IN RE: APPLICATION OF FINLEY

2019 NV 63
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 2019
Docket76715-COA
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 NV 63 (IN RE: APPLICATION OF FINLEY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
IN RE: APPLICATION OF FINLEY, 2019 NV 63 (Neb. 2019).

Opinion

135 Nev., Advance Opinion 6.5 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEVADA

IN THE MATTER OF THE No. 76715-COA APPLICATION OF EDWARD TARROBAGO FINLEY, FOR AN ORDER TO SEAL RECORDS. FILED EDWARD TARROBAGO FINLEY, DEC 2 6 2019 Appellant, vs. CITY OF HENDERSON; AND THE STATE OF NEVADA, Respondents.

Appeal from a district court order denying a petition to seal criminal records. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark County; Susan Johnson, Judge. Reversed and remanded.

The Wright Law Group and John Henry Wright and Christopher B. Phillips, Las Vegas, for Appellant.

Steven B. Wolfson, District Attorney, and John T. Niman, Deputy District Attorney, Clark County, for Respondent State of Nevada.

Nicholas Vaskov, City Attorney, and Marc M. Schifalacqua, Senior Assistant City Attorney, Henderson, for Respondent City of Henderson.

COURT OF APPEALS OF NEVADA

tO) 1.947B BEFORE GIBBONS, C.J., TAO and BULLA, JJ.

OPINION' By the Court, TAO, J.: As an act of grace, the Nevada Legislature has decided that persons convicted of certain types of crimes (both misdemeanors and many felonies) may, in certain circumstances and if they have not committed any new crimes for a certain length of time, ask the judiciary to have their convictions "sealed," which means that the convictions are "deemed never to have occurred," thereby restoring a panoply of civil rights that convicted felons otherwise do not enjoy. See NRS 179.285. Not all convictions are eligible to be sealed—for example, sex offenses and crimes against children are never eligible to be sealed no matter how old the convictions. See NRS 179.245(6). But for many other offenses, if the person has proven able to successfully turn their life around and live crime-free long enough, the Legislature has enacted a series of statutes designed to give courts the power to seal convictions for those deemed "rehabilitate& and who deserve "second chances." See NRS 179.2405 (declaring the public policy behind sealing statutes). Iterations of these criminal record sealing statutes have been around a long time, but in recent years the Legislature has changed the procedures that must be followed to obtain such sealing. Previously, petitioners had to file a separate petition in each court in which they were

3-We originally resolved this appeal in an unpublished order of reversal and remand. Appellant subsequently filed a motion to publish the order as an opinion. We grant the motion and replace our earlier order with this opinion. See NRAP 36(0. COURT OF APPEALS OF NEVADA 2 (0) 1947B convicted of any crime, and that court could seal only the convictions that it issued. If the person was convicted of different crimes in different levels of the judiciary (e.g., municipal court, justice court, or district court), then they had to file separate petitions in each court to address the convictions issued by that court. But recently the Legislature decided to permit a convicted person to file a single consolidated petition in a single district court asking to seal convictions involving multiple cases from different courts. The question raised by this appeal is this: on the one hand, criminal convictions are eligible to be sealed only if the person was not convicted of any subsequent crimes for a certain prescribed period of time thereafter (ranging from one year to ten years after the expiration of the prior sentence), see NRS 179.245 (1), (5); and on the other hand, once sealed, a conviction is "deemed never to have occurred," see NRS 179.285. Normally, an earlier conviction followed very quickly by another conviction renders the first conviction ineligible for sealing. But suppose enough time elapses so that the latest conviction is eligible to be sealed. Once that later conviction is sealed and "deemed neyer to have occurred," does that then make an earlier conviction eligible to also be sealed (since it is no longer chronologically followed by another later conviction), even though it would not have been eligible prior to sealing the later conviction? And can entire chains of otherwise ineligible successive convictions now all be sealed by unwinding the convictions one after 'another in reverse chronological order all the way back in time to the person's first conviction? The plain words of the statutes provide our answer: as enacted, the statutes vest district cotirts with considerable discretion in handling petitions involving multiple convictiCons. If they wish, district courts may evaluate successive convictions in reverse chronological order, thereby

COURT OF APPEALS Of NEVADA potentially sealing earlier convictions that would not have been eligible had the court instead considered the convictions in forward chronological order (i.e., by deeming the later convictions to have never occurred). On the other hand, the statutes do not require that district courts handle a train of multiple successive convictions this way. Quite to the contrary, NRS 179.295 "does not prohibit" courts from considering previously sealed convictions when determining whether to grant a petition to seal other criminal records. In other words, even if a later conviction has been sealed, the district court may still consider it in deciding whether earlier convictions should be sealed or not, and may rely upon the later sealed conviction to conclude that the petitioner was not truly rehabilitated and refuse to seal the earlier conviction. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY Edward Tarrobago Finley filed a consolidated petition in district court to seal records associated with multiple different criminal convictions in multiple different courts throughout Clark County. The State of Nevada (through the Clark County District Attorney) and the City of Henderson (the City) opposed Finley's petition on various grounds, only one of which matters to this appeal. The City argued that one of Finley's convictions, a 2004 non-felony battery domestic violence conviction, was ineligible to be sealed because Finley was convicted of new felony offenses within the seven-year time period specified in NRS 179.245(1)(e) for him to remain crime-free in order to have the 2004 non-felony conviction sealed. Following a brief hearing, the district court issued a written order denying Finley's petition. The district court concluded that, because Finley was convicted of new crimes within the seven-year waiting period required to invoke the district court's discretion to seal a non-felony battery domestic violence conviction, the 2004 conviction was ineligible for sealing. COURT OF APPEALS OF NEVADA 4 (0) 1947B The district court further concluded that Finley had not satisfied the requisite waiting periods for the new offenses and therefore also failed to invoke the court's discretion to seal those convictions. Finley now appeals. ANALYSIS On appeal, Finley primarily argues that the district court's interpretation of the governing statutes2 produced an absurd result and rendered a particular statute (NRS 179.2595) meaningless.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 NV 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-application-of-finley-nev-2019.