DocketNumber: 95635-9
Citation Numbers: 434 P.3d 522
Judges: Wiggins, Fairhurst
Filed Date: 2/14/2019
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
*525¶ 1 Michael Gehrke was charged with second degree murder, predicated on second degree assault, for the death of Christopher Pineyro. Immediately before the State rested its case, the trial court allowed the State to amend its charges to include first degree manslaughter. The jury found Gehrke guilty of first degree manslaughter but not second degree murder.
¶ 2 Gehrke asks us to order the trial court to vacate his conviction for first degree manslaughter and dismiss with prejudice, arguing that allowing the amendment violated his constitutional right to be informed of the charges against him. We hold that allowing the State to amend its charge after completing its case in chief and immediately prior to resting violated Gehrke's constitutional right. We agree with Gehrke and reverse the decision of the Court of Appeals and remand to the trial court for vacation of his conviction, dismissal of the first degree manslaughter charge with prejudice, and further proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 3 Michael Gehrke was convicted of first degree manslaughter for the death of Christopher Pineyro, who died after being stabbed in a street fight with Gehrke. The two men had a history of conflict. At trial, the opposing sides offered conflicting accounts of the fight. According to Gehrke, he had just arrived at a friend's house in a vehicle driven by his girlfriend when Pineyro rode up to him on a bicycle. Pineyro stated that he had "something" for Gehrke and stopped his bicycle. Pineyro then reached behind himself and began to "shed his things." Gehrke reacted and kicked Pineyro's bike frame, which hit Pineyro in the leg. Pineyro and the bike fell to the ground together.
¶ 4 When Pineyro stood up, he was wielding a hammer. Gehrke drew a pocketknife. Pineyro began swinging the hammer at Gehrke, and Gehrke backed away. Pineyro advanced, and Gehrke retreated approximately 17 feet, toward a fence. Gehrke testified that he saw no opportunity to get any farther back and that "I thought that if I didn't do something, he would - he would back me up against the fence and hit me with the hammer." Gehrke jabbed at Pineyro twice with the knife, fatally wounding Pineyro in the neck. The police arrived and Gehrke admitted to striking Pineyro, saying, "I'm the guy. I stabbed him and it was self-defense."
¶ 5 The State charged Gehrke with second degree felony murder predicated on second degree assault. Clerk's Papers (CP) at 1. On the first day of trial, the prosecutor stated that the State was considering amending the charges to include first degree manslaughter as an alternative charge but noted that he was not currently seeking such an amendment. The prosecutor told the trial court, "I don't think that it would be prejudicial [to amend the charge], and it's a lesser offense.[
¶ 6 After the State called its last witness but before it had formally rested, the prosecutor moved to amend the information to add a manslaughter charge. The State made clear that it intended to rest even if the amendment was not allowed ("The State does intend on. resting [regardless] of the Court's decision [to allow the amendment] in this *526case."). Defense counsel objected to the prosecutor's motion to amend, on the grounds that manslaughter is not a lesser included offense of felony murder and that Gehrke did not mount a defense to manslaughter, which requires an element of recklessness not required for felony murder.
¶ 7 The trial court granted the State's motion to amend the information. The court explained that Gehrke's possible defense strategy against a first degree manslaughter charge was "essentially the same" as the defense he had presented to the second degree murder charge. It is unclear from the record whether the trial court believed that the manslaughter charge was a lesser included offense of the original felony murder charge.
¶ 8 The jury was apparently unable to agree as to whether Gehrke was guilty of second degree murder.
¶ 9 Gehrke appealed. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court, holding that, under CrR 2.1(d), Gehrke could not demonstrate prejudice because his defense at trial was self-defense and that would have also been his defense to the amended charge. Gehrke petitioned this court for review, which we granted.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 10 We review a trial court's ruling on a proposed amendment to an information for abuse of discretion. State v. Lamb,
ANALYSIS
¶ 11 The trial court violated Gehrke's constitutional rights by allowing the State to add an alternative charge against Gehrke after it finished its case in chief and immediately before it rested.
