Executive Director of the Colorado Department of Corrections v. Fetzer , 2017 Colo. LEXIS 556 ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •              Opinions of the Colorado Supreme Court are available to the
    public and can be accessed through the Judicial Branch’s homepage at
    http://www.courts.state.co.us. Opinions are also posted on the
    Colorado Bar Association’s homepage at http://www.cobar.org.
    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    June 26, 2017
    
    2017 CO 77
    No. 16SC361, Exec. Dir. of the Colo. Dep’t of Corr. v. Fetzer—Parole Eligibility.
    The department of corrections petitioned for review of the court of appeals’
    judgment reversing an order of the district court that denied Fetzer’s petition pursuant
    to C.R.C.P. 106(a)(2). See Fetzer v. Exec. Dir. of the Colo. Dep’t of Corr., 2016 COA 7M,
    ___ P.3d ___, as modified on denial of reh’g (Apr. 7, 2016). Fetzer’s petition sought an
    order compelling the recalculation of his parole eligibility date, asserting that the
    department’s “governing sentence” method, which calculated his parole eligibility date
    solely on the basis of the longest of his concurrent sentences, violated the statutory
    requirement that his multiple sentences be treated as one continuous sentence. The
    court of appeals reversed and remanded for recalculation, reasoning both that, contrary
    to the department’s understanding, the statutory continuous sentence requirement
    applies to concurrent as well as consecutive sentences and that the department’s
    “governing sentence” method of calculation could not apply to Fetzer’s sentences
    because they were all subject to the same statutory parole provisions.
    The supreme court holds that, because the “governing sentence” theories that
    have previously been sanctioned by this court have served to determine the statutory
    parole and discharge provisions applicable to a single continuous sentence and the
    manner in which those provisions can be meaningfully applied to it, rather than as an
    alternative to the statutory continuous sentence requirement itself, the department
    erred in simply substituting Fetzer’s longest sentence for the required continuous
    sentence. Because, however, Fetzer’s multiple sentences are not all subject to the same
    statutory parole provisions, as indicated in the court of appeals’ opinion, reference to a
    governing sentence, or some comparable means of determining the applicable incidents
    of his parole, may remain necessary to the calculation of Fetzer’s parole eligibility date.
    The judgment of the court of appeals reversing the district court’s order is therefore
    affirmed. Its remand order, directing the department to recalculate Fetzer’s parole
    eligibility date in accordance with its opinion, however, is reversed, and the case is
    remanded with directions that it be returned to the district court for further
    proceedings.
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2017 CO 77
    Supreme Court Case No. 16SC361
    Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
    Court of Appeals Case No. 15CA83
    Petitioners:
    Executive Director of the Colorado Department of Corrections and Warden for the Buena
    Vista Correctional Facility,
    v.
    Respondent:
    Raymond Lee Fetzer.
    Judgment Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part
    en banc
    June 26, 2017
    Attorneys for Petitioners:
    Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General
    Nicole S. Gellar, Senior Assistant Attorney General
    Denver, Colorado
    Respondent Raymond Lee Fetzer, Pro Se
    Buena Vista, Colorado
    JUSTICE COATS delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1    The department of corrections petitioned for review of the court of appeals’
    judgment reversing an order of the district court that denied Fetzer’s petition pursuant
    to C.R.C.P. 106(a)(2). See Fetzer v. Exec. Dir. of the Colo. Dep’t of Corr., 2016 COA 7M,
    ___ P.3d ___, as modified on denial of reh’g (Apr. 7, 2016). Fetzer’s petition sought an
    order compelling the recalculation of his parole eligibility date, asserting that the
    department’s “governing sentence” method, which calculated his parole eligibility date
    solely on the basis of the longest of his concurrent sentences, violated the statutory
    requirement that his multiple sentences be treated as one continuous sentence. The
    court of appeals reversed and remanded for recalculation, reasoning both that, contrary
    to the department’s understanding, the statutory continuous sentence requirement
    applies to concurrent as well as consecutive sentences and that the department’s
    “governing sentence” method of calculation could not apply to Fetzer’s sentences
    because they were all subject to the same statutory parole provisions.
