From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

In re Appl. of Kirkland v. Artus

Supreme Court of the State of New York, Clinton County
Jan 29, 2009
2009 N.Y. Slip Op. 30183 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2009)

Opinion

08-1460.

January 29, 2009.


DECISION AND JUDGMENT


This is a habeas corpus proceeding that was originated by the Petition for Writ of Habeas Corpus of Eric Kirkland, verified on September 5, 2008, and stamped as filed in the Clinton County Clerk's Office on September 10, 2008. Petitioner, who is an inmate at the Clinton Correctional Facility, is challenging his continued incarceration in the custody of the New York State Department of Correctional Services. The Court has issued an Order to Show Cause on September 17, 2008, and has received and reviewed respondent's Return, including in camera materials, dated October 24, 2008. The Court has also received and reviewed petitioner's Reply thereto, filed in the Clinton County Clerk's office on November 5, 2008.

By Letter Order dated January 12, 2009, respondent was directed to supplement his Return ". . . by describing in detail the sentence calculation methodology underlying the argument advanced in paragraph eight of his Return." In response thereto the Court has received the January 22, 2009, letter from counsel for the respondent. Included with that letter was a copy of the January 21, 2009, letter from Richard de Simone, Esq., Associate Counsel in Charge, DOCS Office of Sentencing Review to counsel for the respondent. Mr. De Simone's letter included a detailed description of DOCS' current calculation of petitioner's multiple sentences as well as a detailed description of the calculation of petitioner's multiple sentences if petitioner's most recent sentence was calculated as running concurrently, rather than consecutively, with respect to the undischarged term of prior sentences.

On February 18, 1987, the petitioner was sentenced in Monroe County Court, apparently as a second felony offender, to two concurrent indeterminate sentences of 9 to 18 years each upon his convictions of the crimes of Burglary 1 and Robbery 1, apparently committed while on parole from previously imposed indeterminate sentences. He was received back into DOCS custody on February 19, 1987, certified as entitled to 439 days of jail time credit. At that time it was determined that petitioner still owed 3 years, 4 months and 26 days against the maximum term of his previously imposed indeterminate sentences and DOCS officials calculated the interim maximum expiration date of petitioner's multiple sentences to be April 30, 2007. After two subsequent parole violations, the interim maximum expiration date of petitioner's multiple sentences was re-calculated as May 1, 2007. None of the determinations or calculations described to this point are challenged in this proceeding.

Petitioner was again paroled on November 9, 1998. On January 13, 1999, while at liberty under parole supervision, petitioner committed an additional criminal offense. On October 29, 1999, he was sentenced in Monroe County Court, as a second felony offender, to an indeterminate sentence of 2 to 4 years upon his conviction of the crime of Criminal Possession of a Weapon 3 . He was received back into DOCS custody on December 1, 1999, certified as entitled to 322 days of jail time credit. At that time it was determined petitioner still owed 8 years, 3 months and 18 days against the maximum term of

petitioner's previously imposed indeterminate sentences. That determination is not challenged in this proceeding. Neither the 1999 sentence and commitment order nor the 1999 sentencing minutes specified whether petitioner's 1999 sentence was to run consecutively or concurrently with respect to the undischarged term of his previously imposed sentences. DOCS nevertheless calculated petitioner's 1999 sentence as running consecutively with respect to such undischarged term. Accordingly, petitioner's sentences were aggregated pursuant to Penal Law § 70.30(1)(b) and petitioner's interim aggregate maximum expiration date was calculated as April 26, 2011. After two subsequent parole violations the aggregate maximum expiration date of petitioner's multiple sentences was re-calculated as May 2, 2011.

Citing, inter alia, People ex rel Gill v. Greene, 48 AD3d 1003, petitioner asserts that DOCS improperly calculated his 1999 sentence as running consecutively, rather than concurrently, with respect to the undischarged term of his previously imposed indeterminate sentences. The Court agrees.

Penal Law § 70.25(1)(a) provides, in relevant part, as follows:

"1. Except as provided in subdivisions . . . two-a . . . of this section . . . when a person who is subject to any undischarged term of imprisonment imposed at a previous time by a court of this state is sentenced to an additional term of imprisonment, the sentence or sentences imposed by the court shall run either concurrently or consecutively with respect to . . . the undischarged term or terms in such manner as the court directs at the time of sentence. If the court does not specify the manner in which a sentence imposed by it is to run, the sentence shall run as follows:

(a) An indeterminate . . . sentence shall run concurrently with all other terms. . ." (Emphasis added).

