State Of Washington, V Richard Anthony Carpenter ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                   FILED
    COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    1015 FEB - 3   AM 8: 51
    STATE OF WASHINGTON
    BY
    DEP.   Y
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                                                        No. 44562 -0 -II
    Respondent,
    v.
    RICHARD ANTHONY CARPENTER,                                             UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Appellant.
    JOHANSON, C. J. —       Richard Anthony Carpenter appeals his jury convictions for first
    degree   assault,   first degree robbery,   and second      degree   unlawful possession of a   firearm. - He
    argues that the trial court violated his public trial rights when it permitted the parties to exercise
    their peremptory challenges in writing and his .right to counsel when it denied his motion to
    1
    substitute counsel without an adequate       inquiry.
    We hold that the trial court did not violate Carpenter' s public trial right regarding
    peremptory juror challenges because those challenges do not implicate the public trial right and
    1 This case is linked for appeal with No. 44569 -7 -II and the two arguments in this appeal are
    identical to the first two arguments in that appeal. Therefore, the language of the two opinions is
    similar.
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    did not violate his Sixth Amendment right to counsel because Carpenter' s reasons for substituting
    counsel were clear     from the     record and a        formal   inquiry   was not   necessary.   Accordingly, we
    affirm Carpenter' s convictions.
    FACTS
    In December 2011,         Robert Bisom opened his front door to an unknown Carpenter
    knocking, and Carpenter pushed his way into Bisom' s house. Carpenter asked Bisom for his keys
    and when Bisom did not comply, a fight ensued. Finally Bisom surrendered and opened the safe
    where he kept his car keys and a pistol. Carpenter threatened Bisom with the pistol, left the house
    taking the keys and pistol with him, and was arrested later on unrelated charges. The State charged
    2
    Carpenter   with   first degree   assault,       first degree robbery,3   and second degree unlawful possession
    of a firearm.4
    On May 11, 2012, during a pretrial status hearing, Carpenter' s counsel expressed concerns
    about Carpenter' s competency. Although two mental health evaluators had found Carpenter to be
    competent, his counsel sought a new evaluation because they were unable to communicate.
    Because Carpenter refused to cooperate with his counsel and the mental health evaluators, it took
    three visits before the second evaluation was accomplished. The court ordered the third evaluation.
    The trial court also asked Carpenter' s counsel about his difficulties communicating with
    Carpenter.    Carpenter' s counsel explained that, in his opinion, Carpenter' s position was that " he
    2 RCW 9A.36. 011.
    3 RCW 9A.56. 200.
    4
    Former RCW 9. 41. 040( 2)(     a) (   2011).
    2
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    should go home now and that if [Carpenter' s counsel] can' t do that, [he is] not doing anything for
    him."    Report       of   Proceedings ( RP) (    May       11, 2012)     at   1.    Carpenter     responded   that "[ w] e don' t
    have    a, we   don' t have       a   relationship, Judge.        We    cannot conversate [ sic]         with each other."     RP
    May    11, 2012)      at   5.    Carpenter asked for a new attorney and the trial court told him to put his
    motion for substitution of counsel in writing so that the court could consider it and the State could
    respond.
    On May 18, 2012, at a second competency status hearing, the trial court learned that
    although Carpenter was willing to talk with the new evaluator, he was willing to discuss only topics
    that   were " acceptable"          to him and    refused     to talk    about       his   case.   Due to Carpenter' s failure to
    cooperate during the evaluation, the evaluator could not determine the cause of his inability to
    work with       his   counsel.        Carpenter' s counsel also told the court that Carpenter had been involved
    in two j ail incidents in the 24 hours preceding the hearing, including an incident where he spat on
    a corrections officer.            Seven corrections officers were needed to escort Carpenter to court, and
    because of his behavior, Carpenter had been charged with six counts of custodial assault.
    Lieutenant James, a corrections officer, stated that he thought Carpenter might have " some mental
    health issues" and that the mental health supervisor at the jail thought Carpenter probably had a
    mood     disorder.         RP (   May     18, 2012)    at   12.     Lieutenant James also observed, however, that
    Carpenter       was   willing to        cooperate at   times      and   usually " understood         what was   going   on."   RP
    May 18, 2012) at 13.