    ¶2    Because the “governing sentence” theories that have previously been sanctioned
    by this court have served to determine the statutory parole and discharge provisions
    applicable to a single continuous sentence and the manner in which those provisions
    can be meaningfully applied to it, rather than as an alternative to the statutory
    continuous sentence requirement itself, the department erred in simply substituting
    Fetzer’s longest sentence for the required continuous sentence.          Because, however,
    Fetzer’s multiple sentences are not all subject to the same statutory parole provisions, as
    indicated in the court of appeals’ opinion, reference to a governing sentence, or some
    comparable means of determining the applicable incidents of his parole, may remain
    2
    necessary to the calculation of Fetzer’s parole eligibility date. The judgment of the court
    of appeals reversing the district court’s order is therefore affirmed. Its remand order,
    directing the department to recalculate Fetzer’s parole eligibility date in accordance
    with its opinion, however, is reversed, and the case is remanded with directions that it
    be returned to the district court for further proceedings.
    I.
    ¶3     Raymond Fetzer, who was and remains in the custody of the Colorado
    Department of Corrections as the result of multiple convictions, filed a petition in the
    district court, pursuant to C.R.C.P. 106(a)(2), to compel the department to recalculate his
    eligibility for parole. As reflected in the pleadings, Fetzer has been convicted, over a
    period of years extending back to 1988, of aggravated robbery, first degree burglary,
    robbery of the elderly, possession of a weapon by a previous offender, introducing
    contraband, and three separate counts of aggravated robbery—menacing the victim.
    These convictions have resulted in three concurrent sentences of 20 years each, with an
    effective date of August 12, 1988; one sentence of 8 years, with an effective date of May
    25, 1990, to be served concurrently with the previous sentences; one sentence of 18
    months, with an effective date of November 25, 1991, to be served consecutively with all
    previous sentences; one sentence of 22 years, with an effective date of June 17, 1999, to
    be served concurrently with all previous sentences; and two sentences of 30 years each,
    with effective dates of March 14, 2000, to be served concurrently with each other and
    with all previous sentences.
    3
    ¶4     Fetzer alleged that by designating one of his 30-year sentences, being his
    sentences with the longest incarceration effect, as the governing sentence, and
    computing his parole eligibility date solely on the basis of that sentence, the department
    failed to comply with a statutory requirement that all of his separate sentences be
    treated as a single continuous sentence. Fetzer further alleged that if the department
    had instead considered all of his convictions as one continuous sentence running from
    the date of his first sentence, August 12, 1988, and had calculated his parole eligibility
    date by allowing credits during each relevant time period according to the statutory
    provisions in effect at the time, he would have become eligible to be considered for
    parole several years earlier.
    ¶5     The department moved to dismiss on the grounds that the statutory continuous
    sentence requirement applies only to consecutive sentences and that the incidents of
    parole applicable to an inmate serving multiple concurrent sentences are to be
    determined according to the “governing sentence” method. By considering Fetzer’s
    longest concurrent sentence as the “governing sentence,” and not only applying the
    particular parole provisions applicable to that sentence but applying them as if that
    sentence were the only sentence currently being served by him, the department
    calculated that Fetzer will not become eligible for parole until June 2019, and that he
    will not reach his mandatory release date until August 2026.
    ¶6     The district court granted the department’s motion and dismissed the petition.
    The court of appeals, however, reversed, concluding that the plain language of section
    17-22.5-101 of the revised statutes, requiring as it does that all of an inmate’s separate
    4
    sentences be construed as one continuous sentence, applies to all separate sentences,
    whether ordered to be served concurrently or consecutively. Further, surveying this
    court’s precedent, the intermediate appellate court concluded that the “governing
    sentence” method is applicable only to inmates whose various sentences are subject to
    conflicting parole provisions, and understanding all of Fetzer’s sentences to be subject
    to the same parole provisions, it concluded that the “governing sentence” method
    cannot apply to them. It therefore remanded for the department to recalculate Fetzer’s
    parole eligibility date in accordance with its opinion.
    ¶7     The department of corrections petitioned for a writ of certiorari.
    II.
