Blackmon v. TN Bd. of Paroles ( 2000 )


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  •         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    FILED
    BOBBY BLACKMON,                     )                      March 13, 2000
    )
    Cecil Crowson, Jr.
    Petitioner/Appellant,         )                   Appellate Court Clerk
    )      Appeal No.
    )      M1998-00887-COA-R3-CV
    VS.                                 )
    )      Davidson Chancery
    )      No. 98-1355-I
    TENNESSEE BOARD OF                  )
    PAROLES, et al.,                    )
    )
    Respondents/Appellees.        )
    APPEALED FROM THE CHANCERY COURT OF DAVIDSON COUNTY
    AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE
    THE HONORABLE IRVIN H. KILCREASE, JR., CHANCELLOR
    BOBBY BLACKMON, #68314
    Northwest Correctional Complex, Site II
    Route 1, Box 660
    Tiptonville, Tennessee 38079
    Pro Se/Petitioner/Appellant
    PAUL G. SUMMERS
    Attorney General and Reporter
    MARK A. HUDSON
    Senior Counsel
    425 Fifth Avenue North
    Nashville, Tennessee 37243-0488
    Attorney for Respondents/Appellees
    AFFIRMED AND REMANDED
    BEN H. CANTRELL,
    PRESIDING JUDGE, M.S.
    CONCUR:
    KOCH, J.
    CAIN, J.
    OPINION
    A paroled prisoner who was returned to prison after being arrested
    on a drug charge petitioned the chancery court for a writ of certiorari. He
    claimed that the Board of Paroles violated his due process rights by not
    conducting a timely parole revocation hearing. The trial court dismissed the
    petition. We affirm the trial court.
    I.
    Bobby Blackmon was convicted of felony murder and armed
    robbery in 1970. He received a life sentence on the murder conviction and a
    concurrent ten year sentence for the armed robbery. In 1973, he escaped from
    custody. In 1980, he was arrested in California for armed robbery, and received
    a four year sentence. He was imprisoned there until 1983, when he was
    extradited to Tennessee to be tried for his 1973 escape. After being convicted
    on that charge, he was sentenced to two to five years.
    Mr. Blackmon was paroled from his life sentence on November 6,
    1989. However, on March 22, 1993, he was arrested in Sumner County for
    facilitation in the sale of $19,000 worth of cocaine. Judge Jane Wheatcraft of the
    General Sessions Court presided over the preliminary hearing on the charge as
    well as over bond hearings. Although Mr. Blackmon was initially released on
    a $25,000 bond, he was returned to custody after his bond was raised to
    $250,000. His attorney subsequently requested another bond hearing, and was
    -2-
    informed that Mr. Blackmon was subject to a parole violation warrant, which
    was not bondable.
    On April 7, 1993, Mr. Blackmon was served by the Board of Paroles
    with a document titled “Notice of Charges and Explanation of Rights.” The
    document explained the two hearings that are a normal part of parole revocation
    proceedings, and stated that “[y]ou also have the option to waive or postpone
    either hearing. You may later cancel the postponement/waiver by writing the
    Parole Board and requesting a hearing.” The rights enumerated in the Notice are:
    1.      The right to prior notification of the charges
    against you and prior notice of the date, place, and
    time of the hearing.
    2.     The right to remain silent, and not offer testimony
    which could be used against you in court.
    3.     The right to present witnesses and documents in
    your own behalf.
    4.     The right to speak in your own behalf.
    5.     The right to question witnesses that testify and/or
    present evidence against you.
    6.     The right to retain counsel and have such counsel
    present at your hearing to assist you.
    7.     The right to have an attorney appointed to
    represent you. (This is a limited right and the
    hearing official will evaluate your case and decide
    if counsel will be appointed).
    A preliminary revocation hearing was scheduled for April 26, but
    was continued at Mr. Blackmon’s request. The hearing was finally conducted
