Banks v. State

920 P.2d 905, 128 Idaho 886, 1996 Ida. LEXIS 88
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1996
Docket22553
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 920 P.2d 905 (Banks v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Banks v. State, 920 P.2d 905, 128 Idaho 886, 1996 Ida. LEXIS 88 (Idaho 1996).

Opinion

McDEVITT, Chief Justice.

Appellant, Jerry Banks (Banks), filed an application for writ of habeas corpus with the magistrate division of the district court, claiming that his due process rights were violated by the Idaho Commission of Pardons and Parole (Commission). Banks claims that the Commission had no justification for continuing Banks’s incarceration and that Banks’s due process rights were violated.

*887 i.

BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS

Banks is an inmate at the Idaho Correctional Institute in Orofino, Idaho. On September 7, 1990, Banks entered an Alford guilty plea and was sentenced to an aggregate term of twelve years to be served for a minimum period of confinement of five years, followed by a subsequent indeterminate period of custody not to exceed seven years, with the two terms running concurrently. Banks was sentenced for two counts of lewd and lascivious conduct with a minor.

On February 22, 1995, Banks appeared before the Commission requesting a date of release following his fixed sentence which expired March 3, 1995. Banks alleges that the Commission sentenced Banks to serve an additional five years prior to becoming eligible for parole.

Prior to the February 22, 1995 Commission hearing, Banks allegedly requested copies of files and reports submitted to the Commission to be utilized in the Commission’s analysis and decision. This request was denied. As a result of the Commission’s denial of Banks’s request for the reports and files, Banks contends that:

During the parole hearing, board members asked questions I was unprepared to respond to and the parole board made allegations I was unable to defend because I was denied access to said reports and files. Also, during said hearing, I was ridiculed and questioned in regards to unconfirmed allegations and charges of criminal behavior which had not been confirmed, admits ted to or proven in a court of law. These allegations were utilized by the parole board in rendering the decision to sentence me to serve an additional Five (5) years incarceration prior to being eligible for parole.

On March 20, 1995, Banks filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus with the magistrate division of the district court. Banks’s petition alleged that “in view of the many programs completed by [Banks] and the many hours of counseling [Banks] attended, the parole board [was] in violation of the wording and intent of the Unified Sentencing Act effective February 1, 1987 regarding indeterminate sentencing.”

Banks’s petition requested the magistrate set aside the remaining indeterminate portion of Banks’s sentence, and place Banks on probation for that period of time in accordance with the recommendations of the institutional psychologist at the Idaho Correctional Institute in Orofino, Idaho.

On March 20, 1995, Banks submitted an affidavit in support of his petition for habeas corpus. Banks stated that he had attended numerous classes 1 , had not been a security problem (noting that he had only two minor infractions in over five years), and that he was a “low risk,” if he was released with conditions requiring therapy attendance and provisions.

On March 20, 1995, Banks filed a motion for appointment of counsel. Banks informed the magistrate in an affidavit that he was indigent, unable to competently research the issues raised in this case, unable to conduct the necessary discovery in this case, unable to adequately present to the magistrate the credibility determinations (inmate testimony versus prison official testimony), and that the appointment of counsel was necessary so that Banks’s witnesses could be confidentially interviewed and deposed. The magistrate denied Banks’s motion for appointment of counsel.

On April 8, 1995, Banks filed a motion to amend his petition. The only new substantive allegation Banks made was that the Commission failed to give Banks a written statement of the reason(s) for refusing to release Banks on parole.

On April 7, 1995, an Affidavit of Carolee Kelly, an employee of the Idaho Department of Corrections, was filed. Kelly stated that the minimum portion of Banks’s sentence was satisfied on March 3, 1995, at which time Banks became eligible for parole. Kelly noted that the amount of time to be served on *888 the indeterminate portion of the sentence was to be determined by the Commission.

On April 7, 1995, the State filed a response, motion to dismiss, and a motion for summary judgment, each in the alternative. On April 14,1995, the State filed an objection to Banks’s motion to amend his complaint.

On May 1, 1995, the magistrate issued an order dismissing Banks’s allegation that he was entitled to a written statement of the reasons the Commission denied him parole, Banks’s allegation that he was improperly denied access to reports and files, and Banks’s allegation that he was entitled to due process protection in relation to his parole hearing. The magistrate found that the remaining allegations in Banks’s petition did not state grounds to grant habeas corpus relief. The magistrate provided Banks the opportunity to file a factual statement indicating the Commission did not have a rational basis for denying Banks parole.

Banks subsequently filed a motion amending and further defining his petition. Banks contended that “because he did everything expected of him in counseling and self-change, he [had] a reasonable expectation of parole this creating a ‘liberty interest’ for [Banks].”

The magistrate dismissed Banks’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The magistrate found that Banks’s own statement in his petition indicated the Commission had a rational basis for denying Banks parole:

The Petitioner states in his Objection/Response that the Parole Board stated in its oral notice of cause for denial that denial was based on the severity of the Petitioner’s crime and numerous, unconfirmed allegations. Taking Petitioner’s own statement, the Parole Board would appear to have stated a rational basis in its statement of reasons.

The magistrate found that Banks’s petition did not state grounds upon which habeas corpus relief could be granted and awarded the State attorney fees, based upon the magistrate’s finding that Banks had pursued his petition frivolously.

Banks appealed the magistrate’s order to the district court. The district court affirmed the magistrate’s denial of Banks’s petition for habeas corpus and affirmed the magistrate’s award of attorney fees to the State. Banks appealed to this Court.

II.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

This Court has appellate jurisdiction over Banks’s petition for habeas corpus, which was originally brought in the district court. Idaho Const, art. V, § 9 (“The Supreme Court shall have jurisdiction to review, upon appeal any decision of the district courts....”); In re Jennings, 46 Idaho 142, 146, 267 P. 227, 228 (1928) (“We conclude that this court has appellate jurisdiction in habeas corpus

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Bluebook (online)
920 P.2d 905, 128 Idaho 886, 1996 Ida. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banks-v-state-idaho-1996.