In re Pers. Restraint of Meredith
In re Pers. Restraint of Meredith
Opinion of the Court
¶ 1 At Gary Meredith's trial, the court erroneously gave the State and defense counsel one less peremptory challenge than they were entitled to under CrR 6.4(e)(1) and CrR 6.5. In a timely personal restraint petition, Meredith claimed his appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to raise the peremptory challenge violation on direct review. In an unpublished opinion, the Court of Appeals agreed with Meredith, reversing his convictions and remanding for a new trial. However, under RAP 2.5(a), the appellate court could have refused to hear the claim of error because it was not objected to at trial and it is not a type of structural error that requires automatic reversal. Thus, we hold that Meredith's appellate counsel was not ineffective for failing to raise that claim of error. We reverse the Court of Appeals on this issue and remand for the Court of Appeals to address Meredith's remaining claims.
PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL HISTORY
¶ 2 Gary Meredith was convicted of second degree rape of a child and communication with a minor for immoral purposes in 1996. The trial court seated 14 jurors, including two alternates who would be chosen at random at the end of the trial. The trial court gave the State and defense counsel seven peremptory challenges each. This was an error. With two alternates, the court should have added two peremptory challenges to the initial six that are granted for any noncapital felony case and granted a total of eight to each party. CrR 6.4(e)(1) ; CrR 6.5. Neither party objected to this number. Each party *461exercised all seven peremptory challenges. There was a brief colloquy on whether the alternate jurors should be designated at the start or end of trial:
THE COURT: The two alternates, the Court's usual procedure is we seat 14 and then at the end of the State's rebuttal, prior to them commencing deliberations, we draw randomly from the entire 14 in the panel. Unless you all wanted to indicate some other proposal.
MR. SCHACHT [the State]: My strong preference is to know who the alternates are. I would prefer not to draw them from random.
MR. PURTZER [defense counsel]: Your Honor, my preference is to draw because I think that if you do it at that point in time everybody pays attention. You don't have to worry about alternates not being involved in the case at some point in time. I think that the jurors' attention is much more focused when no one knows exactly who is going to be the alternate.
THE COURT: All right. The Court's usual procedure is to randomly draw at the close of the State's rebuttal. Most often we are usually left with 12 anyway.
1 Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) at 9-10. Prior to trial, the court also ruled on motions relating to admitting evidence of Meredith's prior sex offense convictions. The court admitted Meredith's prior convictions as proof of an element of count II, communicating with a minor for immoral purposes. The trial court issued the following jury instruction limiting consideration of the prior conviction evidence: "I would like to advise the jury that evidence that Mr. Meredith has previously been convicted of a crime is not evidence of his guilt. Such evidence may be considered by you in deciding Count II and for no other purpose." 6 VRP at 512-13.
¶ 3 After his conviction, Meredith absconded for 12 years and was sentenced in November 2008 to 198 months in prison. State v. Meredith ,
¶ 4 Meredith filed this timely personal restraint petition on August 8, 2014, and filed a revised personal restraint petition on January 29, 2015. The Court of Appeals allowed the filing and considered the supplemental petition on the merits. The court appointed counsel, who raised five claims on Meredith's behalf: (1) incorrect denial of the correct number of peremptory challenges, (2) ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel, (3) incorrect denial of Meredith's motion to sever the two counts, (4) insufficient jury instruction limiting consideration of ER 404(b) evidence, and (5) evidentiary hearing is required to present testimony regarding duration of motile spermatozoa and lack of physical findings.
¶ 5 The Court of Appeals granted relief based on the ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim. In re Pers. Restraint of Meredith , No. 46671-6-II, slip op. at 1,
*462
¶ 6 The State petitioned for review, arguing the Court of Appeals improperly considered Meredith's supplemental filings, there was no ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, and the limiting instruction was sufficient. We granted review. State v. Meredith ,
ISSUES
I. Was it proper for the Court of Appeals to consider Meredith's supplemental filings under RAP 16.8 ?
II. Was Meredith's appellate counsel ineffective for failing to raise the peremptory challenge violation on direct appeal?
III. Was the trial court's limiting instruction on prior conviction evidence sufficient?
ANALYSIS
¶ 7 To obtain relief through a personal restraint petition, Meredith must show either (1) a constitutional error that resulted in actual and substantial prejudice or (2) a nonconstitutional error that " 'constitutes a fundamental defect which inherently results in a complete miscarriage of justice.' " In re Pers. Restraint of Davis ,
I. The Court Properly Considered Meredith's Supplemental Filings
¶ 8 As an initial matter, we address whether the Court of Appeals properly considered Meredith's supplemental filings. The State asserts that Meredith's claim of ineffective assistance of appellate counsel in his January 2015 petition was not sufficiently supported by legal authority. The State argues that later filings addressing the issue in detail were improperly considered because under RAP 16.8(e), Meredith needed the Court of Appeals' authorization to add grounds for relief after the one-year deadline. See RAP 16.8(e) ; RCW 10.73.090(1). This is incorrect.
¶ 9 Under our Rules of Appellate Procedure, "a petitioner can amend an initial PRP and raise new grounds for relief, without requesting a formal amendment, as long as the brief is timely filed and the new issue is adequately raised." In re Pers. Restraint of Rhem ,
II. Meredith's Appellate Counsel Was Not Ineffective for Failing To Raise the Peremptory Challenge Issue on Direct Appeal
¶ 10 The State argues that Meredith's appellate counsel's failure to raise the peremptory challenge issue on direct appeal was reasonable in light of the requisite standard of review under RAP 2.5. Because this unpreserved, nonconstitutional error is not a structural error, it ordinarily could not be raised for the first time on appeal under RAP 2.5(a)(3). While the Court of Appeals did not apply the framework of RAP 2.5, it *463found that the trial court's impairment of Meredith's right to eight peremptory challenges constituted a structural error, a "reversible error without a showing of prejudice." Meredith , slip op. at 7. The Court of Appeals improperly relied on three Washington cases to hold that it was a structural error and, consequently, incorrectly held that Meredith's appellate counsel was ineffective.