    on October 7, 1993, during which probable cause to revoke parole was found.
    According to the affidavit of Randy Gibson, Mr. Blackmon’s parole officer, Mr.
    -3-
    Blackmon requested that the final revocation hearing be postponed until the new
    charges against him were adjudicated. On February 13, 1995, a Sumner County
    jury found Mr. Blackmon guilty of Possession of a Schedule II Controlled
    Substance for Resale, a Class B Felony. Judge Wheatcraft presided over the
    trial.
    However, the story does not end there. Judge Wheatcraft granted
    Mr. Blackmon’s motion for a new trial, on the ground that it was a violation of
    the Tennessee Constitution for the same judge to preside over both a defendant’s
    preliminary hearing and his criminal trial. On the State’s appeal, the Court of
    Criminal Appeals reversed the award of a new trial, and reinstated the
    conviction. The defendant then petitioned the Tennessee Supreme Court for
    permission to appeal. The petition was granted, and the Supreme Court reversed
    the Court of Criminal Appeals in State v. Blackmon, 
    984 S.W.2d 589
     (1998).
    Mr. Gibson stated that he asked Mr. Blackmon numerous times during the
    appeals process if he wanted a hearing, and was told that he did not.
    On April 30, 1998, Mr. Blackmon filed a Petition for Writ of
    Certiorari in the Chancery Court of Davidson County. He claimed that since the
    Board of Paroles had never granted him a parole revocation hearing, he was
    being held illegally, and was entitled to release. He stated that “[i]t has now been
    five years since my arrest and no parole revocation hearing has been held and
    there has been no final valid judgment of conviction nor have there been any
    technical violations to warrant petitioners (sic) being continually incarcerated.”
    -4-
    The chancery court did not address Mr. Blackmon’s drug
    conviction, but dismissed his petition, finding that “the evidence indicates that
    the hearing officer made several attempts to set a hearing date for the petitioner
    and the petitioner refused every proposal.” The court noted that Tenn. Code.
    Ann. § 41-21-804(b) authorized it to dismiss an inmate’s claim if it found it to
    be frivolous or malicious, and ruled that Mr. Blackmon was not denied his right
    to a parole revocation hearing within a reasonable time. This appeal followed.
    II. Due Process in Parole Revocation
    In the case of Morrissey v. Brewer, 
    408 U.S. 471
     (1972), the United
    States Supreme Court declared that a parolee threatened with revocation of his
    parole possesses a constitutionally protected liberty interest, and outlined the
    requirements of the due process needed to protect that interest.
    The court observed that the full panoply of rights to which a
    defendant in a criminal proceeding is entitled does not apply to a parole
    revocation, because “[r]evocation deprives an individual, not of the absolute
    liberty to which every citizen is entitled, but only of the conditional liberty
    properly dependent on observance of special parole restrictions.” 
    408 U.S. at 480
    . Since this is so, the court does not insist on strict adherence to any fixed set
    of procedures, but states that revocation of parole “calls for some orderly
    process, however informal.”
    -5-
    The Court envisioned a process typically involving two stages. The
    first stage is a preliminary hearing to determine whether there is probable cause
    to believe that the parolee has violated his parole conditions. If probable cause
    has been found, then the second stage is a final hearing to evaluate any contested
    facts, and to determine whether those facts warrant revocation.
    While the court sets out minimum due process requirements for both
    hearings, it is careful to warn us again that we cannot equate them with criminal
    prosecutions, and it again characterizes the required procedures as “informal.”
    The Tennessee Board of Paroles has created a set of rules for parole
    revocation that are consistent with the requirements of Morrissey v. Brewer,
    
