Ty Trenary v. Timothy Gonsalves & Christopher Mcmullen ( 2020 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    SNOHOMISH COUNTY SHERIFF TY                                                               )   No. 79426-4
    TRENARY,
    )   DIVISION ONE
    Appellant,
    )
    v.                                                             )   PUBLISHED OPINION
    TIMOTHY GONSALVES and                                                                     )
    CHRISTOPHER MCMULLEN,                                                                     )
    Respondents.                       )   FILED: March 23, 2020
    _______________________________________________________________________________________   )
    ANDRUS, J.            —   Snohomish County Superior Court issued a writ of mandamus
    prohibiting the Snohomish County Sheriff’s Office from using restraints on Timothy
    Gonsalves and Christopher McMullen at any non-jury criminal hearings.                                               The
    Sheriff appeals, arguing that mandamus was inappropriate because corrections
    transport deputies do not have a mandatory legal duty to remove a defendant’s
    restraints absent a court order and because Gonsalves and McMullen had
    adequate legal remedies outside of mandamus. We agree and reverse the trial
    court’s writ of mandamus.
    FACTS
    On December 12, 2018, Timothy Gonsalves, an in-custody defendant being
    held in the Snohomish County Jail pending two separate trials, filed a petition for
    a writ of mandamus against the Snohomish County Sheriff, Ty Trenary, and his
    No. 79426-4-112
    deputy officers (hereinafter “Sheriff”) to “[c]ease placing physical restraints on this
    pretrial detainee or any similar[ly} situated citizen when present in the courthouse
    for judicial hearings, absent a hearing and judicial order that a particular individual
    presents specific security risks which requires the use of said physical restraints.”
    That same month, Gonsalves amended the petition to add Christopher McMullen,
    another in-custody defendant, as an additional petitioner.
    Gonsalves and McMullen alleged below that the Sheriff maintains a blanket
    policy of shackling all in-custody defendants during transport to court hearings,
    while awaiting court hearings, and during those proceedings without conducting
    individualized assessments of a particular defendant’s dangerousness or flight
    risk. They alleged that Snohomish County Superior Court conducts omnibus and
    trial call hearings in Department 304, during which in-custody defendants in the
    courtroom must remain in restraints unless a court orders them to be removed.
    They further alleged that “it is the practice in Snohomish County Superior Court”
    to transport in-custody defendants to criminal motions hearings, plea hearings, trial
    call hearings, and sentencing hearings in restraints and to leave those restraints
    in place during these hearings.
    Gonsalves and McMullen did not challenge any practice of the Snohomish
    County Superior Court.      Instead, they sought a writ only against the Sheriff,
    claiming that the Sheriff and those under his command were violating their due
    process rights and those of all detainees by shackling them “absent a compelling
    showing following [a] hearing.”
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    No. 79426-4-1/3
    The Sheriff objected to the use of the mandamus procedure to address the
    issues raised by Gonsalves and McMullen. To support this objection, the Sheriff
    presented declarations from the elected Sheriff, Ty Trenary; Jamie Kane, the Major
    at the Snohomish County Sheriff’s Office Corrections Bureau (Bureau), which
    operates the Snohomish County Jail; and Anthony Aston, the Chief of the Bureau.
    They described the following procedures and practices within the jail and the
    courthouse:
    The Sheriff is responsible for a number of duties and functions in the county,
    including police patrol, criminal and traffic investigations, search and rescue
    operations, and management and operation of the county jail. The daily population
    of the jail averages approximately 900 individuals. The Bureau has developed and
    implemented written policies for the transport and restraint of in-custody
    defendants to and during court hearings. The policy considers the movement of
    any in-custody defendant to be a high risk activity. The custodial staff assigned to
    transport in-custody defendants follow routine practices and procedures for
    assembling and transporting these individuals to court.
    First, in-custody defendants scheduled to appear for a court hearing are
    assembled in a “transport holding” area within the jail. The area, comprised of
    multiple occupant and single occupant cells, allows custodial staff to segregate
    people by gender and security level. If an in-custody defendant is housed in a
    maximum security area within the jail, they are placed in wrist and waist restraints
    prior to leaving their housing unit before they reach the transport holding area. All
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    No. 79426-4-1/4
    other in-custody defendants are placed in waist and wrist restraints in the transport
    hold ing area before leaving the jail.
