Kragt v. Board of Parole

529 P.3d 1019, 325 Or. App. 688
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMay 3, 2023
DocketA163421
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 529 P.3d 1019 (Kragt v. Board of Parole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kragt v. Board of Parole, 529 P.3d 1019, 325 Or. App. 688 (Or. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Argued and submitted March 17, affirmed May 3, on petitioners petition for reconsideration filed May 16, on respondent’s response to petition for reconsider- ation filed May 23, reconsideration allowed by opinion July 12, 2023 See 327 Or App 25, 533 P3d 392 (2023)

RANDALL J. KRAGT, Petitioner, v. BOARD OF PAROLE AND POST-PRISON SUPERVISION, Respondent. Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision A163421 529 P3d 1019

Petitioner seeks review of a final order of the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision. He challenges the board’s calculation of the end dates of his PPS terms for three different convictions. Due to another pending matter, this review proceeding was held in abeyance for most of five years. Upon reactivation, peti- tioner moved to file an amended opening brief, which was denied, but the parties were allowed to file supplemental briefs. In his supplemental brief, petitioner raised a new constitutional argument that he had not made to the board or in his opening brief. Held: The Court of Appeals rejected the arguments in petitioner’s opening brief as not well taken. As for the new constitutional issue raised in the supplemental brief, the Court of Appeals declined to consider that issue, because it was not raised in the opening brief, and petitioner had not been granted per- mission to raise a distinct new issue in the supplemental brief that could have been raised in the opening brief. Affirmed.

Kyle Krohn, Deputy Public Defender, argued the cause for petitioner. Also on the briefs was Ernest G. Lannet, Chief Defender, Criminal Appellate Section, Office of Public Defense Services. Jonathan N. Schildt, Assistant Attorney General, argued the cause for respondent. Also on the briefs were Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, and Benjamin Gutman, Solicitor General. Before Aoyagi, Presiding Judge, and Joyce, Judge, and Jacquot, Judge. AOYAGI, P. J. Affirmed. Cite as 325 Or App 688 (2023) 689

AOYAGI, P. J. This case requires us to consider the proper uses of a “supplemental brief” in this court. Whereas our court rules and case law are clear about the requirements for opening briefs and the limitations on reply briefs, we have said rel- atively little about supplemental briefs, beyond mentioning them in a few court rules and occasionally acknowledging in an opinion that supplemental briefs were filed. Here, as described below, we conclude that petitioner exceeded the permissible scope of the supplemental brief that he was given leave to file, when he raised a new constitutional chal- lenge to the order on review. We therefore decline to address that new argument, and we reject petitioner’s other argu- ments. Accordingly, we affirm. The relevant facts are entirely procedural. Peti- tioner was convicted of three counts of sodomy in 1999. On Count 1, he was sentenced to 60 months’ imprisonment, plus post-prison supervision (PPS) for a term of 20 years less time served. On Count 3, he was sentenced to 100 months’ imprisonment, concurrent with Count 1, plus a PPS term of 20 years less time served. On Count 5, he was sentenced to 100 months’ imprisonment, consecutive to Count 3, plus a PPS term of 20 years less time served. Petitioner was released from prison in 2016. He seeks judicial review of a final order of the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision that established the end dates for his PPS terms as April 22, 2031 (Count 1) and December 21, 2027 (Counts 3 and 5). The board issued the challenged order in 2016, and petitioner timely sought review, but this case was held in abeyance for most of five years while a direct criminal appeal was litigated, and it has only recently been reactivated. In his opening brief, which was filed back in 2018, petitioner challenges the board’s order, making three argu- ments as to how the board erred in calculating his PPS end dates. Each of those arguments has become nonviable, for one reason or another, with the passage of time. The first argument is based on the language of the sentencing judgment and is no longer viable because, after petitioner filed his opening brief, the trial court entered an amended 690 Kragt v. Board of Parole

sentencing judgment that changed the relevant language. The second argument is that petitioner should have been sentenced to a single PPS term, rather than three separate PPS terms. That issue was decided against petitioner in State v. Kragt, 304 Or App 537, 467 P3d 830 (2020) (Kragt II), aff’d, 368 Or 577, 495 P3d 1233 (2021) (Kragt III), which was petitioner’s direct appeal of the aforementioned amended judgment.1 The third argument, made alternatively to the second argument, is that we should overrule precedent and hold that a person begins to serve the PPS term on an indi- vidual count immediately upon completing the prison term for that count, even if the person is still in prison on another count. We rejected that argument in Kragt II. After the Supreme Court issued its decision in Kragt III, this case was reactivated. As part of his motion to reactivate the case, petitioner requested to file an amended opening brief so that he could omit the arguments that were no longer viable and revise the remaining arguments in light of Kragt II and Kragt III. The board agreed that reacti- vation was appropriate, but it opposed allowing an amended opening brief, instead asking us to allow supplemental briefs “to address the appellate decisions resolving petition- er’s direct criminal appeal and the trial court’s issuance of a fifth amended judgment.” The board explained that its “principal concern with petitioner’s request to withdraw the existing briefing is that he will raise new, distinct assign- ments of error.” The board argued that this case was “held in abeyance because resolution of the direct criminal appeal could affect this court’s analysis of petitioner’s existing chal- lenge to the board’s order, not so that petitioner could raise an entirely new challenge to that order once the criminal appeal was resolved.” (Emphasis in original.) We denied petitioner’s request to file an amended opening brief. However, we allowed petitioner 21 days to file a supplemental brief, up to 12 pages in length, if he wished, and we allowed the board 21 days to file a supplemental

1 Except for a few months in 2018 (during which the opening brief was filed), this case was held in abeyance from May 2017 until May 2022, while petitioner’s appeal of the amended sentencing judgment was litigated. That litigation con- cluded with the Supreme Court’s decision in Kragt III. Cite as 325 Or App 688 (2023) 691

brief in response, up to 12 pages in length, if it wished. Our order did not expressly address the permissible scope of the supplemental briefing that was being allowed. Petitioner filed a supplemental brief. He acknowl- edges that the arguments that he made in his opening brief are no longer viable, given what has occurred since that brief was filed in 2018.2 Most of petitioner’s supplemental brief is dedicated to a new argument that “ORS 144.103(1) vio- lates Article I, section 16, [of the Oregon Constitution] when applied to a person convicted of multiple offenses because it arbitrarily extends the PPS term and more harshly pun- ishes less serious offenses.” The thrust of petitioner’s new argument is that it is unconstitutional to require him to serve his longest PPS term on the conviction for which he received the shortest prison sentence, for reasons analogous to vertical disproportionality. Petitioner admits that he did not make that argument to the board or in his opening brief on judicial review.

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Related

Kragt v. Board of Parole
563 P.3d 359 (Oregon Supreme Court, 2025)
Kragt v. Board of Parole
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Bluebook (online)
529 P.3d 1019, 325 Or. App. 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kragt-v-board-of-parole-orctapp-2023.