Westfall v. STATE EX REL. DEPT. OF CORR.

271 P.3d 116, 247 Or. App. 384
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 29, 2011
Docket07C23164 A140772
StatusPublished

This text of 271 P.3d 116 (Westfall v. STATE EX REL. DEPT. OF CORR.) 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
Westfall v. STATE EX REL. DEPT. OF CORR., 271 P.3d 116, 247 Or. App. 384 (Or. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

271 P.3d 116 (2011)
247 Or. App. 384

Chester C. WESTFALL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
STATE of Oregon, by and through the actions of its agency the OREGON DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, Defendant-Respondent.

07C23164; A140772.

Court of Appeals of Oregon.

Decided December 29, 2011.
Submitted November 23, 2010.

Bradley J. Volk, Richard L. Cowan, and Rockwell & Cowan filed the brief for appellant.

John R. Kroger, Attorney General, Jerome Lidz, Solicitor General, and Ryan Kahn, Assistant Attorney General, filed the brief for respondent.

Before HASELTON, Presiding Judge, and ARMSTRONG, Judge, and DUNCAN, Judge.

ARMSTRONG, J.

Plaintiff brought this action against the state for negligence and false imprisonment based on an alleged improper calculation by Oregon Department of Corrections (DOC) employees of plaintiff's prison-release date. The trial court granted the state's motion for summary judgment, concluding that the DOC employees who calculated plaintiff's sentence were performing a discretionary function and, therefore, the *117 state was immune under ORS 30.265(3)(c) from tort liability arising from the employees' actions. Plaintiff assigns error to that decision, and, reviewing the facts in the light most favorable to plaintiff, we conclude that the state was not entitled to judgment on its immunity defense.[1] Accordingly, we reverse and remand.

Plaintiff was convicted in Jackson County of various crimes and was sentenced for those convictions in a January 24, 2000, judgment. The three prison sentences that the Jackson County trial court imposed in the judgment provided for plaintiff to serve 26 months on the first count (Jackson Count 1), eight months consecutively to that sentence on the second count (Jackson Count 2), and six months concurrently with the consecutive eight-month sentence on the fourth count (Jackson Count 4). The following illustration approximately represents how DOC structured those sentences:

Jackson Count 1 Jackson Count 2 1----26 months----1----8 months----1 Jackson Count 4 1----6 months----1

Plaintiff later escaped from an Oregon State Hospital warehouse work crew while serving his Jackson County sentences. After he was recaptured, plaintiff was convicted in Marion County of escape in the second degree (Marion Count) and was sentenced on July 12, 2001, to 20 months in prison "consecutive to any sentence previously imposed." Because plaintiff was still serving his sentences from the Jackson County case, DOC structured the Marion County sentence so that it would be served consecutively to Jackson Count 2, as shown:

Jackson Count 1 Jackson Count 2 Marion Count 1----26 months---1----8 months----1----20 months----1 Jackson Count 4 1----6 months----1

Plaintiff was subsequently convicted in Douglas County of various crimes (Douglas Counts)—a case that apparently was pending when the Jackson County case was resolved—and, on July 19, 2002, received three 13-month prison sentences to run concurrently with one another. DOC structured those sentences to run concurrently with the Marion County sentence, as shown:

Jackson Count 1 Jackson Count 2 Marion Count 1----26 months----1----8 months----1----20 months----1 Jackson Count 4 Douglas Counts 1----6 months----1----13 months----1

Finally, plaintiff was convicted in Josephine County of various crimes and received his sentences on those convictions on September 11, 2002. On Count 49 (Josephine Count 49), plaintiff received a prison sentence of "26 months consecutive to all previously imposed sentences." On Count 5 (Josephine Count 5), he received a prison sentence of "10 months consecutive to count 49." On Count 10 (Josephine Count 10) and Count 46 (Josephine Count 46), plaintiff received identical prison sentences of "13 months concurrent with all previously imposed sentences."[2] DOC structured the sentences on counts 10 and 46 to run concurrently with the Marion County sentence and the consecutive Josephine County sentences to run consecutively to the Marion County sentence, as shown:

Marion Count Josephine Count 49 Josephine Count 5 1-----20 months------1-----26 months-----1-----10 months-----1 Douglas Counts *118 1-----13 months-----1 Josephine Count 46 1-----13 months-----1 Josephine Count 10 1-----13 months-----1

Roughly three years later, plaintiff received post-conviction relief in his Marion County case, resulting in vacation of the sentence in that case and a remand for resentencing.[3] Because the Marion County sentence was vacated, DOC in 2005 had to restructure plaintiff's other outstanding prison sentences—the Josephine County sentences and the Douglas County sentences. To accomplish the restructuring, DOC employees followed the directives outlined in a policy that DOC had adopted in November 2004 to instruct its employees on the computation of prison sentences in light of the terms used by courts to impose those sentences in judgments. The DOC policy provided the following instruction to DOC employees in dealing with the phrase "consecutive to sentences previously imposed" in a judgment:

"A consecutive sentence begins on the date of completion of the preceding sentence in the sequence of sentences. If the court orders that a sentence be served `consecutive to sentences previously imposed,' the sentence will be set up as consecutive to any other sentences imposed the same date or on an earlier date. (Sentences imposed the same date will be considered as `previously imposed.')"

(Boldface and underlining in original.)

Therefore, when DOC employees restructured the consecutive prison sentence imposed on Josephine Count 49-which was imposed by the court about two years before the adoption of the above-quoted DOC policy and was expressed as "26 months consecutive to all previously imposed sentences" (emphasis added)—the employees, pursuant to their understanding of the policy, structured that sentence to run after the concurrent Josephine County sentences, because those sentences were "imposed the same date" as the sentence on Josephine Count 49. Accordingly, the new sentence structure became:

Josephine Count 46 Josephine Count 49 Josephine Count 5 1-----13 months-----1-----26 months-----1-----10 months-----1 Josephine Count 10 1-----13 months-----1 Douglas Counts 1-----13 months-----1

After his release from prison, plaintiff brought this action against the state for negligence and false imprisonment, alleging that DOC employees, as employees of the state, had incorrectly applied the Josephine County judgment when restructuring his sentence in 2005, thereby extending his incarceration 13 months beyond the time that the Josephine County trial court had intended him to serve.[4] Specifically, plaintiff alleged that the *119 Josephine County court had intended that the sentence for Josephine Count 49 run consecutively to the sentences imposed in earlier cases that he was serving when the Josephine County judgment was entered.

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Westfall v. State ex rel. Oregon Department of Corrections
271 P.3d 116 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
271 P.3d 116, 247 Or. App. 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/westfall-v-state-ex-rel-dept-of-corr-orctapp-2011.