IN RE: APPLICATION OF SMITH (BRECK) ( 2022 )


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  •                                                    138 Nev., Advance Opinion 11
    0
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEVADA
    IN THE MATTER OF THE                                  No. 82696
    APPLICATION OF BRECK WARDEN
    SMITH FOR A WRIT OF HABEAS
    CORPUS.
    FL
    THE STATE OF NEVADA,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    BRECK WARDEN SMITH,
    Respondent.
    Appeal from a district court order granting a postconviction
    petition for a writ of habeas corpus. Eighth Judicial District Court, Clark
    County; Kathleen E. Delaney, Judge.
    Affirmed.
    Aaron D. Ford, Attorney General, and Katrina A. Samuels, Deputy
    Attorney General, Carson City,
    for Appellant.
    McAvoy Arnaya & Revero Attorneys and Michael J. McAvoy-Amaya and
    Timothy E. Revero, Las Vegas,
    for Respondent.
    Claggett & Sykes Law Firm and Micah S. Echols, Las Vegas; Sharp Law
    Center and A.J. Sharp, Las Vegas; The Powell Law Firm and Tom W.
    Stewart, Las Vegas,
    for Amicus Curiae Nevada Justice Association.
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    BEFORE THE SUPREME COURT, SILVER, CADISH, and PICKERING,
    JJ.
    OPINION
    By the Court, SILVER, J.:
    When a parolee is detained for a parole violation and returned
    to the custody of the Nevada Department of Corrections (NDOC), NRS
    213.1517(3) requires the Nevada Board of Parole Commissioners (the
    Parole Board) to hold a hearing on the matter within 60 days. NRS
    213.1517(4) sets out an exception to this 60-day rule when the parolee is
    detained on a new criminal charge but not returned to NDOC until after
    the final adjudication of that new charge. At issue in this appeal is whether
    subsection Ts exception applies where the Parole Board executes a warrant
    to return the parolee to NDOC before the final adjudication on the new
    criminal charge. We conclude that the parolee's return to NDOC pursuant
    to a warrant triggers subsection 3's 60-day hearing requirement. We
    therefore determine that the district court here correctly applied NRS
    231.1517 and ordered the Parole Board to credit respondent for the time he
    spent incarcerated pending adjudication on his new criminal charges.
    FACTS
    In 2008, respondent Breck Smith was adjudicated as a habitual
    criminal and sentenced to serve a prison term of ten years to life. He was
    released on parole in March 2017. One year later, in March 2018, he was
    arrested on new criminal charges of attempted burglary and possession of
    burglary tools and remanded into the custody of the Clark County Sheriff.
    As a result of his new arrest, he was incarcerated at the Clark County
    Detention Center.
    2
    Soon after, the Division of Parole and Probation issued parole
    violation reports based on the new criminal charges. Based on the new
    arrest report, the Division found probable cause for the parole violation. On
    April 11, 2018, the Parole Board issued a retake warrant that resulted in
    Smith being remanded back into the custody of NDOC. Although Smith
    was remanded into NDOC's custody and physically incarcerated in the
    prison, Smith's parole revocation hearing was continued for over a year,
    until June 25, 2019, the day after Smith entered an Alford plea to the new
    attempted burglary charge. On that date, the Parole Board revoked Smith's
    parole for one year, until July 1, 2020. Because Smith received a
    consecutive sentence on his new charge, he did not begin serving his new
    sentence until July 2, 2020, after he was paroled on the previous charges.
    In January 2021, Smith filed an emergency petition for a writ
    of habeas corpus, arguing that under NRS 213.1517, the Parole Board
    exceeded its authority by immediately returning Smith to NDOC's custody
    but deferring the parole revocation hearing until he pleaded guilty on the
    new criminal charges—far beyond the 60 days allowed by that statute.