    The trial court found Carpenter to be competent and asked him why he had not submitted
    a written motion for new counsel. When Carpenter informed the court that he was not allowed to
    have a pencil or paper to prepare the motion, the court decided that " at this point I' m not going to
    3
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    allow    Mr. Carpenter to discharge Mr. DePan.              I think this is just partly his way of trying to
    manipulate     getting   what   he   wants."   RP ( May 18, 2012)    at   14 -15.   After the May 18 hearing, the
    issue of substitution of counsel was not raised again, although trial occurred over eight months
    later.
    In January 2013, the trial court conducted voir dire in open court, and Carpenter and the
    State questioned the venire and exercised their for -cause challenges. The State and Carpenter then
    exercised their peremptory challenges on a written form that was later filed with the clerk.5 Based
    on that written form, the trial court announced which jurors had been selected and excused the
    others.
    The jury convicted Carpenter on all three counts. He now appeals those convictions.
    ANALYSIS
    I. PEREMPTORY CHALLENGES Do NOT IMPLICATE THE PUBLIC TRIAL RIGHT
    Carpenter argues that the trial court violated his public trial rights when the parties
    exercised     their peremptory       challenges   in writing.   We held in State v. Dunn, 
    180 Wn. App. 570
    ,
    575, 
    321 P. 3d 1283
     ( 2014),         review    denied, No. 90238 -1 ( Wash. Jan. 7, 2015), and again in State
    v.   Marks,          Wn.   App. ,       
    339 P. 3d 196
    , 200 ( 2014), that exercising peremptory challenges
    does not implicate the public trial right. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not violate
    Carpenter' s public trial rights by allowing counsel to make peremptory challenges at a sidebar
    conference.
    5 As the parties made their challenges, the trial court made small talk with the prospective jurors
    on   the   record.   When the parties finalized their peremptory challenges with the clerk, the record
    shows a "(    Pause)" in the    proceedings.      RP ( Voir Dire Examination) (Jan. 24, 2013) at 154.
    4
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    II. SUBSTITUTION OF COUNSEL
    Carpenter next argues that the trial court violated his Sixth Amendment rights when it
    denied his motion to substitute counsel because it failed to conduct an adequate inquiry. We hold
    that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it denied Carpenter' s request for substitute
    counsel because Carpenter' s reasons for substituting counsel were clear from the record, a formal
    inquiry was not necessary, and it was reasonable for the trial court to find that there was not an
    irreconcilable conflict or complete breakdown in communication.
    A. STANDARD OF REVIEW AND RULES OF LAW
    We review a trial court' s decision not to appoint new counsel for an abuse of discretion.
    State   v.   Varga, 
    151 Wn.2d 179
    , 200, 
    86 P. 3d 139
     ( 2004). A trial court abuses its discretion when
    its decision is "' manifestly              unreasonable or     based   upon untenable grounds or reasons. "'            State v.
    Garcia, 
    179 Wn.2d 828
    , 844, 
    318 P. 3d 266
     ( 2014) ( internal                           quotation marks omitted) (       quoting
    State   v.    Lamb, 
    175 Wn.2d 121
    , 127, 
    285 P. 3d 27
     ( 2012)).                         Criminal defendants are generally
    guaranteed       the   right   to   counsel.    U. S. CONST.    amend.   VI; WASH. CONST.         art.   I, § 22.   A defendant,
    however, does          not   have    an absolute right "`` to choose      any   particular advocate.'"       Varga, 
    151 Wn.2d at 200
     ( quoting State            v.   Stenson, 
    132 Wn.2d 668
    , 733, 
    940 P. 2d 1239
     ( 1997), cent. denied, 
    523 U.S. 1008
     ( 1998)).
    In order to justify substitution of counsel, the defendant must show good cause for the
    substitution, such as "'            a conflict of interest, an irreconcilable conflict, or a complete breakdown in
    communication. "'            Varga, 
    151 Wn.2d at 200
     ( quoting Stenson, 
    132 Wn.2d at 734
    ). A substitution
    of counsel may be justified when the attorney -client relationship is plagued by things that suggest
    that the attorney cannot                 provide   diligent   representation.     In   re   Pers. Restraint of Stenson, 142
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    Wn.2d 710, 724 -31, 
    16 P. 3d 1
     ( 2001).              However, a defendant must show more than a general loss
    of   trust   or confidence.       State   v.   Schaller, 
    143 Wn. App. 258
    , 268, 
    177 P. 3d 1139
     ( 2007),   review
    denied, 
    164 Wn.2d 1015
     ( 2008). The cause of the breakdown in communication matters as well,
    and Carpenter must show that the breakdown is not because of his own refusal to cooperate.
