Personal Restraint Petition Of Hayden Cross Baus ( 2023 )


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  •  IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    In the Matter of the Personal Restraint of            No. 83795-8-I
    HAYDEN CROSS BAUS,                                    DIVISION ONE
    Petitioner.                           UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    BIRK, J. — Hayden Baus filed this personal restraint petition (PRP)
    challenging a guilty finding that he violated prison regulation WAC 137-25-030(1)
    category A, violation 603 (Violation 603). The dispositive question is whether his
    taking an illicit, used syringe from his cell to a waste receptacle in a janitor’s closet
    amounted to “transferring” drug paraphernalia. We uphold the violation and deny
    the petition.1
    I
    Department of Corrections (DOC) staff found Baus unresponsive in his cell
    after he had injected suboxone into his arm using a syringe. Baus reported he
    discarded the syringe in a trash can located in a janitor’s closet next to his cell.2
    1
    On June 6, 2023, the State filed a motion to dismiss Baus’s petition as
    moot because Baus was released from custody on June 4, 2023. Baus filed a
    response and the State filed a reply. We deny the State’s motion to dismiss.
    2
    Other than describing its location in relation to Baus’s cell, the record does
    not specify who had access to the janitor’s closet and the trash can. The DOC
    contends a staff member or inmate tasked with emptying the trash “would have
    been exposed to a used syringe.” Baus argues the syringe was put in the “staff
    garbage, not in a place where it would be accessed by or could cause harm to
    others.”
    No. 83795-8-I/2
    When recovered, the syringe had a pen cap on it. The syringe tested negative for
    controlled substances.
    The DOC charged Baus with a “serious violation” of Violation 603, which
    prohibits     “[i]ntroducing   or   transferring   any   unauthorized   drug   or   drug
    paraphernalia.”3 Baus admitted moving the syringe from his cell to the trash can
    in the janitor’s closet. The hearing officer found Baus guilty and imposed sanctions
    including loss of good conduct time. Baus appealed the Violation 603 guilty finding
    and sanctions pursuant to an internal appeal process. The infraction reviewer
    affirmed both.      Baus filed this PRP, seeking dismissal of his Violation 603
    infraction.
    II
    A limited number of procedural safeguards must be afforded when a prison
    resident is subject to discipline for serious misconduct that may deprive the
    resident of a liberty interest. In re Pers. Restraint of Reismiller, 
    101 Wn.2d 291
    ,
    294, 
    678 P.2d 323
     (1984). The statutory right to earned early release credit
    creates a limited liberty interest requiring minimal due process.          In re Pers.
    Restraint of Fogle, 
    128 Wn.2d 56
    , 65-66, 
    904 P.2d 722
     (1995). We will reverse a
    prison discipline decision only on a showing that it was so arbitrary and capricious
    as to deny the petitioner a fundamentally fair proceeding so as to work to the
    3
    Baus does not challenge two additional violations with which he was
    charged: one, refusing to submit to urinalysis under WAC 137-25-030(1) category
    B – Level 2, violation 607, and two, causing injury by resisting orders, assisted
    movement, or physical efforts to restrain under WAC 137-25-030(1) category B –
    Level 3, violation 777. The latter was charged because, while helping carry Baus’s
    stretcher down a flight of stairs, an officer felt his knee “give out followed [by] a
    loud popping sound and then a sharp pain.”
    2
    No. 83795-8-I/3
    offender’s prejudice. In re Pers. Restraint of Grantham, 
    168 Wn.2d 204
    , 215, 
    227 P.3d 285
     (2010). An arbitrary and capricious action is a willful and unreasoning
    action, without consideration of and in disregard of facts and circumstances.
    Reismiller, 
    101 Wn.2d at 296
    . There must be at least some evidence to affirm
    prison discipline. Grantham, 
    168 Wn.2d at 216
    .
    Interpretation of a statute is a question of law we review de novo.
    Ellensburg Cement Prods., Inc. v. Kittitas County, 
    179 Wn.2d 737
    , 743, 
    317 P.3d 1037
     (2014). “The primary goal in statutory interpretation is to ascertain and give
    effect to the intent of the Legislature.” Nat’l Elec. Contractors Ass’n, Cascade
    Chapter v. Riveland, 
    138 Wn.2d 9
    , 19, 
    978 P.2d 481
     (1999).               Statutory
    interpretation begins with the statute’s plain language and ordinary meaning. 
    Id.
    Undefined statutory terms must be given their usual and ordinary meaning, and
    the “court will not read into a statute matters which are not there nor modify a
    statute by construction.” Dominick v. Christensen, 
    87 Wn.2d 25
    , 27, 
    548 P.2d 541
    (1976). When the statutory term is undefined, the court may look to a dictionary
    for the statute’s ordinary meaning. Filmore LLLP v. Unit Owners Ass’n of Ctr.
    Pointe Condo., 
    184 Wn.2d 170
    , 174, 
    355 P.3d 1128
     (2015). “A term in a regulation
    should not be read in isolation but rather within the context of the regulatory and
    statutory scheme as a whole.” City of Seattle v. Allison, 
    148 Wn.2d 75
    , 81, 
    59 P.3d 85
     (2002). We apply the same principles of interpretation to administrative rules
    and regulations.4 
    Id.
    4
    We conclude this matter is amenable to resolution based on the ordinary
    meaning of “transfer.” As a result, our decision does not depend on deference due
    to an agency’s interpretation of regulatory provisions within its expertise. See
    3
    No. 83795-8-I/4
    Chapter 137-25 WAC does not define “transfer.” See WAC 137-25-020.
    Baus argues “transfer” means to convey ownership or possession to another
    person.5 Baus relies on cases focused on delivery. In State v. Campbell, the court
    upheld a conviction under a statute making it illegal for “any person to manufacture,
    deliver, or possess with intent to manufacture or deliver, a controlled substance.”
    
