Taylor v. Peters
This text of 361 P.3d 54 (Taylor v. Peters) 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.
Opinion
Plaintiff appeals from a judgment dismissing with prejudice1 his petition for a writ of habeas corpus under ORS 34.310.2 Plaintiff is an Oregon inmate incarcerated in Colorado pursuant to the Western Interstate Corrections Compact (WICC), ORS 421.282 to 421.294. According to the allegations in the petition, plaintiff is confined under conditions in which other prisoners are “continually” throwing feces and urine into his cell. Those conditions, plaintiff alleges, violate his rights under the Eighth and Fifth Amendments to the United States Constitution and Article I, sections 13 and 10, of the Oregon Constitution.3 Plaintiff seeks relief from those conditions through a writ of habeas corpus under ORS 34.310, directing defendant, the Director of the Oregon Department of Corrections (ODOC) — plaintiffs legal custodian — to remove him from those conditions.4 The [480]*480director filed a motion to deny plaintiffs petition, and the trial court granted that motion, accepting the director’s arguments that the petition was not proper because the director did not have physical custody of plaintiff or control over his conditions of confinement in Colorado, and because plaintiff did not adequately allege a constitutional deprivation requiring immediate judicial attention.5
We review for legal error, Barrett v. Williams, 247 Or App 309, 311, 270 P3d 285 (2011) (citing Moser v. Mark, 223 Or App 52, 54, 195 P3d 424 (2008)), and reverse. Under Billings v. Gates, 133 Or App 236, 243, 890 P2d 995 (1995), aff'd on other grounds, 323 Or 167, 916 P2d 291 (1996), and Bedell v. Schiedler, 307 Or 562, 569, 770 P2d 909 (1989), plaintiff has sufficiently alleged the need for immediate judicial attention under ORS 34.362(2).6 And, under Barrett v. Peters (A155789), 274 Or App 237, 360 P3d 638 (2015), plaintiff was entitled to seek habeas corpus relief in Oregon, notwithstanding his incarceration in Colorado, and plaintiff properly named the director as the defendant.
[481]*481As to whether plaintiffs petition sufficiently alleged the deprivation of a constitutional right that requires immediate judicial attention, we conclude that the allegations in the petition are sufficient to overcome defendant’s motion to deny. Allegations of a constitutional deprivation that results in “a serious, immediate, and ongoing health hazard” are sufficient to meet the “immediate judicial attention” requirement under ORS 36.362(2). Billings, 133 Or App at 243; see also Bedell, 307 Or at 569-70 (replication sufficient to overcome a motion to dismiss when it “alleges that the environment in which [the plaintiff] is confined unnecessarily subjects her to serious health hazards”). Here, assuming the truth of all the allegations in the petition and giving plaintiff the benefit of all favorable inferences that may be drawn from them — as we must on a motion to deny, Williams, 247 Or App at 311 — plaintiff has adequately alleged that he is confined in an environment that subjects him to serious health hazards. The petition alleges that other inmates continuously “throw feces and urine into [plaintiffs] cell,” and that both Colorado and Oregon correctional staff have done nothing to prevent that from continuing to happen. We are satisfied that those allegations alone sufficiently allege a serious, immediate, and ongoing health hazard, and, thus, a constitutional deprivation requiring immediate judicial attention. See McCray v. Burrell, 516 F2d 357, 369 (4th Cir 1975) (prisoner being placed in an excrement-encrusted cell constitutes Eighth Amendment violation).
With respect to the director’s contention that plaintiff has no right to an Oregon state habeas action by virtue of his physical incarceration in Colorado, those arguments are foreclosed by our recent decision in Peters. In Peters, we concluded that, notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff was incarcerated in Florida pursuant to the Interstate Corrections Compact (ICC), the plaintiff retained the right to be incarcerated under conditions that met the constitutional standards to which he would be entitled if he were incarcerated in Oregon; that the plaintiff retained the right to seek habeas corpus relief in Oregon under ORS 34.310 to redress any constitutional deficiencies in his conditions of confinement in Florida; and that the director of ODOC, which had legal custody of the plaintiff, was a proper defendant in a habeas action brought by an Oregon inmate [482]*482incarcerated outside of the state pursuant to the ICC. 274 Or App at 240. Under Peters, the trial court here was wrong to conclude that defendant’s lack of physical custody and control over plaintiffs conditions of confinement in Colorado required dismissal of the petition.
Although Peters involved an inmate transferred under the ICC, not the WICC, that fact makes no difference. The ICC and the WICC are, for all practical purposes, identical. Both of those compacts were created pursuant to a 1934 grant of authority from Congress that authorized states “to enter into agreements or compacts for cooperative effort and mutual assistance in the prevention of crime and in the enforcement of their respective criminal laws and policies * * * ” Pub L 293, ch 406, 48 Stat 909 (1934). Pursuant to that grant of authority, in the late 1950s, western states created the WICC to provide for interstate use of their correctional facilities, Mitchell Wendell, Multijurisdictional Aspects of Corrections, 45 Neb L Rev 520, 525-26 (1966), and the Oregon Legislature then enacted the WICC in 1959, Or Laws 1959, ch 290. The WICC later became the model for the ICC, a national interstate corrections compact. Tape Recording, House Committee on Judiciary, HB 2070, Feb 2, 1979, Tape 6, Side 1 (statement of Dennis Bromka, Legal Counsel to Judiciary Committee) (identifying the ICC as a “uniform law” with essentially the same wording as the WICC). Consistent with that model, in 1979, the legislature adopted the wording from the WICC when enacting the ICC. Or Laws 1979, ch 486.7
[483]*483Based on the identical nature of the ICC and the WICC, and consistent with Peters, we conclude that (1) plaintiff did not lose his right to be incarcerated under conditions that comply with constitutional standards by virtue of his transfer to Colorado pursuant to the WICC; (2) plaintiff did not lose the right to petition for habeas corpus relief in Oregon by virtue of his transfer to Colorado pursuant to the WICC; and (3) plaintiff alleged sufficient facts to establish that he properly named the director as the defendant in this habeas corpus proceeding by alleging that he was in the custody of ODOC, but housed out of state under the WICC.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
361 P.3d 54, 274 Or. App. 477, 2015 Ore. App. LEXIS 1230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-peters-orctapp-2015.