Kenneth Goben v. Kathleen M. Keeney ( 2021 )


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  •                      RENDERED: JUNE 4, 2021; 10:00 A.M.
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2020-CA-0878-MR
    KENNETH W. GOBEN                                                        APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM LYON CIRCUIT COURT
    v.           HONORABLE CLARENCE A. WOODALL, III, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 19-CI-00127
    KATHLEEN M. KEENEY; DEEDRA
    HART, WARDEN; AND AMY JONES                                             APPELLEES
    OPINION
    REVERSING AND REMANDING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: GOODWINE, MAZE, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.
    MAZE, JUDGE: Kenneth W. Goben filed a petition for declaration of rights in the
    Lyon Circuit Court asking for a declaration that his parole eligibility date has been
    calculated incorrectly. The circuit court dismissed the petition, concluding
    Goben’s parole eligibility date had been properly determined. We reverse because
    the circuit court’s construction of the relevant administrative regulation is at odds
    with its plain language and remand for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    Although the circuit court record does not contain documentation of
    all the underlying facts, it appears undisputed that in December 2013 Goben was
    sentenced to thirty years’ imprisonment after being convicted of, among other
    things, manufacturing methamphetamine in the first degree and being a persistent
    felony offender1 in the first degree (PFO I). Apparently, Goben was then informed
    his parole eligibility date was November 2019. However, after Goben had already
    begun serving that sentence, he was again convicted of manufacturing
    methamphetamine in the first degree2 and of being a PFO I and sentenced to life
    1
    “Conviction as a Persistent Felony Offender is not a charge of an independent criminal offense
    but rather a particular criminal status. . . . Persistent Felony Offender proceedings involve the
    status of the offender and the length of the punishment, not a separate or independent criminal
    offense.” White v. Commonwealth, 
    770 S.W.2d 222
    , 224 (Ky. 1989). “There is no additional
    punishment imposed by a persistent felony offender conviction, merely a more severe
    punishment. [Kentucky Revised Statutes] KRS 532.080 does not create or define a criminal
    offense. It recognizes a status and, in a proceeding separate and apart from the initial trial, fixes a
    penalty which is to be imposed rather than the one fixed by the jury on the initial trial.” Hardin
    v. Commonwealth, 
    573 S.W.2d 657
    , 661 (Ky. 1978).
    2
    Goben already had been convicted of manufacturing methamphetamine. Nonetheless, the
    subsequent manufacturing methamphetamine conviction was classified as a first offense.
    Though the record shows the dates of conviction for the methamphetamine offenses, it does not
    show when Goben engaged in the underlying criminal conduct for each offense, so it is
    theoretically possible that his second conviction was based upon conduct which occurred before
    the conduct underlying his first conviction. Regardless, classifying his second conviction as a
    first offense is significant because a first offense for manufacturing methamphetamine is deemed
    a Class B felony but a second or subsequent offense is deemed a Class A felony. See KRS
    218A.1432(2).
    -2-
    imprisonment. Consequently, the Department of Corrections changed Goben’s
    parole eligibility date from November 2019 to November 2029.
    Dissatisfied with that change, Goben unsuccessfully sought
    administrative relief within the Department of Corrections.3 Goben then filed the
    petition for declaration of rights in October 2019 seeking: a November 2019
    parole eligibility date; a return to an “outside detail” at Kentucky State Penitentiary
    (KSP); restoration of his job as a boiler room worker; and reimbursement of his
    incurred costs and fees.
    The defendants filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim
    pursuant to Kentucky Rule of Civil Procedure (CR) 12.02. The gist of their motion
    was that Goben was sentenced as if he had committed a Class A felony and thus
    was subject to the same initial parole eligibility requirements as persons convicted
    of Class A felonies. Defendants relied upon 501 Kentucky Administrative
    Regulations (KAR) 1:030 Section 3, which provides in relevant part as follows:
    (1) Initial parole review. Except as provided by Section 2
    of this administrative regulation, a person confined to a
    state penal institution or county jail shall have his case
    reviewed by the board, in accordance with the following
    schedules:
    ....
    (e) For a crime:
    ....
    3
    Appellees do not argue that Goben failed to exhaust his administrative remedies.