I. Criminal defendants are entitled to receive notice of the nature of the charges and an opportunity to present a defense
¶ 12 It is a central right, provided in our constitution, that "[i]n criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right ... to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him." WASH. CONST. art. I, § 22. Pursuant to this right, "[t]he accused, in criminal prosecutions, has a constitutional right to be apprised of the nature and cause of the accusation against him. ... This doctrine is elementary and of universal application, and is founded on the plainest principle of justice." State v. Ackles,
A. Criminal rules that allow for midtrial amendments operate within the confines of the constitution and cannot be read to contravene the constitution
¶ 13 The constitutional rights created by article I, section 22 inherently limit *527when and whether the State may make midtrial amendments to its information. State v. Olds,
¶ 14 Courts of this state have long made clear that CrR 2.1 (d) is thus limited by our constitution. See, e.g., State v. Lutman,
¶ 15 In Carr, this court extended the holding in Lutman to the pretrial amendment of an information, reaffirming Olds in the process.
B. Pelkey and its progeny
¶ 16 Five years after we decided Carr , the court accepted review of Pelkey .
¶ 17 The State argued that under CrR 2.1, the defendant bears the burden of establishing that prejudice resulted from the midtrial amendment. Id. at 490,
¶ 18 In doing so, we created a rule that
[a] criminal charge may not be amended after the State has rested its case in chief unless the amendment is to a lesser degree of the same charge or a lesser included offense. Anything else is a violation of the defendant's article 1, section 22 right to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him or her.
*528
¶ 19 The bright-line rule established in Pelkey , which prohibits certain midtrial amendments, is not concerned with whether the State has formally rested. As Justice Utter repeatedly stated in the Pelkey decision, a trial court cannot allow the "State to amend the information ... after the State completed presentation of its case in chief." Id. at 487,
¶ 20 On the other hand, we have declined to apply Pelkey's bright-line rule when the State amends its case in the midst of its case in chief, when the defendant has an opportunity to respond meaningfully to the amendment. Schaffer,
II. The amendment to the information violated Gehrke's constitutional rights to receive notice of the nature of the charges and an opportunity to present a defense
¶ 21 Here, the State moved to amend the information immediately before resting its case. The State told the court, upon moving to amend, that it "intend[ed to] rest[ ] [regardless] of the Court's decision [to allow the amendment]." Gehrke argues that the Pelkey rule applies to this situation. We agree. By informing the court that it would rest its case regardless of the court's decision of the amendment, the State made clear that it had completed its case in chief. As Pelkey and Markle stated expressly, when the State has completed its case in chief, it cannot amend the information. Pelkey,
¶ 22 Situations like the one before us now are within the scope of the Pelkey rule because when the State explicitly states that *529it will rest its case after moving to amend, it has functionally rested its case in chief. Pelkey , Markle , and Schaffer reiterate that the Pelkey rule applies when the State has completed its case in chief. If these statements are to mean something, they must mean, at least, that when the State has made it clear that it will rest its case, then it may no longer amend. We hold, therefore, that in a situation like the one before us here, where the State made it clear that it has completed its case in chief, the Pelkey rule applies.
¶ 23 The dissent argues, and the concurrence agrees, that Gehrke's case cannot be within the scope of the Pelkey rule because the Pelkey rule requires that the State formally rest its case; without such ritual formalism, the dissent indicates, the Pelkey rule cannot apply. Dissent at 534; concurrence at 533.
¶ 24 But this is wrong. Pelkey never required the talismanic invocation of the phrase, "the State rests." Only once does the Pelkey opinion state that its bright-line rule applies when the State "has rested its case." Pelkey,
¶ 25 This is not to say that formalities are irrelevant. The formality of Miranda
¶ 26 Applying Pelkey in the instant case creates no "unnecessary confusion" for litigants, trial judges, or appellate courts. Dissent at 534; see also concurrence at 533. Pelkey's bright-line rule remains intact. Litigants and judges both are given a clear statement of the law: when the State has made it abundantly clear that it will rest its case after moving to amend, irrespective of the decision on that amendment, then the State has completed its case in chief and the Pelkey rule applies. No substantial "factual finding" is required of appellate courts to understand when this has occurred. See dissent at 534. Here, all that was required was to look at what the State actually said : that it would rest its case after moving to amend, irrespective of whether that amendment was permitted. A trial court and an appellate court need only take a prosecutor at his or her word to resolve this question.
