In re Pers. Restraint of Stuhr ( 2016 )


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  •                                                                   Supreme Court Clerk
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    )
    In the Matter of the Personal           )           No. 91920-8
    Restraint of                            )
    )           ENBANC
    CLARK L. STUHR,                         )
    )
    Petitioner.         )           Filed:     JUL 1 4 2016
    ____________________)                                       ------------------
    YU, J.-- Petitioner Clark Stuhr is in Department of Corrections (DOC)
    . custody, serving two consecutive sentences imposed pursuant to the Sentencing
    Reform Act of 1981 (SRA), chapter 9.94A RCW. As penalties for Stuhr's serious
    disciplinary infractions, DOC has revoked potentially available good conduct time
    for both of his sentences. Stuhr contends that this loss of potential good conduct
    time violates statutory and constitutional law. We disagree and therefore deny
    relief on his personal restraint petition (PRP).
    BACKGROUND
    Stuhr pleaded guilty to first degree murder in 1989 and was given an
    exceptional sentence of 425 months. In 1991, he was convicted of second degree
    In re Pers. Restraint of Stuhr, No. 91920-8
    assault and given a 17-month sentence to run consecutively with his 1989 murder
    sentence. Pursuant to the SRA, Stuhr is eligible to have each of his sentences
    reduced by up to one-third. RCW 9.94A.729(3)(e). Stuhr has committed a number
    of serious disciplinary infractions while incarcerated, including assaults, throwing
    objects, and destroying property. DOC has revoked potentially available good
    conduct time for both of Stuhr's sentences as penalties for his infractions.
    Stuhr does not challenge the substantive or procedural validity of any of his
    underlying infractions, and he does not argue that DOC violated any applicable
    provisions of the Washington Administrative Code or DOC policy manual.
    Instead, he argues that RCW 9.94A.729(1)(a) prohibits the loss of potential good
    conduct time on a prospective basis. In the alternative, he contends that he has a
    protected liberty interest in his potential good conduct time and was not afforded
    due process before losing it, as required by the state and federal constitutions. See
    WASH. CONST. art. I, § 3; U.S. CONST. amend. V, XIV.
    The acting chief judge for the Court of Appeals dismissed Stuhr's PRP.
    Order Dismissing Pet., In re Pers. Restraint ofStuhr, No. 46988-0-II, at 2 (Wash.
    Ct. App. June 24, 20 15). This court granted Stuhr's motion for discretionary
    review and appointed counsel to represent him. Order Granting Review, In re
    Pers. Restraint of Stuhr, No. 91920-8 (Wash. Dec. 2, 2015).
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    In re Pers. Restraint ofStuhr, No. 91920-8
    ISSUES
    A.     Does the SRA prohibit the loss of potentially available good conduct
    time as a penalty for serious disciplinary infractions?
    B.     Has Stuhr shown that he has a protected liberty interest in potential
    good conduct time and that he was not afforded due process before losing it?
    ANALYSIS
    Stuhr has not had a prior opportunity to judicially appeal the issues
    presented in his PRP, so he need not make any threshold showing of prejudice; he
    must show only that he is under an unlawful restraint as defined by RAP 16.4. In
    re Pers. Restraint of Grantham, 
    168 Wn.2d 204
    ,214,
    227 P.3d 285
     (2010).
    Stuhr's incarceration is clearly a "'restraint,"' RAP 16.4(b), so we consider only
    whether the loss of potential good conduct time as a disciplinary penalty is
    "unlawful," RAP 16.4(c). See In re Pers. Restraint of Pullman, 
    167 Wn.2d 205
    ,
    211,
    218 P.3d 913
     (2009). We conclude that Stuhr has not shown any statutory or
    constitutional violations, and he does not allege any administrative violations. He
    has thus not shown that he is under an unlawful restraint.
    A.     Early release pursuant to the SRA and DOC policy
    The SRA contemplates that an offender may be released from total
    confinement before serving the full sentence imposed by the court. This is
    accomplished through "earned release time," which may be granted "for good
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    In re Pers. Restraint of Stuhr, No. 91920-8
    behavior and good performance" while the offender is in custody. RCW
    9 .94A. 729( 1)(a). Policies and procedures for earned release time are "developed
    and adopted by the correctional agency having jurisdiction in which the offender is
    confined." I d. The SRA gives correctional agencies a high level of discretion to
    determine whether and how to reward good behavior and good performance with
    early release. In re Pers. Restraint of Williams, 
    121 Wn.2d 655
    , 661, 
    853 P.2d 444
    (1993). Correctional agencies are not required to grant the maximum allowable
    earned release time. Pullman, 
    167 Wn.2d at 214
    .