    -3-
    4. Committed on or after June 26, 2007,
    which is:
    ....
    b. Class A felony . . . .
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Sentences of a number of 85% of sentence received or
    years                              20 years, whichever is less
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    Sentences of life                  20 years
    ----------------------------------------------------------------------
    The circuit court agreed and dismissed Goben’s petition in April 2020. Goben
    then filed this appeal, naming Kathleen M. Keeney and DeEdra Hart as appellees. 4
    4
    Kathleen M. Keeney, also referred to as Kathleen Kenney at times in the record, was named as
    a defendant and appellee due to her former status as the Commissioner of the Department of
    Corrections (the Department). Cookie Crews is now the Commissioner, having been appointed
    by Governor Beshear to that position in 2020. However, the Department, though represented
    here by its own Office of Legal Services, oddly has not moved to substitute Crews for Keeney as
    an appellee. See CR 25.04 (“When an officer of the state, a county, city, or other governmental
    agency is a party to an action and during its pendency dies, resigns, or otherwise ceases to hold
    office, the action may be continued and maintained by or against his successor. Substitution may
    be made upon written motion of the successor or any party.”). Similarly, DeEdra Hart was
    named as a defendant and appellee because she formerly was the KSP Warden. Scott Jordan
    became the KSP Warden in 2020, but the Department also has not moved to substitute him for
    Hart as an appellee. Although a motion to substitute is better practice, it is not mandatory “so
    long as the real party in interest is before the court.” Koehler v. Commonwealth by and ex rel.
    Luckett, 
    432 S.W.2d 397
    , 399 (Ky. 1968).
    Goben also should have named the Department itself as a defendant in his declaratory
    judgment action, though “the custom has developed in declaratory judgment litigation for the
    inmate to designate the warden of the DOC penal institution in which he is incarcerated as the
    defendant rather than the [Department of Corrections] DOC itself.” Reed v. Commonwealth, No.
    2013-SC-000707-MR, 
    2015 WL 2266260
    , at *2 n.2 (Ky. May 14, 2015). We cite Reed only as
    an illustration showing that other inmates, not just Goben, have named the warden of their place
    of incarceration in lieu of naming the Department as a defendant in declaratory judgment
    petitions.
    -4-
    When ruling on a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon
    which relief may be granted, a court must construe the pleadings in the light most
    favorable to the plaintiff and “must ask if the facts alleged in the complaint can be
    proved, would the plaintiff be entitled to relief?” Fox v. Grayson, 
    317 S.W.3d 1
    , 7
    (Ky. 2010) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). A ruling on a motion
    to dismiss for failure to state a viable claim presents a question of law, so we
    review the circuit court’s decision de novo. 
    Id.
    The overarching question presented here is whether a person who
    commits a nonviolent Class B felony but receives a life sentence by virtue of being
    a PFO I is subject to the twenty-year waiting period for parole eligibility under 501
    KAR 1:030 Section 3(1)(e)4.? The answer is no because Goben did not commit
    any of the offenses enumerated therein.
    In Kentucky, there are five categories of felonies: “(1) Capital
    offenses; (2) Class A felonies; (3) Class B felonies; (4) Class C felonies; and (5)
    Class D felonies.” KRS 532.010. For a capital offense, the punishment ranges
    from twenty years’ imprisonment to the death penalty. KRS 532.030(1). For
    Goben named the then-Commissioner of the Department and the then-warden of his place
    of incarceration as defendants in his petition. Although it would have been better if he had
    named the Department itself, on balance and considering the lack of any objections by Keeney
    and/or Hart regarding Goben’s failure to name the Department as a defendant/appellee, we are
    satisfied that the Department’s interests are adequately represented before us.
    -5-
    Class A felonies, the penalty range is a term of years between twenty and fifty
    years’ imprisonment, or life imprisonment. KRS 532.030(2); KRS 532.060(2)(a);
    KRS 532.020(1)(d). For Class B felonies, the penalty range is ten to twenty years’
    imprisonment. KRS 532.060(2)(b); KRS 532.020(1)(c). Class C and D felonies
    incur shorter terms of incarceration. Thus, absent a PFO designation, only persons
    convicted of capital offenses and Class A felonies may receive a sentence of life
    imprisonment.
