State, Department of Corrections v. Anthoney

229 P.3d 164, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 41, 2010 WL 1529393
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 2010
DocketS-13396
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 229 P.3d 164 (State, Department of Corrections v. Anthoney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State, Department of Corrections v. Anthoney, 229 P.3d 164, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 41, 2010 WL 1529393 (Ala. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Kirby Anthoney, an inmate at the Spring Creek Correctional Center (SCCC), was charged with and found guilty by the SCCC disciplinary committee of "mutual combat." Anthoney appealed, arguing that he was not guilty of "mutual combat" and that the Department of Corrections had violated his procedural due process rights. The superior court concluded that Anthoney had been charged with the wrong offense, ordered that his disciplinary record be changed to reflect a guilty finding for a lesser infraction, and affirmed the disciplinary committee decision in all other respects. The superior court then named Anthoney the prevailing party *165 and awarded him costs. The State only appealed the superior court's prevailing party designation. Because we conclude that the superior court correctly designated Anthoney as the prevailing party, we affirm the superi- or court's ruling.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Facts

Kirby Anthoney is an inmate at Spring Creek Correctional Center. While working in the SCCC kitchen on July 20, 2006, Antho-ney was involved in an altercation with fellow inmate Fernando Jimenez. Erik Nielsen, a maintenance plumber, witnessed and reported the altercation over the radio and later described the altercation in an incident report. As Nielsen reported, Anthoney said to Jimenez "something to the effect of 'You must be one of the dumbest guys in the United States,'" and Jimenez "responded by running the 10 to 15 feet distance between them and hit [Anthoney] on the side of his face." Anthoney disputed this series of events. He claimed that Jimenez asked, "You got a problem, you got a problem," he then accused Jimenez of "acting like a jerk," and Jimenez then called him a "rat" and swung at him. 1 Anthoney also claimed that he called Jimenez "one of the stupidest guys in the institution" only after Jimenez swung at him, and because Jimenez did so in front of the security camera. Both Nielsen and Anthoney agreed that Anthoney never struck back.

At least one officer responded to Nielsen's radio call, escorted both inmates away in "hard restraints," and placed them in administrative segregation. Anthoney requested that the security video footage from the kitchen at the time of the altercation be saved for viewing by the disciplinary committee, but the footage was not saved.

B. Proceedings

On July 28, 2006, the SCCC disciplinary committee held Anthoney's disciplinary hearing. Anthoney was charged with the "high-moderate" infraction of "mutual combat" but pled not guilty;. At the hearing, Anthoney presented his story of the altercation, insisted that the security video would have verified that story, requested that inmate Michael McCullough testify on his behalf, and requested leniency in light of his history of appropriate behavior. The disciplinary committee did not view the video and apparently did not allow Anthoney's witness to testify. Relying on Nielsen's incident report, the disciplinary committee found Anthoney guilty of "mutual combat" and sentenced him to thirty days of punitive segregation. The committee reasoned that either physical or verbal assault could constitute "mutual combat" because an inmate must respond to either type of assault or risk being considered "a punk."

Anthoney appealed the committee's decision to the SCCC superintendent. Also relying on Nielsen's incident report, the superintendent affirmed the finding of guilt but reduced the sanction to fifteen days of punitive segregation "due to otherwise appropriate behavior." Anthoney requested reconsideration, stating that after the denial of his appeal, he obtained testimony from inmate Michael Flynn who had been in the kitchen at the time of the altercation and who would corroborate Anthoney's version of the events. The request was denied. Because Anthoney had "exhausted all [dJepartmental levels of appeal," he was placed in punitive segregation from November 27 through December 12.

Anthoney appealed to the superior court. On June 21, 2007, Superior Court Judge Stephanie E®. Joannides ordered the State to file a notice of preservation of the security video or an affidavit explaining what happened to it. In response to that order, the SCCC superintendent filed an affidavit stating that video footage is not shown to inmates for security reasons, that no relevant video footage existed because security cameras did not record the area where the altercation occurred, and that all video footage is recorded over every thirty days. On May 23, *166 2008, the case was reassigned to Superior Court Judge Morgan Christen.

Anthoney raised twenty-four points in his appeal. The superior court concluded that four of those had been waived because An-thoney had not raised them in the proceedings below. It grouped the remaining points into seven categories: (1) failure to write a proper incident report; (2) failure to allow a witness to be called, to allow state of mind evidence, and to explain reasons for denial in writing and on record; (8) failure to admit video footage and to explain reasons in writing and on record; (4) failure to write a report stating the specific evidence used to find appellant guilty; (5) incorrect definition of mutual combat; (6) insufficient evidence and reliance on hearsay; and (7) denial of appellant's motion for reconsideration. An-thoney also claimed the State knowingly and intentionally violated his rights. He requested amendment of his disciplinary record, reinstatement to the position he occupied before he was found guilty, and lost wages.

On September 22, 2008, the superior court granted Anthoney's appeal on his claim that the State "improperly included a verbal assault within the definition of 'mutual combat." The superior court reasoned that abusive language in such a way that invites retaliation is not 'mutual' and ... is not 'combat'" and concluded that the evidence did not support a finding of guilt for mutual combat but for the lesser infraction of "using abusive or obscene language." 2 As the superior court indicated, a charge for the lesser infraction was supported both by Nielsen's statement that Anthoney called Jimenez "one of the dumbest guys in the United States" before Jimenez hit him and by An-thoney's statement that he accused Jimenez of "acting like a jerk" before Jimenez hit him. The superior court ordered that Antho-ney's disciplinary record be amended to reflect a finding of guilt for the "low-moderate" infraction set out in 22 AAC 05.400(d)(13). 3 It denied Anthoney's other appeal points and affirmed the disciplinary committee's decision in all other respects. 4

On October 20, 2008, Anthoney filed a motion for an award of costs. The State made two arguments in opposition: (1) that Antho-ney's motion was untimely and (2) that An-thoney was not the prevailing party. The superior court found that because the clerk of court did not provide Anthoney with the necessary form regarding costs and attorney's fees until October 10, Anthoney's motion was timely.

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229 P.3d 164, 2010 Alas. LEXIS 41, 2010 WL 1529393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-department-of-corrections-v-anthoney-alaska-2010.