Reginald D. Hughes v. Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 31, 2020
DocketM2019-00487-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Reginald D. Hughes v. Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole (Reginald D. Hughes v. Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reginald D. Hughes v. Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

03/31/2020 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs December 2, 2019

REGINALD D. HUGHES v. TENNESSEE BOARD OF PROBATION AND PAROLE ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 18-1056-III Ellen H. Lyle, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. M2019-00487-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

A state inmate filed a petition for a common law writ of certiorari seeking judicial review of the prison disciplinary board’s decision to deny parole. The board filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The trial court granted the board’s motion to dismiss because the petition was not filed within the sixty-day period prescribed by Tenn. Code Ann. § 27-9-102 (2017). We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ANDY D. BENNETT and CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, JJ., joined.

Reginald D. Hughes, Henning, Tennessee, appellant, pro se.

Herbert H. Slatery, III, Attorney General and Reporter, Andrée Sophia Blumstein, Solicitor General, and Pamela S. Lorch, Senior Assistant Attorney General, for the appellee, Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole.

OPINION

I.

In 1987, Reginald Hughes was convicted of two counts of second-degree murder. He received a thirty-year sentence on each count, to be served consecutively, for a total effective sentence of sixty years. Mr. Hughes is currently serving his sentence in the West Tennessee State Penitentiary in Henning, Tennessee.

In 2011, Mr. Hughes became eligible for parole. On August 18, 2011, the Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole (the Board) denied Mr. Hughes parole. Mr. Hughes filed an administrative appeal. On December 7, 2011, the Board denied Mr. Hughes’s appeal.

On January 25, 2012, Mr. Hughes submitted his first petition for a common law writ of certiorari seeking review of the Board’s denial of parole.1 The trial court dismissed the petition because Mr. Hughes had unpaid court costs from two prior lawsuits. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 41-21-812(a). The Court of Appeals affirmed. The Supreme Court granted Mr. Hughes’s application for permission to appeal in order to consider whether Tenn. Code Ann. § 41-21-812(a) was unconstitutional as applied in that case. Ultimately, the Court determined that the statute was constitutional as applied and therefore affirmed the dismissal of the petition. Hughes v. Tenn. Bd. of Prob. and Parole, 514 S.W.3d 707, 724 (Tenn. 2017).

On May 30, 2017, Mr. Hughes attempted to file a second petition for a common law writ of certiorari seeking review of the same August 18, 2011 parole hearing. However, the court clerk did not accept the petition for filing because Mr. Hughes still had unpaid court costs. Mr. Hughes eventually paid those outstanding court costs on August 31, 2018.

On September 23, 2018, Mr. Hughes submitted a third petition for a common law writ of certiorari seeking review of “the procedure(s) and decision(s) of [the Board] related to [the] August 18, 2011 parole hearing.”2 In his petition, Mr. Hughes argued: (1) that the Board “improperly stacked” Mr. Hughes’s two thirty-year sentences for purposes of parole consideration; (2) that the Board “unconstitutionally denied [Mr. Hughes] his ‘day in court’ for reconsideration [of] custodial parole”; and (3) that Mr. Hughes’s release eligibility date “was fraudulent[ly] kept hidden[.]”

The Board filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, arguing: (1) that the petition was untimely filed and (2) that “the petition for writ of certiorari is not the proper vehicle” to challenge an inmate’s sentence calculation. Mr. Hughes filed a “response” to the Board’s motion to dismiss. He argued, among other things, that the sixty-day statute of limitations “re-start[ed]” when prior court costs were “paid in full.” Mr. Hughes also attached an “affidavit of due diligence” and

1 The petition was stamped “filed” on January 31, 2012. But see Tenn. R. Civ. P. 5.06 (providing that papers “prepared by or on behalf of a pro se litigant incarcerated in a correctional facility” are deemed filed when “delivered to the appropriate individual at the correctional facility within the time fixed for filing.”). 2 The petition was stamped “filed” on October 1, 2018. But see Tenn. R. Civ. P. 5.06 (providing that papers “prepared by or on behalf of a pro se litigant incarcerated in a correctional facility” are deemed filed when “delivered to the appropriate individual at the correctional facility within the time fixed for filing.”). -2- documentation showing that he completed payment of prior court costs on August 31, 2018. The Board filed a “reply” to Mr. Hughes’s “response.” The Board argued that the sixty-day statute of limitations is not tolled during the time an inmate takes to pay his outstanding court costs. Moreover, according to the Board, Mr. Hughes’s petition would still be untimely filed even if the statute-of-limitations period had been tolled.

On February 15, 2019, the trial court entered an order granting the Board’s motion to dismiss. Relying on this Court’s decision in Meeks v. Tenn. Bd. of Prob. and Parole., No. M2007-00584-COA-R3-CV, 2008 WL 802458 (Tenn. Ct. App., filed Mar. 24, 2008), perm. app. denied (Tenn. Oct. 27, 2008), the trial court ruled, in relevant part:

[T]he 60 days begins to run on the date the inmate receives the Board’s final parole decision, and there is no tolling of the 60 days for outstanding court costs to be paid and the petition resubmitted. . . .

Thus, the Petitioner’s time to appeal the December 7, 2011 denial of parole was and remains . . . February 5, 2012. Therefore the filing in this case of a petition for writ of certiorari on October 1, 2018 is time-barred by over six years. The consequence is that this case must be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction for failure to file within the required 60 days.

The court ruled that dismissal was not appropriate under the second ground asserted by the Board in its motion to dismiss. According to the court, Mr. Hughes’s petition was not challenging a sentence calculation; instead, the petition “explicitly states that it challenges the Parole Board’s construction and application of the sentence in determining parole eligibility.” Accordingly, the court emphasized that “[d]ismissal of this case is based solely upon lack of jurisdiction for failure to file the petition for writ of certiorari within 60 days of the December 7, 2011 final decision of the Board denying parole.” Mr. Hughes timely appealed.

II.

Mr. Hughes raises a host of issues which, in effect, challenge the trial court’s dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction due to the untimeliness of his petition for a writ of common law certiorari. To the extent Mr. Hughes attempts to raise other issues, those issues are not properly before us. The Board raises one additional issue: whether dismissal was appropriate on the alternative ground that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because Mr. Hughes’s petition sought a revision to his sentence calculation.

-3- III.

The trial court dismissed Mr. Hughes’s petition for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. See Tenn. R. Civ. P. 12.02(1).

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Bluebook (online)
Reginald D. Hughes v. Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reginald-d-hughes-v-tennessee-board-of-probation-and-parole-tennctapp-2020.