    However, a person found to be a PFO I may also receive a life
    sentence upon conviction for an underlying Class B felony. KRS 532.080(1)
    provides that “[w]hen a defendant is found to be a persistent felony offender, the
    jury, in lieu of the sentence of imprisonment assessed under KRS 532.060 for the
    crime of which such person presently stands convicted, shall fix a sentence of
    imprisonment as authorized by subsection (5) or (6) of this section.” And KRS
    532.080(6)(a), which governs here, provides that “[i]f the offense for which he
    presently stands convicted is a Class A or Class B felony” then the person “shall be
    sentenced to an indeterminate term of imprisonment, the maximum of which shall
    not be less than twenty (20) years nor more than fifty (50) years, or life
    imprisonment . . . .”
    In other words, PFO I offenders who commit a Class B felony, even a
    nonviolent one, are sentenced as if they committed a Class A felony, which opens
    -6-
    up the possibility of the offender receiving a life sentence. But that does not
    change the fact that the offender actually only committed a Class B felony. Thus,
    the issue is whether a person convicted of a Class B felony who is sentenced to life
    imprisonment based upon being a PFO I must wait twenty years before being first
    eligible for parole consideration under 501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(1)(e)4. because
    they were sentenced to life as if they had committed a Class A felony (the
    Department’s position)? Or is such an offender’s initial parole eligibility still ten
    years because they actually only committed an underlying Class B felony not listed
    in 501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(1)(e)4. (Goben’s core position)? The parties’
    arguments to the contrary notwithstanding, there appears to be no factually similar
    precedent which conclusively answers this discrete question because former cases
    involve differentiating factors like application of different versions or sections of
    501 KAR 1:030 or do not involve a life sentence.
    Before determining whether 501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(1)(e)4.’s initial
    twenty-year eligibility based upon a life sentence applies here, we first briefly
    address Goben’s constitutional arguments. The existence of parole at all is a
    matter of pure legislative grace. See, e.g., Belcher v. Kentucky Parole Bd., 
    917 S.W.2d 584
    , 587 (Ky. App. 1996). Accordingly, the General Assembly has
    discretion to fashion the parameters of the parole system it created (within, of
    course, broad constitutional parameters prohibiting things like arbitrariness and
    -7-
    cruel and unusual punishment). Commonwealth v. Vincent, 
    70 S.W.3d 422
    , 424
    (Ky. 2002) (“[P]arole is a matter of legislative grace and . . . the general assembly
    may impose such limitations, restrictions and conditions as it deems best for
    society.”) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). “As such, it is not for
    this Court to determine the wisdom of the General Assembly’s exercise of its
    power in this area.” 
    Id.
     And the General Assembly’s delegation to the Parole
    Board of the task of promulgating regulations detailing parole eligibility
    requirements set forth in KRS 439.340(3)(b)5 is permissible. Willard v. Ferguson,
    
    358 S.W.2d 516
    , 516 (Ky. 1962) (“It must be kept in mind that parole is a matter
    of legislative grace and that the general assembly may impose such limitations,
    restrictions and conditions as it deems best for society. It may likewise invest the
    [Parole] Board with power to make rules and regulations with respect to
    eligibility.”).
    However, Goben possesses a “a legitimate interest in a decision
    rendered in conformity with the established procedures and policies; one which is
    based upon consideration of relevant criteria.” Belcher, 
    917 S.W.2d at 587
    . The
    5
    KRS 439.340(3)(b) provides in relevant part that “[e]xcept as provided in this section, the
    board shall adopt administrative regulations with respect to the eligibility of prisoners for parole
    . . . .”
    -8-
    Department and circuit court’s construction of 501 KAR 1:030 does not follow the
    established initial parole eligibility policies set forth in its plain language.
    The General Assembly has set forth a default position that a PFO I
    whose underlying conviction is a Class A, B, or C felony is first eligible for parole
    consideration in ten years. See KRS 532.080(7) (“If the offense the person
    presently stands convicted of is a Class A, B, or C felony, the person shall not be
    eligible for parole until the person has served a minimum term of incarceration of
    not less than ten (10) years, unless another sentencing scheme applies.”). But the
    General Assembly made that default position conditional by adding language to
    KRS 532.080(7) specifying that the ten-year eligibility statement applies “unless
    another sentencing scheme applies.” The Parole Board validly created “another
    sentencing scheme” when it adopted 501 KAR 1:030. But that alternate sentencing
    scheme does not apply here.
