WOLLHEIM, J.
Plaintiff appeals a judgment dismissing his writ of habeas corpus, in which he alleged that his continued incarceration violated state and federal constitutional protections against the application of ex post facto laws. After plaintiff filed his notice of appeal, he was released from prison on parole. Plaintiff maintains that his case remains justiciable because he has not yet been discharged from parole, and that his current parole status is a collateral consequence of an earlier improper decision to deny him parole. Because we conclude that the claimed collateral consequence is speculative, we dismiss plaintiff’s appeal as moot.
In 1986, plaintiff was convicted of first-degree kidnapping, ORS 163.235, first-degree sodomy, ORS 163.405, and felon in possession of a firearm ORS 166.250. He was sentenced as a dangerous offender to 30 years in prison, with a 15-year minimum term, for the kidnapping conviction. Plaintiff was also sentenced to up to 10 years for the sodomy conviction and to up to five years for the possession conviction, with those sentences to run consecutively to the sentence for the kidnapping conviction. If required to serve his full sentences, plaintiff would be discharged in approximately 2015, or possibly later.
Plaintiff was denied parole at hearings in 1992, 1994, and 1996. After the 1996 denial, plaintiff sought administrative review arguing, inter alia, that the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision (board) had applied legislative amendments passed in 1993 in violation of the ex post facto clauses of the state and federal constitutions. The board rejected those arguments in 1996. In 1998, plaintiff filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus, again asserting that the board had violated his right to be free from the application of ex post facto laws. The trial court dismissed the writ with prejudice, on the ground that his replication “failed to plead ultimate facts stating a cognizable claim and, in any event, there was no ex post facto violation.”
As noted above, after plaintiff filed his notice of appeal he was released from prison to active parole supervision. Because he remains on parole, plaintiff argues that his [354]*354release from prison does not render his case moot because a decision on the merits in his favor would have a practical effect on his rights. In particular, he urges this court to order the board to reassess “when it should have properly set a release date * * * and to use that proper release date as the commencement date of plaintiffs active supervision period. Such an order could and likely would result in plaintiffs immediate discharge from parole.”
In support of his argument, plaintiff cites Baty v. Slater, 161 Or App 653, 984 P2d 342 (1999), adh’d to on recons, 164 Or App 779, 995 P2d 1176, rev den, 331 Or 191 (2000). Baty involved a habeas plaintiff who earlier had been convicted of two felonies and sentenced to probation for each. As a condition of probation, the plaintiff was ordered to serve 110 days’ incarceration. When the plaintiff later violated probation, he was sentenced to 22 months’ incarceration followed by three years of post-prison supervision. In a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the plaintiff argued that he was entitled to credit for the 110 days he had been incarcerated as a condition of his probation. The trial court dismissed the writ. While his appeal to this court was pending, the plaintiff was released from prison and placed on post-prison supervision. 161 Or App at 655. The plaintiff argued, however, that his case had not thereby been rendered moot because, by dint of the trial court’s failure to credit his initial period of incarceration, his overall sentence had improperly been lengthened by 110 days. We agreed with the plaintiff that his claim was not moot because a decision on the merits in his favor could have a practical effect on him. Id. at 656-57.
The case before us is distinguishable from Baty in at least one important respect. While the plaintiff in Baty was sentenced under the state’s determinate sentencing guidelines providing for a fixed period of post-prison supervision, plaintiff here was sentenced under the preguidelines system characterized by indeterminate sentences and parole. Under the determinate sentencing system, as we noted in Baty, “[t]he earlier the term of imprisonment ends, the earlier the term of post-supervision both begins and ends.” Id. at 656 (emphasis in original). But under the prior indeterminate sentencing structure, an earlier commencement of active [355]*355parole supervision does not ensure an earlier discharge from parole.
