Shannon Breeden and Laura Hochmuth v. Iowa Department of Corrections

887 N.W.2d 602, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 106
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 18, 2016
Docket15–1459
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 887 N.W.2d 602 (Shannon Breeden and Laura Hochmuth v. Iowa Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shannon Breeden and Laura Hochmuth v. Iowa Department of Corrections, 887 N.W.2d 602, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 106 (iowa 2016).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Justice.

This appeal and two others decided today 1 present the question of how to calculate earned-time (good behavior) credit after an incarcerated juvenile felon serving a prison sentence with a mandatory minimum term -is resentenced without the mandatory minimum. According to the counsel for the State, the answer to this question affects the release dates of up to 150 inmates. Sentences subject to a mandatory minimum under Iowa Code section 902.12 (2015) accrue earned-time credit at a slower rate under section 903A.2(1). The offenders and the Iowa Department of Corrections (IDOC) disagree on how to interpret the operative statutory language after State v. Lyle, which held that mandatory minimum-sentences automatically imposed on defendants for crimes committed as juveniles constituted cruel and unusual *604 punishment under the Iowa Constitution. 854 N.W.2d 378, 400 (Iowa 2014). Numerous offenders were resentenced after Lyle to new prison terms without mandatory mínimums. 2 We must decide whether these resentencings trigger the faster accrual rate for earned-time credits.

The district court ruled that earned time continued to accrue at the slower rate for Shannon Breeden and Laura Hochmuth based on their convictions for forcible felonies listed in Iowa Code section 902.12. The legislature provided that such crimes were subject to automatic mandatory minimum terms, and under Iowa Code section 903A.2(1)(6), inmates serving sentences for such crimes accrue earned-time credit at the slower rate. The court of appeals reversed based on the plain language of section 903A.2(1), which provides earned-time credit accrues at the faster rate for sentences lacking a mandatory minimum term. For the reasons explained below, we hold that upon resentencing without the mandatory minimum, the IDOC must apply the faster rate for earned-time credit. Accordingly, we affirm the decision of the court of appeals, reverse the district court’s ruling, and remand this case for entry of an order directing the IDOC to recalculate the offenders’ release dates, applying the faster rate.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings..

The parties stipulated to the following facts. Breeden and Hochmuth were incarcerated under the custody of the IDOC. 3 Breeden was convicted of attempted murder and sentenced to an indeterminate term of twenty-five years. 4 She was age sixteen at the time of her offense. She began serving her prison sentence on March 3, 2003. Hochmuth was convicted of second-degree kidnapping, first-degree robbery, and second-degree robbery and sentenced to an indeterminate term of fifty years. She was age sixteen when she committed her offenses. Hochmuth began serving her prison sentence on September 23,1997.

Both Breeden and Hochmuth were convicted of felonies listed in Iowa Code section 902.12. 5 Both offenders were subject *605 to the mandatory minimum requirement to serve at least seven-tenths of their sentences before becoming eligible for parole or work release. The IDOC calculated earned time for Breeden and Hochmuth under section 908A.2, which states in part,

For purposes of calculating the amount of time by which an inmate’s sentence may be reduced, inmates shall be grouped into the following two sentencing categories:
a. Category “A” sentences are those sentences which are not subject to a maximum accumulation of earned time of fifteen percent of the total sentence of confinement under section 902.12.... An inmate of an institution under the control of the department of corrections who is serving a category “A” sentence is eligible for a reduction of sentence equal to one and two-tenths day for each day the inmate demonstrates good conduct and satisfactorily participates in any program or placement status identified by the director to earn the reduction ....
[[Image here]]
b. Category “B” sentences are those sentences which are subject to a maximum accumulation of earned time of fifteen percent of the total sentence of confinement under section 902.12. An inmate of an institution under the control of the department of corrections who is serving a category “B” sentence is eligible for a reduction of sentence equal to fifteen eighty-fifths of a day for each day of good conduct by the inmate.

Because Breeden and Hochmuth had committed offenses listed in section 902.12, the IDOC classified their sentences as category “B” and calculated their earned time at a rate of fifteen eighty-fifths per day for each day of good conduct. This classification resulted in a tentative discharge date of November 28, 2023, for Breeden and July 26, 2040, for Hochmuth.

On July 18,2014, we decided Lyle, which required resentencing of all offenders serving prison sentences with automatically imposed mandatory minimum terms for crimes committed as juveniles. 854 N.W.2d at 400. The district court vacated the original sentences and resentenced Breeden and Hochmuth. Each was resen-tenced to the same indeterminate term of years, but without a mandatory minimum and with immediate eligibility for parole. Their sentencing orders did not address how to calculate or recalculate their earned-time credits. The IDOC continued to classify Breeden’s and Hochmuth’s sentences as category “B,” such that their tentative discharge dates remained the same.

On November 12,, 2014, Breeden and Hochmuth filed a consolidated petition for declaratory relief with the IDOC, arguing it erroneously and illegally calculated their earned time in violation of Lyle, the Iowa Constitution, and Iowa Code sections 903A.2 and 902.12. Specifically, the petitioners claimed because they were no longer subject to the mandatory minimum under 902.12, the accrual of earned time for each of their sentences should have been calculated under category “A” at the faster rate of 1.2 days for each day of good conduct, rather than category “B” at the *606 slower rate of fifteen eighty-fifths. On December 3, John Baldwin, then director of the IDOC, denied their petition, concluding that “the method of sentence calculation used by the IDOC is mandated by law and that the IDOC has followed such requirements.” He stated,

While both offenders have had the minimum sentence provision eliminated, both offenders were still sentenced to an'offense identified under Section 902,12. As an offender convicted of a Section 902.12 sentence, their., earned time accumulation is calculated as a category “B” sentence—which accumulates earned time credit at a rate of 15/85 days of credit for ¿very day served.

Baldwin further noted that under Iowa Code section 903A.5(1), the IDOC could only apply earned-time credit that was “authorized,” and “there [was] no statutory authorization for the IDOC to apply a different rate” than fifteen eighty-fifths per day for a category “B” sentence.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
887 N.W.2d 602, 2016 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shannon-breeden-and-laura-hochmuth-v-iowa-department-of-corrections-iowa-2016.