    DOC policy divides earned release time into two categories-" earned time"
    and "good conduct time." WAC 137-30-020 (formatting omitted); DOC Policy
    350.100, at 2. Only good conduct time is at issue in this case. Good conduct time
    is the "good behavior" component ofRCW 9.94A.729(1)(a). DOC Policy
    350.100, at 4. It is presumptively available for any nonmandatory portions of the
    offender's sentence, subject to exceptions not relevant here. Jd. at 3-4. Good
    conduct time may be lost when an offender is "found guilty of a serious violation"
    of prison disciplinary rules. I d. at 4. Subject to certain limitations, lost good
    conduct time may be restored by complying with an approved "restoration plan."
    Id. at 9.
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    In re Pers. Restraint of Stuhr, No. 91920-8
    B.     Prospective loss of good conduct time is not prohibited by statute
    Stuhr's statutory argument relies on RCW 9.94A.729(1)(a), which provides
    that "[t]he correctional agency shall not credit the offender with earned release
    credits in advance of the offender actually earning the credits." Stuhr reads this
    statutory provision as requiring good conduct time to be earned on an ongoing
    basis. Therefore, he contends, good conduct time does not exist before it is earned,
    and something that does not exist cannot be taken away. We disagree with Stuhr's
    interpretation of RCW 9 .94A. 729(1 )(a).
    In fact, Stuhr's reading inverts the plain language of the statute, which
    clearly limits the extent to which correctional agencies may grant earned release
    time; it does not purport to limit a correctional agency's authority to withhold
    earned release time. While DOC does calculate how much good conduct time is
    potentially available to an offender when he or she enters DOC custody, nothing
    about this initial calculation unlawfully "credit[s] the offender with earned release
    credits in advance of the offender actually earning the credits." Id. It simply
    determines the maximum potentially available good conduct time allowed by the
    SRA. At oral argument, counsel described DOC's initial calculation with the
    following useful analogy:
    I think of good conduct time as a stack of plastic chips ... [and] that
    good conduct time can be calculated at the beginning of the sentence.
    The imnate can calculate it, the Department can calculate it, it's two-
    thirds of the potential earned release time-that's the way it works.
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    In re Pers. Restraint ofStuhr, No. 91920-8
    So let's suppose it's a thousand chips. The inmate walks into the
    prison. At the end of the road down there, at the end of his sentence
    somewhere, is a thousand chips waiting for him. Each one of those
    chips represents a day less time that he is going to have to serve if he
    behaves throughout the course of his sentence. Now, he is told ...
    we're using those chips to calculate when your actual release date will
    be, and between now and then, if you misbehave, you're going to lose
    some of those chips. They're there waiting for you, but you're going
    to lose some of them. And as you go through, you might be able to
    get some of those back. But we're going to use those chips as a tool
    to decide when your earned release date is. So he has no present right
    to those chips-he can't say I want all my chips now. He has --he
    doesn't earn those chips as he goes through month by month, day by
    day. In other states, he might, but not in Washington.
    Wash. Supreme Court oral argument, In re Pers. Restraint of Stuhr, No. 91920-8
    (May 12, 20 16), at 22 min., 2 sec. through 23 min., 18 sec., audio recording by
    TVW, Washington State's Public Affairs Network, http://www.tvw.org.
    Consistent with this description, we have previously observed that "the
    critical feature of [DOC's calculation of potential earned released time] is that it is
    not based upon the amount of time the offender is incarcerated. Instead, the
    allowable good time is calculated based upon one-third of the sentence imposed."
    Williams, 
    121 Wn.2d at 659
    . For this reason, Stuhr's reliance on State ex rei.
    Bailey v. State Div. ofCorr., 
    213 W.Va. 563
    , 
    584 S.E.2d 197
     (2003), is misplaced.