    Corrections deputies then escort the in-custody defendants through a
    tunnel from the jail to the courthouse. They walk into the courthouse basement, at
    which time custody deputies place each in-custody defendant into leg restraints.
    The corrections deputies then escort the group of restrained defendants into public
    elevators to holding cells on the second or third floors of the courthouse, or into an
    unsecure area at the back of Department 304. A corrections deputy then conducts
    security sweeps of the courtrooms and verifies the location and time of each
    defendant’s hearing. The current courthouse configuration does not provide for
    secure transport to each courtroom.        The deputies navigate public areas and
    elevators to reach each courtroom.
    In the past, deputies escorted defendants from the holding area in the
    courthouse to their respective courtrooms in full waist, wrist, and leg restraints. For
    jury trials, the defendants would be handcuffed behind their backs and escorted
    into the courtroom where the handcuffs were removed before the jury entered.
    Historically, the deputies escorted defendants to court in waist, wrist, and leg
    restraints for all non-jury trial court hearings and left the restraints in place during
    the hearings. If there were multiple defendants with hearings scheduled in the
    same courtroom, the deputies brought them all to that courtroom at the same time
    and staged them in the jury box until each one’s hearing began.
    Before Gonsalves and McMullen filed this lawsuit, the Snohomish County
    Prosecuting Attorney’s Office arranged a meeting with the Snohomish County
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    No. 79426-4-1/5
    Public Defenders Association, judges from superior and district court, and staff
    from the Bureau to discuss the use of restraints during transport of in-custody
    defendants from the county jail to courtrooms and during court proceedings. As a
    result of this meeting, the Sheriff temporarily agreed to change its policy:
    Corrections currently is prepared to present inmates for their court
    hearings out of restraints. This does not apply to transport of inmates
    from the Jail to the courthouse or maintaining inmates in the
    courthouse before and after hearings.
    Under this agreement, for criminal hearings in courtrooms other than Department
    304, deputies brought defendants into a courtroom one at a time. Unless a court
    ordered otherwise, the deputies removed the restraints before the judge took the
    bench.     Once the hearing concluded, deputies placed restraints back on the
    defendant and escorted that defendant back to the holding area. This process
    repeated until all defendants scheduled to appear for a hearing had completed
    their court appearance.
    For the criminal hearings in Department 304, deputies staged all defendants
    in the back of the courtroom in waist, wrist, and leg restraints. The deputies
    removed each defendant’s restraints before their appearance and placed them
    back on after each defendant’s hearing concluded.
    Although the Sheriff and Bureau representatives agreed to this procedure,
    they nevertheless believed that it decreased courthouse safety and impacted the
    deputies’ ability to maintain control of defendants.       They also testified that it
    stressed the operational functions of the jail because additional deputies were
    necessary to monitor defendants during court proceedings.               One concern
    expressed by the jail managers is the fact that the deputies transporting
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    No. 79426-4-116
    defendants do not work in the housing units with the defendants and, as a result,
    do not know each individual’s baseline behaviors and personalities. The transport
    deputies must be vigilant to a defendant who, under stress from the court
    proceedings, may act out unexpectedly. And the restraints are used as a way to
    keep the defendants safe from each other, as there may be co-defendants present
    in the courtroom at the same time. Finally, the Sheriff and Bureau management
    are concerned about the safety of the courtroom staff who may be unaware of risks
    presented by the presence of a defendant’s friends, family, or enemies in the
    courtroom audience.
    The trial court conducted a hearing on the petition on December 28, 2018.
    The record indicates that neither Gonsalves nor McMullen presented any evidence
    before or at the hearing. At the conclusion of this hearing, the court granted the
    writ of mandamus. The trial court reasoned that under Washington law, “a prisoner
    is entitled to be brought into the presence of the court free from restraints.” It stated
    that the Sheriff had a legal duty not to violate this right and that it was a violation
    of this duty not to remove restraints when a defendant was in “the presence of the
    court.” Gonsalves and McMullen were “in the presence of the court” when “court
    is in session,” and “[c]ourt is in session when the judge is on the bench and the
    proceedings are on the record.” The trial court also found that Gonsalves and
    McMullen lacked an adequate legal remedy, making mandamus appropriate.