    Generally, we construe statutes, and administrative regulations,
    according to their plain language. See, e.g., Comprehensive Home Health Services,
    Inc. v. Professional Home Health Care Agency, Inc., 
    434 S.W.3d 433
    , 441 (Ky.
    2013). And the plain language of 501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(e)4. premises initial
    parole eligibility on whether the offender “[c]ommitted” one of the enumerated
    types of offenses. It is uncontested that Goben committed a Class B, nonviolent
    -9-
    felony, and it is uncontestable that felony is not listed in 501 KAR 1:030 Section
    3(1)(e)4. 6
    6
    501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(1)(e) states that it applies to a “crime”:
    4. Committed on or after June 26, 2007, which is:
    a. A capital offense;
    b. Class A felony;
    c. Complicity to a Class A felony;
    d. Class B felony involving the death of the victim or serious physical
    injury to a victim;
    e. The commission or attempted commission of a Class A or B felony sex
    offense in KRS Chapter 510;
    f. The use of a minor in a sexual performance as described in KRS
    531.310(2)(b) and 531.310(2)(c);
    g. Promoting a sexual performance by a minor as described in KRS
    531.320(2)(b) and 531.320(2)(c);
    h. Unlawful transaction with a minor in the first degree as described in
    KRS 530.064(1)(a) when the minor is less than sixteen (16) years old or if
    the minor incurs physical injury;
    i. Human trafficking as described in KRS 529.010(5)(b) when the victim
    is a minor;
    j. Burglary in the first degree accompanied by the commission or
    attempted commission of an assault described in KRS 508.010, 508.020,
    508.032, or 508.060;
    k. Burglary in the first degree accompanied by the commission or
    attempted commission of kidnapping as prohibited by KRS 509.040; or
    l. Robbery in the first degree[.]
    It is beyond rational dispute that Goben’s manufacturing methamphetamine first offense
    conviction is not among those listed felonies (though it would have been if it had been classified
    -10-
    The Department’s argument is that Goben was sentenced as if he
    committed a Class A felony. We agree. But 501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(1)(e)4.
    does not premise its applicability on persons sentenced “as if” they committed one
    of the enumerated offenses, including Class A felonies. Instead, it plainly premises
    its applicability only on the actual offense committed. Accepting the Department’s
    argument would require us to add language to the regulation stating that it applies
    to persons sentenced as if they committed a Class A felony. We are not free to add
    language to the regulation by judicial fiat. Fox, 317 S.W.3d at 8 (“It is well settled
    law that a court may not add language to the written law to achieve a desired
    result.”).
    We are aware that 501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(1)(e)4., as written,
    affords someone like Goben who is serving a life sentence a markedly earlier
    parole eligibility date than someone who committed, for example, a nonviolent
    Class A felony (such as a second or subsequent manufacturing methamphetamine
    offense) and received a twenty-five-year sentence, which is near the minimum
    sentence for a Class A offense.7 But we must presume such a result, though odd at
    as a second offense since a second or subsequent manufacturing methamphetamine offense is a
    Class A felony).
    7
    501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(1)(e)4. provides that anyone convicted of any Class A felony who is
    sentenced to a term of years is eligible for parole in either twenty years or after serving 85% of
    his/her sentence, whichever is less. So, in our example, a person with a twenty-five-year term
    would have to serve twenty years before being eligible for parole because twenty years is less
    than 21.25 (85% of the person’s twenty-five-year sentence).