    Schaller, 143 Wn. App. at 271.
    Where the representation was inadequate, this court will presume prejudice. Schaller, 143
    Wn.     App.       at   270.    If his counsel' s representation was adequate, however, Carpenter must
    demonstrate          prejudice.   Schaller, 143 Wn.      App.   at   270. To determine whether the breakdown in
    communication entitled             Carpenter to    new counsel, we examine        three factors: ( 1) the extent of the
    conflict, (2) the adequacy of the trial court' s inquiry into the conflict, and ( 3) the timeliness of the
    motion for substitution of counsel. State v. Cross, 
    156 Wn.2d 580
    , 607, 
    132 P. 3d 80
    , cert. denied,
    
    549 U. S. 1022
     ( 2006).
    B. ANALYSIS
    1.         EXTENT OF THE CONFLICT
    We must first consider the extent and nature of the breakdown in communication and what
    effect, if any, the breakdown had on the representation that Carpenter received. State v. Thompson,
    
    169 Wn. App. 436
    ,    457, 
    290 P. 3d 996
     ( 2012),   review     denied, 
    176 Wn.2d 1023
     ( 2013); Schaller,
    143 Wn. App. at 270. Carpenter does not argue that his counsel had a conflict of interest and fails
    to demonstrate an irreconcilable conflict or a complete breakdown in communication for three
    reasons.
    First, the record suggests that the reason for the breakdown in communication was
    Carpenter' s own refusal to cooperate and not his counsel' s ill will or failure to engage or to try to
    6
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    communicate.       The record shows that Carpenter refused to communicate with his counsel about
    his case, was only willing to engage with the mental health evaluator about topics that were
    acceptable" to Carpenter and not about the charges pending against him, and that Carpenter did
    not cooperate with     the     guards at   the jail.    In fact, because Carpenter refused to cooperate with
    corrections officers, seven officers were needed                to   escort   him to   court.    Carpenter, therefore, did
    not only struggle to communicate with his own counsel but was generally uncooperative and
    struggled    to   communicate with everyone.             Carpenter, however, is not entitled to new counsel
    simply because he      refused    to   cooperate.   Thompson, 169 Wn.             App.    at   457 -58 ( "`` It is well settled
    that a defendant is not entitled to demand a reassignment of counsel on the basis of a breakdown
    in   communications where        he simply    refuses    to   cooperate with      his   attorneys. ' (   quoting Schaller,
    143 Wn. App. at 271)).
    Second, during the May 11 and May 18, 2012 hearings, Carpenter' s counsel thought that
    Carpenter' s failure to communicate might have been due, in part, to a competency problem. This
    fact suggests that the nature of his failure to communicate was not a deep- seated, irreconcilable
    conflict    with   counsel   but latent    mental      health   problems.        Carpenter' s counsel sought a new
    evaluation and different medication to identify and to remedy these problems so that he could
    provide     more   effective   representation.      The nature of the conflict between Carpenter and his
    counsel is, therefore, at best, the result of Carpenter' s mental health problems and, at worst, due to
    Carpenter'   s general   intransigence.       Neither fact suggests that Carpenter and his counsel had a
    complete breakdown in communication that prevented diligent, adequate representation.
    Finally, there was no evidence at the time of Carpenter' s motion that this problem
    prevented    his   counsel   from providing     adequate representation, and             Carpenter      does   not argue   that
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    his   counsel' s continued representation prejudiced                    him.   Carpenter' s counsel agreed that he had
    not     been   able   to   converse with       Mr. Carpenter regarding the facts          of   this   case, ...   his ability to
    work with his attorney is zero, and I have no ability to unless Mr. Carpenter' s behavior changes."
    RP ( May 18, 2012)            at   5 - 6.   But he continued to represent Carpenter diligently. The record from
    just the May 11 and May 18 hearings shows that Carpenter' s counsel made multiple attempts to
    visit    him to try to       work on        their   case.    Carpenter' s counsel sought an additional mental health
    evaluation and different medications to try to address their communication problem.