    The trial court, however, declined to prohibit the Sheriff from transporting all
    defendants from the jail to the courtroom in restraints, and it limited the writ to
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    No. 79426-4-117
    Gonsalves and McMullen, rejecting their argument that it should apply to similarly
    situated individuals. The writ states:
    BY ORDER OF THE SNOHOMISH COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT,
    the Snohomish County Sheriff shall, acting through his agents and
    employees, bring Petitioner Gonsalves and Petitioner McMullen into
    the presence of the court free from restraints. This writ shall not
    supersede any future Order authorizing restraints that is entered by
    the Superior Court following an individualized determination that
    restraints are warranted.
    The Sheriff appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    The Sheriff advances two arguments on appeal. First, he argues that his
    transport deputies have no mandatory legal duty to remove a defendant’s
    restraints absent a court order to do so. He contends that the deputies exercise
    discretion when determining to restrain a defendant until the trial court decides
    whether to order restraints removed.      Second, he argues that Gonsalves and
    McMullen had adequate legal remedies other than the extraordinary writ of
    mandamus. We agree with both arguments.
    A writ of mandamus “may be issued by any court           .   .   .   to compel the
    performance of an act which the law especially enjoins as a duty resulting from an
    office, trust or station.” RCW 7.16.160. This writ is only appropriate where the
    official is under a “mandatory ministerial duty to perform an act required by law as
    part of that official’s duties.” Freeman v. Grecioire, 
    171 Wash. 2d 316
    , 323, 
    256 P.3d 264
    (2011). The mandate must define the duty with such particularity as to leave
    nothing to the exercise of discretion or judgment. j~çj~. at 323. Whether there is a
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    No. 79426-4-118
    clear duty to act is a question of law this court reviews de novo. Paxton v. City of
    Bellinqham, 
    129 Wash. App. 439
    , 445, 
    119 P.3d 373
    (2005).
    Additionally, a writ of mandamus may only be issued in cases “where there
    is not a plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.” RCW
    7.16.170. The availability of such a remedy “is a question left to the discretion of
    the court in which the proceeding is instituted.” River Park Square, LLC v. Miggins,
    
    143 Wash. 2d 68
    , 76, 
    17 P.3d 1178
    (2001). An appellate court “will not disturb a
    decision regarding a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy on review unless the
    superior court’s discretion was manifestly unreasonable, or exercised on
    untenable grounds, or for untenable reasons.” ki.
    The Sheriff first challenges the trial court’s conclusion that transport
    deputies have a mandatory legal duty to remove a defendant’s restraints for non
    jury proceedings once a defendant’s hearing commences, unless the trial court
    orders otherwise. He argues that the deputies have the discretion to leave the
    restraints in place and, under Washington case law, the duty of determining the
    appropriateness of restraints falls on the court. Gonsalves and McMullen argue
    just the opposite. They contend that the Sheriff has a mandatory duty to remove
    the restraints and that the trial court has the discretion to order that they be placed
    back on if the facts warrant. We conclude that the Sheriff has the better argument
    here.
    First, a defendant has a clear constitutional right to appear in court without
    restraints in the presence of the jury. See State v. Williams, 
    18 Wash. 47
    , 48-49,
    
    50 P. 580
    (1897) (trial court’s refusal to order removal of defendant’s restraints and
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    No. 79426-4-1/9
    restraints on defense witnesses during jury trial violated constitutional guaranty to
    fair trial); State v. Miller, 
    78 Wash. 268
    , 276, 
    138 P. 896
    (1914) (defendant not
    prejudiced by being led from jail to courtroom in handcuffs because jury not aware
    of it and because defendant was flight risk); State v. Boqqs, 
    57 Wash. 2d 484
    , 488-
    89, 
    358 P.2d 124
    (1961) Guror witnessed defendant in jail cell but any prejudice
    was cured with an instruction); State v. Sawyer, 
    60 Wash. 2d 83
    , 85, 
    371 P.2d 932
    (1962) (instruction cured any prejudice after jurors witnessed defendants being
    handcuffed after first day of trial). The Sheriff does not contend otherwise, and the
    Bureau had no practice of shackling any defendant in front of a jury.
    Second, our case law has repeatedly indicated that it is the court’s
    obligation—not that of the jail administration—to determine if restraints are
    warranted in any individual case. In State v. Hartzog, 
    96 Wash. 2d 383
    , 
    635 P.2d 694
    (1981), our Supreme Court invalidated a general security order issued by the Walla
    WalIa Superior Court requiring all defendants to remain in restraints during trial.