Penal Law § 70.25(2-a) in turn provides that where, as here, an indeterminate sentence of imprisonment is imposed pursuant to Penal Law § 70.06 on a second felony offender ". . . and such person is subject to an undischarged indeterminate . . . sentence of imprisonment imposed prior to the date on which the present crime was committed, the court must impose a sentence to run consecutively with respect to such undischarged sentence."

Based upon the above-quoted statutory provisions the Appellate Division, Third Department, repeatedly held that a sentence imposed pursuant to Penal Law § 70.06 on a second felony offender was statutorily mandated to run consecutively with respect to undischarged term of a previously imposed sentence notwithstanding the sentencing court's silence on the point. See e.g. People ex rel Batista v. Walsh, 48 AD3d 845, Moore v. Goord, 34 AD3d 909, lv den 8 NY3d 807 and Myles v. Smith, 32 AD3d 1142. In People ex rel Gill v. Greene, 48 AD3d 1003, however, the Third Department moved in another direction. In spite of the statutory mandate that a sentencing court impose a second felony offender sentence as running consecutively with respect to the unexpired term of a previously imposed sentence, the Gill court ruled that DOCS had no authority to, in effect, correct a sentencing court's error by calculating a second felony offender sentence as running consecutively where the sentencing court failed to so direct. The Third Department, moreover, re-affirmed the vitality of Gill in Ettari v. Fischer, 54 AD3d 460.

When petitioner's multiple sentences are calculated as running concurrently, as they must be under constraint of Gill and Ettari, it is clear that the maximum expiration date of such sentences has been reached. Penal Law § 70.30(1)(a) provides, in relevant part, that where an individual, such as petitioner, is serving more than one indeterminate sentence of imprisonment running concurrently, "[t]he maximum . . . terms of the indeterminate sentences . . . shall merge in and be satisfied by discharge of the term which has the longest unexpired time to run. . ." When petitioner's 1999 sentence is calculated as running concurrently with respect to the undischarged term of his previously imposed sentences the interim maximum expiration date of petitioner's merged (concurrent) sentences would be controlled by the maximum term of the previously imposed sentences since it had a longer unexpired time to run (8 years, 3 months and 18 days) then the 4-year maximum term of the 1999 sentence, less jail time credit. With those 8 years, 3 months and 18 days calculated as running from December 1, 1999, the date petitioner was received back into DOCS custody, an interim merged (concurrent) maximum expiration date of March 19, 2008, would be produced. The delinquency associated with the first of petitioner's two subsequent parole violations would have the effect of altering that interim merged (concurrent) maximum expiration date from March 19, 2008, to March 18, 2008. All of the above calculations of petitioner's 1999 sentence as running concurrently with respect to the undischarged term of his previously imposed indeterminate sentences are consistent with the calculations set forth in Mr. de Simone's January 21, 2009, letter. Since March 18, 2008, has long since passed, habeas corpus relief is warranted.

The delinquency associated with the second of petitioner's two subsequent parole violations does not come into play since the March 24, 2008, delinquency date did not occur until after the merged (concurrent) maximum expiration date of March 18, 2008.

The Court is aware that certain coordinate level courts in the Third Department have issued Gill-related determinations that are at odds with this Decision and Judgment. While this Court has carefully considered the analyses of those courts, it remains convinced that habeas corpus relief is appropriate under the facts and circumstances herein. In Lilley v. James, ___ N.Y.S. 2d ___, 2008 WL 4922354, the Supreme Court, Madison County, considered a Gill-related habeas corpus proceeding filed by an inmate who acknowledged that even if his multiple sentences were calculated as running concurrently his maximum expiration date would not fall until May 10, 2010. The Lilley Court converted the habeas corpus proceeding into a CPLR Article 78 proceeding and directed DOCS officials to commence procedures to obtain the inmate's re-sentencing pursuant to Correction Law § 601-a. Although acknowledging that under Gill DOCS had no authority to calculate Mr. Lilley's sentences as running in consecutive fashion, the Lilley Court found that "[t]he [Gill] Court clearly did not go so far as to hold that Penal Law § 70.25(1) caused the Gill petitioner's sentences to run concurrently as a result of the sentencing court's silence. The [Gill] court made no determination on that question." Id. It appears to this Court that under the Lilley analysis sentence calculations for Gill-related inmates are in limbo (neither consecutive nor concurrent) pending re-sentencing. Such limbo status may be of little more than academic interest where the affected inmate, like Mr. Lilley, is not entitled to immediate release from DOCS custody even if his/her multiple sentences were to be calculated as running in concurrent fashion. In the case at bar, however, the only basis for petitioner's continued incarceration is DOCS' determination to calculate his 1999 sentence as running consecutively with respect to the undischarged term of his previously imposed sentences.