¶ 27 We do not move the line of where the Pelkey rule applies any further into the State's case in chief than did Pelkey or Schaffer. The facts here, indeed, are very specific, concerning a likely rare situation in which the State has said it will rest after amending. Schaffer 's holding that the Pelkey rule does not apply in the midst of the State's case in chief thus stands. If the State had not completed its case in chief-and, for instance, had made clear that were the amendment denied, it would then call witnesses whose testimony would be used to support the amendment, as the State did in Schaffer -the outcome of this case would be different. That would not fall within the Pelkey rule. But that is not what happened. The State made it clear that it had completed its case in chief. In such a situation, the Pelkey rule applies.
¶ 28 Contrary to the State's arguments, the amended charge in this case more closely resembles the amendments made in Pelkey and Markle than that made in Schaffer. As in Pelkey and Markle, the State here did not move to amend until it had finished presenting its entire case in chief. Gehrke was not given an opportunity during the State's case to defend against the amended charge of manslaughter, which contains an element not present in felony murder: recklessly causing the death of another. He had not been charged with manslaughter during voir dire, and he was unable to cross-examine any witnesses called by the State with the objective of raising a reasonable doubt as to recklessness in the death of Pineyro. All the concerns that this court had in Pelkey and reaffirmed in Markle exist with equal force here.
¶ 29 This case is unlike Schaffer, in which the trial court initially denied the State's motion, forcing the State to present additional testimony to support the amended charge.
¶ 30 Schaffer indeed demonstrates why we must answer as we do today. There, we noted that when protecting defendants' rights to fair notice of the charges and the opportunity to present a defense, "this court has avoided technical rules. Instead, we have tailored our jurisprudence toward the precise evil that article I, section 22 was designed to prevent-charging documents which prejudice the defendant's ability to mount an adequate defense by failing to provide sufficient notice." Schaffer,
¶ 31 The State also argues that the State's informing Gehrke of the possibility of a later amendment prior to voir dire provided *531adequate notice. Suppl. Br. of Resp't at 12. We disagree. Warning a defendant that the State "may" charge an additional offense after the State presents its evidence does not provide the "reasonable certainty" necessary to satisfy the defendant's constitutional right to be properly informed of the charges. See Leach,
¶ 32 Were it considered adequate notice to advise the defendant that another charge "may" be added, the defendant would be uniquely harmed. The defendant, once told that the prosecution might add another charge, would have the option either to proceed as if that charge will never be brought or to alter the defense to address that possibility. This creates a dilemma. If the defendant chooses to act as if the charge will never be brought but the prosecution does bring the additional charge at the close of the State's case, then the defendant will have insufficiently prepared to defend against it. However, if the defendant expends time and resources defending against the charge and the prosecution declines to bring it, then the defendant will have wasted that time and those resources, which would otherwise have solely been utilized defending against the actual charge brought. Given that what to charge (and not to charge) rests solely in the hands of the State-and that in any criminal case the power of the State vastly outweighs that of the criminal defendant-the State cannot avoid the rules established by Pelkey and its progeny merely by dropping pretrial hints regarding possible additional or amended charges. To permit the State to wait until resting its case to amend the information would allow fundamental unfairness to creep into the trial, and "our system of the administration of justice suffers when any accused is treated unfairly." Brady v. Maryland,
¶ 33 Not only is a verbal hint insufficient to notify a defendant of the charges but, here, the prosecutor did not even give Gehrke an accurate warning against which he could have mounted a defense. In telling Gehrke that the State "may" add a charge, the prosecutor also mistakenly indicated that first degree manslaughter was a lesser offense to felony murder. If manslaughter were a lesser included offense, it would by its nature require no additional notice and no changes to the defense at trial, as a lesser included offense necessarily contains only elements present in the charged offense. State v. Berlin,
