Clark v. State, Department of Corrections

156 P.3d 384, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 42, 2007 WL 1168451
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 2007
DocketS-12135
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 156 P.3d 384 (Clark v. State, Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. State, Department of Corrections, 156 P.3d 384, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 42, 2007 WL 1168451 (Ala. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETTI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Richard Clark, an Alaska state prisoner, challenges his transfer to Florence Correctional Center in Arizona on the grounds that it violated his right to rehabilitation by denying him visitation with his family and alcohol treatment. While Clark's case was pending before this court, the court of appeals ordered Clark to be resentenced on his underlying criminal conviction. Because the department of corrections transferred Clark back to Alaska pursuant to the court of appeals's decision, Clark's appeal has become moot. Accordingly, we dismiss the appeal.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

* Richard Clark, a prisoner of the State of Alaska, is currently serving a sixteen-year sentence with eight years suspended, for assault and arson. Clark is scheduled for release in February 2009. Clark began serving his sentence at Spring Creek Correctional Center (Spring Creek) in Seward. In April 2004 the Department of Corrections considered transferring Clark to an Arizona prison facility. 1 The Spring Creek classification committee informed Clark that he was being considered for transfer to an out-of-state fa-

*386 cility in order to alleviate overerowding and then conducted a classification hearing. 2

Clark was present at the bearing. The committee inquired into any visitation Clark received from family. Clark informed the committee that while incarcerated he received visits from family approximately every other month, and that he spoke to his family over the telephone twice per week. He also stated that these visits and phone calls were important to his rehabilitation. Clark asserted that alcohol treatment was his primary rehabilitative need. He informed the committee that he was appealing his sentence, and that he had been previously incarcerated for separate convictions in Ketchikan and Palmer. Based on the foregoing, the committee determined that an out-of-state transfer would not impede Clark's rehabilitation. The committee recommended Clark for transfer to Florence Correctional Center in Arizona.

The superintendent of Spring Creek approved Clark's transfer. The classification committee then notified Clark. Clark filed a department appeal of the transfer order. In his appeal, Clark argued the following: (1) the Native Village Council of Clarks Point recommended that Clark remain in Alaska and eventually be paroled to Clarks Point for alcohol treatment; (2) as an Alaska Eskimo he maintained a traditional lifestyle; (8) his father was ill; (4) the pro se appeal of his sentence would benefit from his presence in Alaska; (5) he was enrolled in a computer class and had applied for a job at Spring Creek; (6) the transfer affected Clark's visitation with family and his right to rehabilitation; (7) he was not informed of the transfer until after he had signed the notice of classification; and (8) the judge who sentenced Clark had recommended Clark serve his sentence in Alaska.

Deputy Commissioner of Corrections Donald Stolworthy rejected Clark's appeal. Stol-worthy determined that the transfer would not substantially impair Clark's access to rehabilitation or treatment, that Clark failed to show any rehabilitative effects of any visitation he had received, and that Clark's prior criminal history and previous incarceration indicated Clark did not have a predominantly rural lifestyle. Clark then filed an administrative appeal to the superior court. In October 2005 Clark was transferred to Florence Correctional Center in Arizona.

Shortly thereafter, the superior court issued an order affirming the transfer. The court found that the classification committee had addressed each of Clark's rehabilitative concerns. The court's order noted that Clark presented no evidence that a potential decrease in visitation would substantially impair his rehabilitation: Clark would remain eligible for work and educational rehabilitation programs in Arizona, Clark's wish to be paroled to Clarks Point could be addressed from Arizona, and Clark had failed to show that his native lifestyle somehow precluded his transfer. Clark filed an appeal before this court.

While Clark's appeal was pending, the court of appeals issued Memorandum and Opinion No. 5125 in October 2006. The court of appeals ordered that Clark be resen-tenced on his underlying eriminal conviction. Pursuant to that decision, the department transported Clark back to Alaska for resen-tencing. The state then filed an emergency motion to dismiss Clark's appeal and to vacate oral argument. We denied the state's motion but requested that the parties be prepared to discuss mootness issues at oral argument. Oral argument was held on November 8, 2006.

Because we now conclude that Clark's appeal of his transfer decision is moot, we do not decide the merits of his appeal.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

We apply our independent judgment to issues of mootness "because as a matter of Judicial policy, mootness is a question of law." 3

*387 IV. DISCUSSION

A. Clark's Appeal of His 2004 Transfer Decision Is Moot.

We will not generally decide questions of law "where the facts have rendered the legal issues moot." 4 A claim is moot where a decision on the issue is no longer relevant to resolving the litigation, or where it has lost its character as a "present, live controversy," 5 that is, where a party bringing the action would not be entitled to any relief even if he or she prevailed. 6

The department contends that because Clark will be resentenced and reclassified prior to any transfer back to Arizona, his appeal should be dismissed. As noted by counsel for the department in both its emer-geney motion to dismiss the appeal and at oral argument, the 2004 classification decision transferring Clark to Arizona has been vacated. Clark was transferred back to Alaska in late October 2006. Following re-sentencing, Clark may be classified and housed in Alaska or he may be classified for transfer to Arizona under a new out-of-state transfer determination. In either case, the 2004 administrative decision now before us on appeal would no longer be the operative decision that causes Clark to be housed in Arizona. Clark's appeal of his 2004 transfer decision is therefore moot.

B. The Public Interest Exception Does Not Apply to Clark's Appeal.

We may still review issues that are moot under the public interest exception to the mootness doctrine. 7 In determining whether the public interest exception applies, we consider: "(1) whether the disputed issues are capable of repetition, (2) whether application of the mootness doctrine will repeatedly cireumvent review of the issues, and (8) whether the issues are of important public interest." 8

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Bluebook (online)
156 P.3d 384, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 42, 2007 WL 1168451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-state-department-of-corrections-alaska-2007.