Curtis Reece v. Kentucky Parole Board

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 28, 2022
Docket2021 CA 000765
StatusUnknown

This text of Curtis Reece v. Kentucky Parole Board (Curtis Reece v. Kentucky Parole Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Curtis Reece v. Kentucky Parole Board, (Ky. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

RENDERED: APRIL 29, 2022; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals

NO. 2021-CA-0765-MR

CURTIS REECE APPELLANT

APPEAL FROM FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE THOMAS D. WINGATE, JUDGE ACTION NO. 20-CI-00718

KENTUCKY PAROLE BOARD APPELLEE

OPINION AND ORDER DISMISSING

** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: COMBS, LAMBERT, AND K. THOMPSON, JUDGES.

LAMBERT, JUDGE: Curtis Reece appeals from the Franklin Circuit Court’s

denial of his motion for summary judgment. We dismiss the appeal as having been

taken from a nonfinal order. Reece pleaded guilty to incest due to having had a sexual relationship

with his minor daughter.1 Reece was sentenced to twelve-years’ imprisonment,

consistent with the sentence for a Class B felony. See KRS 532.060(2)(b). KRS

530.020(2)(b) provides that incest is a Class B felony if committed via forcible

compulsion2 or if the victim is less than eighteen years of age. Although we do not

have the complete record of that criminal case before us, apparently Reece did not

admit, nor did the sentencing court find, that Reece’s sexual relationship with his

daughter occurred due to forcible compulsion.

Under KRS 532.043, Reece was automatically also subject to five

years of postincarceration supervision, during which he was required to comply

with all treatment required by the Department of Corrections. The Kentucky

Parole Board (the Board) retained the ultimate power to revoke Reece’s

postincarceration supervision and to order him to be reincarcerated for the

remainder of his postincarceration supervision period for violations of the

conditions of his supervision.

1 It is unclear whether the victim is Reece’s biological daughter or his stepdaughter. Regardless, his sexual relationship with her qualified as incest under Kentucky Revised Statute (KRS) 530.020(1). 2 Forcible compulsion is statutorily defined in KRS 510.010(2) as “physical force or threat of physical force, express or implied, which places a person in fear of immediate death, physical injury to self or another person, fear of the immediate kidnap of self or another person, or fear of any offense under this chapter.”

-2- While incarcerated, Reece completed a sex offender treatment

program (SOTP). It is uncontested that Reece had to admit to having committed

his offense to complete that program. In 2017, after completing the SOTP, Reece

was discharged from incarceration and began his postincarceration supervision.

Reece signed a document agreeing to the terms of his postincarceration

supervision, including a requirement to “attend, participate, and successfully

complete a Sex Offender Treatment Program.”

Reece was admitted to the postincarceration SOTP in January 2018.

However, Reece was dismissed from that program in September 2018 because he

allegedly did not sufficiently accept responsibility for his offense(s). According to

Reece, he admitted having sex with his daughter was wrong but was nonetheless

dismissed because he refused to admit to having used forcible compulsion.

In November 2018, the Board revoked Reece’s postincarceration

supervision and ordered him to be incarcerated for the remainder of his five years

of postincarceration supervision. Because our Supreme Court ruled in 2019 that

the Board’s previous process for revoking postincarceration supervision was

constitutionally inadequate, the Board again heard Reece’s revocation case in

2020.3 At the hearing, an officer whose precise job title was not mentioned, and

3 The record before us contains only an audio recording of that proceeding.

-3- who admitted that he lacked personal knowledge of Reece’s case, was the only

witness against Reece. That officer testified that Reece was terminated from the

postincarceration SOTP because he had not sufficiently admitted his offenses. By

contrast, Reece testified that his behavior with his daughter was morally and

legally wrong but that it did not involve forcible compulsion. The gist of Reece’s

testimony was that the sexual relationship, though wrong, was based upon mutual

agreement and so he was being punished for refusing to admit to an untruth.

By checking a box on a form, the Board concluded that Reece had

violated the conditions of his release and that he constituted a significant risk to his

victim or the community at large and could not be appropriately managed in the

community. Thus, the Board ordered Reece to be reincarcerated.

In September 2020, Reece filed this declaratory judgment action

against the Board in the Franklin Circuit Court. Reece raised two main claims:

first, that it was improper to require him to admit to forcible conduct as such an

admission could constitute a new offense and violate his right against self-

incrimination and, second, that the Board had made insufficient findings. The

Board did not file a timely answer.

In November 2020, Reece filed a motion for default judgment or,

alternatively, summary judgment. The Board filed a two-paragraphs-long response

alleging that default judgment was improper because the record of the Board

-4- proceedings was not before the court. The Board’s response did not directly

address Reece’s claim for summary judgment, nor did it seek affirmative relief on

behalf of the Board.

In January 2021, the trial court conducted a hearing via

videoconference on Reece’s motion for default, or summary, judgment. At the

hearing, the Board insisted that the Department of Corrections was the proper

defendant. The trial court initially agreed and issued an order denying default

judgment and requiring Reece to file an amended complaint naming the

Department of Corrections as a defendant. But, in response to Reece’s motion to

alter, amend, or vacate, the court later vacated that order.

In May 2021, the trial court denied Reece’s motion for summary

judgment. Crucially, the order did not dismiss or otherwise finally resolve Reece’s

claims. Instead, the order appeared to be only a decision that summary judgment

was improper because it would be possible for the Board to prevail at a trial. Thus,

the order did not contain language making it final and appealable.

Reece filed a motion to alter, amend, or vacate pursuant to Kentucky

Rule of Civil Procedure (CR) 59.05, in which he largely reiterated his previous

arguments. In the alternative, Reece asked the trial court to make its prior decision

final and appealable. The Board filed a short response, mainly restating its belief

that the Department of Corrections is the proper defendant.

-5- In June 2021, the trial court issued an opinion and order which stated

in relevant part that the order denying Reece’s motion for summary judgment had

been based on its conclusion that “it would not be impossible for the Board to

produce evidence in order to prevail at trial . . . .” Of course, that language parrots

Kentucky’s familiar summary judgment standard, under which summary judgment

“is appropriate only when it appears that it would be impossible for the respondent

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Curtis Reece v. Kentucky Parole Board, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/curtis-reece-v-kentucky-parole-board-kyctapp-2022.