Case v. Mahoney

2000 MT 324, 15 P.3d 884, 303 Mont. 8, 57 State Rptr. 1367, 2000 Mont. LEXIS 336
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 2000
Docket00-574
StatusPublished

This text of 2000 MT 324 (Case v. Mahoney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case v. Mahoney, 2000 MT 324, 15 P.3d 884, 303 Mont. 8, 57 State Rptr. 1367, 2000 Mont. LEXIS 336 (Mo. 2000).

Opinion

JUSTICE LEAPHART

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Petitioner (Case) is an inmate at the Montana State Prison where he has served approximately twenty years on a 175-year sentence. He argues that he has been incorrectly declared ineligible for parole and petitions this Court for a writ of habeas corpus directing the Warden of the Montana State Prison to declare him eligible. The Montana Department of Corrections (DOC) has filed a response in opposition.

BACKGROUND

¶2 On June 20, 1979, Case pled guilty to three counts of murder, three counts of aggravated kidnaping, one count of robbery and one count of theft. The District Court imposed a sentence of seventy-five years on each of three murder counts (to run concurrently); seventy-five years on each of three counts of aggravated kidnaping (to run concurrently); twenty years for robbery and five years for theft. The murder, kidnaping, robbery and theft sentences were all ordered to run consecutively so that the sentence resulted in a 175-year term of imprisonment. Case was designated a nondangerous offender and given credit for pretrial incarceration.

DISCUSSION

¶3 Under Montana law, any person deprived of liberty may petition this Court for a writ of habeas corpus to be delivered from illegal imprisonment or restraint. Section 46-22-101(1), MCA. Furthermore, this Court has held that prisoners sentenced prior to 1989 have a liberty interest in parole that is protected by the due process clause of the federal constitution. Worden v. Board of Pardons, 1998 MT 168, ¶ 41, 289 Mont. 459, ¶ 41, 962 P.2d 1157, ¶ 41 (citing Board of Pardons v. Allen (1987), 482 U.S. 369, 377, 107 S.Ct. 2415, 2420, 96 L.Ed.2d 303, 312). Therefore, Case’s parole eligibility is a proper subject for our habeas review.

¶4 The controlling parole eligibility statute at the time of the Case’s conviction was § 46-23-201(1), MCA (1978). It provides in relevant part:

*10 [A] convict designated as a nondangerous offender under 46-18-404 may be paroled after he has served one-quarter of his full term, less the good time allowance provided for in 53-30-105. Any offender serving a time sentence may be paroled after he has served, upon his term of sentence, 17% years.

The controversy arises out of the seeming conflict between the first and last sentences of § 46-23-201(1), MCA (1978), and the application of those provisions to prisoners serving consecutive sentences. As a designated nondangerous offender, Case is eligible for parole either after he has served one-quarter of his full term, less good time, or after he has served seventeen and one-half years upon the term of his sentence. Case relies upon the second sentence of the statute to conclude that he is eligible for parole as of May 9, 1996-seventeen and one-half years after he began serving his sentence. DOC applies the “one-quarter less good time” rule to the 175-year sentence and concludes that Case is not entitled to be considered for parole until June 11, 2004.

¶5 DOC cites State ex rel. Herman v. Powell (1961), 139 Mont. 583, 367 P.2d 553, for the proposition that the one-quarter less good time rule is the only applicable rule for determining parole eligibility. In doing so, however, DOC, misstates the law and misconstrues our holding in that case. Rather than setting out a rule for determining parole eligibility, the language DOC cites from Herman merely suggests a method of calculating one-quarter time for inmates serving consecutive sentences.

¶6 Historically, the Board of Pardons determined parole eligibility separately for each term of a consecutive sentence. An inmate serving consecutive sentences of eight and twelve years, for example, could be paroled after two years on the first sentence but remain incarcerated serving the second sentence. After three more years he would become eligible for parole on the second sentence and could be released from prison. The net effect was the same as if the Board had simply applied the one-quarter rule to the entire term of twenty years and released the prisoner on parole after five years.

¶7 In Herman, the defendant had been sentenced to a five-year term in the Montana State Prison. He escaped and, following his recapture, was sentenced to an additional term of one year. Shortly thereafter, he was paroled on the original charge but remained incarcerated on the escape charge. A few months later he was paroled on the escape *11 charge and released from prison. He then violated the conditions of parole and was returned to prison.

¶8 At the time, he had approximately two years left on his original sentence and several months left on his escape sentence. The question in the case was how much time he should serve after he was returned to prison. Herman argued that his parole on the escape charge acted as a discharge of his original sentence and he was entitled to be released from prison when the escape sentence was served. The Court presented the issue in the case as “whether the granting of a parole to the escape sentence ... in effect resulted in a discharge of the original sentence. Herman, 139 Mont. at 586, 367 P.2d at 555.

¶9 The Court held, of course, that it did not. Along the way, however, we commented on the system used by the Board to calculate parole eligibility for inmates subject to consecutive sentences:

The Board could, in order to avoid any ambiguity or confusion in the case of consecutive sentences, issue one parole to cover the maximum period of confinement. The result, of course, would be the same. That is, the prisoner would be required to serve a period equivalent to one fourth of the combined total of each sentence (less good time) before he would be eligible for parole.

Herman, 139 Mont. at 589-90, 367 P.2d at 557. What was originally an aside about how the Board of pardons might simplify the parole eligibility calculation has subsequently been cited by DOC as the “longstanding rule” of Herman, that prisoners are required to serve one-quarter of their total sentence before becoming eligible for parole. See also Taylor v. Risley (1984), 210 Mont. 356, 684 P.2d 1118.

¶10 Taylor came before the Court on a motion for clarification regarding a previous denial of a habeas petition. The petitioner had been serving three consecutive sentences. He was paroled on all three sentences but later had his parole revoked. In denying his habeas petition the Court stated that:

“The action of the Board of Pardons purporting to release petitioner on parole from all three consecutive sentences was and is illegal. All the time served, whether in prison or on parole, applies only against the twenty year sentence for robbery, and petitioner has never begun serving his sentence for second degree assault or escape.”

Taylor, 210 Mont. at 357, 684 P.2d at 1119 (citation omitted).

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Related

Board of Pardons v. Allen
482 U.S. 369 (Supreme Court, 1987)
Taylor v. Risley
684 P.2d 1118 (Montana Supreme Court, 1984)
Worden v. Montana Bd. of Pardons and Parole
1998 MT 168 (Montana Supreme Court, 1998)
State Ex Rel. Herman and Roy v. Powell
367 P.2d 553 (Montana Supreme Court, 1961)
Stadler v. City of Helena
127 P. 454 (Montana Supreme Court, 1912)
City of Butte v. Industrial Accident Board
156 P. 130 (Montana Supreme Court, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2000 MT 324, 15 P.3d 884, 303 Mont. 8, 57 State Rptr. 1367, 2000 Mont. LEXIS 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-v-mahoney-mont-2000.