    The court held that the trial court must evaluate the use of restraints on any
    defendant on a case-by-case basis and “must exercise discretion in determining
    the extent to which courtroom security measures are necessary to maintain order
    and prevent injury.”   ~ at 400.
    Nearly a decade later in State v. Finch, 
    137 Wash. 2d 792
    , 
    975 P.2d 967
    (1999), our Supreme Court reiterated that it is an abuse of discretion for the court
    not to conduct an individualized assessment of the defendant’s risk of escaping
    custody, injuring himself or others, or misbehaving in the courtroom.
    Id. at 850.
    -9-
    No. 79426-4-1/10
    In granting the writ, the trial court relied on State v. Damon, 
    144 Wash. 2d 686
    ,
    
    25 P.3d 418
    (2001), in which our Supreme Court held that the trial court failed to
    exercise its discretion and in doing so, violated the defendant’s right to a
    presumption of innocence when the court deferred to the corrections officer’s
    recommendation to require the defendant to be held in a restraint chair during trial.
    ki. at 691-92. But the Damon court did not address the precise question presented
    here—namely, whether transporting deputies have a ‘mandatory duty” to remove
    a defendant’s restraints during non-jury criminal hearings.
    In fact, no Washington court has held that a law enforcement officer has a
    “mandatory ministerial” legal duty to remove a defendant’s restraints before the
    trial court conducts an individualized assessment of that defendant’s case. Each
    of the cases on which Gonsalves and McMullen rely addresses the trial court’s
    duty, not the duty of the transporting deputies. And the record here amply supports
    why the decision to leave or remove restraints is a discretionary, not a mandatory,
    one. The Bureau has assessed the layout of the courthouse, the characteristics
    of each courtroom, the path they take to escort defendants from one area to
    another, the staff available on any given day for transporting defendants to
    courtrooms for non-jury proceedings and for jury trials, and unique security issues
    that may arise in any courtroom based on the number of other defendants in the
    same courtroom and the presence of court staff and members of the public.
    In State v. Walker, 
    185 Wash. App. 790
    , 796, 
    344 P.3d 227
    (2015), this court
    rejected the argument that jail or prison administrators have plenary authority to
    determine whether an inmate defendant must wear restraints in the courtroom:
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    No. 79426-4-I/i I
    The interests of prison administrators in the security of their
    institutions and the resulting decision to use restraints are readily
    distinguishable from the interests of the court. To be sure, on matters
    of courtroom security, those interests may overlap because of
    common concerns about preventing injury to those in the courtroom,
    preventing disorderly conduct in the courtroom, and preventing
    escape     .   But, unlike in a penal setting, a court is also required to
    .       .
    balance the need for a secure courtroom with the defendant’s
    presumption of innocence, the defendant’s ability to assist counsel,
    the right to testify on one’s own behalf, and the dignity of the judicial
    process        .While prison officials may be well positioned to assist
    .       .
    the trial court in deciding matters of courtroom security, they are in
    no position to weigh and balance the many factors the court must
    consider when determining whether, and in what manner, a
    defendant should be restrained during a court proceeding.
    Id. at 796-97.
    We placed the duty of making the individualized assessment—this
    balancing of an individual’s constitutional rights against the need for security in a
    particular courtroom—on the shoulders of the trial courts. ki.
    We thus conclude that the trial court erred in ruling that the Sheriff and his
    transporting deputies have a mandatory legal duty to remove restraints from an in-
    custody defendant during all criminal proceedings, even in the absence of a court
    order to do so.
    Additionally, we disagree with the trial court that Gonsalves and McMullen
    lacked an adequate legal remedy. Mandamus is only proper “where there is not a
    plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.” RCW 7.16.170.
    “A remedy is not inadequate merely because it is attended with delay, expense,
    annoyance, or even some hardship.” City of Kirkland v. Ellis, 
    82 Wash. App. 819
    ,
    827, 
    920 P.2d 206
    (1996). “There must be something in the nature of the action
    that makes it apparent that the rights of the litigants will not be protected or full
    redress afforded without issuance of the writ.” City of Olympia v. Thurston County.
