Miller v. West Virginia Division of Correction

8 Ct. Cl. 62
CourtWest Virginia Court of Claims
DecidedJanuary 15, 1970
DocketNo. D-149
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Ct. Cl. 62 (Miller v. West Virginia Division of Correction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. West Virginia Division of Correction, 8 Ct. Cl. 62 (W. Va. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

DUCKER, JUDGE:

The claimant, Sylvia Miller, Administratrix of the Estate of Helen Louise Miller, deceased, seeks damages in the original amount of $110,000.00, later amended to $10,000.00 limit of the amount allowed by law at the time of act complained of, against the West Virginia Division of Correction existing under the authority of the Commissioner of Public Institutions of the State of West Virginia, on account of the alleged murder of Helen Louise Miller, an infant nine years of age, on .the 27th day of December, 1967, by one Charles Gratton Plantz, a parolee from the West Virginia Penitentiary.

The more important facts disclosed from the evidence are as hereinafter enumerated. Charles G. Plantz, according to a report made to the West Virginia Board of Probation and Parole on December 26, 1963, was born on May 19, 1945 to Owen Plantz, age 45, and Betty Plantz, age 37, who were separated in 1945, and from 1955 Plantz was boarded out in private homes with little success in education. He was a ward of the Welfare Department from 1955-1960, placed in foster homes in the Charleston area, twice committed to Pruntytown, once to Forestry Camp, and Spencer State Hospital, and he escaped from all three institutions and was returned. From 1956 to March 1963, he was repeatedly guilty of breaking and entering and of larceny in one form or [63]*63another, which resulted in his conviction and confinement in the several institutions. From this record the subject was considered the product of a broken home and a deserting father, and due to his misfortunes he became a misplaced person. On March 2, 1963, Plantz was sentenced to serve one to ten years in the State penitentiary for breaking and entering, and he immediately began serving his term which, with credit for good behaviour, would have terminated in April, 1968. On January 25, 1967, Plantz was released on parole from the penitentiary. On April 24, 1967, Bob E. Willis, Probation and Parole Officer, made a Parole Violation Report on Plantz to John W. Mastín, Deputy Director of the Division of Corrections, in which he listed four violations by Plantz of his parole and suggested that Plantz’s parole be revoked, saying the “subject was not considered mentally ill but he doesn’t have the ability to live under the simplest form of regulations” and that subject “be returned to an ^outline’ institution as a trusty.” This report had at its bottom a notation, “No! See about Voc. Rehab. Program and await grand jury action. S”. This notation was made by Charles Robert Sarver, then Director of the Division of Corrections. The parole violations cited by Willis were (1) for associating with persons with criminal record or bad reputation, (2) drinking intoxicating beverages, beer, (3) driving a car without operator’s license, and (4) being arrested for auto larceny. The first three of these were considered by the state as technical violations 'and the fourth as a felony violation. For the fourth violation Plantz was arrested on April 11, 1967 and incarcerated in the Kanawha County jail. Two terms of grand jury action passed and on August 31, 1967, Parole Officer Willis reported to John W. Mastín, Deputy Director, that Plantz had not been indicted and that a motion of Plantz’s attorney for Plantz’s release had not been opposed by Prosecuting Attorney Spencer and that the Prosecuting Attorney did not have any objection to releasing Plantz from jail, and that he (Willis) considering the time Plantz had already spent in jail recommended that the Parole Board withdraw their “hold” on subject until he was indicted for the alleged offense, to which recommendation Director Sarver agreed, whereupon Plantz was released from jail.

[64]*64Sarver testified that the first three technical parole violations were not considered sufficient to revoke Plantz’s parole and that without a conviction of Plantz on the alleged felony violation, Plantz could not be considered guilty or subject to revocation on that alleged violation. So while free on his original parole Plantz committed the alleged murder of Helen Louise Miller, and this claim is based on the theory that the state has been negligent in not revoking Plantz’s parole and not returning him to the penitentiary or other custody which would have confined him and would not have allowed him to have been free and able to commit the alleged murder in question, and that legally such negligence was the cause of the death of Helen Louise Miller, to which claim the state responds by denying there was 'any negligence and that its action or inaction in not revoking Plantz parole was not in any legal sense the proximate or any cause of the alleged murder committed by Plantz. So the issues in this matter are, first, whether there was actionable negligence on the part of the state officers, and, secondly, whether if there was negligence it was the proximate cause of the tragedy.

Considerable evidence was introduced by the claimant showing the history of Plantz from the time he was eleven years old until he was sent to the penitentiary in 1963, most of which showed he was an incorrigible youth, the result of a broken home with no disciplined course of conduct or restraint, and after many arrests mostly for crimes involving theft in one form or another resulting eventually in his conviction and incarceration in the penitentiary in 1963 for a one to ten year term. In some reports it was stated he was accused of being a homosexual, but we find no positive proof of such allegations, and even if true violence can not be inferred from such a fact. In November, 1963, Bob E. Willis, Probation and Parole Officer, recommended to the Parole Board that Plantz serve eighteen months before being considered for parole. Plantz, who sometime after 1963 served time in the Medium Security Prison at Huttonsville, was returned to the penitentiary in Moundsville in May, 1966 as being totally undesirable for the Huttonsville institution. Two exhibits filed by the respondent show Plantz had excellent general conduct records in the penitentiary for the two months period covered by such [65]*65records. Plantz’s application for parole in January, 1967 was approved, Robert E. Kuhn, Chairman of the Parole Board having participated in the decision granting the parole. In view of the action of the Board in this matter, it seems reasonable to conclude that all the history of Plantz prior to his incarceration in 1963 has been to a large degree overcome by Plantz’s record being good enough to obtain his release on parole in January, 1967. Of course, it is argued that all the history of Plantz shows that he should not have been released on parole and that once released his parole should have been revoked. If there had beeen proof that Plantz had violent tendencies which in the foreseeable future could result in murderous conduct on the part of the parolee, then such argument would be more tenable, but we see nothing in the evidence in this case which would justify such a conclusion. The Parole Board exercised its discretion and judgment in granting the parole and we see no reason in this case to imply that there was any abuse in the exercise of that discretion.

The foregoing analysis brings us to the question of the parole not being revoked on the recommendation of parole officer Willis. As has been stated, the report of Willis specified four parole violations by Plantz, three so-called technical and one felony. There seems to be no contradiction in the evidence that the felony violation was the only one in which parole revocation was always considered mandatory under the Parole Board’s regulations or procedure.

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Related

Griffith v. Wood
149 S.E.2d 205 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1966)
McCoy v. Cohen
140 S.E.2d 427 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 Ct. Cl. 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-west-virginia-division-of-correction-wvctcl-1970.