    Because he was not given proper credit for any time served after the 60-day
    statutory period, he claimed that he effectively lost over a year of credit for
    time served due to him on his parole violation case. The district court
    agreed and ordered NDOC to ensure Smith was awarded flat time and
    statutory credit from June 12, 2018, to June 17, 2019—the dates by which
    his parole revocation hearing should have been held and his one-year parole
    revocation penalty would have expired, respectively. The State appeals,
    arguing that NRS 213.1517(4) creates an exception to the 60-day statutory
    'North Carolina v. Alford, 
    400 U.S. 25
     (1970).
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    rule that allowed the Parole Board to defer the parole revocation hearing to
    after Smith entered his Alford plea on the new criminal charges.
    DISCUSSION
    We review questions of statutory interpretation de novo, giving
    the statute its plain meaning unless doing so would create an unreasonable
    result.   Moore v. State, 
    136 Nev. 620
    , 622-23, 
    475 P.3d 33
    , 36 (2020);
    Lofthouse v. State, 
    136 Nev. 378
    , 380, 
    467 P.3d 609
    , 611 (2020). We will
    avoid interpretations that would render words or phrases superfluous or
    nugatory. Harvey v. State, 
    136 Nev. 539
    , 543, 
    473 P.3d 1015
    , 1019 (2020).
    Before the Parole Board may revoke parole, a parolee is entitled
    to a parole revocation hearing. See Morrissey v. Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
    , 487-
    88 (1972). Minimal due process requires that this hearing "be tendered
    within a reasonable time after the parolee is taken into custody." 
    Id. at 488
    ;
    see also Scarbo v. Eighth Judicial Dist. Court, 
    125 Nev. 118
    , 124, 
    206 P.3d 975
    , 979 (2009) (explaining the due process protections of the United States
    and Nevada Constitutions require an opportunity to be heard where a
    liberty interest is at stake). This is so because the execution of a parole
    violation warrant, and custody under that warrant, together are "the
    operative event triggering any loss of liberty attendant upon parole
    revocation." Moody v. Daggett, 
    429 U.S. 78
    , 87 (1976).
    To this end, the Legislature established that where probable
    cause exists for a parolees detention, the Parole Board must conduct the
    parole revocation hearing within 60 days after a parolee is returned to
    NDOC's custody. NRS 213.1517(3). NRS 213.1517(4) provides an exception
    to that rule:
    If probable cause for continued detention of a
    paroled prisoner is based on conduct which is the
    subject of a new criminal charge, the Board may
    consider the prisoner's case under the provisions of
    4
    subsection 3 or defer consideration until not more
    than 60 days after his or her return to the custody
    of the Department of Corrections following the final
    adjudication of the new criminal charge.
    The State argues that under subsection 4, where a parolee is
    detained on new criminal charges, the Parole Board may defer the parole
    revocation hearing up to 60 days after the final adjudication on the new
    criminal charges, even where, as here, the parolee is in NDOC's custody
    pending the adjudication. Smith counters that subsection Ts exception to
    the 60-day requirement applies only where the parolee remains in local
    custody pending adjudication on the new charges and returns to NDOC
    after that adjudication.
