The People v. Warden, Westchester County Correctional Facility

CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 23, 2020
Docket73
StatusPublished

This text of The People v. Warden, Westchester County Correctional Facility (The People v. Warden, Westchester County Correctional Facility) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Warden, Westchester County Correctional Facility, (N.Y. 2020).

Opinion

State of New York OPINION Court of Appeals This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the New York Reports.

No. 73 The People &c. ex rel. Chance McCurdy, Appellant, v. Warden, Westchester County Correctional Facility, &c., et al., Respondents.

Elon Harpaz, for appellant. Ester Murdukhayeva, for respondents. Center for Appellate Litigation; Prisoners' Legal Services of New York, amici curiae.

STEIN, J.:

This appeal presents us with a question of statutory interpretation. Penal Law §

70.45 (3) provides that, “notwithstanding any other provision of law, the board of parole

may impose as a condition of postrelease supervision (PRS) that for a period not exceeding

six months immediately following release from the underlying term of imprisonment the

person be transferred to and participate in the programs of a residential treatment facility

(RTF).” Correction Law § 73 (10), in turn, authorizes the Department of Corrections and

Community Supervision (DOCCS) “to use any [RTF] as a residence for persons who are -1- -2- No. X

on community supervision,” which includes those on PRS (see Correction Law § 2 [31]).

The question before us is whether Correction Law § 73 (10) authorizes DOCCS to provide

temporary housing in an RTF to sex offenders subject to the mandatory condition set forth

in the Sexual Assault Reform Act (SARA) (see Executive Law § 259–c [14]) after the six-

month period specified in Penal Law § 70.45 (3) has expired but before the offender on

PRS has located compliant housing. We conclude that it does.

I.

In 2007, petitioner pleaded guilty to criminal sexual act in the first degree and was

sentenced to five years in prison to be followed by five years of PRS. In 2011, while

serving PRS, petitioner was charged with committing additional crimes and ultimately

pleaded guilty to attempted sexual abuse in the first degree. For that crime, he was

sentenced to three years in prison to be followed by five years of PRS. Petitioner was also

adjudicated a level three sex offender, and it is undisputed that he is subject to the

restriction contained in SARA, which prohibits him from residing within 1,000 feet of

school grounds (see Executive Law § 259–c [14]; Penal Law § 220.00 [14]).

At the time petitioner was received into DOCCS’ custody on his attempted first-

degree sexual abuse conviction, he had served sufficient time in a local jail to reach the

maximum expiration date of the sentence imposed on that conviction. Therefore, he was

designated for release to PRS. However, petitioner was unable to identify SARA-

compliant housing. The Parole Board directed that petitioner be transferred to Fishkill

RTF, pursuant to Penal Law § 70.45 (3), until a residence was approved for him that was

-2- -3- No. X

verified to be located outside of “school grounds” as defined by SARA. On December 1,

2014, petitioner moved to a SARA-compliant residence in Far Rockaway, New York.

In January 2015, while on PRS, petitioner violated curfew, leading to revocation of

his PRS status and imposition of 12 months of delinquency time. However, the Parole

Board directed that, if petitioner completed a 90-day drug treatment program, he would be

released back to PRS. Petitioner completed the drug treatment program in June 2015, but

he again failed to identify SARA-compliant housing. Pursuant to Correction Law § 73

(10), DOCCS designated Fishkill RTF as petitioner’s residence until he was able to identify

adequate housing. In September 2015, petitioner was transferred from Fishkill RTF to

Queensboro RTF, which was closer to his proposed future residence in New York City.

The following month, while en route to a work crew assignment in New York City,

petitioner jumped out of a DOCCS van, stole a bicycle, and fled. He was apprehended,

returned to DOCCS’ custody, and charged with violating the terms of his PRS.

While awaiting a final parole revocation hearing, petitioner commenced this

proceeding against both respondent Warden of Westchester County Correctional Facility

and DOCCS, seeking a writ of habeas corpus and arguing that DOCCS lacked the authority

to assign him to an RTF following his completion of the 90-day drug treatment program.

Petitioner asserted that, in fact, he had never been released to PRS after completing the

drug treatment program because RTFs are prisons and, having never been released on PRS,

he could not have violated PRS conditions. Petitioner further contended that Correction

Law § 73 (10), when read in conjunction with Penal Law § 70.45 (3), does not confer

authority on DOCCS to send a PRS violator to an RTF after the six-month period under

-3- -4- No. X

Penal Law § 70.45 (3) has expired. Petitioner, who is indigent, admitted that DOCCS had

no authority to release him in violation of SARA’s residency requirement, but maintained

that he should be placed at the top of the waiting list for a bed in a SARA-compliant

homeless shelter.

Supreme Court converted the habeas corpus proceeding to a CPLR article 78

proceeding and granted the petition solely to the extent of ordering DOCCS to immediately

transfer petitioner back to Queensboro RTF and place him in a SARA-compliant New York

City Department of Homeless Services facility, or on a waitlist—based on the July 2015

date that he was last transferred to an RTF—for such facility if no space was immediately

available. The court concluded that conversion to an article 78 proceeding was necessary

in light of petitioner’s concession that he was not entitled to immediate release because he

had not obtained a SARA-compliant residence and DOCCS lacked the authority to release

him in violation of SARA. Turning to the merits, the court determined that Correction Law

§ 73 (10) did not authorize DOCCS to assign petitioner to Fishkill RTF following

completion of the 90-day drug treatment program. The court reasoned that, because Penal

Law § 70.45 (3) limits DOCCS’s authority to impose transfer to an RTF as a condition of

PRS only “for a period not exceeding six months immediately following release from the

underlying term of imprisonment,” DOCCS’s reliance on Correction Law § 73 (10) as

authority to use an RTF as a residence for the otherwise homeless petitioner beyond that

six-month period rendered the language of section 70.45 (3) meaningless. Thus, the court

held that DOCCS’s July 2015 determination to assign petitioner to an RTF was “a nullity”

and petitioner could not “be found . . . in violation of that illegally imposed condition.”

-4- -5- No. X

The Appellate Division unanimously reversed, denied the petition, and dismissed

the proceeding (164 AD3d 692 [2d Dept 2018]).1 The Court concluded that there was no

conflict between Penal Law § 70.45 (3) and Correction Law § 73 (10) (164 AD3d at 694).

In reaching that conclusion, the Court noted that the Correction Law definition of

“community supervision” encompasses individuals serving time on PRS, and that DOCCS

is authorized, pursuant to Correction Law § 73 (10), “‘to use any [RTF] as a residence for

persons who are on community supervision’” (id.). In contrast, Penal Law § 70.45 (3)

“permits DOCCS to require an offender subject to a term of [PRS] to spend the first six

months of [that PRS term] in [RTF] housing as a transitional period prior to re-entry into

the community” (id. [emphasis added]).

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