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    No. 79426-4-1/12
    Bd. of Comm’rs, 
    131 Wash. App. 85
    , 96, 
    125 P.3d 997
    (2005). Whether there is a
    plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of the law is reviewed
    for abuse of discretion. River Park Square 
    LLC, 143 Wash. 2d at 76
    .
    The trial court reasoned that the writ was appropriate here because “there
    is a continuing violation of a duty.” It based this decision on Euqster v. City of
    Spokane, 
    118 Wash. App. 383
    , 
    76 P.3d 741
    (2003). But Euqster is distinguishable.
    In that case, members of the Spokane City Council brought an action to invalidate
    an ordinance that required the city to loan parking meter revenue to a public
    development authority (PDA) to cover any shortfalls in the cost of erecting a
    parking garage.       The garage developer, named as a defendant, filed a
    counterclaim seeking a writ of mandamus compelling the city council to comply
    with the ordinance.
    Id. at 397.
    After concluding that the ordinance imposed a mandatory duty on the city
    to offer a loan to the PDA, the Euqster court analyzed whether the developer had
    any means, other than mandamus, to enforce the 
    duty. 118 Wash. App. at 414
    . It
    concluded that the developer had no contractual basis for compelling the city to
    make the requested loan because no contract existed. j~ at 416. It affirmed the
    trial court’s conclusion that the developer lacked a plain, speedy and adequate
    remedy in the ordinary course of law.
    But the trial court here conducted no analysis of what options, other than
    mandamus, exist for Gonsalves and McMullen. First, the trial court has the ability
    and legal duty to protect Gonsalves’s and McMullen’s constitutional rights to be
    free of restraints.    The record shows that the transport deputies escorted
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    No. 79426-4-1/13
    Gonsalves and McMullen to the mandamus hearing in restraints. The court was
    able to quickly conduct an assessment of the need for the restraints by asking the
    deputies whether the Sheriff had any specific concerns and whether either
    defendant presented a flight risk, a risk of committing harm, or a risk of upsetting
    the decorum of the proceeding.       After hearing from a transport deputy and
    reviewing the dockets for each of the defendant’s criminal cases, the trial court
    determined that restraints were unnecessary.        Gonsalves and McMullen, in
    essence, obtained an individualized assessment by the court on the spot without
    having to request it.
    Second, Gonsalves and McMullen can simply ask to have their restraints
    removed in any criminal hearing. As Walker clearly indicates, had they made such
    a request, the court presiding over their hearing would have been obligated to
    conduct an assessment of the need for restraints. And Gonsalves and McMullen
    also could have sought a court order prohibiting the use of restraints at any future
    criminal hearings, thereby eliminating the need to raise the issue repeatedly. Had
    the Sheriff failed or refused to comply with such a lawful court order, Gonsalves or
    McMullen could have requested sanctions for contempt. See State v. Sims, 
    193 Wash. 2d 86
    , 
    441 P.3d 262
    (2019) (affirming court imposed remedial sanctions
    against DSHS for non-compliance with court ordered mental health evaluation).
    Moreover, as demonstrated by the mandamus hearing in this case, the trial court
    can raise the issue sua sponte even if a defendant or counsel does not.
    Finally, if Gonsalves, McMullen, or any other defendant deems the Sheriff’s
    “blanket” transport policy to be unconstitutional, they have a legal right to seek a
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    No. 79426-4-1/14
    declaratory judgment and injunctive relief. ~ Johnson v. Moore, 
    80 Wash. 2d 531
    ,
    
    496 P.2d 334
    (1972) (individuals held in city jail without charge could bring suit for
    declaratory judgment and injunctive relief to challenge practice of holding
    individuals in city jail on suspicion of crime). There is a statutory mechanism for
    obtaining emergency temporary injunctive relief when a party can establish a
    violation of legal rights. ~ RCW 7.40.020 (grounds for issuance) and 7.40.050
    (emergency restraining orders). Gonsalves and McMullen could have brought a
    declaratory judgment action to challenge the constitutionality of restraining
    defendants during non-jury criminal proceedings and could have sought an
    injunction to prevent the Sheriff from following any policy a court deems
    unconstitutional.
    The trial court abused its discretion in concluding that Gonsalves and
    McMullen lacked an adequate remedy at law.              A writ of mandamus was
    inappropriate under these circumstances.
    Reversed.
    WE CONCUR:
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