State v. Judson

45 P.3d 329, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 65, 2002 WL 538938
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 12, 2002
DocketA-8050
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 P.3d 329 (State v. Judson) 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. Judson, 45 P.3d 329, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 65, 2002 WL 538938 (Ala. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinions

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

After pleading guilty to driving while intoxicated (DWI),1 Norman R. Judson asked the district court to order him, as a condition of his release, to enroll in residential alcohol treatment in Washington state. The court agreed and at sentencing granted Judson twenty-one days of confinement credit-enough to satisfy the statute's twenty-day mandatory minimum sentence for second offenders-for the time he spent in alcohol treatment.

The state argues that the court erred by awarding Judson Nygren credit 2 for the time he spent in treatment because the court's order mandating treatment was not a true court order, but an accommodation of Judson's desire to avoid jail. The state also argues that Nygren credit cannot be used to satisfy the DWI statute's mandatory minimum sentence because the legislature intended jail time and rehabilitative treatment to be distinct requirements. Lastly, the state argues that the district court violated the bail release statute by ordering treatment without considering whether Judson was a flight risk or a danger to the community. We reject these three claims and affirm Judson's sentence.

Facts and proceedings

On March 6, 2001, Judson was cited for DWI. He was released on his own recognizance. A month later, Judson pleaded guilty to DWI and asked District Court Judge Peter B. Froehlich to modify his conditions of release to require him to enroll in the Sundown M Ranch, an alcohol treatment program in Washington. Judson asked for this order so he would be eligible at sentencing to request Nygren credit for the days he was confined to treatment. The state opposed Judson's request, arguing that accommodating Judson's desire to serve his sentence in aleohol treatment instead of jail, as opposed to ordering treatment as part of his sentence, would violate equal protection, the bail and DWI statutes, and Nygren requirements.

[331]*331The district court rejected the state's arguments and granted Judson's request. Judge Froehlich conceded that the only changed cireumstance that would warrant modification of Judson's release conditions was his DWI conviction. But Judge Froehlich noted that Judson's conviction was a "significant change." Judge Froehlich also reasoned that Judson would receive longer-lasting benefits from alcohol treatment than time in a jail cell, the community would benefit from Judson's rehabilitation, and the state would save money.

During Judson's sentencing hearing in June, the state reiterated its arguments in opposing Nygren credit for the time Judson had spent in treatment. The state also argued that the Sundown M Ranch was not restrictive enough to meet Nygren requirements. After hearing testimony from a representative of that treatment program, Judge Froehlich concluded that Judson was entitled to twenty-two days of Nygren credit for the time he had spent in treatment (twenty-one days) and in jail (one day). Judge Froehlich then sentenced Judson to 122 days with 100 suspended and placed him on probation for three years. Judson's conditions of probation required him, among other things, to be screened by the Alcohol Safety Action Program (ASAP) and to complete up to forty-five days of inpatient treatment if recommended by that program.

The state appeals the district court's decision to grant Nygren credit, but does not argue on appeal that the Washington facility failed to meet Nygren requirements.

Discussion

Should Judson get Nygren credit for the period he spent in treatment even though he asked the court to order him to participate in treatment?

The erux of the state's argument is that Judson should not receive Nygren credit for the period he spent in alcohol treatment because the court's order was "nothing more than an accommodation of Judson's desire to get treatment and avoid serving time in jail." Under Nygren v. State, a defendant can receive credit for time served in treatment if the defendant is subjected to "restrictions approximating incarceration."3

The state relies on Anchorage v. Bussel4 to argue that Judson's treatment was insufficiently compelled to entitle him to Nygren credit. In Bussell, we held that the defendant could not receive credit toward his sentence for time he had spent in treatment before reporting to jail because the court had never issued a valid order mandating that treatment.5 We observed that time voluntarily spent in a restrictive treatment environment does not automatically entitle a defendant to credit for time served.6 Here, the state does not dispute that the district court issued an order requiring treatment, but argues that the order was invalid because it was issued at Judson's request and on Judson's schedule.

We recently reaffirmed the Bussel! holding in State v. Fortuny.7 In Fortuny, the defendant enrolled in residential alcohol treatment while awaiting sentencing for DWI and third-degree assault.8 After Fortuny had spent about six weeks in that program, the court ordered Fortuny to continue alcohol treatment, presumably at his request.9 We held that Fortuny could receive Nygren credit for the days he spent in treatment after the court issued its order, but not before.10 The state did not argue, as it does here, that the court's order was invalid because it accommodated Fortuny's voluntary decision to enroll in treatment. Consequently, the issue raised by this appeal was never litigated.

Because we have never held that Nygren credit is inappropriate in Judson's cireum-stances, the state relies by analogy on our [332]*332decision in M.R.S. v. State.11 The defendant in M.R.S. asked the court to order him as part of a delinquency proceeding to undergo a psychological evaluation.12 In a later unrelated proceeding, M.R.S. argued that the statements he made in that evaluation were protected from disclosure by the privilege against self-incrimination because they were obtained by government compulsion-i.¢., by court order.13 We rejected that claim, finding the statements voluntary because the psychological evaluation had been conducted "at MRS's behest and with his blessing[.]"14 The state asserts that this same principle applies here, arguing that "Judson's days at the rehabilitation center cannot be deemed court-ordered: the 'confinement' was voluntary, rather than compelled, because the 'order' was done strictly at Judson's behest."

The state's analogy is unpersuasive. For purposes of receiving Nygren credit for time spent in a treatment facility, the significant question is not whether the treatment was ordered at the defendant's behest or against his will, but the extent to which the defendant "is subjected to restrictions approximating those experienced by one who is incarcerated."15 A defendant who voluntarily enters a treatment program is not subjected to jail-like conditions because the defendant can leave the program at any time. But onee a defendant is under court order to attend treatment, that defendant faces immediate arrest and imprisonment for leaving the facility without court permission.16

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Related

Fox v. State
436 P.3d 1101 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2019)
Valencia v. State
91 P.3d 983 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2004)
State v. Judson
45 P.3d 329 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 P.3d 329, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 65, 2002 WL 538938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-judson-alaskactapp-2002.