Court Opinion

ID: 4681226
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-04-27 15:20:09.926617+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:04:00.361796
License: Public Domain

FILED
                                                                       APRIL 27, 2021
                                                                In the Office of the Clerk of Court
                                                               WA State Court of Appeals Division III

         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
                            DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON,          )
                              )                        No. 37483-1-III
               Appellant,     )
                              )
     v.                       )
                              )                        UNPUBLISHED OPINION
STEVENS COUNTY DISTRICT COURT )
JUDGE & STEVENS COUNTY        )
DISTRICT COURT,               )
                              )
               Respondent.    )

      FEARING, J. — In our second review of this case, we must decide whether the

Stevens County Superior Court complied with the Washington Supreme Court’s mandate

commanding the Superior Court to issue a writ of mandamus directing the Stevens

County District Court to accept certain Superior Court orders for filing. We hold in the

affirmative and confirm the Superior Court’s order for writ.
No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

                                           FACTS

       On January 29, 2018, the Stevens County Superior Court ordered all preliminary

appearance hearings for misdemeanors and gross misdemeanors to be heard by the

Superior Court, including cases initially filed in the Stevens County District Court. The

Superior Court justified this order as preventing scheduling conflicts between the courts,

court clerks, prosecutors, defense counsel, and the county jail.

       On February 2, 2018, District Court Judge Gina Tveit ordered the district court

staff not to file any orders in a district court case unless those orders had been signed by a

district court judge. This direction barred the filing of orders signed by a superior court

judge and effectively barred the handling of any misdemeanor proceedings by a superior

court judge. The February 2 district court order obviously conflicted with the January 29

superior court order.

       On February 8, 2018, the State of Washington sought a writ of mandamus with the

Stevens County Superior Court directing the Stevens County District Court to permit

filing of orders signed by superior court judges. The superior court subsequently ordered

an alternative writ against the district court directing the court to comply with the writ or

to show cause as to why she has not complied. The district court objected to the writ.

       On March 7, 2018, a visiting judge in the Stevens County Superior Court held the

Stevens County District Court was not required to recognize the superior court’s orders in

cases originally filed in the district court. The visiting judge observed that neither party

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No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

cited to any case law or statute granting the superior court the authority to sign orders for

misdemeanors absent the district court’s authorization.

       The State of Washington appealed to this court, which reversed and held that the

district court could not refuse to file superior court orders. State v. Stevens County

District Court Judge, 7 Wn. App. 2d 927, 936, 436 P.3d 430, aff’d, 194 Wn.2d 898, 453

P.3d 984 (2019). This court remanded to the superior court with instructions to grant the

State’s writ of mandamus petition.

       The district sought review from the Washington Supreme Court, and the high

court granted review. The Washington Supreme Court addressed the issue of whether a

superior court may “conduct preliminary appearance hearings and enter related orders in

all county misdemeanors and gross misdemeanors, even when a charge has been filed in

the country’s district court and the district court assumed exclusive jurisdiction over the

trial process[.]” State v. Stevens County District Court Judge, 194 Wn.2d 898, 902, 453

P.3d 984 (2019). The opening sentence to the Supreme Court’s opinion states:

              This case asks us to determine whether a superior court may conduct
       preliminary appearance hearings for misdemeanors and gross
       misdemeanors originally filed in district court.

State v. Stevens County District Court Judge, 194 Wn.2d at 900.

       The state high court affirmed this court’s judgment and remanded to the superior

court to issue a writ of mandamus against the district court. At the conclusion of the

opinion, the court wrote:

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No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

              We hold the Superior Court may preside over preliminary
      appearance hearings for misdemeanors and gross misdemeanors originally
      filed in the District Court. Court rules authorize the Superior Court to
      preside over these hearings regardless of whether the case was originally
      filed in the Superior Court or the District Court. Furthermore, RCW
      3.66.060 does not restrict the Superior Court’s authority to preside over
      these hearings. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ judgment
      and remand the case to the Stevens County Superior Court to issue a writ of
      mandamus against the Stevens County District Court to accept cases from
      the Superior Court.

State v. Stevens County District Court Judge, 194 Wn.2d at 908. The Supreme Court

issued a mandate on January 15, 2020, which writ read:

             This case is mandated to the superior court from which the appellate
      review was taken for further proceedings in accordance with the attached
      true copy of the opinion.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 71.

