Raggio v. Campbell

395 P.2d 625, 80 Nev. 418, 1964 Nev. LEXIS 185
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1964
Docket4777
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 395 P.2d 625 (Raggio v. Campbell) 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
Raggio v. Campbell, 395 P.2d 625, 80 Nev. 418, 1964 Nev. LEXIS 185 (Neb. 1964).

Opinion

*420 OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, C. J.:

This is an original proceeding seeking a writ of prohibition, commenced by the district attorney of Washoe County against the Board of Parole Commissioners and the warden of the state prison. Petitioner asserts that the board granted parole to three persons convicted of second degree murder who had been sentenced to a term of ten years “which may extend to life.” NRS 200.030 (4). The parole was granted so as to be effective after the prisoners had served three years, six months, and seventeen days.

Petitioner contends that the provisions of NRS 176.190 control, and deprive the board of any power to parole the three prisoners until they have served the minimum term of ten years, less good behavior time. The section reads as follows:

“The state board of parole commissioners may, at any time after the expiration of the minimum term of imprisonment for which any prisoner was committed thereto, direct that any prisoner confined in the state prison shall be released on parole upon such terms and conditions as in their judgment they may prescribe in each case.”

Respondents support the order releasing the prisoners on parole by reason of the provisions of subsection 1 of NRS 213.110, reading as follows:

“1. The board shall have power to establish rules and regulations under which any prisoner who is now or hereafter may be imprisoned in the state prison and who shall have served 1 calendar year, less good time credits, of the term for which he was sentenced and who has not previously been more than three times convicted of a felony and served a term in a penal institution, or who is imprisoned in a county jail, may *421 be allowed to go upon parole outside of the buildings or inclosures, but to remain, while on parole, in the legal custody and under the control of the board and subject at any time to be taken within the inclosure of the state prison or county jail.”

The board, apparently pursuant to the authority of this section, adopted rule No. 8, which originally read as follows: “No one may apply for parole in the State Prison who shall not have served eight (8) months including statutory and work credits.” This was thereafter amended, and at the time in question read as follows: “No one may apply for parole in the State Prison who shall not have served six (6) full months.”

It may be observed that rule 8 adopted by the board adopts a rule which, negatively expressed, restricts eligibility for parole to a prisoner who shall not have served six full months. Even construing this as an affirmative fixing of eligibility for parole to any prisoner who has served a full six months, such authority was not given the board by § 213.110, which restricted the promulgation of a rule as applicable only as applied to a prisoner “who shall have served one calendar year, less good time credits.”

Several procedural questions must first be disposed of.

1. Respondents assert that the district attorney of Washoe County is not a “person beneficially interested” and is therefore not authorized to seek a writ of prohibition. We are satisfied, however, that the district attorney of the county is the person peculiarly beneficially interested so as to enable him to seek the writ. He is the public prosecutor. He prosecuted the defendants in the district court as attorney for the State of Nevada. As such attorney he would defend against an appeal from a judgment of conviction. The ultimate result of a conviction is the execution of the penalty— in this case imprisonment for a minimum term of ten years, which might extend to life. If the Board of *422 Parole Commissioners attempted to release the prisoners on parole and if the warden was about to carry out their order and if this was in violation of the statute, who but the district attorney, as representing the state, would be the person beneficially interested to arrest the threatened release? In State ex rel. Colvin v. Superior Court, 159 Wash. 335, 293 P. 986, 73 A.L.R. 555, the prosecuting attorney was deemed to be a person beneficially interested where he sought to prevent the discharge of the defendant confined as a criminally insane person. We think the same reasoning applies to the instant case.

This conclusion is re-enforced by rule 19 adopted by the board.

“On behalf of an applicant [for parole] who has been convicted of felony, evidence of facts relating to the commission of the crime other than that contained in the record may be presented only by witnesses, who know the circumstances, appearing and testifying under oath, or by depositions or affidavits, copies of which shall have been served upon the District Attorney and District Judge of the County in which the indictment was found, at least (30) days before the hearing, unless for good cause shown this time be shortened by the Board.” (Emphasis supplied.)

This rule clearly recognizes the right of the district attorney to appear when an applicant desires to present further evidence, before the board, relating to> the commission of the crime other than that contained in the record.

Rule 14 requires all oral testimony to- be presented under oath, and rule 17 allows a total of 10 minutes to “attorneys in the presentation of each case.” Such allowance of time to “attorneys” is not restricted to attorneys for the applicant, but may include the attorney for the state. The district attorney, who prosecuted the case in the trial court, would most assuredly be expected to appear on behalf of the state to cross-examine the witnesses for the parole applicant before the board.

The opposition to the writ on the ground that the *423 district attorney is not authorized to seek it is without merit.

2. It is next contended that the state Board of Parole Commissioners does not exercise judicial or quasi-judicial power and that its action accordingly may not be arrested by a writ of prohibition. NRS 34.320 expressly makes the writ available not only as against judicial tribunals but also to “any tribunal, corporation, board or person exercising judicial functions, when such proceedings are without or in excess of the jurisdiction of such tribunal, corporation, board or person.”

This court in Van Heukelom v. Nevada State Board of Chiropractic Examiners, 67 Nev. 649, 224 P.2d 313, a proceeding in which the same point was raised, held that the action proposed to be taken by the State Board of Chiropractic Examiners, in revoking a license, was clearly a judicial function. It distinguished the action, in view of its finality, from one which would be advisory in nature.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
395 P.2d 625, 80 Nev. 418, 1964 Nev. LEXIS 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raggio-v-campbell-nev-1964.