In particular, under the law in effect at the time of plaintiffs crimes, discharge from parole was within the discretion of the board if it was satisfied “that the prisoner’s final release is not incompatible with the prisoner’s welfare and that of society * * *.” Former ORS 144.310 (1985), repealed by Or Laws 1993, ch 680, § 7. The broad discretion conferred by the statute was reflected in the board’s rules in effect at the time of plaintiff’s crimes.1 Those rules charged the board with establishing both a conditional discharge date and a period of active supervised parole of either six or 12 months. Former OAR 255-90-002 (1985).2 In the board’s discretion, the initial period of active parole supervision could be extended up to 36 months. Former OAR 255-90-002(1) (1985). Moreover, the rules authorized the board, following a hearing, to deny discharge to the parolee, former OAR 255-90-010 (1985),3 and to do so repeatedly if warranted, subject to the offender’s maximum term of sentence. Former OAR [356]*356255-90-015 (1985).4 The applicable rules therefore vested the board with considerable discretion to determine “whether and when to modify” a parolee’s supervision status. Odle v. Thompson, 174 Or App 506, 511, 26 P3d 177 (2001).
We confronted a similar issue in Odie, where an offender also had petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that he was entitled to release on parole. The trial court had dismissed the writ, the plaintiff appealed and, as in the present case, while his appeal was pending, the plaintiff was released from prison to active supervision. The plaintiff in Odie urged this court not to dismiss his appeal as moot because, he argued, the board’s delay in releasing him on parole effectively delayed his transfer from active to inactive supervision. Id. at 508. We concluded that the plaintiffs argument was not well taken because, under ORS 144.085,5 [357]*357the board was vested with discretion to retain him on active supervision.
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WOLLHEIM, J.
Plaintiff appeals a judgment dismissing his writ of habeas corpus, in which he alleged that his continued incarceration violated state and federal constitutional protections against the application of ex post facto laws. After plaintiff filed his notice of appeal, he was released from prison on parole. Plaintiff maintains that his case remains justiciable because he has not yet been discharged from parole, and that his current parole status is a collateral consequence of an earlier improper decision to deny him parole. Because we conclude that the claimed collateral consequence is speculative, we dismiss plaintiff’s appeal as moot.
In 1986, plaintiff was convicted of first-degree kidnapping, ORS 163.235, first-degree sodomy, ORS 163.405, and felon in possession of a firearm ORS 166.250. He was sentenced as a dangerous offender to 30 years in prison, with a 15-year minimum term, for the kidnapping conviction. Plaintiff was also sentenced to up to 10 years for the sodomy conviction and to up to five years for the possession conviction, with those sentences to run consecutively to the sentence for the kidnapping conviction. If required to serve his full sentences, plaintiff would be discharged in approximately 2015, or possibly later.
Plaintiff was denied parole at hearings in 1992, 1994, and 1996. After the 1996 denial, plaintiff sought administrative review arguing, inter alia, that the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision (board) had applied legislative amendments passed in 1993 in violation of the ex post facto clauses of the state and federal constitutions. The board rejected those arguments in 1996. In 1998, plaintiff filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus, again asserting that the board had violated his right to be free from the application of ex post facto laws. The trial court dismissed the writ with prejudice, on the ground that his replication “failed to plead ultimate facts stating a cognizable claim and, in any event, there was no ex post facto violation.”
As noted above, after plaintiff filed his notice of appeal he was released from prison to active parole supervision. Because he remains on parole, plaintiff argues that his [354]*354release from prison does not render his case moot because a decision on the merits in his favor would have a practical effect on his rights. In particular, he urges this court to order the board to reassess “when it should have properly set a release date * * * and to use that proper release date as the commencement date of plaintiffs active supervision period. Such an order could and likely would result in plaintiffs immediate discharge from parole.”
In support of his argument, plaintiff cites Baty v. Slater, 161 Or App 653, 984 P2d 342 (1999), adh’d to on recons, 164 Or App 779, 995 P2d 1176, rev den, 331 Or 191 (2000). Baty involved a habeas plaintiff who earlier had been convicted of two felonies and sentenced to probation for each. As a condition of probation, the plaintiff was ordered to serve 110 days’ incarceration. When the plaintiff later violated probation, he was sentenced to 22 months’ incarceration followed by three years of post-prison supervision. In a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, the plaintiff argued that he was entitled to credit for the 110 days he had been incarcerated as a condition of his probation. The trial court dismissed the writ. While his appeal to this court was pending, the plaintiff was released from prison and placed on post-prison supervision. 161 Or App at 655. The plaintiff argued, however, that his case had not thereby been rendered moot because, by dint of the trial court’s failure to credit his initial period of incarceration, his overall sentence had improperly been lengthened by 110 days. We agreed with the plaintiff that his claim was not moot because a decision on the merits in his favor could have a practical effect on him. Id. at 656-57.
