Desmond Ricks v. State of Michigan

CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 2021
Docket160657
StatusPublished

This text of Desmond Ricks v. State of Michigan (Desmond Ricks v. State of Michigan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Desmond Ricks v. State of Michigan, (Mich. 2021).

Opinion

Michigan Supreme Court Lansing, Michigan Chief Justice: Justices:

Syllabus Bridget M. McCormack Brian K. Zahra David F. Viviano Richard H. Bernstein Elizabeth T. Clement Megan K. Cavanagh Elizabeth M. Welch

This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been Reporter of Decisions: prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader. Kathryn L. Loomis

RICKS v STATE OF MICHIGAN

Docket No. 160657. Argued on application for leave to appeal March 4, 2021. Decided July 8, 2021.

Desmond Ricks filed a complaint in the Court of Claims under the Wrongful Imprisonment Compensation Act (WICA), MCL 691.1751 et seq., seeking compensation for the nearly 25 years that he spent in prison following a wrongful conviction. Ricks was sentenced in 1987 for armed robbery and assault with intent to rob while armed, and in 1991, he was paroled with 4 years and 118 days remaining on his sentences. While on parole in 1992, Ricks witnessed the shooting death of Gerry Bennett. While Ricks was fleeing from the gunman, he dropped his coat, which the police later used to connect him to Bennett’s killing along with fabricated ballistics evidence. On October 12, 1992, Ricks was sentenced to 30 to 60 years in prison for second-degree murder and two years for felony-firearm. As a result of these convictions, Ricks’s parole for armed robbery and assault was violated and revoked. Under Michigan law, Ricks was required to serve the remainder of his sentences for armed robbery and assault before his new sentences would begin to run; he served these sentences from October 13, 1992 to February 8, 1997. After serving these sentences, Ricks began to serve his sentences for the murder of Bennett, for which he was imprisoned until May 26, 2017. Following the discovery that the police had fabricated the ballistics evidence used to convict Ricks, the Wayne Circuit Court, Richard M. Skutt, J., vacated Ricks’s convictions for murder and felony-firearm, and Ricks was released from prison. Ricks filed a WICA complaint seeking $1,231,918 for the time he spent in prison from October 13, 1992 to May 26, 2017. The state agreed that Ricks had been wrongfully imprisoned for Bennett’s murder and was eligible for compensation under the WICA. However, the state asserted that Ricks was not entitled to compensation for the 4 years and 118 days he had served for his armed-robbery and assault sentences after his parole was revoked. Ricks argued that he was entitled to compensation for this time because the wrongful conviction was the only reason that his parole was revoked. The Court of Claims, MICHAEL J. TALBOT, J., concluded that Ricks was not entitled to compensation under the WICA for the time he served for the remainder of his armed-robbery and assault sentences and entered a stipulated judgment in Ricks’s favor for $1,014,657.53. Ricks reserved the right to appeal the remainder of his claim. The Court of Appeals, CAMERON and TUKEL, JJ. (JANSEN, P.J., dissenting), affirmed the Court of Claims. 330 Mich App 277 (2019). The Supreme Court ordered and heard oral argument on whether the Court of Appeals erred by concluding that MCL 691.1755(4) barred Ricks from recovering compensation for the time he served for the parole revocation. 505 Mich 1068 (2020). In an opinion by Chief Justice MCCORMACK, joined by Justices BERNSTEIN, CAVANAGH, and WELCH, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to appeal, held:

The exception in MCL 691.1755(4), which bars compensation under the WICA for any time served under a consecutive sentence for another conviction, is not applicable when a wrongful conviction triggered a parole revocation which required the WICA claimant’s parole-revoked sentence to be served before the sentence for the wrongful conviction would begin to run, because the time served under the parole-revoked sentence is not served under a consecutive sentence for another conviction.

1. The WICA allows a person who was wrongfully convicted and imprisoned to seek compensation by bringing an action against the state. The WICA has two steps: (1) determining who is eligible for compensation and (2) calculating the amount of compensation to be awarded. Once a WICA claimant has satisfied the threshold-eligibility requirements of MCL 691.1755(1), the court must determine whether any time served is subject to the exception in MCL 691.1755(4) and calculate the amount owed for each year from the date the claimant was imprisoned until the date the claimant was released from prison. Under MCL 691.1755(4), compensation may not be awarded for any time during which the claimant was imprisoned under a concurrent or consecutive sentence for another conviction.

2. Just because a WICA claimant served sentences consecutively does not mean that the WICA’s consecutive-sentence exception applies. Under MCL 768.7a(2), Ricks was required to serve the remaining portion of his sentences for armed robbery and assault before serving the sentences he received for second-degree murder and felony-firearm. The text of MCL 691.1755(4) makes the order in which the sentences were served critical. It provides that a WICA claimant cannot be compensated for time served in prison “under a . . . consecutive sentence for another conviction.” A sentence that is served before another sentence begins to run is not a consecutive sentence, because it is not consecutive to anything. Under MCL 691.1755(4), compensation is barred only for time served under a sentence that begins to run after the completion of the sentence that gave rise to the claimant’s WICA eligibility. Ricks served the remainder of his sentences for his 1987 convictions before serving his sentences for murder and felony-firearm. Therefore, the exception in MCL 691.1755(4) did not apply to bar compensation for time Ricks served after his wrongful conviction because he did not serve a consecutive sentence for another conviction.

3. The context and purpose of the WICA further support the conclusion that the Legislature intended to compensate eligible claimants who served a parole-revoked sentence only as a result of the wrongful conviction, and as required by law, served the parole-revoked sentence before the wrongful-conviction sentence. For example, the WICA’s formula for compensation is straightforward: $50,000 per year of wrongful imprisonment from the date that the claimant was wrongfully imprisoned until the date of release. Only the exception in MCL 691.1755(4) ties compensation to the sentence imposed for the wrongful conviction. This exception also bars compensation for any time served under a concurrent sentence for another conviction. The Legislature presumably saw little utility in using the limited monies that fund the WICA to compensate a wrongfully convicted individual if they would have been imprisoned anyway under a concurrent sentence that was independent of the wrongful conviction. Similarly, the exception in MCL 691.1755(1)(b) bars compensation when there is an adequate and independent basis for the claimant’s incarceration. By contrast, when a wrongfully convicted person whose prior parole is violated because of a wrongful conviction is imprisoned, all of their imprisonment is wrongful. This result reflects the WICA’s remedial purpose. All of Ricks’s imprisonment was wrongful because all of it was caused by his wrongful convictions; WICA compensation helps to remedy that harm. Because the text, context, and purpose of the WICA agree that the Legislature intended to provide compensation for time served under a parole-revoked sentence when the revocation was caused solely by a wrongful conviction, Ricks was entitled to WICA compensation for the entire period that he was incarcerated between October 13, 1992 and February 8, 1997.

4.

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Desmond Ricks v. State of Michigan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/desmond-ricks-v-state-of-michigan-mich-2021.