    59 Wn. App. 61
    , 63-64, 
    795 P.2d 750
     (1990); former RCW 69.50.401(a) (LAWS OF
    1987 ch. 458, § 4). The defendant argued the jury should have been instructed on
    the meaning of constructively transferring drugs. Campbell, 
    59 Wn. App. at 64
    .
    The court instructed that “deliver” means the “transfer” of a controlled substance
    from one person to another. 
    Id.
     “Transfer” was not defined and consequently,
    “determination of the meaning of the word transfer was left to the common
    understanding of the jury.” 
    Id.
    In State v. Martinez, we reversed a conviction for unlawful “delivery” of a
    controlled substance. 
    123 Wn. App. 841
    , 847, 
    99 P.3d 418
     (2004). The defendant
    had placed a plastic bag of cocaine in the proposed recipient’s open hand, but did
    not release the bag, and the proposed recipient returned it. Id. at 843. We noted
    courts used dictionary definitions of “transfer” to determine that a buyer of drugs
    does not “transfer” and therefore “deliver,” because the definitions “all contemplate
    that a person who transfers undertakes the active task of relinquishing control to
    Cobra Roofing Serv., Inc. v. Dep’t of Lab. & Indus., 
    122 Wn. App. 402
    , 409, 
    97 P.3d 17
     (2004).
    5
    Because transferring drug paraphernalia is a category A serious violation,
    Baus’s disposal of the syringe falls within the same seriousness class as rioting,
    manufacturing explosives, hostage taking, escape, and homicide, among other
    things. See WAC 137-25-030.
    4
    No. 83795-8-I/5
    another.” Id. at 847. The defendant could not have completed a “delivery,”
    because he did not relinquish possession to the proposed recipient. Id.
    In Garrison v. Washington State Nursing Board, the court looked to criminal
    statutes to interpret the meaning of “distribute” after the state nursing board
    suspended a nurse’s license. 
    87 Wn.2d 195
    , 195, 197, 
    550 P.2d 7
     (1976). The
    nurse had removed drugs from the workplace to their home, but had not provided
    the drugs to any others. 
    Id. at 196-97
    . The statute at issue did not define
    “distribute.” See 
    id. at 196
    . Taking guidance from criminal statutes prohibiting the
    unlawful distribution of drugs, the court held that because the nurse had not
    conveyed the drugs to any others, the nurse’s “actions [did] not establish a
    distribution within the meaning of these statutes.” 
    Id. at 197
    .
    But none of these cases turned on the ordinary meaning of “transfer.” The
    DOC relies on Webster’s, which defines “transfer” as “to carry or take from one
    person or place to another,” “to move or send to a different location,” or “to cause
    to pass from one person or thing to another.” WEBSTER’S THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL
    DICTIONARY 2426-27 (2002). To the extent the DOC argues “transfer” means the
    infinitesimal translocation of an object from one place to another, we doubt its
    argument is consistent with the gravity of the regulation implied by its covering, in
    addition to Baus’s putting the syringe in the trash, rioting, manufacturing
    explosives, hostage taking, escape, and homicide. But the DOC further contends
    that if the ordinary meaning of “transfer” in Violation 603 is defined consistent with
    discouraging and punishing the moving, hiding, and trafficking of contraband within
    prisons, then it covers Baus’s conduct. We agree.
    5
    No. 83795-8-I/6
    The legislature’s intent for prison facilities is to “establish a comprehensive
    system of corrections for convicted law violators,” and that system should be
    designed and managed to provide the maximum feasible safety for the persons
    and property of the general public, the staff, and the inmates. RCW 72.09.010(1).
    The State has a compelling interest in maintaining a safe prison for all. In re Pers.
    Restraint of Anderson, 
    112 Wn.2d 546
    , 551, 
    772 P.2d 510
     (1989). Anderson
    considered a rule that made an inmate accountable for possessing a knife in a
    communal cell unless the inmate could prove their lack of involvement in the
    possession. The court said, the “penological interest in decreasing the number of
    assaults and in decreasing drug trafficking within the prison outweighs the
    petitioner’s limited liberty interest in good time credits.” 
    Id.
    As it applies to Baus’s conduct, the DOC’s interpretation of Violation 603
    follows the ordinary meaning of “transfer” and is not contrary to the legislature’s
    intent.     The Anderson court acknowledged the serious risks posed by drug
    trafficking in prisons, which makes the DOC’s application of the regulation in this
    case fit within the category A serious violations. At least two individuals, an inmate,
    Baus, and, presumably, a DOC janitor, had access to the janitor’s closet where
    Baus discarded the syringe. The DOC legitimately promotes the safety of inmates
    and staff by preventing contact with drug paraphernalia. Baus’s carrying the
    syringe from one place to another, his cell to the janitor’s closet, fits within the
    ordinary meaning of the word “transfer” and within the core intent of Violation 603
    to quell the clandestine movement of drug paraphernalia within the prison.
    6
    No. 83795-8-I/7
    Because we conclude Baus’s actions amounted to “transferring” drug
    paraphernalia, we need not decide whether they amounted to “introducing” them.
    The petition is denied.
    WE CONCUR:
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 83795-8

Filed Date: 6/26/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/14/2023