In People ex rel Moeller v. Rivera, ___ N.Y.S. 2d ___, 2008 WL 4489932, the Supreme Court, Ulster County, considered the case of a Gill-related inmate who would have been entitled to immediate release from DOCS custody if his multiple sentences were calculated as running in concurrent fashion. Citing People v. Sparber, 10 NY3d 457, the Moeller Court nevertheless found the petitioner before it was not entitled to immediate release from DOCS custody and, therefore, that habeas corpus did not lie. According to the Moeller Court, "[o]rdinarily, the appropriate action for this Court to take would be to convert the present proceeding to a CPLR Article 78 proceeding challenging DOCS' administrative action in its sentencing calculation. . ." Presumably, the Moeller petitioner would only be entitled to re-sentencing. Sparber, however, was a post-release supervision case where all of the defendants before the Court of Appeals had been sentenced to lengthy determinate terms of imprisonment. Thus, for the Sparber defendants, as was the case for the Lilley petitioner, bases existed for their continued incarcerations in DOCS custody pending re-sentencing. As noted previously, however, there is no basis for the continued incarceration of the petitioner in this proceeding other than DOCS' determination to calculate his 1999 sentence as running consecutively with respect to the undischarged term of his previously imposed sentences. This Court also notes that the Appellate Divisions in the First, Second and Fourth Departments have all sustained habeas corpus relief, post-Sparber, with respect to inmates whose ongoing incarcerations in DOCS custody were based solely upon violations of administratively imposed periods of post-release supervision. See People ex rel Lewis v. Warden, 51 AD3d 512, People ex rel Gerard v. Kralik, 51 AD3d 1045 and People ex rel Foote v. Pascotti, 51 AD3d 1407. The Appellate Division, Third Department, has yet to consider a post- Sparber habeas corpus proceeding.

In Jackson v. Bradt, et al, the Supreme Court, Chemung County (Index #2008-2664) considered the fact that the Gill-related habeas corpus petitioner therein had been sentenced in the Fourth Department. After noting that Gill ran counter to a long line of Fourth Department cases, the Jackson Court held that". . . [i]t would be incongruous for this Court to conclude that the fortuity of placement in the Third Department by DOCS of a sentenced inmate is dispositive with respect to controlling law. The law to be followed, to insure the orderly and consistent resolution of matters such as these, is that of the county in which the sentences were imposed." Id. Although habeas corpus relief was therefore denied, the Jackson Court, sitting in the Third Department, cited no judicial authority in support of its determination to, in effect, apply Fourth Department, rather than Third Department, precedent to the matter before it. This Court is unaware of any such authority and also notes that in Ettari v. Fischer, 54 AD3d 460, the Appellate Division, Third Department, found Gill dispositive in an Article 78 proceeding brought by a DOCS inmate who had been sentenced in the Second Department. See People v. Ettari, 31 AD3d 577.

This Court also finds it would be inappropriate to stay enforcement of this Decision and Judgment pending final resolution of the currently-pending appeal to the Court of Appeals in Gill v. Greene, 48 AD3d 1003. "One entitled to `this, the greatest of all writs' (People ex rel Tweed v. Liscomb, [ 60 NY 559, 556]), should not be held in prison `during the weary processes of an appeal.'" People ex rel Sarley v. Pope, 230 AD 649 at 651, quoting People ex rel Sabatino v. Jennings, 246 NY 258, 261. See also People ex rel Morris v. Meloni, 209 AD2d 1057.

This Decision and Judgment is also rendered without prejudice to any ability that either the People or DOCS may have to seek re-sentencing of the petitioner in the proper forum. See Garner v. New York State Department of Correctional Services, 10 NY3d 358.

Based upon all of the above, it is, therefore, the decision of the Court and it is hereby

ADJUDGED, that the petition is granted, without costs or disbursements, and unless there is another hold on petitioner, the respondent is directed to release petitioner from DOCS custody; and it is further ADJUDGED, that this judgment is rendered without prejudice to any ability that either the People or DOCS may have to seek re-sentencing of petitioner in the proper forum.


Summaries of

In re Appl. of Kirkland v. Artus

Supreme Court of the State of New York, Clinton County
Jan 29, 2009
2009 N.Y. Slip Op. 30183 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2009)
Case details for

In re Appl. of Kirkland v. Artus

Case Details

Full title:IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF ERIC KIRKLAND, #99-B-2756, for…

Court:Supreme Court of the State of New York, Clinton County

Date published: Jan 29, 2009

Citations

2009 N.Y. Slip Op. 30183 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 2009)