    ¶8     For purposes of administering a criminal convict’s sentence, this jurisdiction has
    long required that his separate sentences be construed as one continuous sentence. See,
    e.g., In re Packer, 
    33 P. 578
    , 580 (Colo. 1893) (relying on “one continuous sentence” rule
    from 1876 parole statute as support for imposing consecutive sentences for five
    voluntary manslaughter convictions).       Currently, section 17-22.5-101, C.R.S. (2016),
    imposes a seemingly clear command: “For the purposes of this article, when any
    inmate has been committed under several convictions with separate sentences, the
    department shall construe all sentences as one continuous sentence.”         Neither this
    statute nor any of its predecessors, however, has ever provided guidance concerning
    the eventuality of disparate statutory parole provisions otherwise applicable to the
    various sentences comprising the mandated continuous sentence. Largely as the result
    of a series of dramatic changes since the late 1970s in the nature and philosophy of
    5
    criminal sentencing in this jurisdiction, including the treatment of parole supervision,
    this court has been forced on a number of occasions to review the practices of the
    department of corrections in administering the continuous sentence requirement.
    ¶9    Prior to 1979, criminal courts were required to sentence convicted felons to an
    indeterminate term with fixed minimum and maximum limits, leaving the parole board
    tremendous discretion within that range to determine whether, when, and for how long
    to release an inmate to parole. See Ankeney v. Raemisch, 
    2015 CO 14
    , ¶ 9, 
    344 P.3d 847
    ,
    849–50.   In 1979, however, the legislature enacted what has been referred to as a
    “determinate sentencing system,” in which a felony offender was sentenced to a specific
    term of years, with an additional statutorily mandated term of parole to be served upon
    discharge from incarceration. Id.; Thiret v. Kautzky, 
    792 P.2d 801
    , 803–04 (Colo. 1990).
    In that particular sentencing scheme, the parole board lost all discretion concerning
    whether, when, and for how long to release an offender to parole. Thiret, 792 P.2d at
    803–04.   Importantly, when an inmate became “eligible” for parole under that
    framework, he was also entitled to release to serve the statutorily prescribed period of
    parole. Id.
    ¶10   In 1985, the legislature shifted its sentencing philosophy by enacting what has
    been referred to as a “modified determinate sentencing system,” restoring much
    discretion to the parole board to determine whether, when, and for how long to release
    an otherwise eligible offender to parole, within a range extending from the date upon
    which he became eligible for parole until the date upon which he had fully discharged
    his sentence. See id.; Renneke v. Kautzky, 
    782 P.2d 343
    , 346 (Colo. 1989). Finally, in
    6
    1993, the legislature fundamentally altered the sentencing system once more, this time
    leaving discretion with the parole board to determine whether and when to release an
    eligible offender to parole, any time before his release would be mandated, but
    imposing statutorily prescribed periods of parole for most classes of offenders, which
    parole terms then would become a separate component of the sentence, to be fully
    served whether the offender had already completed the full term of incarceration to
    which he was sentenced or not. Ankeney, ¶ 10, 
    344 P.3d at 850
    ; People v. Norton, 
    63 P.3d 339
    , 343 (Colo. 2003). Each of these schemes reflects a different concept of parole,
    with different characteristics concerning whether parole is part of or separate from the
    sentence judicially imposed, whether early release is a right or a privilege, and whether
    the term of parole supervision should be fixed or should vary with the circumstances
    and behavior of each individual offender.
