STATE EX REL. GONZALEZ v. Washington

47 P.3d 537, 182 Or. App. 112, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 869
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJune 5, 2002
Docket01C-12747; A114932
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 P.3d 537 (STATE EX REL. GONZALEZ v. Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE EX REL. GONZALEZ v. Washington, 47 P.3d 537, 182 Or. App. 112, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 869 (Or. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

*114 EDMONDS, P. J.

Appellant, who is incarcerated under the authority of the Department of Corrections (DOC), filed a petition for an alternative writ of mandamus, ORS 34.110 et seq., requesting the trial court to direct the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision (board) to apply certain administrative rules that he alleges should have limited his term of reimprisonment following a parole violation. The trial court dismissed his alternative writ, and appellant appeals. We affirm.

Appellant committed the crime of first-degree assault in September 1986 and was convicted and given an indeterminate sentence of 20 years in prison. His maximum term of incarceration is until January 25, 2015, without credit for good time. He was paroled in October 1991. He then absconded and committed a new crime. He was returned to DOC’s custody in August 2000. The board held a hearing in November 2000 and “denied re-release, finding the inmate cannot be adequately controlled in the community.” It also “reset [appellant’s parole] release date to 08/16/2003 following 48 months.”

Appellant sought administrative review. The board affirmed its previous order, ruling that

“[b]oth the Oregon Administrative Rules and the Oregon Revised Statutes have always authorized the board to deny an offender’s re-release on parole after revoking his parole. * * * [T]he board could deny your re-release on parole and order that you remain in custody for any period of time up to your statutory good time date which is currently April 12, 2010. The board did not violate any rules, poliches], statutes, or constitutions by making this decision.”

Appellant then sought a writ of mandamus in the trial court, requesting the court to order the board to reset his release date within 24 months in accordance with OAR 255-75-095 (1985). 1 The board moved to dismiss appellant’s alternative writ, and the trial court granted the board’s motion in *115 June 2001. In its letter opinion, the trial court ruled, “Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED for the reason that [appellant] has not established a clear right to mandamus relief.” Appellant appeals the dismissal of his alternative writ.

On appeal, appellant contends that he has established his entitlement to mandamus relief because “the Board did not have discretion and was limited to the ministerial performance” of setting a rerelease date in accordance with OAR 255-75-090 2 and because no statute or administrative rule authorized the board to set the new rerelease date following 48 months of incarceration. The board responds that, under the statutes and rules in effect at the time appellant committed his crime, a parole violator could either be “sanctioned,” in which case the administrative rule on which appellant relies would apply, or could be “revoked” and required to serve up to the remainder of the original indeterminate sentence, less any applicable good time. According to the board, under those rules an inmate who had been revoked could receive a new parole release date that was unrelated to the “sanctions” for parole violations.

The prerequisites to seeking mandamus relief are established by statute. See ORS 34.110 (writ of mandamus is issuable to compel performance of an act that the law specially enjoins and as to the performance of which the relator lacks any other plain, speedy, and adequate remedy). We turn to the merits of appellant’s argument that the board was required by OAR 255-75-090 through OAR 255-75-096 to set his release date for 24 months or less. We review the trial court’s dismissal of his alternative writ of mandamus for errors of law. ORS 34.240. If the board had a permissible range of actions to choose from, and it chose from within that range, then appellant is not entitled to mandamus relief as a matter of law. ORS 34.110 (“[T]hough the writ may require such * * * board * * * to exercise judgment, or proceed to the discharge of any functions, it shall not control judicial discretion.”).

*116 It is helpful to begin our analysis by tracing the chronology of a revocation proceeding through the statutory framework of ORS chapter 144, as it existed at the time that appellant committed his crime. 3 Under ORS 144.340, 4 a person who had violated the conditions of parole could be “retaken and returned” to a correctional facility for the purpose of conducting a parole violation hearing under ORS 144.343. Under ORS 144.370, the board could then order “suspension” of a person’s parole following his or her detention on a parole violation, before the hearing was held on the alleged violation. 5

Then, under ORS 144.343, and before the parole violation hearing, the returned person was to be notified of several matters, including the fact that the hearing was being held to determine whether a violation had occurred and, if so, whether the person should either be (1) “reinstate [d] or continue [d]” on parole “subject to the same or modified conditions of parole” or (2) “revoke[d]” from parole and required to serve the remainder of the sentence. 6 ORS 144.345 also expressly provided authority to the board to “revoke,” or deny, parole following a parole violation. It provided:

“Whenever the State Board of Parole considers an alleged parole violator and finds such person has violated one or more conditions of parole and the evidence offered in mitigation does not excuse or justify the violation, the board may revoke parole.”

*117 After the hearing on the alleged violation was held, the board could either “reinstate or continue the alleged parole violator on parole subject to the same or modified conditions of parole” or “revoke parole and require that the parole violator serve the remaining balance of sentence as required by law.” ORS 144.343(6). ORS 144.390

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 P.3d 537, 182 Or. App. 112, 2002 Ore. App. LEXIS 869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-gonzalez-v-washington-orctapp-2002.