    The West Virginia statute at issue in that case provided that an inmate would
    accrue good time credit on an ongoing basis '"for each day he or she is
    incarcerated."' !d. at 202 (quoting W.VA. CODE § 28-5-27(c)); cf Nichols v.
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    In re Pers. Restraint of Stuhr, No. 91920-8
    Warren, 
    209 Conn. 191
    ,
    550 A.2d 309
    , 312 (1988) (applying Connecticut law).
    Stuhr points to no comparable language in Washington's SRA.
    To the extent Stuhr argues that this court should adopt his statutory
    interpretation based on policy considerations, we decline. The legislature has
    tasked correctional agencies with determining how best to promote the
    rehabilitative and disciplinary purposes of early release. Williams, 
    121 Wn.2d at 661-62
    . This court is ill suited to make such determinations, and because the plain
    language of the SRA does not prohibit the loss of potential good conduct time as a
    disciplinary penalty, we defer to DOC policy. See Bostain v. Food Express, Inc.,
    
    159 Wn.2d 700
    , 716, 
    153 P.3d 846
     (2007). Stuhr has thus not shown that his
    restraint is unlawful as a matter of statutory law.
    C.     Stuhr does not show that he was denied due process
    Stuhr contends that if we reject his statutory argument, then he has a
    protected liberty interest in his potentially available good conduct time and did not
    receive due process before losing it. This argument is foreclosed by our precedent.
    "The threshold question in every due process challenge is whether the
    challenger has been deprived of a protected interest in life, liberty, or property."
    Pullman, 
    167 Wn.2d at 211-12
    . In Pullman, this court rejected the petitioner's
    claim that "DOC violated his right to due process when it raised his risk
    classification to a level at which he was unable to earn a 50 percent reduction in his
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    In re Pers. Restraint of Stuhr, No. 91920-8
    sentence without advance notice or a hearing." 
    Id. at 211
    . We noted that the SRA
    statutes governing early release do not "create any expectation of a specific release
    date or a specific classification level" and instead give DOC "broad discretion to
    determine and enforce the procedures by which an offender will be allowed to earn
    a reduction in his sentence." 
    Id. at 214
    . We also distinguished between early
    release pursuant to the SRA, which does not create a protected liberty interest, and
    parole pursuant to the prior indeterminate sentencing scheme, which does. !d. at
    215 (citing Monahan v. Burdman, 
    84 Wn.2d 922
    , 
    530 P.2d 334
     (1975)).
    Stuhr attempts to distinguish this case from Pullman, but his constitutional
    argument is based on the same premise as his statutory argument-that DOC's
    initial calculation effectively awards good conduct time up front, when the
    offender first enters DOC custody. As discussed above, however, Stuhr misreads
    the statute and DOC policy. He also points to no substantive statutory limitations
    that would give an offender a legitimate expectation of early release based on
    DOC's initial calculation of the maximum potential good conduct time allowed by
    the SRA. This is fatal to his constitutional claim because "[f]or a state law to
    create a liberty interest, it must contain 'substantive predicates' to the exercise of
    discretion and 'specific directives to the decisionmaker that if the regulations'
    substantive predicates are present, a particular outcome must follow'." In re Pers.
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    In re Pers. Restraint of Stuhr, No. 91920-8
    Restraint of Cas haw, 
    123 Wn.2d 138
    , 144, 
    866 P.2d 8
     (1994) (quoting Ky. Dep't of
    Corr. v. Thompson, 
    490 U.S. 454
    ,463, 
    109 S. Ct. 1904
    , 
    104 L. Ed. 2d 506
     (1989)).
    Finally, even if Stuhr did have a protected liberty interest in his potential
    good conduct time, it is not clear what process Stuhr believes was due to him but
    not provided. He does not allege, and the record does not indicate, that he was
    denied any of the minimal due process protections that may be required in the
    prison disciplinary context. See Grantham, 
    168 Wn.2d at 215-16
    . Stuhr is
    therefore not entitled to relief or a reference hearing on his constitutional claim.
    CONCLUSION
    Stuhr does not show that the loss of his potential good conduct time as a
    penalty for serious disciplinary infractions is an unlawful restraint as a matter of
    either statutory or constitutional law. We therefore deny relief on his PRP.
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    In re Pers. Restraint of Stuhr, No. 91920-8
    WE CONCUR:
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