    ¶11    Over a similar period, the legislature enacted substantial, although not always
    directly corresponding, changes to the statutes prescribing the calculation of both parole
    eligibility and ultimate discharge dates.        Before July 1979, the statutory scheme
    provided for various credits capable of rendering an inmate eligible for parole before
    reaching even the minimum limit of his indeterminate sentence. See Ankeney, ¶ 11, 
    344 P.3d at 850
    ; §§ 17-22.5-201 to -203, C.R.S. (2016). For crimes committed after July 1, 1979,
    but before 1990, the statutory scheme provided for good time and earned time credits,
    which, although not constituting the actual service of his sentence, rendered the inmate
    eligible for parole before serving his full determinate sentence. See Ankeney, ¶ 11, 
    344 P.3d at 850
    ; §§ 17-22.5-301 to -307, C.R.S. (2016). By the very nature of the “determinate
    7
    sentencing system” that existed until mid-1985, eligibility for parole alone mandated
    release to a statutorily-predetermined period of parole. See Bynum v. Kautzky, 
    784 P.2d 735
    , 738–39 (Colo. 1989). Although largely the same regimen for providing credits
    remained in place until 1990, eligibility for parole in the “modified determinate
    sentencing system,” which became effective in mid-1985, no longer required release to a
    predetermined period of parole but rather placed the matter in the discretion of the
    parole board, permitting it to release an eligible inmate any time before reaching his
    mandatory release date, for any period of parole not to exceed the time remaining
    before reaching that mandatory release date. See Jones v. Martinez, 
    799 P.2d 385
    , 387
    (Colo. 1990).
    ¶12    Finally, in 1990, the legislature added an entirely new scheme for parole
    eligibility and discharge from custody, abandoning the concept of good time altogether,
    in favor of a new formula for parole eligibility, making most felony offenders eligible
    after the service of a prescribed percentage of the sentence imposed upon them—either
    50% or 75%, depending upon the inmate’s particular crime and prior record of
    convictions—less earned time granted in accordance with the provisions of the new
    scheme. See Ankeney, ¶ 12, 
    344 P.3d at
    850–51; §§ 17-22.5-401 to -406, C.R.S. (2016).
    The new scheme was generally made applicable to all offenders sentenced for crimes
    committed after July 1, 1979, thereby largely superseding the pre-1990 system of
    eligibility and discharge, but because it expressly excluded certain pre-1990 offenders
    who failed to meet specific criteria, it did not fully replace that pre-1990 system, and
    instead coexists alongside it. See Ankeney, 
    2015 CO 14
    , 
    344 P.3d 847
    ; § 17-22.5-406(3).
    8
    ¶13    In this legislative environment, it has not been uncommon to encounter inmates
    suffering under separate sentences, imposed under different sentencing frameworks,
    often with incompatible provisions governing the service of those sentences—
    implicating, among other things, the relationship between incarceration and parole as
    component parts of a sentence, the mandatory or discretionary nature of release to
    parole, and the determination of both eligibility for parole and the actual service of a
    sentence. In 1986, this court first approved the department’s reliance on the offense that
    produces the longest incarceration effect to calculate the credits legislatively authorized
    to reduce the actual amount of time convicted felons remained incarcerated. Price v.
    Mills, 
    728 P.2d 715
     (Colo. 1986). In Price, where the inmates suffered under both
    indeterminate sentences with longer incarceration effects, under the pre-1979
    sentencing statute, and concurrent shorter determinate sentences, under the post-1979
    determinate sentencing system, in order to comply with the continuous sentence
    requirement, the department applied a single system of credits from the pre-1979
    statutes to a “composite ‘governing sentence,’” created by considering the sentences
    together to arrive at a minimum governing sentence, equal to the inmates’ determinate
    sentence, and a maximum governing sentence, equal to the maximum end of the
    inmates’ indeterminate sentence. Id. at 718.
    ¶14    We concluded that the requirement for one continuous sentence “indicate[d] a
    legislative decision that for purposes of administering the various time-reducing credits
    defined by the General Assembly, the department must employ some type of hybrid or
    ‘composite’ sentence to which the credits may be applied.” Id. at 719. Finding that the
    9
    legislature also intended that persons convicted of more than one offense not receive
    double credits, we upheld the department’s solution, concluding that its interpretation
    of its responsibility to administer all of these statutes was reasonable and contravened
    no legislative or constitutional rights or policies. Id. Under such circumstances, we
    held that the department’s “administrative interpretation of the statutes is entitled to
    great weight.” Id. Two years later, despite recognizing that the pre- and post-1979
    statutes might be interpreted to mandate separate good time credit calculations for the
    defendant’s separate consecutive sentences, we reaffirmed our willingness to defer to
    the department’s administrative interpretation, relying on the sentence with the longest
    incarceration effect, even where the separate sentences were ordered to run
    consecutively, as long as that interpretation was “reasonable and contravene[d] no
    legislative or constitutional rights or policies.” People v. Broga, 
    750 P.2d 59
    , 63 (Colo.