                                     PROCEDURE

      On remand to the Stevens County Superior Court, the State of Washington

presented a proposed peremptory writ of mandamus, which would order the Stevens

County District Court as follows:

             The Stevens County District Court is further permanently and in
      perpetuity COMMANDED to accept, file, and comply with all orders
      signed by a Stevens County Superior Court Judge or Stevens County
      Superior Court Commissioner in a Stevens County criminal matter,
      including but not limited to Rule 3.2 Hearing Orders Conditions of Release,
      Warrants, or Orders Quashing Warrants.

CP at 3.

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No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

       The Stevens County District Court objected to the State’s proposed writ. The

district court characterized the proposed writ as overly broad in that it required the district

court to accept, file, and comply with all orders from the superior court. The district

court contended that the Supreme Court’s ruling only addressed the superior court’s

authority to preside over preliminary appearances in misdemeanor prosecutions.

       A visiting judge of the Stevens County Superior Court agreed with the district

court’s position. The visiting judge, on February 18, 2020, signed an “Order for

Peremptory Writ of Mandamus.” The order reads as follows:

               [T]his court does hereby:
               ORDER That the Stevens County District Court shall accept for
       filings those orders signed by the Stevens County Superior Court judges
       and commissioners from preliminary appearance hearings for
       misdemeanors and gross misdemeanors in cases originally filed in said
       district court.

CP at 12. The visiting judge concluded that the Supreme Court’s mandate did not

authorize or require the superior court to hear proceedings with regard to all defendants

being held in custody on district court charges. The judge noted that the State did not

argue on appeal to either this court or the Supreme Court that the proposed writ was

intended to apply to situations other than preliminary appearances. The visiting judge did

not insert a return date on the order for writ.

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No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

                                 LAW AND ANALYSIS

       On appeal, the State of Washington challenges the Stevens County Superior Court

ruling’s format and substance. The State seeks to invalidate the ruling because the court

signed an “order for writ,” rather than a “writ.” The State also seeks to void the ruling

because of the lack of a return date. In addition, the State complains that the superior

court order does not comply with the Supreme Court ruling in that the superior court

narrowly defined the directions of the Supreme Court.

                                         Writ Format

       Issue 1: Whether the superior court erred when entering an “Order for

Peremptory Writ of Mandamus,” rather than a “Writ?”

       Answer 1: No.

       The State contends that the Stevens County Superior Court order for writ lacks a

proper format in violation of RCW 7.16.180. The State argues that the Supreme Court

mandated that the superior court issue a writ, not an order for writ, and therefore, the

superior court erred.

       RCW 7.16.180 governs the format of writs of mandamus. The statute declares:

               The writ may be either alternative or peremptory. The alternative
       writ must state generally the allegation against the party to whom it is
       directed, and command such party, immediately after the receipt of the writ,
       or at some other specified time, to do the act required to be performed, or to
       show cause before the court, at a specified time and place, why he or she
       has not done so. The peremptory writ must be in some similar form, except

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No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

       the words requiring the party to show cause why he or she has not done as
       commanded must be omitted and a return day inserted.

(Emphasis added.) The writ challenged on appeal is a peremptory writ.

       The Stevens County Superior Court captioned its February 20, 2020 directive as

an “Order for Peremptory Writ of Mandamus.” We hold that the issuance of an order,

rather than a writ, does not invalidate the validity of the writ or excuse the district court

from following the order. Nothing in RCW 7.16.180 requires any magic words or voids

the writ if the phrase “order for” proceeds the word “writ” in the title. The substance of

the order, in compliance with RCW 7.16.180, included the party required to act and the

instruction with which the party must comply.

       Issue 2: Whether the superior court erred when failing to insert a return date in

the order for writ?

       Answer 2: Because of the unique directions in the order, no.

       We have some concern that the peremptory writ fails to insert a return date as

directed by RCW 7.16.180. Nevertheless, the writ demands continuing compliance of its

terms, rather than demanding that the district court complete a discrete task by a date

certain. Under these circumstances, a return date makes little sense. For this reason, we

conclude that the lack of a return date does not void the order for writ.

       Issue 3: Whether the superior court erred by narrowing the State’s proposed writ

to instances of misdemeanors rather than all in-custody criminal proceedings?

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No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

       Answer 3: No.