    We read NRS 213.1517 with a due process overlay and are
    persuaded by Smith's arguments. NRS 213.1517(4) provides that where the
    probable cause for the parolees continued detention is based on conduct
    underlying a new criminal charge, the Parole Board may either conduct the
    revocation hearing in accordance with subsection 3—return the parolee to
    NDOC's custody and hold the hearing within 60 days—or defer the
    revocation hearing until no later than 60 days after the parolees return to
    NDOC's custody following final adjudication of the new charge. The phrase
    "following the final adjudication of the new criminal charge in subsection
    4 attaches to the phrase "after [the parolee's] return to the custody of the
    Department of Corrections," creating separate and sequential requirements
    here: final adjudication on the new charges, followed by a return to NDOC's
    custody. And because each of these conditions must be met to defer
    consideration under subsection 4, it follows that subsection Ts exception
    will not apply where the Parole Board executes a warrant and returns the
    parolee to NDOC's custody before adjudication on the new charges. This
    interpretation avoids rendering the phrase "after [the parolee's] return to
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    the custody of the Department of Corrections" superfluous. It also comports
    with due process considerations, as a parolee loses liberty once the parolee
    is taken into custody under the warrant and this loss triggers due process
    protections. See Moody, 
    429 U.S. at 87
     (explaining that the trigger for the
    parolee's loss of liberty is the execution of the warrant and the return to
    custody); Morrissey, 
    408 U.S. at 487-88
     (explaining that once a parolee is
    taken into custody, due process requires the Parole Board hold a hearing
    within a reasonable time).2
    Here, the Parole Board issued a retake warrant in April 2018,
    at which point Smith was immediately remanded back into the custody of
    NDOC and returned to incarceration at the prison. His parole revocation
    hearing was continued until after adjudication on his new criminal charges
    in June 2019—well in excess of the 60 days allowed by NRS 213.1517. We
    therefore conclude that the Parole Board exceeded its authority under that
    statute and that the district court properly ordered NDOC to reflect a parole
    2A1though the State argued below that Smith requested the
    continuances of his parole revocation hearing and thus created the
    complained-of error, the State does not renew these arguments in its
    opening brief on appeal and, moreover, the State failed to provide us with a
    sufficient record to review that point. See Cooper v. State, 
    134 Nev. 860
    ,
    861 n.2, 
    432 P.3d 202
    , 204 n.2 (2018) (declining to consider an argument
    raised for the first time in the reply brief); Johnson v. State, 
    113 Nev. 772
    ,
    776, 
    942 P.2d 167
    , 170 (1997) ("It is appellant's responsibility to make an
    adequate appellate record. We cannot properly consider matters not
    appearing in that record." (citation omitted)). We note, however, that a
    petitioner may not leverage an error he or she invited or waived. See
    Jeremias v. State, 
    134 Nev. 46
    , 52-53, 
    412 P.3d 43
    , 50 (2018). Thus, where
    a parolee delays the revocation hearing by requesting continuances pending
    the outcome of the parolee's new criminal charges, neither due process nor
    NRS 213.1517 will require the Parole Board to hold the revocation hearing
    within 60 days of the parolee's return to NDOC.
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    revocation date of June 12, 2018, and to ensure that any credits, expiration
    date of his parole revocation case, and start date of the sentence for his new
    case reflect the June 12, 2018, parole revocation date.3
    CONCLUSION
    When probable cause exists to detain a parolee, NRS
    213.1517(3) requires the Board of Parole Commissioners to consider the
    parolees case within 60 days of the date the parolee returns to the custody
    of the Department of Corrections. NRS 213.1517(4) provides an exception
    to the 60-day rule and allows the Parole Board to defer consideration until
    the parolee is adjudicated on the new criminal charge and subsequently
    returned to NDOC. Each of the conditions set forth in NRS 213.1517(4)
    must be met to defer consideration beyond 60 days from the date the parolee
    is returned to the custody of NDOC. Because, here, the Parole Board
    executed a retake warrant and returned Smith to the custody of NDOC
    before Smith's new criminal charges were adjudicated, this exception did
    not apply and the Parole Board exceeded its authority by deferring the
    revocation hearing beyond 60 days after Smith's return to the custody of
    3We do not reach the States arguments against the district coures
    remedy of ordering the recalculation of Smith's time, as the State neither
    raised its arguments below nor supports them with adequate authority on
    appeal. See Jeremias, 134 Nev. at 50, 412 P.3d at 48 ("The failure to
    preserve an error, even an error that has been deemed structural, forfeits
    the right to assert it on appear); Mazzan v. Warden, 
    116 Nev. 48
    , 75, 
    993 P.2d 25
    , 42 (2000) ("Contentions unsupported by specific argument or
    authority should be summarily rejected on appeal.").
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    NDOC. Accordingly, we affirm the district court order granting Smith's
    postconviction petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
    J.
    Silver
    We concur:
    J.
    Cadish
    9
    J.
    Pickering
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 82696

Filed Date: 3/24/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/24/2022