Gratzer v. Mahoney

2006 MT 282, 150 P.3d 343, 334 Mont. 297, 2006 Mont. LEXIS 591
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 2006
Docket05-075
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2006 MT 282 (Gratzer 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
Gratzer v. Mahoney, 2006 MT 282, 150 P.3d 343, 334 Mont. 297, 2006 Mont. LEXIS 591 (Mo. 2006).

Opinion

*298 OPINION AND ORDER

¶1 Karl Eric Gratzer, who was convicted of deliberate homicide in 1982 and who is presently serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole (plus ten additional years for using a dangerous weapon while perpetrating the deliberate homicide) petitioned this Court for a writ of habeas corpus. As a preliminary matter, Gratzer challenges the constitutionality of § 46-22-101(2), MCA (2003), suggesting that the statute, by prohibiting a petitioner from challenging the validity of a sentence, impermissibly suspends the writ of habeas corpus. Substantively, Gratzer maintains that the District Court violated his constitutional rights and exceeded its authority when it declared him ineligible for parole. Gratzer insists that § 46-18-202(2), MCA (1981) (“Additional Restrictions on Sentence”), does not permit such a parole restriction to be imposed upon a life sentence. Gratzer also contends that the District Court violated his constitutional rights when it designated him a “dangerous offender,” because, he asserts, the court lacked the authority to designate a person serving a life sentence as a “dangerous offender.” Finally, relying on Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466, 120 S. Ct. 2348 (2000), Gratzer argues that the District Court violated his constitutional rights when, absent a specific charge and a jury finding that Gratzer had used a weapon, it sentenced him to a consecutive ten-year term for the use of a weapon in the commission of an offense. We address each argument in turn.

I. Constitutionality of § 46-22-101(2), MCA (2003)

¶2 Section 46-22-101(2), MCA (2003), provides, in pertinent part:

The writ of habeas corpus is not available to attack the validity of the conviction or sentence of a person who has been adjudged guilty of an offense in a court of record and has exhausted the remedy of appeal.

Gratzer, who is attacking the validity of his sentence, challenges the constitutionality of § 46-22-101(2), MCA (2003). We recently addressed this issue in Lott v. State of Montana, 2006 MT 279, wherein we held that the procedural bar to habeas corpus petitions contained in § 46-22-101(2), MCA (2003), is unconstitutional as applied to facially invalid sentences. Since Gratzer’s challenges draw into question the facial *299 validity of his sentence, 1 we conclude that the procedural bar to his habeas corpus petition is not applicable, and we address the merits of bis claims.

¶3 We evaluate the legality of a sentence according to the sentencing statutes in effect at the time a defendant is sentenced. State v. Finley, 276 Mont. 126, 147, 915 P.2d 208, 221 (1996). Gratzer was sentenced in 1982. Accordingly, we examine Gratzer’s sentence through the lens of the 1981 Montana Code.

H. Parole Ineligibility

¶4 Gratzer contends that the District Court violated his constitutional rights when it declared him ineligible for parole while serving a life sentence. Gratzer interprets the sentencing statutes and parole eligibility statutes to distinguish between determinate time sentences-statutorily dubbed “term” sentences, according to Gratzer-and indeterminate life sentences, and suggests that the statutory scheme, therefore, does not authorize a court to remove a prisoner’s eligibility for parole if the prisoner is serving a life sentence. Essentially, Gratzer argues that the statute that authorizes a court to restrict parole eligibility, because it speaks only of “a sentence of imprisonment in the state prison for a term exceeding 1 year,” § 46-18-202(2), MCA (1981) (emphasis added), does not apply to life sentences. Gratzer notes that a life sentence carries a statutorily mandated restriction on parole during the first thirty years of the sentence, § 46-23-201(l)(b), MCA (1981), and insists that courts lack authority to affix any additional parole restrictions to a life sentence.

¶5 The structure of the statutory framework authorizing sentences and parole restrictions and the statutory terminology pertaining thereto, however, undermine Gratzer’s argument and evince the legislature’s clear intent to enable courts to impose life sentences without the possibility of parole. Gratzer correctly points out that his “life sentence” carries a statutorily mandated restriction on parole during the first thirty years of his incarceration, § 46-23-201(l)(b), MCA (1981), as distinguished from the parole eligibility of prisoners serving “time sentence[s]” (which is dictated by the duration of the *300 sentence), § 46-23-201(l)(a), MCA (1981). Gratzer overlooks the essential fact that the statutory provisions delineating parole eligibility for prisoners serving both “time sentence[s],” and “life sentence[s],” explicitly yield to § 46-18-202(2), MCA (1981), which allows a court to impose “the restriction that the defendant be ineligible for parole and participation in the supervised release program while serving his term.” See § 46-23-201(1), MCA (1981) (providing that the parole board shall release certain prisoners on parole, “except ... persons serving sentences imposed under 46-18-202(2)”). This explicit exception to parole eligibility applies equally to the ensuing statutory subsections governing time sentences, § 46-23-201(l)(a), MCA (1981), and life sentences, § 46-23-201(l)(b), MCA (1981). This statutory structure clearly reflects the legislature’s intent to authorize a sentencing court to impose parole ineligibility on either a life sentence or a time sentence.

¶6 This discernment of legislative intent is supported by the criminal code’s repeated references to term sentences. “Term” is used throughout the criminal code to refer to the duration of a sentence without any indication that it is meant to refer exclusively to determinate time sentences. See, e.g., § 46-23-103(4), MCA (1981), and § 46-23-1001(3), MCA (1981) (defining “parole” as “release to the community of a prisoner by the decision of the board prior to the expiration of his term,” and thereby indicating that if a prisoner serving a life sentence may be released on parole, then his sentence is for a “term” of life) (emphasis added); see also, § 46-23-216(2), MCA (1981), “Duration of parole” (mandating that “[t]he period served on parole or conditional release shall be deemed service of the term of imprisonment, and ... the total time served may not exceed the maximum term or sentence,” thereby implying that “term” applies equally to determinate time sentences and to life sentences, or else there is no delineation of the duration of parole for prisoners serving life sentences) (emphasis added); § 45-2-101(21) MCA (1981), (defining “felony” as “an offense in which the sentence imposed upon conviction is death or imprisonment in the state prison for any term exceeding 1 year”) (emphasis added). The statutes defining parole and establishing its duration refer to the “term” of a sentence. By use of this nomenclature, the legislature evidently intended to refer both to prisoners

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Missoula v. F. Sadiku
2021 MT 295 (Montana Supreme Court, 2021)
Rood v. Laughlin
Montana Supreme Court, 2021
Bullock v. State of Montana
2020 MT 57N (Montana Supreme Court, 2020)
Raul Sanchez v. State
2012 MT 191 (Montana Supreme Court, 2012)
State v. Rozell R. Cook
2012 MT 34 (Montana Supreme Court, 2012)
State v. Kirkbride
2008 MT 178 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
State v. Rickman
2008 MT 142 (Montana Supreme Court, 2008)
Adams v. State
2007 MT 35 (Montana Supreme Court, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2006 MT 282, 150 P.3d 343, 334 Mont. 297, 2006 Mont. LEXIS 591, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gratzer-v-mahoney-mont-2006.