David Middleton II v. State of Alaska

556 P.3d 276
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedAugust 2, 2024
DocketA13173
StatusPublished

This text of 556 P.3d 276 (David Middleton II v. State of Alaska) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Middleton II v. State of Alaska, 556 P.3d 276 (Ala. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NOTICE The text of this opinion can be corrected before the opinion is published in the Pacific Reporter. Readers are encouraged to bring typographical or other formal errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts: 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501 Fax: (907) 264-0878 E-mail: corrections@akcourts.gov

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

DAVID MIDDLETON II, Court of Appeals No. A-13173 Appellant, Trial Court No. 3AN-17-09317 CI

v. OPINION STATE OF ALASKA,

Appellee. No. 2787 — August 2, 2024

Appeal from the Superior Court, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Michael D. Corey and Dani Crosby, Judges.

Appearances: Laurence Blakely (opening brief) and Rachel E. Cella (supplemental and reply briefs), Assistant Public Defenders, and Samantha Cherot, Public Defender, Anchorage, for the Appellant. Anna L. Marquez, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau, for the Appellee.

Before: Allard, Chief Judge, and Harbison and Terrell, Judges.

Judge TERRELL.

David Middleton II appeals the denial of his application for post- conviction relief, arguing that the Department of Corrections (DOC) unlawfully extended his maximum release date — i.e., the date by which defendants must have served all of their active term of imprisonment through a combination of incarceration and parole supervision.1 More specifically, Middleton argues that the 2016 amendment to AS 33.16.220(i) applied retroactively,2 rendering DOC’s 2015 action, which resulted in an extension of his maximum release date, unlawful. For the reasons explained here, we reject this retroactivity claim and affirm the judgment of the superior court.

Relevant background In 2006, Middleton was sentenced in two separate cases to a composite term of 4,750 days to serve. In accordance with the applicable statutes, DOC calculated Middleton’s mandatory parole release date as March 23, 2013, and his maximum release date as July 23, 2017. In 2013, Middleton was released on parole. After his initial release, he was repeatedly brought back into custody for various parole violations. He also committed a new criminal offense for which he received a 1-year sentence in September 2015. In December 2015, the Alaska Parole Board revoked Middleton’s parole and imposed a parole revocation sentence of 1,583 days (i.e., one-third of Middleton’s original composite sentence). DOC then conducted its time-accounting analysis, combining this sentence with Middleton’s 1-year sentence for the new offense and a 60-day sentence he received for a probation violation (concurrent to the parole revocation sentence), yielding a composite sentence of 1,948 days. In accordance with the applicable statutes, DOC recalculated Middleton’s mandatory parole date as March 20, 2018 and his maximum release date as December 29, 2019. In July 2016, the Alaska legislature enacted Senate Bill 91, which inter alia, amended AS 33.16.220(i), the provision authorizing the parole board to revoke all or a portion of a defendant’s remaining parole. This amendment stated that the parole

1 Roller v. State, 539 P.3d 518, 522-23 (Alaska App. 2023). 2 SLA 2016, ch. 36, § 148. In 2019, the legislature repealed this provision. See FSSLA 2019, ch. 4, § 115.

–2– 2787 board could not “extend the period of parole beyond the maximum release date calculated by [DOC] on the parolee’s original sentence.”3 In September 2017, the parole board revoked Middleton’s parole again and imposed a parole revocation sentence of 711 days. DOC subsequently recalculated Middleton’s mandatory parole date as June 13, 2019, but determined that Middleton’s maximum release date of December 29, 2019 had not changed.4 Following this September 2017 disposition, Middleton was under the mistaken impression that DOC had recalculated his maximum release date to December 29, 2019 when it conducted its 2017 time-accounting analysis. Based on this mistaken impression, Middleton filed an application for post-conviction relief, arguing that the parole board’s 2017 action violated the 2016 amendment to AS 33.16.220(i). The State opposed but did not correct Middleton’s mistaken impression about when the change to his maximum release date occurred. The superior court conducted a statutory interpretation analysis of AS 33.16.220(i), rejected Middleton’s claim, and denied his post-conviction relief application. Middleton then appealed. While Middleton’s appeal was pending, the State realized that DOC had recalculated Middleton’s maximum release date in December 2015 — i.e., before the 2016 amendment to AS 33.16.220(i) was enacted and took effect. Middleton’s case was then remanded to the superior court so that the parties could litigate whether the 2016 amendment had an impact on the parole board’s December 2015 action. On remand, Middleton argued that the 2016 amendment to AS 33.16.220(i) was retroactive and that the December 2015 revocation of Middleton’s

3 SLA 2016, ch. 36, § 148. In 2019, the legislature repealed this provision. See FSSLA 2019, ch. 4, § 115. 4 The notice accompanying the parole board’s revocation decision stated that Middleton would not have parole supervision following his release from prison unless he was released prior to December 29, 2019, in which case he would remain on parole until that date.

–3– 2787 parole, which resulted in an extension of his maximum release date, was therefore invalid. The superior court rejected this claim, ruling that the 2016 amendment to AS 33.16.220(i) was not retroactive and therefore did not affect the validity of the parole board action that extended Middleton’s maximum release date. The court dismissed Middleton’s post-conviction relief application for the second time. This appeal followed.

Why we reject Middleton’s retroactivity claim On appeal, Middleton recognizes that when the parole board revoked his parole in December 2015 and DOC recalculated his maximum release date to December 29, 2019, these actions were legal. But he argues that the 2016 amendment to AS 33.16.220(i) was retroactive, and that the December 2015 action was invalidated by the enactment of this amendment. Middleton bases his retroactivity claim on the language in the enacting session law’s applicability clause, which stated that the amended provision applied “to parole granted before, on, or after [its] effective date.”5 Middleton relies on Stoneking v. State for the proposition that use of the language “before, on, or after” in an applicability clause automatically leads to the conclusion that the statute is fully retroactive.6 Middleton is in error. Stoneking dealt with a 1995 legislative amendment to AS 12.55.088, a statute providing for post-judgment modification of criminal sentences. The 1995 amendment changed the way defendants may obtain sentence modifications.7 The amendment’s applicability clause provided that it applied to “offenses committed

5 SLA 2016, ch. 36, § 185(p)(7). 6 Stoneking v. State, 39 P.3d 522, 523 (Alaska App. 2002). 7 SLA 1995, ch. 79, §§ 6, 30.

–4– 2787 before, on, or after” its July 1, 1995, effective date.8 We interpreted this language as making the statutory change in Stoneking fully retroactive.9 But our decision in Stoneking did not go so far as to hold that every time “before, on, or after” language is used, the affected statute is fully retroactive. That is an over-simplification of our decision in Stoneking.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
556 P.3d 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-middleton-ii-v-state-of-alaska-alaskactapp-2024.