       The State contends that the superior court interpreted the Supreme Court’s

mandate too narrowly. The State argues that the Supreme Court held that the writ should

direct the district court to accept all filings related to in-custody criminal proceedings.

The State contends that the superior court thereby erred by failing to include in its order:

(1) cases not originally filed in district court, (2) arrests and initial appearances based on

a district court’s bench warrant, and (3) arrests and initial appearances based on probation

violations from a district court.

       In support of its assignment of error, the State requests this court to direct the

Stevens County Superior Court to strictly follow the Supreme Court’s ruling and

mandate. In turn, the district court asks this court to limit its review to whether the

superior court abused discretion in following the Supreme Court’s ruling. We believe we

can follow each request and arrive at the same decision.

       The Washington Supreme Court’s opening line in its opinion declared:

              This case asks us to determine whether a superior court may conduct
       preliminary appearance hearings for misdemeanors and gross
       misdemeanors originally filed in district court.

State v. Stevens County District Court Judge, 194 Wn.2d 898, 900 (2019) (emphasis

added). The Supreme Court concluded its opinion as follows:

               We hold the Superior Court may preside over preliminary
       appearance hearings for misdemeanors and gross misdemeanors originally
       filed in the District Court. Court rules authorize the Superior Court to

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No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

       preside over these hearings regardless of whether the case was originally
       filed in the Superior Court or the District Court. Furthermore, RCW
       3.66.060 does not restrict the Superior Court’s authority to preside over
       these hearings. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ judgment
       and remand the case to the Stevens County Superior Court to issue a writ of
       mandamus against the Stevens County District Court to accept cases from
       the Superior Court.

State v. Stevens County District Court Judge, 194 Wn.2d at 908 (emphasis added). Note

that the closing line, highlighted by the State, reads broadly, while two other lines in the

opinion mention only preliminary appearances for misdemeanors and gross

misdemeanors.

       While we agree with the State that the superior court must strictly follow the

Supreme Court’s decision, we also conclude that the superior court and this court must

consider the entirety and context of the Supreme Court decision. The Supreme Court

stated twice that the only issue before it concerned the superior court’s authority to

preside over preliminary appearances in misdemeanor cases. During litigation, the State

only mentioned preliminary appearances in misdemeanor cases. We conclude that the

superior court did not err when refusing to sign the State’s proposed writ of mandamus

and when signing the court’s own writ.

       In advancing its own proposed writ of mandamus, the State emphasizes some

broad language in this court’s first opinion. We previously wrote:

              This matter is reversed and remanded to superior court with
       instructions to grant the State’s petition for writ of mandamus.

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No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

State v. Stevens County Dist. Court Judge, 7 Wn. App. 2d 927, 936 (2019). Nevertheless,

the superior court must follow the ruling of the Supreme Court, not the Court of Appeals.

       Finally, the State asserts that the superior court misapprehended CrR 3.2 and

CrRLJ 3.2. The State highlights that CrR 3.2 and CrRLJ 3.2 apply to all in-custody

appearances, not merely preliminary appearance hearings. The district court responds

that the Supreme Court did not require the superior court to construe the criminal rules.

Rather, the high court ordered the superior court only to enter an order consistent with the

Supreme Court’s mandate. We agree with the district court.

       The Supreme Court’s opinion observed that the court rules authorize the superior

court to preside over preliminary appearance hearings for misdemeanors and gross

misdemeanors:

               We hold the Superior Court may preside over preliminary
       appearance hearings for misdemeanors and gross misdemeanors originally
       filed in the District Court. Court rules authorize the Superior Court to
       preside over these hearings regardless of whether the case was originally
       filed in the Superior Court or the District Court.

State v. Stevens County District Court Judge, 194 Wn.2d 898, 908 (2019). The Supreme

Court itself construed the criminal rules relevant to this case. The Supreme Court did not

direct the superior court to construe the rules further. The superior court’s only duty is to

follow the Supreme Court’s instructions.

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No. 37483-1-III
State v. Stevens County District Judge

                                    CONCLUSION

      We affirm the Stevens County Superior Court’s order for writ entered on February

20, 2020.

      A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the

Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW

2.06.040.

                                            _________________________________
                                            Fearing, J.

WE CONCUR:

______________________________
Lawrence-Berrey, J.

______________________________
Staab, J.

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