State Of Washington, V James Vincent Meyers ( 2014 )


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  •                                                                                                                                     FILE
    CO-URT OF APPEALS'
    DIVISION LI
    2014 JUN 10 111 8: 4 I
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHIN                                                                                         014
    DIVISION II
    oki:
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                                                               No. 44079 -2 -II
    Respondent,
    v.
    JAMES VINCENT MEYERS,                                                        UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Appellant.
    HUNT, J. —        James Vincent Meyers appeals his jury trial convictions for unlawful
    possession     of a   controlled     substance ( morphine)        and third degree driving with a suspended
    license ( DWLS).       He argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence
    1,
    because the statutory basis for the initial stop, RCW 46. 16A.200( 5)(                      a)(   iii)    and (   7)(   c)        which
    require    that   vehicle    license   plates   be kept     clean,    plainly    visible,   and      not       obstructed,           are
    unconstitutionally vague as applied. Disagreeing, we affirm.
    FACTS
    On May 20, 2012, at about 11: 30 PM, Centralia Police Officer William Phipps was on
    2
    routine patrol when         he   observed a van pull      away from the         curb and    onto     the       main     roadway.
    Driving behind        the   van,   Phipps   noticed   that the   van' s "   trailer ball hitch" obscured two of the
    1
    The legislature   amended       RCW 46. 16A. 200 twice in 2014. LAws              OF    2014,        ch.   80, § 1, ch. 181,
    2.   The amendments did not alter the statute in any way relevant to this case; accordingly, we
    cite the current version of the statute.
    2
    We base our recitation of the facts on the trial court' s written findings of fact issued following
    the suppression  hearing, which Meyers does not challenge.
    No. 44079 -2 -II
    characters on       the   van' s rear   license   plate.   Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at 99 ( Findings of Fact ( FF) 3).
    Believing this to be a traffic infraction, Phipps stopped the van, driven by James Vincent Meyers.
    Phipps arrested Meyers after learning that his license was suspended and that there was a warrant
    for his   arrest.   During a search of Meyers incident to his arrest, Phipps found a single morphine
    pill.
    The State charged Meyers with unlawful possession of a controlled substance ( morphine)
    and     third degree DWLS.              Meyers moved to suppress the evidence found during the search
    incident to arrest, arguing that RCW 46.26A.200( 5) and ( 7) did " not make it unlawful to have a
    trailer ball hitch that may         obstruct a partial view of     the license     plate,"   that photographic evidence
    showed     that the " trailer ball hitch"          did not obscure the license plate, and that the stop was
    unlawful. CP at 10.
    3
    The trial   court    denied Meyers'       suppression motion,      concluding:
    1.         RCW 46[.] 16A[.] 200( 5)( a)( iii) requires that vehicle license plates be kept
    clean  and be able to be plainly seen and read at all times[.]       RCW
    46[.] 16A[.] 200( 7)( c) makes it unlawful to use holders, frames, or other
    materials   that    change, alter, or make      a   license     late or plates illegible[.]
    The obstruction of a license plate from view by a trailer ball hitch is a civil
    infraction[.]
    2.         Officer Phipps had a reasonable suspicion that the Defendant committed a
    traffic infraction    prior   to stopping the Defendant'        s vehicle[.]   Specifically,
    Officer Phipps observed that the Defendant' s rear license plate was
    illegible because it was obstructed by the vehicle' s trailer ball hitch[.]
    3 The trial court also found that although Meyers had submitted photographs showing the license
    plate was      clearly    visible   from   some angles, "     the angles from which the pictures [ were] taken
    were] not the same as the vantage point that Officer Phipps had while he was driving in his
    vehicle." - CP at     99 ( FF 4).
    No. 44079 -2 -II
    3.        The basis for the traffic stop in this case was reasonable suspicion of a
    traffic infraction[.]There is no evidence suggesting that the traffic stop
    was a pretext stop[.]
    CP    at   100 ( Conclusions          of   Law 1 - 3).     Based on this admitted evidence, a jury found Meyers
    guilty     of unlawful        possession       of a      controlled          substance   and   third degree DWLS.       Meyers
    appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    Meyers contends that the trial court erred in denying his suppression motion. He argues
    that RCW 46. 16A.200( 5)( a)( iii) and ( 7)( c) are unconstitutionally vague as applied to the facts of
    this case and, therefore, cannot provide a legal basis for the traffic stop. This argument fails.
