Hill v. State

22 P.3d 24, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 86, 2001 WL 428953
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 27, 2001
DocketA-7522
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 22 P.3d 24 (Hill v. State) 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
Hill v. State, 22 P.3d 24, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 86, 2001 WL 428953 (Ala. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

In 1993, Raymond E. Hill was convicted of robbery and sentenced to serve 7 years in prison. In early 1998, Hill's actual time in prison, combined with the "good time" credit that had been awarded to him under AS 33.20.010, totaled 7 years. Hill was therefore released on mandatory parole. See AS 33.20.030-.040(a).

The Parole Board established various conditions to govern Hill's parole, but Hill refused to sign these conditions because he believed that mandatory parole was illegal. (He nevertheless was released on mandatory parole.) A few weeks later, Hill launched the first in a series of court cases in which he contended that a prisoner who is released because of good time credit is entitled to an *26 unconditional discharge. Hill presents that same argument in this appeal.

Hill raises several constitutional and statutory challenges to mandatory parole. For the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that mandatory parole is lawful, that the Parole Board has the authority to set conditions governing the conduct of prisoners released to mandatory parole, and that a parolee who violates those conditions can lawfully be sent back to prison to serve the remainder of their sentence-i.e., the number of days that the parolee was excused from serving earlier because of good time credit.

Hill's contention that, under the Alaska statutes, good time credit constitutes a complete forgiveness of a portion of a prisoner's sentence

Under AS 88.20.010, all prisoners are entitled to a good time credit equal to one-third of their sentence if they abide by the rules of their correctional facility. This credit can be forfeited (in whole or part) for misbehavior 1 , and forfeited credit can be restored for renewed good behavior 2 . Under AS 38.20.0830, when a prisoner's actual time in prison, combined with their good time credit, equals the number of days that the prisoner was sentenced to serve, the prisoner shall be released.

However, AS 38.20.040(a) declares that many of the prisoners who are released from prison because of good time credit will remain under the supervision of the Parole Board. Under this statute, prisoners whose composite sentence is 2 years or less are unconditionally discharged. By contrast, prisoners whose composite sentence exceeds 2 years are "released on mandatory parole to the custody and jurisdiction of the parole board under AS 33.16, until the expiration of the maximum term to which the prisoner was sentenced". Thus, for prisoners sentenced to serve more than 2 years, good time credit does not constitute a complete forgiveness of jail time. Rather, good time eredit converts time that would otherwise be spent in prison to time that will be spent on parole.

Hill argues that the rule established in AS 33.20.040(a) contradicts what is said in AS 33.20.010 and AS 33.20.0830.

Hill notes that AS 83.20.010 declares that prisoners are "entitled to a deduction of one-third of [their] term of imprisonment" for good behavior. Hill argues that, onee good time credit is deducted from a sentence, those days can not be added back to the sentence. He notes that AS 38.20.0830 speaks of a prisoner's "release" because of accumulated good time credit, and he further notes that the title of this section is "Discharge". From these provisions, Hill concludes that the "release" granted by section 080 is a complete discharge from state supervision-an unconditional release.

Hill contends that AS 833.20.040 contradicts these two sections because it allows a prisoner's good time credit days to be added back to the sentence. As explained above, AS 38.20.040 states that prisoners whose composite sentence exceeds 2 years are not released unconditionally; rather, they are released on mandatory parole. If a prisoner released on mandatory parole is later found to have violated the conditions of their parole, the prisoner can be sent back to prison to serve some or all of the days that were previously deducted on account of good time credit. 3 Hill argues that this result is "hopelessly in conflict" with AS 38.20.010 and 33.20.030.

Conceivably, these two sections might be interpreted in the way Hill suggests if they were simply read by themselves. But when the legislature has enacted several statutes that all deal with one related subject matter, this court is obliged to read all of the *27 statutes together and construe them in harmony with each other, if possible. 4

In this case, it is possible to construe the statutes harmoniously. For prisoners who receive a composite term of 2 years or less, good time credit constitutes a true reduction of their sentence. When the combination of their actual time served and their good time credit equals their sentence, they are released unconditionally. But for prisoners who receive a composite term exceeding 2 years, good time credit operates to convert days in jail to days on parole. Good time credit still speeds their release from prison, but these prisoners are released to mandatory parole under the supervision of the Parole Board. The prisoner's good time credit becomes a sort of suspended sentence that can be re-imposed in whole or in part by the Parole Board if the parolee violates the conditions of their release.

Hill's contention that the Parole Board has mo authority to revoke a parolee's good time credit and require the parolee to serve those days in prison

- Hill also argues that even if mandatory parole is lawful, the Parole Board has no authority to take away a prisoner's good time credit onee this credit has "vested"-that is, once the Department of Corrections has officially recognized the prisoner's good time credit by releasing the prisoner. Hill notes that when a prisoner is released because of good time credit, AS 88.20.080 requires the warden or superintendent of the prison to affix or append a "certificate of deduction" to the prisoner's commitment. (The "commitment" is the document that authorizes the Department of Corrections to hold the prisoner. See AS 38.80.051.)

Hill contends that onee a prisoner's total good time credit is memorialized in this "certificate of deduction", the Parole Board can not revoke or reduce it. Hill acknowledges that AS 38.20.050 authorizes the forfeiture of a prisoner's good time, but only for an offense committed "during the [prisoner's] term of imprisonment". Thus, Hill concludes, the Parole Board has no authority to revoke a prisoner's good time credit once the prisoner is released.

Again, we have a legal duty to read all of the related statutes together and see if they can reasonably be construed in harmony with each other. The whole concept of mandatory parole makes no sense unless the parolee faces a penalty-return to prison-for violating the conditions of parole. Just as a sentence of probation requires that some portion of the defendant's imprisonment or fine be suspended 5 , so parole requires the conditional forgiveness of jail time and the possibility that this jail time might be re-imposed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 P.3d 24, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 86, 2001 WL 428953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-state-alaskactapp-2001.