¶ 34 The State also argues that Gehrke's failure to request a continuance is evidence that the amendment should be upheld. This, too, is inapposite. Failure to seek a continuance indicates a lack of surprise and prejudice only when the amendment is made at the beginning of trial. See State v. Brown,
¶ 35 Finally, the State's amendment also does not fit into either of the two exceptions to the rule against midtrial amendments. These exceptions apply when the amendment either is to a lesser degree of the original charge or is a lesser included offense of the original charge. Pelkey,
¶ 36 In light of this, we hold that by allowing this amendment to the information, the trial court abused its discretion as it acted on an erroneous view of the law set down in Pelkey . State v. Quismundo,
III. We remand to the trial court for vacation of Gehrke's conviction and dismissal of the first degree manslaughter charge with prejudice
¶ 37 Gehrke has asked us to order that his manslaughter conviction be dismissed *533with prejudice pursuant to the mandatory joinder rule. The mandatory joinder rule provides that related charges against a defendant shall be consolidated for trial. CrR 4.3.1(a). Charges are related within the meaning of this rule if "they are within the jurisdiction and venue of the same court and are based on the same conduct." CrR 4.3.1(b)(1). In the case of an untimely amendment to the information, the mandatory joinder rule requires dismissal with prejudice of the charge in the late-filed amendment (unless the ends of justice exception applies). See State v. Dallas,
¶ 38 In light of this clear precedent, we agree with Gehrke. We remand to the trial court for vacation of his conviction and dismissal of the first degree manslaughter charge with prejudice.
CONCLUSION
¶ 39 For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Court of Appeals and remand to the trial court for vacation of Gehrke's conviction and dismissal of the first degree manslaughter charge with prejudice, and for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
WE CONCUR.
Madsen, J.
Stephens, J.
Gordon McCloud, J.
As discussed below, this characterization of first degree manslaughter as a "lesser offense" was inaccurate and misleading.
When filling out the verdict forms, the jury left blank "Verdict Form A," for second degree murder, but on "Verdict Form B" found Gehrke guilty of first degree manslaughter. CP at 188-89. The jury had been instructed to leave Verdict Form A blank if it could not agree on a verdict on that charge. 4 Report of Proceedings at 773 (oral instruction); CP at 173 (written instruction). This indicates that the jury was unable to agree on the charge of second degree murder.
A due process right also exists in this realm. The United States Supreme Court has articulated that "the most basic ingredients of due process of law" include " '[a] person's right to reasonable notice of a charge against him, and an opportunity to be heard in his defense.' " Washington v. Texas,
The existence of per se prejudice in this situation is no accident. In situations where, as in Pelkey and here, the defendant has no opportunity whatsoever to respond to the amended charges, prejudice exists inherently because the defendant has no opportunity to modify even a shred of defendant's strategy before being faced with the new charge. The defense always must build its case around the architecture provided by the State, the latter of which decides what to charge and what not to charge. (As discussed below, the mere indication provided by the State that a new charge may be brought is an insufficient foundation on which the defendant can properly build a case.) When the State amends the information at the end of its case, the State places the defendant not only (as is necessarily the case) in an edifice not of defendant's own making but also in one that looks entirely different from what the defendant had, up to that point, been led to expect. With half of the opportunity to respond to the new charge gone, prejudice necessarily follows.
Specifically, Justice Utter wrote, "The State violated Const, art. 1, § 22 (amend. 10) when it amended its information to charge a separate crime after it had already presented its case in chief ," Pelkey,
Contrary to the dissent's arguments (and the concurrence's agreement with them), Schaffer did not disturb Pelkey' s emphasis on whether the State had completed its case in chief, but, instead, reaffirmed it. See dissent at 534. The dissent relies on State v. Vangerpen,
Miranda v. Arizona,
We have decided this case under the per se rule crafted by Pelkey. However, were it otherwise-that is, were this case outside the boundaries of the per se rule-we would still reverse, as Gehrke was clearly prejudiced by the trial court's allowing the amendment to the information. The concurrence is correct to so conclude. Prejudice in this context involves surprise or inability to prepare a defense. See State v. James,
As the concurrence correctly points out, the result would be the same were we to hold that CrR 2.1(d) prejudice, not the Pelkey rule, disposes of this case. Concurrence at 533.