149 Wash. 2d 143 | Wash. | 2003
The issue here is whether the State may appeal the trial court’s determination of a defendant’s eligibility for special sentencing under the drug offender sentencing alternative (DOSA) provisions of RCW 9.94A-.660. We conclude that such determinations are indeed appealable and therefore reverse the Court of Appeals and direct it to consider the merits of the State’s substantive challenges to the defendant’s DOSA sentence.
In May 2000, Darin Williams pleaded guilty to manufacturing, possessing, and delivering methamphetamine. During a presentence hearing, Williams asked the superior court to give him a special DOSA sentence. Under DOSA, a judge may sentence drug defendants to a period of punishment equal to the midpoint of the standard sentencing range, with half the period spent in incarceration and the other half spent in a substance abuse treatment program and community custody. RCW 9.94A.660(2). The State opposed the request and argued that Williams did not meet the statutory eligibility requirements for DOSA. The trial court, however, granted the request, imposing a 75-month prison term and a 75-month period of community custody under DOSA.
The State appealed, again arguing that Williams was ineligible for DOSA. The State first asserted that the trial court had erred by giving retroactive effect to the DOSA eligibility provisions of former RCW 9.94A.120(6)(a)(ii) (1999) dealing with prior criminal history.
After reviewing the record, the Court of Appeals declined to reach either of these issues on the merits.
ISSUE
May the State appeal a trial court’s determination of a defendant’s eligibility for alternative sentencing under the DOSA provisions of RCW 9.94A.660?
ANALYSIS
As a general rule, the length of a criminal sentence imposed by a superior court is not subject to appellate review, so long as the punishment falls within the correct standard sentencing range established by the Sentencing Reform Act of 1981, chapter 9.94A RCW. See, e.g., RAP 2.2(b)(6) (providing that the State or a local government may appeal only “[a] sentence in a criminal case which is outside the standard range for the offense or which the state or local government believes involves a miscalculation of the standard range”); RCW 9.94A.585(1) (“A sentence within the standard sentence range for the offense shall not be appealed.”). This precept arises from the notion that, so long as the sentence falls within the proper presumptive sentencing ranges set by the legislature, there can be no
In the present case, the State sought appellate review of Williams’s sentence on the grounds that the trial court had improperly given retroactive effect to the DOSA eligibility provisions of former RCW 9.94A.120(6)(a)(ii) (1999) dealing with prior criminal history and had ignored the “small” drug quantity requirement of former RCW 9.94A.120(6)(a)(iii) (1999). These are not challenges to a standard range sentence as such, but challenges to claimed legal errors in determining which sentencing provision applies. The State therefore had the right to appeal, and the Court of Appeals erred when it declined to reach the merits of the State’s case.
The Court of Appeals decision is reversed. The case is remanded to that court with directions to reinstate the case as an appeal to be considered on the merits.
The pre-2001 versions of present RCW 9.94A.660 were codified at RCW 9.94A.120.
Confusingly, although the court declined to decide the case on the merits, it also said it “affirmed” Williams’s DOSA sentence. If an appellate court declines to