    1988).
    ¶15      In the ensuing decade, with regard to inmates with separate sentences at least
    one of which would otherwise be subject to mandatory release upon becoming eligible
    for parole and at least one of which would otherwise be subject to discretionary release
    upon becoming eligible, we began to refer to governance of the continuous sentence by
    the provisions applicable to the sentence with the longest incarceration effect as a
    governing sentence “concept,” “rule,” “principle,” “theory,” or “analysis.” See Spoto v.
    Dep’t of Corr., 
    883 P.2d 11
    , 14 (Colo. 1994); Vaughn v. Gunter, 
    820 P.2d 659
    , 662 (Colo.
    1991). With regard to the determination of an inmate’s mandatory release date when
    his continuous sentence included a sentence subject to mandatory parole as well as a
    10
    sentence subject to discretionary parole, we concluded that a governing sentence
    analysis was necessary when the sentences were ordered to run concurrently, Vaughn,
    820 P.2d at 661–62; Thiret, 792 P.2d at 807–08, but was not necessary, and could not
    control, when they were ordered to run consecutively, Badger v. Suthers, 
    985 P.2d 1042
    ,
    1043–44 (Colo. 1999); Spoto, 883 P.2d at 14–15. With regard to the latter situation, we
    reasoned that regardless of the parole characteristics otherwise governing the longer
    sentence, the effect of a sentence as to which parole was merely discretionary, following
    consecutively upon a sentence as to which parole was mandatory, would necessarily be
    to “nullify” or preclude the mandatory release of the inmate. Spoto, 883 P.2d at 15.
    Because the inmate’s parole eligibility date in these pre- and post-1985 cases would be
    governed by the same credit provisions in any event, the ultimate question before this
    court was simply whether the inmate’s parole eligibility and mandatory release dates
    would necessarily be identical.
    ¶16   We have, however, never suggested that there is only one governing sentence
    “method” or “methodology,” which must apply to concurrent separate sentences for all
    purposes and which may not apply to consecutive separate sentences for any purpose.
    Similarly, we have never sanctioned a governing sentence methodology that would
    permit the calculation of an inmate’s parole eligibility date solely on the basis of his
    longest concurrent sentence, in lieu of a composite continuous sentence accounting for
    all his separate sentences.   Rather, the composite governing sentence has always
    controlled as an application of—not a substitute for—the statutorily required one
    continuous sentence. See, e.g., Vaughn, 820 P.2d at 661–62; Thiret, 792 P.2d at 808;
    11
    Broga, 750 P.2d at 63; Price, 728 P.2d at 719. In those few cases in which we have
    approved reliance on an inmate’s longest sentence to determine the applicable credit or
    sentencing scheme, the longest or governing sentence has had either the earliest
    effective date of all the inmate’s separate sentences or an effective date coinciding with
    those of the inmate’s other separate sentences, and therefore the starting point of the
    governing sentence coincided with the starting point of the composite continuous
    sentence.
    ¶17   While the department’s interpretation of its responsibilities to administer
    relevant statutory mandates is entitled to great weight, in this case the department
    offers no interpretation of the continuous sentence requirement consistent with the
    governing sentence method it uses to calculate Fetzer’s parole eligibility. Quite the
    contrary, the department makes clear that it considers its governing sentence method,
    as applied to concurrent sentences, to be an exception to the statutory requirement,
    mandated by the prior decisions of this court. As we have explained, the department
    errs in construing the precedents of this court as having sanctioned its current
    governing sentence method at all, much less as having directed that it be applied in lieu
    of the continuous sentence requirement of section 17-22.5-101.
    III.
