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State v. Coronell
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
Thomas Coronell was sentenced to a five-year drug offender sentencing alternative program, the statutory maximum sentence. After he had given notice of appeal, the trial court amended his sentence so that he would serve an "additional" 12 months in community custody if he failed the program. In another postsentencing order, the trial court rescinded its decision to extend Coronell credit for time served presentencing at the King County Community Center for Alternative Programs, which offers a variety of services and classes in lieu of detention. Coronell appeals challenging both these postsentencing orders. We reverse in part because the trial court exceeded its authority when it imposed the additional 12 months.
Coronell was charged with domestic violence felony violation of a court order and resisting arrest. A jury found him guilty of the first offense but acquitted him of the second. He was sentenced to a prison-based drug offender sentencing alternative (DOSA) program. This sentence required 30 months spent in prison followed by 30 months in community custody. As a condition of his community custody, Coronell was ordered to attend certain classes and adhere to certain restrictions. Specifically, he was ordered to complete a substance use disorder treatment program and a domestic violence treatment program, and to refrain from use of illegal controlled substances and alcohol and submit to drug testing. Failure to comply would result in his return to prison for the remainder of his sentence.
The trial court gave Coronell about nine months credit toward his sentence for the time he spent in King County Jail before his release on his own recognizance. It also credited him for the 57 days he spent participating in the King County Community Center for Alternative Programs (CCAP) after his release from jail. CCAP provides a variety of classes and programs-including drug and alcohol treatment, domestic violence education, and mental health services. It requires that defendants report to its facility every weekday at 9:00 a.m. and remain until discharged by staff. Defendants released to CCAP are ordered to avoid drugs and alcohol submit to drug testing, keep staff aware of their residential situation and contact information, and comply with programming and directions from staff.
After Coronell was sentenced, the trial court heard and decided two motions amending that sentence. The first added a condition to his DOSA: "[T]he defendant is ordered to an additional 12 months of community custody term if the offender fails to complete or is administratively terminated from the DOSA program." The second rescinded the credit the trial court had previously extended to Coronell for the 57 days he served in CCAP.
Coronell appeals.
Coronell first contends that the trial court exceeded its authority under the Sentencing Reform Act of 1981 (SRA), chapter 9.94A RCW, when it amended his sentence so that if he failed his DOSA program he would serve an additional year in community custody. He asserts that this amendment caused his sentence to exceed its statutory maximum length. He also contends that the trial court erred when it concluded that his participation in the CCAP program did not qualify as credit for time served. We agree that the trial court exceeded its sentencing authority but conclude that it did not err when it denied him credit for time served in CCAP.
Washington appellate courts presented with questions of law concerning whether a defendant has been lawfully sentenced under the SRA apply de novo review. In re Pers. Restraint of Brooks, 166 Wn.2d 664, 667, 211 P.3d 1023 (2009). We therefore review the first issue-whether the trial court had the authority to add 12 months to Coronell's sentence-de novo. Similarly, questions of statutory interpretation are reviewed de novo. State v. Van Wolvelaere, 195 Wn.2d 597, 600, 461 P.3d 1173 (2020). Because Coronell challenges whether the trial court had the discretion to extend credit for time served under the SRA, a question of statutory interpretation, we also review the second issue de novo.
The first order modifying Coronell's judgment and sentence (J&S)[1] was issued on April 29, 2022, two and a half months after he was sentenced and he initiated his appeal. It amended his J&S "to reflect that the defendant is ordered to an additional 12 months of community custody term if the offender fails to complete or is administratively terminated from the DOSA program."
The court erred in two ways. First, the trial court lacked authority to amend the J&S because, contrary to RAP 7.2(e), it failed to seek this court's permission before modifying an order, the J&S, already being appealed. Second, the trial court lacked the substantive authority under the SRA to add 12 months to a sentence that already imposed the statutory maximum. For both these reasons, we reverse.[2]
This appeal was pending at the time of the April 2022 order, but the parties did not follow the process required by RAP 7.2(e) to modify an order pending appeal. Regardless of the merits of the trial court's authority under the SRA, this procedural defect means that the trial court lacked the ability to issue the April 2022 order.
RAP 7.2 governs the trial court's power to act in a matter for which appeal is pending. Where the trial court would otherwise be able to modify an order but that modification would affect "a decision then being reviewed by the appellate court, the permission of the appellate court must be obtained prior to the formal entry of the trial court decision." RAP 7.2(e). Here, even though appeal was initiated in February 2022, that permission was neither sought nor obtained. As a result, the trial court did not have the authority to modify Coronell's sentence in the April 2022 order.
Though this alone is grounds for reversal, we still consider Coronell's substantive claim.
Coronell contends that trial court exceeded its authority under the SRA when it amended his J&S in the April 2022 order. We agree.
Courts may not "impose a sentence providing for a term of confinement or community custody that exceeds the statutory maximum for the crime." RCW 9.94A.505(5). Nor may the combination of time served in confinement and served in community custody exceed the statutory maximum. RCW 9.94A.701(10); State v. Boyd, 174 Wn.2d 470, 472-73, 275 P.3d 321 (2012). It is the length of the sentence at the time it is handed down, not the length of time actually served, that is the subject of our review. State v. Bruch, 182 Wn.2d 854, 864, 346 P.3d 724 (2015). Thus, in Boyd, which concerned a crime with a statutory maximum of 60 months, the trial court exceeded its authority when it imposed 54 months of confinement and 12 months of community custody even though it had also noted that the total time served could not exceed 60 months. 174 Wn.2d at 471-73.
Here, the jury found Coronell guilty of domestic violence felony violation of a court order. Domestic violence felony violation of a court order is a class C felony. Former RCW 26.50.110(5) (2019).[3] The maximum sentence for a class C felony is 60 months. RCW 9A.20.021(1)(c). At sentencing, the trial court imposed a DOSA sentence of 30 months in prison and 30 months in community custody. Coronell's J&S laid out the consequences of noncompliance with the DOSA program, including being removed from community custody and returned to prison:
If the defendant fails to complete DOC's special drug offender sentencing alternative program or is administratively terminated from the program, he/she shall be reclassified by DOC to serve the balance of the unexpired term of sentence. If the defendant fails to comply with the conditions of supervision as defined by DOC, he/she shall be sanctioned. Sanctions may include reclassification by DOC to serve the balance of the unexpired term of sentence.
The trial court's April 2022 order modified these terms "to reflect that the defendant is ordered to an additional 12 months of community custody term if the offender fails to complete or is administratively terminated from the DOSA program."
This modification exceeded the trial court's statutory authority. Coronell was already sentenced to the statutory maximum. The trial court's April 2022 order's only effect was to add time that exceeded the maximum sentence, thereby violating RCW 9.94A.701(10).
The State contends that this conclusion takes the April 2022 order too literally. It asserts that, when read in conjunction with the J&S's existing consequences for non-compliance, "it is apparent that community custody could only be imposed for 12 months upon termination of the DOSA if there were 12 months or more left within the total unexpired term of sentence." But this ignores the plain language of the modification order, which explicitly orders "additional" community custody. The State is asking us to read terms into the order that simply are not present.
We therefore conclude that the court erred both procedurally and substantively in making this modification and reverse for vacation of the April 2022 order.
Coronell also challenges the trial court's second order modifying his J&S, which reversed its decision at sentencing to award him 57 days of credit for time served in CCAP.[4] His challenge fails because the statutory...
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