The case before us is distinguishable from Baty in at least one important respect. While the plaintiff in Baty was sentenced under the state’s determinate sentencing guidelines providing for a fixed period of post-prison supervision, plaintiff here was sentenced under the preguidelines system characterized by indeterminate sentences and parole. Under the determinate sentencing system, as we noted in Baty, “[t]he earlier the term of imprisonment ends, the earlier the term of post-supervision both begins and ends.” Id. at 656 (emphasis in original). But under the prior indeterminate sentencing structure, an earlier commencement of active [355]*355parole supervision does not ensure an earlier discharge from parole.
In particular, under the law in effect at the time of plaintiffs crimes, discharge from parole was within the discretion of the board if it was satisfied “that the prisoner’s final release is not incompatible with the prisoner’s welfare and that of society * * *.” Former ORS 144.310 (1985), repealed by Or Laws 1993, ch 680, § 7. The broad discretion conferred by the statute was reflected in the board’s rules in effect at the time of plaintiff’s crimes.1 Those rules charged the board with establishing both a conditional discharge date and a period of active supervised parole of either six or 12 months. Former OAR 255-90-002 (1985).2 In the board’s discretion, the initial period of active parole supervision could be extended up to 36 months. Former OAR 255-90-002(1) (1985). Moreover, the rules authorized the board, following a hearing, to deny discharge to the parolee, former OAR 255-90-010 (1985),3 and to do so repeatedly if warranted, subject to the offender’s maximum term of sentence. Former OAR [356]*356255-90-015 (1985).4 The applicable rules therefore vested the board with considerable discretion to determine “whether and when to modify” a parolee’s supervision status. Odle v. Thompson, 174 Or App 506, 511, 26 P3d 177 (2001).
We confronted a similar issue in Odie, where an offender also had petitioned for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that he was entitled to release on parole. The trial court had dismissed the writ, the plaintiff appealed and, as in the present case, while his appeal was pending, the plaintiff was released from prison to active supervision. The plaintiff in Odie urged this court not to dismiss his appeal as moot because, he argued, the board’s delay in releasing him on parole effectively delayed his transfer from active to inactive supervision. Id. at 508. We concluded that the plaintiffs argument was not well taken because, under ORS 144.085,5 [357]*357the board was vested with discretion to retain him on active supervision. We declined to speculate about whether the board would have sooner transferred the plaintiff to inactive supervision had he earlier been released from prison on active supervision, and we concluded that we could not say that ascertainable collateral consequences from the board’s earlier denial of parole persisted after the plaintiffs release from prison. Id. at 510-12. We therefore dismissed the plaintiffs appeal as moot.
Similarly, here, in light of the board’s discretion over the final decision, we cannot say with certainty that plaintiffs period of supervision would be over by now — that the board would have discharged him from parole — had the board granted plaintiffs request for parole in 1996. The mere possibility that the board might have earlier discharged plaintiff from parole does not prevent plaintiffs claim from becoming moot by reason of his release from prison. See also Barnes v. Thompson, 159 Or App 383, 387, 977 P2d 431 (1999) (“[W]e do not believe that the ‘mere possibility’ that the Board might have changed an inmate from active to inactive supervision status and thus relieved the inmate from several conditions of parole is the type of collateral consequence that would prevent a habeas corpus claim that a plaintiff is entitled to immediate release from prison from becoming moot when the plaintiff is released from prison.”).
Defendant superintendent also urges this court to dismiss plaintiff’s claim as not justiciable on a different ground, namely that by his release from prison plaintiff lost standing under ORS 34.310 to continue to prosecute his habeas corpus claim, irrespective of whether collateral consequences attached to the 1996 decision of the board to deny parole to plaintiff at that time.6 We reviewed and rejected a [358]*358similar argument on reconsideration in Baty. 164 Or App at 782. Although it is generally true that habeas corpus relief is available only to incarcerated offenders, we held there that a habeas plaintiffs appeal may not be moot where a decision on the merits will yet have a certain and practical effect on him. Id. Here, however, we cannot say that a decision in plaintiffs favor on the merits of his appeal would result in his discharge from parole. Accordingly, we conclude that plaintiffs release from incarceration rendered his appeal moot and, thus, not justiciable on that ground.
Appeal dismissed.