    When reviewing the denial                of   a   suppression        motion, [ we]   determine . . .    whether
    substantial evidence supports the challenged findings of fact and whether the findings support
    the   conclusions of        law." State       v.   Garvin, 
    166 Wash. 2d 242
    , 249, 
    207 P.3d 1266
    ( 2009).                 Because
    Meyers does not challenge any of the trial court' s findings of fact, they are verities on appeal.
    State      v.    Hill, 
    123 Wash. 2d 641
    ,              644, 
    870 P.2d 313
    ( 1994).             Nor, aside from challenging the
    constitutionality        of    the    statutory basis for the stop,                  does Meyers otherwise        challenge the
    reasonableness         of     the    officer' s    stop.      Thus, we confine            our analysis to his constitutional
    challenge; we review this legal issue, including the trial court' s pertinent conclusions of law, de
    novo.       
    Garvin, 166 Wash. 2d at 249
    .
    A stop based on reasonable suspicion is generally valid even if it is predicated on a
    statute that the courts subsequently find unconstitutional because the officer' s reasonable
    suspicion determination rests on the facts and circumstances known to the officer at the time of
    the stop.        See State    v.   Carnahan, 130 Wn.              App.       159, 165, 
    122 P.3d 187
    ( 2005) (   citing Michigan
    3
    No. 44079 -241
    v.   DeFillippo, 
    443 U.S. 31
    , 37 -38, 
    99 S. Ct. 2627
    , 
    61 L. Ed. 2d 343
    ( 1979); State v. White, 
    97 Wash. 2d 92
    , 103, 
    640 P.2d 1061
    ( 1982)); see also State v. Potter, 
    156 Wash. 2d 835
    , 842 -43, 132
    4 "'
    P. 3d 1089 ( 2006).              Police are charged to enforce laws until and unless they are declared
    unconstitutional. "'        Carnahan, 130 Wn.                App.    at      165 ( quoting 
    DeFillippo, 443 U.S. at 38
    ).   A
    stop " is invalid only if the statute at issue is `` so grossly and flagrantly unconstitutional that any
    person of reasonable prudence would                       be bound to         see   its flaws. "'   
    Carnahan, 130 Wash. App. at 165
    ( quoting White, 97 Wn.             App.         at   103 ( internal      quotation marks omitted));              see also State v.
    Brockob, 
    159 Wash. 2d 311
    , 342                 n. 19,    
    150 P.3d 59
    ( 2006). Such is not the case here.
    Not     having       been    ruled         otherwise,      RCW            46. 16A.200( 5)(   a)(   iii)   and (    7)( c) 5 were
    presumptively valid when Phipps stopped Meyers. Meyers argues that these statutory provisions
    are vague because whether the license plate is clearly visible " depends entirely on the officer' s
    perspective,"       which      creates "    an   inordinate        amount           of police   discretion"         and leads to their
    arbitrary    application.        Br.   of   Appellant         at   13.       Meyers does not, however, assert that these
    4
    We acknowledge that these              cases address arrests rather               than   initial traffic       stops_   But because
    the "   reasonable     suspicion"       standard applicable to traffic stops is less burdensome than the
    probable cause" standard applicable to arrests, these cases are equally pertinent here.
    5 RCW 46. 16A.200 provides in part:
    5)( a) Display. License plates must be:
    iii)   Kept clean and be able to be plainly seen and read at all times[.]
    7) Unlawful acts. It is unlawful to:
    c)    Use holders, frames, or other materials that change, alter, or make a license
    plate or plates      illegible.
    License plate frames may be used on license plates only
    if the frames do not obscure license tabs or identifying letters or numbers on the
    plates and the license plates can be plainly seen and read at all times[.]
    4
    No. 44079 -2 -II
    provisions are so grossly and flagrantly unconstitutional that any reasonable person could see
    flaws6;
    their             nor   does it   appear    to   us   to be the   case.   Because Meyers fails to show that RCW
    46. 16A.200( 5)( a)( iii) and ( 7)( c) are grossly and flagrantly unconstitutional, we need not address
    the underlying constitutionality of these statutory provisions, and his challenge to the statutory
    basis for his stop fails.         Holding that the trial court did not err in denying Meyers' motion to
    suppress, 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.
    6
    Instead of applying this proper test, both Meyers and the State focus on whether RCW
    46. 16A.200( 5)(    a)( iii) and ( 7)( c)   are   unconstitutionally      vague under   the facts here.