    Carpenter does not argue that his representation was inadequate, only that there was a
    breakdown in communication and the trial court' s inquiry was inadequate to determine the extent
    of the breakdown. He fails to address the facts in the record, does not claim that they demonstrate
    that any alleged breakdown in communication caused deficient representation, and did not.renew
    his motion for new counsel in the more than eight months between his first motion and the start of
    trial.
    The nature and extent of the alleged conflict does not weigh in favor of substitution of
    counsel because Carpenter failed to demonstrate that there was a breakdown in communication
    that affected his representation.
    2.          ADEQUACY OF THE TRIAL COURT' S INQUIRY
    Carpenter argues that the trial court conducted no inquiry at all into the nature and extent
    of his conflict with his attorney. We conclude that the record here provided sufficient information
    for the trial court to determine the nature and extent of the conflict.
    An adequate inquiry includes a " full airing of the concerns" and a " meaningful inquiry by
    the trial   court."         Cross, 
    156 Wn.2d at 610
    . However,   a "[   fJormal inquiry is not always essential
    8
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    where    the defendant       otherwise states       his   reasons   for dissatisfaction   on   the   record."   Schaller, 143
    Wn. App. at 272.
    Here, the trial court did not extensively inquire into Carpenter' s reasons for wanting new
    counsel, but the reasons Carpenter sought new counsel were clear from the record. As Carpenter
    stated, he and his counsel did not "have a relationship" and were struggling to communicate about
    his   case.    RP ( May 11, 2012)       at   5.    Carpenter' s counsel agreed with Carpenter' s characterization
    of their relationship but continued to try to work with Carpenter and with the court so that he could
    provide effective representation.                 From the record of the May 11 and May 18 hearings, the trial
    court was also aware of Carpenter' s many struggles to cooperate with his mental health evaluators
    and corrections officers as well as his own counsel.
    The nature and extent of Carpenter' s conflict with his counsel was evident, and the trial
    court did not abuse its discretion when it did not conduct additional, formal inquiry into the
    conflict.
    3.          TIMELINESS OF THE MOTION
    Carpenter argues that the trial court did not consider timeliness as a factor when it denied
    his motion to substitute counsel and that, regardless, timeliness was not an issue because at the
    time of his motion, no trial date had been set.
    An untimely motion to substitute counsel weighs against a defendant' s attempt to establish
    that an irreconcilable conflict existed. Stenson, 142 Wn.2d at 732. In this case, Carpenter asked
    the   court    for   a new   attorney   on   May     11, 2012,   and    the court denied   his   request on     May   18.   Jury
    selection for Carpenter' s trial did not begin until January 24, 2013, more than eight months later.
    9
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    Timeliness, therefore, weighs in favor of Carpenter' s argument that the trial court erred when it
    denied his motion.
    4.       SUMMARY
    The extent of Carpenter' s conflict with his counsel was substantial but not irreconcilable.
    The nature of their conflict was, at best, because of Carpenter' s mental health problems and, at
    worst, because Carpenter simply refused to cooperate with everyone, and this conflict did not
    prevent    Carpenter'   s counsel   from providing      adequate representation.    The nature and extent of
    their conflict was clear from the record and from Carpenter' s own statements.
    The trial court denied Carpenter' s motion on May 18 because it found that the motion was
    intended to "   manipulate   getting   what   he   wants,"   presumably to   manipulate    the trial   process.   RP
    May 18, 2012) at 15. The trial court did not find a complete breakdown in communication or an
    irreconcilable conflict and, based on the May 11 and May 18 hearings, these determinations were
    not an abuse of discretion.
    The trial court did not abuse its discretion when it denied Carpenter' s request for new
    counsel    because ( 1) Carpenter'   s reasons     for substituting   counsel were clear   from the    record, ( 2)   a
    formal inquiry was not necessary, and ( 3) it was reasonable for the trial court to find that there was
    not an irreconcilable conflict or complete breakdown in communication. Accordingly, Carpenter' s
    argument fails.
    10
    No. 44562 -0 -II
    We affirm.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW 2. 06. 040,
    it is so ordered.
    We concur:
    MAX
    SUTTON, J.
    11