offenses committed before July 25, 1999.9
Toney relies on State v. Grant10 and State v. Heath,
The sentence is vacated, and the case is remanded for resentencing.
Armstrong, C.J., and Seinfeld, J., concur.
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103 Wash. App. 862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-toney-washctapp-2000.