    supra.
     Of particular interest in the context of the hearing that Mr. Blackmon
    claims that he has been denied is Tenn. Rules & Regs 1100-1-1-.13(9)(f) which
    states that proof that the parolee violated the terms of his parole need only be
    established by the preponderance of the evidence.
    The rules also state that the Board sets the day, time and location of
    any final revocation hearing. Tenn. Rules & Regs 1100-1-1-.13(7). It may
    continue the hearing on its own motion to secure any evidence it requires, or to
    secure counsel to represent the parolee. Tenn Rules & Regs 1100-1-1-.13(8)(b).
    The parolee himself may request a postponement of the hearing by making that
    request in writing. Tenn. Rules & Regs 1100-1-1-.13(8)(c)
    -6-
    III. Certiorari
    While it is somewhat difficult to understand Mr. Blackmon’s
    arguments because of the way he sets them out in his petition and his briefs on
    appeal, it is not difficult to understand his situation. It is apparent that if the
    Board holds a final revocation hearing and finds that he violated the terms of his
    parole, he may have to serve out the rest of his life sentence in custody. He thus
    has every reason to want to avoid the final hearing. But since he is already in
    custody, he hopes to use the non-occurrence of such a hearing as a vehicle for
    release.
    If we understand Mr. Blackmon correctly, he is actually making two
    due process arguments: that he was not served with the parole violation warrant,
    and that he did not receive a timely final parole revocation hearing.     We note
    that the Notice of Charges and Explanation of Rights that Mr. Blackmon
    received on April 7, 1993 indicates that a parole violation warrant had been
    served on him on March 26, 1993.
    But even if the warrant had not been served, Mr. Blackmon does not
    deny that he received the notice of April 7, and that he has been informed of the
    charges against him. It thus appears to us that the sole detriment Mr. Blackmon
    would have suffered from an unserved warrant would have been the opportunity
    for bail prior to April 7. Of course in light of Mr. Blackmon’s prior criminal
    history, including his 1973 escape, it is highly unlikely that the judge would have
    seen fit to lower his bail.
    -7-
    As for the revocation hearing, Mr. Blackmon argues that the record
    does not support the trial court’s conclusion that “the evidence indicates that the
    hearing officer made several attempts to set a hearing date for the petitioner and
    the petitioner refused every proposal.” He notes that the Rules of the Board of
    Paroles, Tenn. Rules & Regs 1100-1-1-.13(8)(c), allow a parolee to request a
    postponement of his final revocation hearing by submitting a request in writing,
    but that no such written request is found in the record.
    However, Mr. Blackmon does not deny that he asked the Board for
    such a postponement; he merely insists that he did not put the request in writing.
    It appears to us that this is just the sort of argument the Supreme Court was
    trying to forestall by emphasizing the informal nature of the parole revocation
    process.
    While Mr. Blackmon complains that the Board did not schedule a
    timely hearing, we see nothing in his brief or in the record to indicate that he ever
    asked for one after they accommodated his request to postpone the hearing,
    pending the resolution of the drug charges against him. It thus appears that he
    waived any entitlement to a hearing by any particular date.
    As our courts have often stated, the scope of review under an action
    for writ of certiorari is narrow. Yokley v. State, 
    632 S.W.2d 123
     (Tenn. Ct. App.
    1981). The writ may only be granted if the board has exceeded its jurisdiction,
    or has otherwise acted unlawfully, arbitrarily or fraudulently. Powell v. Parole
    Eligibility Review Board. 
    879 S.W.2d 871
     (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994). The writ is an
    -8-
    extraordinary remedy. Foster v. First National Bank, 
    430 S.W.2d 450
     (Tenn.
    1968). It is not granted as of right, but its grant or denial is always within the
    sound discretion of the trial court.
    In view of Mr. Blackmon’s actions during the period under
    discussion, we see nothing in the record to indicate that the Board acted
    unlawfully, arbitrarily or fraudulently in declining to schedule a parole
    revocation hearing, and we accordingly affirm the trial court. However, it also
    appears to us that Mr. Blackmon is still entitled to a hearing, and that the Board
    of Paroles would be well-advised to schedule one in order to resolve any doubts
    about whether or not his parole should be revoked.
    We must briefly address one other argument that Mr. Blackmon
    raises on appeal. He contends that the trial court erred in dismissing his petition
    as malicious or frivolous under Tenn. Code. Ann. § 41-21-804(b).               Mr.
    Blackmon reasons that the application of the statute to him is a violation of the
    ex post facto provision. He notes that the statute in question did not become law
    until 1996, and he claims the protection of the Criminal Sentencing Reform Acts
    of 1982 and 1989, which state that “[f]or all persons who committed crimes prior
    to July 1, 1982 prior law shall apply and remain in full force and effect in every
    respect, including, but not limited to, sentencing, parole and probation.”
    This is an ingenious argument, but as we stated above, the grant of
    a writ of certiorari is within the sound discretion of the trial court. Thus, even
    -9-
    if the trial judge erred in applying Tenn. Code. Ann. § 41-21-804(b) to Mr.
    Blackmon’s petition, he acted within his discretion in dismissing it.
    IV.
    The order of the trial court is affirmed. Remand this cause to the
    Chancery Court of Davidson County for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion. Tax the costs on appeal to the appellant.
    _______________________________
    BEN H. CANTRELL,
    PRESIDING JUDGE, M.S.
    CONCUR:
    ____________________________
    WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
    ____________________________
    WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE
    

Document Info

Docket Number: M1998-00887-COA-R3-CV

Judges: Judge Ben H. Cantrell

Filed Date: 3/13/2000

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014