    ¶18   Beyond merely finding that the department erred in calculating Fetzer’s parole
    eligibility date solely on the basis of his longest sentence, the court of appeals also
    opined concerning the calculation of Fetzer’s parole eligibility date on remand. Of
    particular note, the court of appeals summarily concluded, in apparent reference to the
    12
    applicability of part 4 of article 22.5 to all but expressly excluded offenders whose
    crimes were committed on or after July 1, 1979, that all of Fetzer’s sentences are subject
    to the same parole provisions and that the governing sentence method, therefore,
    cannot apply to them. Apart from the fact that both this court and the court of appeals
    itself have determined that the novel governing sentence method advocated here by the
    department violates the continuous sentence requirement and therefore may not be
    applied under any circumstances, we believe a broad rule to the effect that no
    governing sentence principle could ever be proper in administering part 4 would be
    both precipitous and unnecessarily restrictive of the department’s discretion.
    ¶19    While part 4 of article 22.5 largely supersedes the credit provisions of part 3, it
    contains numerous exclusions for offenders already incarcerated on June 7, 1990, which
    are hardly straightforward and have not yet been fully and finally litigated.           See
    § 17-22.5-406, C.R.S. (2016); see also Ankeney, ¶ 21 & n.15, 
    344 P.3d at
    855 & n.15.
    Perhaps even more importantly, the provisions of part 4 itself provide for the disparate
    treatment of offenders, not only for purposes of parole eligibility but also based on such
    considerations as the duration of parole, the possible consequences of revocation, and
    the entitlement to ultimate discharge of sentence, based upon the particular time frame
    in which their crimes were committed.         See, e.g., §§ 17-22.5-403(1)–(3.5) (requiring
    service of either 50% or 75% of sentence depending upon crime and offender’s criminal
    record); 17-22.5-403(5) –(7) (dictating different permissible periods of parole for pre- and
    post-1993 crimes); 17-22.5-403(8) (establishing different incidents of parole for sex
    offenders); cf. Thiret, 792 P.2d at 803–07 (applying governing sentence when offenses
    13
    were committed on same date but were nonetheless subject to more than one set of
    parole rules).   It is the responsibility of the department to fairly and consistently
    administer an inmate’s statutorily required continuous sentence, whether disparate
    provisions otherwise governing the inmate’s separate sentences result from subsequent
    statutory amendments or not.
    ¶20    Because the department erroneously calculated Fetzer’s parole eligibility date on
    the basis of his last and longest sentence alone, it has not yet been faced with calculating
    and determining the various incidents of parole that should apply to a composite
    continuous sentence encompassing all of his separate sentences. As we have indicated
    in the past, in light of the practicalities inherent in administering the complex of
    sentencing and parole mandates imposed by statute, the department’s administrative
    interpretations are entitled to great weight. We have in the past held the department’s
    decision to apply some form of governing sentence theory, or some other theory or
    device altogether, in administering the relevant class of composite continuous sentences
    to be a matter within its expertise and discretion. Whether or not other systems of
    determining the applicable parole statutes and applying them to the composite
    continuous sentences mandated by section 17-22.5-101 might also be acceptable, unless
    the methodology selected by the department contravenes a statute or the constitutional
    rights of an inmate, it will be upheld. Price, 728 P.2d at 719.
    IV.
    ¶21    Because the “governing sentence” theories that have previously been sanctioned
    by this court have served to determine the statutory parole and discharge provisions
    14
    applicable to a single continuous sentence and the manner in which those provisions
    can be meaningfully applied to it, rather than as an alternative to the statutory
    continuous sentence requirement itself, the department erred in simply substituting
    Fetzer’s longest sentence for the required continuous sentence.        Because, however,
    Fetzer’s multiple sentences are not all subject to the same statutory parole scheme, as
    indicated in the court of appeals’ opinion, reference to a governing sentence, or some
    comparable means of determining the applicable incidents of his parole, may remain
    necessary to the calculation of Fetzer’s parole eligibility date. The judgment of the court
    of appeals reversing the district court’s order is therefore affirmed. Its remand order,
    directing the department to recalculate Fetzer’s parole eligibility date in accordance
    with its opinion, however, is reversed, and the case is remanded with directions that it
    be returned to the district court for further proceedings.
    15
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Supreme Court Case 16SC361

Citation Numbers: 2017 CO 77, 396 P.3d 1108, 2017 WL 2729857, 2017 Colo. LEXIS 556

Judges: Coats

Filed Date: 6/26/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/13/2024