¶ 11 A petitioner claiming ineffective assistance of appellate counsel on collateral review must show that "the legal issue that appellate counsel failed to raise had merit" and that "he or she was actually prejudiced by appellate counsel's failure to raise the issue." In re Pers. Restraint of Dalluge ,
[t]he appellate court may refuse to review any claim of error which was not raised in the trial court. However a party may raise the following claimed errors for the first time in the appellate court: (1) lack of trial court jurisdiction, (2) failure to establish facts upon which relief can be granted, and (3) manifest error affecting a constitutional right.
(Emphasis added.) "The general rule that an assignment of error be preserved includes an exception when the claimed error is a 'manifest error affecting a constitutional right.' " State v. O'Hara ,
¶ 12 The traditional test for this exception requires the petitioner to "demonstrate (1) the error is manifest and (2) the error is truly of constitutional dimension."
¶ 13 An error is structural when it " 'necessarily render[s] a criminal trial fundamentally unfair or an unreliable vehicle for determining guilt or innocence.' " Washington v . Recuenco ,
¶ 14 Turning to the facts of this case, this court has never addressed whether failing *464to give a party the correct number of peremptory challenges is a structural error. Only a handful of cases from the Court of Appeals and this court address whether other types of peremptory challenge errors are structural. Meredith and the Court of Appeals rely on Vreen, Bird, and Evans for the proposition that "[a]ny impairment of a party's right to exercise a peremptory challenge ... constitutes reversible error without a showing of prejudice." Meredith , slip op. at 7-8 (citing Vreen ,
¶ 15 Our holding in Vreen was more limited than the Court of Appeals recognized. In Vreen , the trial court wrongly denied Vreen's peremptory challenge when it found that his nondiscriminatory reason for the challenge was inadequate. Vreen ,
¶ 16 Similarly, Evans dealt with peremptory challenge errors that were preserved for appeal and involved a Batson challenge.
¶ 17 Bird is also distinguishable from the facts here. In Bird , the trial court erroneously counted Bird's acceptance of the jury panel as one of his seven peremptory challenges.
¶ 18 While these cases are factually distinguishable from Meredith's case, it is also important to recognize that Vreen, Bird, and Evans adopted reasoning from a Ninth Circuit decision, Annigoni , that has since been overruled by the United States Supreme Court in Rivera ,
¶ 19 In conclusion, the court's giving the parties seven peremptory challenges instead of eight was an error, but it does not rise to the standard of a structural error. It did not render Meredith's trial fundamentally unfair or an unreliable vehicle for determining his guilt or innocence. See Recuenco ,
¶ 20 Under the strictures of RAP 2.5, it was reasonable for appellate counsel to refrain from including this error in the direct appeal. As we have explained, "[f]ailure to raise all possible nonfrivolous issues on appeal is not ineffective assistance." In re Pers. Restraint of Lord ,
¶ 21 We hold that Meredith's counsel did not provide ineffective assistance by failing to raise the peremptory challenge error on direct appeal, and thus we reverse the Court of Appeals' holding on this issue.
III. We Need Not Address the Sufficiency of the Limiting Instruction
¶ 22 The Court of Appeals held that the trial court erred by giving the limiting instruction on Meredith's prior sex offense convictions because "[w]hile the instruction correctly limited the consideration of the prior conviction evidence to count II, it did not further instruct the jury it could only use the fact of conviction to decide an element of the count II." Meredith , slip op. at 13. The State initially challenged this holding in its petition for review but later argued in its supplemental brief that the holding was not a basis for granting Meredith relief and thus this court does not need to review it. Meredith argues the holding was another ground for granting the petition for relief, in addition to the ineffective assistance of counsel claim, and it should be affirmed.
¶ 23 We decline to address this issue as it was not a basis for the Court of Appeals granting the personal restraint petition and is insufficiently briefed. The court explained it was addressing the issues of admitting the prior sex offense convictions and the sufficiency of the limiting instruction "because they may arise on retrial." Meredith , slip op. at 9. Even if this court wished to address this issue, it is insufficiently briefed. The State and Meredith dedicated nearly one page per brief on the issue, and neither party cited any legal authority to support their respective arguments. Such a lack of analysis and legal authority on this issue renders review improper. See State v. Gossage ,
CONCLUSION
¶ 24 We hold that a trial court allowing an incorrect number of peremptory challenges is not a structural error requiring automatic reversal without a showing of prejudice. Based on this holding, we reverse the Court of Appeals' holding that Meredith received ineffective assistance of appellate counsel and remand for the Court of Appeals to consider Meredith's remaining claims that have not yet been addressed.
WE CONCUR:
Fairhurst, C.J.
Johnson, J.
Madsen, J.
Stephens, J.
Wiggins, J.
Gonzàlez, J.
Gordon McCloud, J.
Concurring Opinion
*466¶ 25 I concur with the majority and only write to emphasize that jury selection is a critical part of trial and ought not to be treated as merely a prelude to the main event. While the court correctly does not find manifest constitutional error in this case under these facts, prudence dictates that trial courts should make every effort to ensure that litigants have a meaningful opportunity to select an unbiased jury. Our rules of procedure provide specific direction on the number and manner of exercising peremptory challenges, which should not be readily disregarded.
¶ 26 I respectfully concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In the MATTER OF the Personal Restraint of Gary Daniel MEREDITH, Respondent.
- Cited By
- 34 cases
- Status
- Published