    -11-
    first blush, was intentional. We cannot conclude that the regulation’s affording
    more stringent parole consideration to offenders who committed, for example,
    Class A felonies than to offenders who committed, for example, nonviolent Class
    B felonies (even if the offender is also a PFO I) is so absurd and irrational that its
    plain language may not be taken at face value. Bailey v. Reeves, 
    662 S.W.2d 832
    ,
    834 (Ky. 1984) (“We have a duty to accord to words of a statute their literal
    meaning unless to do so would lead to an absurd or wholly unreasonable
    conclusion.”).8 The general thrust of Kentucky’s criminal law system is to treat
    persons who commit higher classifications of felonies more stringently than
    persons who commit lower classifications of felonies. So, it is not wildly illogical
    to defer initial parole eligibility longer for persons convicted of committing Class
    8
    The appellees have insisted that the plain language of the regulation applies to Goben and
    consequently have not argued that the regulation’s plain language leads to an absurd,
    jurisprudentially intolerable result, so we decline to explore further that avenue sua sponte.
    Moreover, this case is distinguishable from Sanders v. Commonwealth, 
    844 S.W.2d 391
     (Ky.
    1992).
    In that case, the plain language of a violent offender statute meant that all violent
    offenders sentenced to life imprisonment were eligible for parole consideration in twelve years
    but violent offenders serving a term of years had to complete fifty percent of their sentences
    before being eligible for parole consideration. Id. at 393-94. Our Supreme Court found that
    disparity absurd and creatively construed the statute to avoid that illogical result by grafting
    language of its own creation onto the statute. This case does not present a similarly blatant,
    wholly illogical disparate treatment of offenders. Reasonable minds may differ as to its wisdom,
    but it is not grossly, patently improper or illogical for offenders convicted of Class A offenses (or
    other sex crimes/crimes of violence listed in 501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(1)(e)4.) to receive less
    favorable initial parole eligibility terms than offenders convicted of non-listed Class B felonies,
    even if those offenders had significant prior criminal histories.
    -12-
    A felonies than persons convicted of committing nonviolent Class B felonies—
    even PFOs.
    We also recognize that reasonable minds may differ that the end result
    is that Goben’s subsequent, serious post-conviction felony convictions had no
    impact on his initial parole eligibility date. But the wisdom of treating nonviolent
    recidivists like Goben more leniently for initial parole eligibility purposes than
    persons who commit any of the enumerated felonies listed in 501 KAR 1:030
    Section 3(1)(e)4., regardless of that person’s potential lack of criminal history, is a
    matter within the purview of the Department/the General Assembly, not this Court.
    Furthermore, Goben’s eligibility for parole is not the same thing as his entitlement
    to it. See Stewart v. Commonwealth, 
    153 S.W.3d 789
     (Ky. 2005).
    The functional upshot is that the chart following 501 KAR 1:030
    Section 3(1)(e)4., requiring certain offenders to serve twenty years before being
    eligible for parole (or 85% of the offender’s sentence, whichever is less), does not
    apply to Goben because he committed none of the felonies listed therein. Thus, he
    remains subject to the default ten-year parole eligibility requirement found in KRS
    532.080(7) for a PFO I convicted of a Class B felony.
    The circuit court’s contrary conclusion cannot stand. Of course, the
    ultimate merits of Goben’s petition are not before a court at the motion to dismiss
    stage. However, the pertinent facts appear to be uncontested. Indeed, Goben states
    -13-
    in his reply brief that he “agrees with the Appellees[’] version of the Appellant’s
    convictions and sentencing.” Reply brief, p. 1. Accordingly, the plain language of
    501 KAR 1:030 Section 3(e)4. and KRS 532.080(7), when applied to these
    undisputed facts, leads to the inescapable conclusion that Goben remained eligible
    for initial parole consideration in ten years.
    We thus reverse the circuit court’s dismissal of the petition and
    remand the matter with instructions to issue a declaration of Goben’s rights
    consistent with our analysis. The circuit court must also determine whether Goben
    is entitled to any of his requested costs/fees. However, we decline to order the
    Department to assign any certain classification or job status to Goben as those are
    matters generally left to the Department’s discretionary purview. See, e.g.,
    Marksberry v. Chandler, 
    126 S.W.3d 747
    , 751 (Ky. App. 2003), as modified on
    grant of reh’g (Jan. 30, 2004).
    For the foregoing reasons, the Lyon Circuit Court’s order of dismissal
    is reversed and this matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
    Opinion.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEES:
    Kenneth Goben, pro se                      John Hamlet
    Eddyville, Kentucky                        Frankfort, Kentucky
    -14-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2020 CA 000878

Filed Date: 6/3/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/11/2021