Baker v. Baxley

348 So. 2d 468
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 22, 1977
DocketCER-10
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 348 So. 2d 468 (Baker v. Baxley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Baxley, 348 So. 2d 468 (Ala. 1977).

Opinion

Pursuant to ARAP Rule 18, the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama has requested this Court to answer questions of law which that court deemed determinative of an action before it on which there is no clear controlling precedent in the decisions of the Supreme Court of Alabama.

In support of the certificate, the Federal District Court submitted the following facts:

"(1) Joseph A. Baker, et al., } } Plaintiffs } } Roland C. Gamble and } Terry Ray Taylor, for } Civil themselves and all others } Action No. 76-413-N similarly situated, } Intervenors } } v. } } Bill Baxley, et al., } } Defendants }

(2) This suit is brought by the plaintiff who is an inmate of the Alabama penal system. Roland C. Gamble and Terry Ray Taylor, also inmates of the state penal system, have been allowed to intervene and have standing. The defendants are Bill Baxley, individually and in his official capacity as Attorney General of the State of Alabama, and Judson C. Locke, Jr., individually and in his official *Page 470 capacity as Commissioner of the Alabama Prison System.

"Plaintiff and plaintiff intervenors contend that on July 29, 1976, the Alabama Legislature passed, over the Governor's veto, Legislative Act No. 182,1 [footnote omitted] Regular Session, 1976, which allowed the Alabama Board of Corrections to award incentive good time credit in exceptional cases of good behavior and industriousness to prison inmates. At the request of the Commissioner of the Board of Corrections, the Attorney General's Office issued an opinion2 [footnote omitted] on September 8, 1976, declaring the Act to apply retroactively. That pursuant to this opinion several hundred prison inmates were given credits and released from prison. On November 24, 1976, the Attorney General personally issued a second opinion3 [footnote omitted] declaring under the authority of Gayle v. State, 261 Ala. 84, 72 So.2d 848 (1954), that an act could not have retroactive application unless this feature was included in the title of the act. This opinion concluded that `under no circumstances should any prisoner be released after the receipt of this opinion if that release is dependent in any way on a retroactive application of Act No. 182. The commutation time of all prisoners currently confined should be computed or re-computed by applying Act No. 182 to them from its effective date only.' The Commissioner of the Board of Corrections thereafter rescinded his earlier calculations for incentive good time credits for all inmates who had not yet been released, including plaintiff and plaintiff intervenors, and recomputed the incentive good time credits pursuant to the opinion of November 24, 1976.

"The plaintiff and plaintiff intervenors claim discrimination by the defendants between themselves and those inmates who were credited with incentive good time pursuant to the Attorney General's opinion of September 8, 1976, and released from custody while they, although credited with such good time but before being released, had their good time revoked and recalculated pursuant to the Attorney General's opinion of November 24, 1976, thus establishing a more future date of release than that established for them under the September 8, 1976, opinion. In order to determine whether the defendants have discriminated between plaintiff, plaintiff intervenors and those inmates who were given credit for good time and released and the constitutional dimensions involved, it is necessary to know whether Act No. 182 is retroactive or nonretroactive in it application and if retroactive only what effect does this have on plaintiff and plaintiff intervenors. Accordingly,

"(3) Under the law of the State of Alabama:

"1. Is Act No. 182 retroactive in its application?

"2. If Act No. 182 is declared not to be retroactive in its application, what effect does this have on those prison inmates who were granted incentive good time credits pursuant to the Attorney General's Opinion of September 8, 1976, but had the granting thereof revoked and continued in custody pursuant to the November 24, 1976, Opinion of the Attorney General? This certificate has been prepared by said federal court."

We answer Certified Question No. 1 in the negative.

In answer to Certified Question No. 2, we opine that incentive good time granted retroactively to inmates under Act No. 182 as a reward for good behavior exhibited by the inmates prior to the effective date of Act No. 182, July 29, 1976, was granted without authority of law. Consequently, the fact that the Board of Corrections granted "good time" to some inmates because of a mistaken apprehension of the law would not require the Board to perpetuate its mistake by granting similar good time to inmates such as plaintiff and plaintiff intervenors. *Page 471

I
Act No. 182 was not intended to be retrospective. In arriving at the legislative intent, we have applied the rule of statutory construction consistently applied in Alabama that "statutes are to be considered prospective, unless the language is such as to show that they were intended to be retrospective." Mobile Housing Board v. Cross, 285 Ala. 94,229 So.2d 485, 487 (1969). The words of the statute do not clearly state that "good behavior" of an inmate at the time prior to the effective date of the Act1 can be considered by the Board of Corrections in computing the inmates' so-called "good time." In fact, from the words used by the legislature, a contrary inference must be drawn. The legislature used words such a "anew classification" and "the newly created classification" in Section 2 of the Act. These words imply that the legislature intended that the Act would look to the future. Furthermore, in Section 3 of the Act, the legislature stated:

"It is the intent of this act that the custody classification provided for in Section 2 of this act be used by the Board only in exceptional cases of good behavior and industriousness in order that inmates be given a meaningful incentive for good behavior." [Emphasis added.]

The word "incentive," means "something that constitutes a motive or spur" and "serving to encourage, rouse, or move to action." Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged. The word "incentive," by definition, necessarily, implies prospectiveness.

II
The second certified question concerns those inmates who were initially granted sentence reduction credits for good behavior exhibited prior to the effective date of Act No. 182, but who were later told that they could not receive credit for good behavior exhibited before Act No. 182 became law.

As set out in the Certified Questions: *Page 472

"The plaintiff and plaintiff intervenors claim discrimination by the defendants between themselves and those inmates who were credited with incentive good time pursuant to the Attorney General's opinion of September 8, 1976, and released from custody while they, although credited with such good time but before being released, had their good time revoked and recalculated pursuant to the Attorney General's opinion of November 24, 1976, thus establishing a more future date of release than that established for them under the September 8, 1976, opinion."

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Bluebook (online)
348 So. 2d 468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-baxley-ala-1977.