State v. Ambrose

758 P.2d 639, 1988 Alas. App. LEXIS 79, 1988 WL 82136
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedAugust 5, 1988
DocketA-2069
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 758 P.2d 639 (State v. Ambrose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Ambrose, 758 P.2d 639, 1988 Alas. App. LEXIS 79, 1988 WL 82136 (Ala. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

In this appeal, the state challenges an order of the superior court releasing Lige Ambrose, a sentenced prisoner, for a period of four days to attend a ceremonial pot-latch. The appeal requires us to determine the scope of the superior court’s authority under Alaska Criminal Rule 35(b), which allows the court to modify a sentence in light of changed circumstances. We conclude that the superior court lacked authority to order Ambrose’s release.

Lige Ambrose was convicted of assault in the third degree. On November 7,1986, Acting Superior Court Judge Christopher E. Zimmerman sentenced Ambrose to a term of three years with one year suspended. 1 On May 28, 1987, Ambrose filed a motion for modification of his sentence pursuant to Criminal Rule 35(b). The motion requested the court to order Ambrose’s release from confinement for four days, stating:

[A] funeral potlatch for Mr. Ambrose’s late brother and sister will be held from June 4 through June 8, 1987, in Hughes. Given the religious and cultural significance of this event, Mr. Ambrose very much wants to be present. He asks this court to modify his sentence pursuant to Alaska R.Crim.P. 35(b) so as to allow him to attend.

*641 Following an expedited hearing, Judge Zimmerman, over the state’s objection, granted Ambrose’s motion. The state appeals, claiming that the court had no jurisdiction under Criminal Rule 35(b) to order Ambrose’s release. 2

Alaska Criminal Rule 35(b) provides in part:

Modification or Reduction of Sentence — Changed Conditions or Circumstances. The court may modify or reduce a sentence at any time during a term of imprisonment if it finds that conditions or circumstances have changed since the original sentencing hearing such that the purposes of the original sentence are not being fulfilled.
(1) The sentencing court is not required to entertain a second or successive motion for similar relief brought under this paragraph on behalf of the same petitioner.
(2) No sentence may be reduced or modified so as to result in a term of imprisonment which is less than the minimum required by law.

In challenging the court’s authority to order Ambrose’s release under this rule, the state advances two primary arguments, neither of which is persuasive. First, the state points out that the rule applies to changes in circumstances or conditions arising after the original sentence is imposed. The state reasons that, because Ambrose’s brother and sister died before the original sentencing hearing, Ambrose's need to attend a potlatch in their honor does not qualify as a changed condition or circumstance occurring after his sentencing. This argument is without merit, since the event that constituted a changed condition and gave rise to Ambrose’s request for modification was plainly the scheduling of a funeral potlatch, not the death of his brother and sister. As a circumstance that arose after Ambrose’s sentence was imposed, the scheduling of the funeral pot-latch at least theoretically qualifies for consideration under Rule 35(b).

Second, the state urges us to hold that Rule 35(b) applies only to unanticipated changes in circumstances or conditions relating to a prisoner’s classification by the Department of Correction following the imposition of sentence. The state cites the legislative commentary to ch. 166, § 12, SLA 1978 — the legislative provision amending the current form of Rule 35(b). The commentary states, in relevant part:

The thrust of this amendment [to Criminal Rule 35(b)] is to provide for correction of demonstrable inequities resulting from breakdowns in the process of classifying prisoners.
Presently, after a defendant is sentenced to imprisonment he is classified by a committee within the [Department] of Corrections for placement, treatment, work and educational releases. If the sentencing court determines that the defendant needs alcohol rehabilitation treatment and sentences the person with that in mind, the classification committee may inadvertently subvert that purpose by it’s [sic] decision for placement or manner of treatment. Current rules allow for a motion to modify sentence in such circumstances for only a limited period after the sentencing hearing. This amendment would grant such jurisdiction to the court at any time during a term of imprisonment if it finds that the change in circumstances or conditions results in subverting the intent of the original sentence.
This amendment makes it clear that this section cannot be used to result in a term of imprisonment which may be less than that required by the presumptive *642 sentencing structure in the revised criminal code or by current law.

1978 Senate Journal 1445.

Relying on this commentary, the state maintains that, “the clear import of Criminal Rule 35(b) is to grant jurisdiction to the superior court to correct inequities relating to prisoner classification which may have occurred since the original sentencing hearing such that the purposes of the original sentence have been subverted.” We find this contention to be without merit, for its reading of the plain language of Criminal Rule 35(b) is too restrictive.

While the “thrust” of the legislature’s amendment to Rule 35(b) was undoubtedly to allow for correction of inequities in the classification process, the clear and unambiguous wording of the amendment did not confine the court’s authority to the narrow subject matter that was apparently the legislature’s core concern. Nothing in the legislative commentary is inconsistent with an intent on the legislature’s part to confer powers on the court somewhat broader than those minimally necessary to address its core concern. Absent significant ambiguity or uncertainty in the language of the rule, we see no basis for narrowing the rule by refusing to give effect to its literal terms.

The language of Criminal Rule 35(b) attaches only three prerequisites to the court’s authority to modify a sentence at any time after it is originally imposed. First, some change in conditions or circumstances affecting the defendant must occur after the original sentence is imposed. For purposes of the present case, we need not decide whether the changes must be in the conditions or circumstances as they actually were at the time of sentencing or as the court and parties believed them to be. Second, the change must relate to “the purposes of the original sentence.” A change relates to a purpose of the original sentence either when it significantly affects one of the fundamental sentencing goals, see State v. Chaney, 477 P.2d 441, 443-44 (Alaska 1970), and AS 12.55.005, or when it implicates some other specific objective of the original sentence that was expressly addressed in the written judgment or in the court’s oral sentencing remarks. Third, the effect of the subsequent change in conditions or circumstances must be so significant as to defeat or substantially frustrate implementation of the sentencing goal or objective. 3

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Related

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792 P.2d 682 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 1990)
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Bluebook (online)
758 P.2d 639, 1988 Alas. App. LEXIS 79, 1988 WL 82136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-ambrose-alaskactapp-1988.