Christopher J. RODERICK v. STATE of Maine.
Supreme Judicial Court of Maine.
Decided: March 21, 2013.
2013 ME 34 | 63 A.3d 1052
Argued: Feb. 13, 2013.
R. Christopher Almy, District Attorney, and Susan J. Pope, Asst. Dist. Atty., Prosecutorial District V, Bangor, for appellee State of Maine.
William J. Schneider, Attorney General, and Diane E. Sleek, Asst. Atty. Gen. (orally), Augusta, for amicus curiae Department of Corrections.
Panel: SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, LEVY, SILVER, MEAD, and GORMAN, JJ.
[¶1] Christopher J. Roderick appeals from a judgment entered by the Superior Court in three consolidated cases (Penobscot, Hancock, and Waldo Counties, Hjelm, J.) denying his petitions seeking post-conviction relief in the form of additional “good time” credits against his sentence. Roderick primarily contends that the Department of Corrections (DOC) incorrectly construed
I. BACKGROUND.
[¶2] In 2007, Roderick pleaded guilty to a total of ten counts of burglary spanning three counties. He received an aggregate sentence of eight years’ incarceration, following which he will begin serving a consecutive federal sentence. Because of the pending federal sentence, Roderick is classified as a medium security inmate by DOC. During his incarceration, he has generally received seven days of good time credit per month: four for good conduct pursuant to
[¶3] In August 2009, Roderick filed a petition for post-conviction review. After the petition was amended by counsel, the State moved to dismiss it, in part on the ground that Roderick had not exhausted his administrative remedies as required by
[¶4] In June 2011, Roderick filed a grievance with DOC contending that he should have been receiving two days of good time per month pursuant to
In addition to the days of deduction provided for in paragraph A [allowing up to three days of good time per month for “work, education or rehabilitation programs“], for any person who commits a crime . . . on or after August 1, 2004 and is subsequently sentenced to a term of imprisonment for that crime to a state facility, up to 2 days per calendar month may also be deducted from that term, calculated from the date of commencement of that term as specified under subsection 1, if that person‘s fulfillment of responsibilities assigned in the person‘s transition plan for community work, education or rehabilitation programs during that month is such that the deduction is determined to be warranted in the discretion of the chief administrative officer of the state facility.
The DOC grievance review officer responded, “Since you were not in community work, education or rehabilitation . . . you were not eligible for the extra two (2) days of good time.” Roderick unsuccessfully pursued his claim through the three levels of the DOC grievance process.2
[¶5] The court held an evidentiary hearing on Roderick‘s third amended petition at which Roderick and an assistant attorney general (AAG) representing DOC testified. Roderick offered exhibits and gave testimony establishing that, in addition to holding various prison jobs, he had participated in a variety of programs while incarcerated, including programs concerning substance abuse, career advancement, parenting, workplace safety, and music; he also took college courses offered through the University of Maine at Augusta. Roderick argued to the court, as he does here, that the word “community” in
[¶6] The AAG testified that DOC interprets
[¶7] The AAG explained that part of the rationale for the policy is grounded in evidentiary studies showing that programs do not significantly reduce community risk unless they are completed near the end of a prisoner‘s incarceration. She said that Roderick was ineligible to earn section 1253(10)(B) credit because (1) he was classified as a medium custody inmate due to the federal detainer, making him ineligible to work outside of the prison in the community; and (2) he was not in the last year of his sentence,3 nor would he ever be while in DOC custody due to the pending consecutive federal sentence.
[¶8] The court found that the DOC policy was consistent with
II. DISCUSSION
A. The Maine Administrative Procedure Act
[¶9] Roderick contends that “DOC‘s good time policy is void and unenforceable because it was not adopted in accordance with the [APA].” An agency must comply with the APA before it adopts a rule; otherwise the rule has no legal effect. Mitchell v. Me. Harness Racing Comm‘n, 662 A.2d 924, 926 (Me. 1995);
[¶10] The APA defines a “rule” as the whole or any part of every regulation, standard, code, statement of policy, or other agency guideline or statement of general applicability . . . that is or is intended to be judicially enforceable and implements, interprets or makes specific the law administered by the agency, or describes the procedures or practices of the agency. . . . A rule is not judicially enforceable unless it is adopted in a manner consistent with [the APA].
[p]olicies or memoranda concerning only the internal management of an agency or the State Government and not judicially enforceable; [or]
[a]ny form, instruction or explanatory statement of policy that in itself is not judicially enforceable, and that is intended solely as advice to assist persons in determining, exercising or complying with their legal rights, duties or privileges.
Id.
[¶11] The term “judicially enforceable” is not defined in the APA. Relying on the plain meaning of the term, however, see Fuhrmann v. Staples the Office Superstore E., Inc., 2012 ME 135, ¶ 23, 58 A.3d 1083 (“We interpret the language of a statute de novo by first examining its plain meaning.“), we conclude that the DOC policy is not intended to be judicially enforceable because the Department would never have occasion to ask a court to order anyone to comply with it.4 Rather, the policy is an “instruction or explanatory statement of policy that in itself is not judicially enforceable, and that is intended solely as advice to assist [DOC staff] in determining, exercising or complying with their legal dut[y]” to administer the good time provision created by
B. DOC‘s Interpretation of Section 1253(10)(B)
[¶12] We next look to see whether, as the Superior Court found, the policy comports with
[¶13] Section 1253 sets out three categories of good time credit that Roderick could potentially earn each month. The first category allows up to four days for good conduct.
[¶14] The only significant difference between sections 1253(10)(A) and 1253(10)(B) for our purposes is the word “community.” Roderick argues that the word “community” only modifies “work,” and so an inmate can receive three days of good time credit for prison-based “education or rehabilitation programs” under section 1253(10)(A), or two days for the same programs under section 1253(10)(B) if, as in his case, he had already received the maximum three days’ credit under section 1253(10)(A) for working in the prison. Had he not worked in the prison at all, Roderick argues, then he would have been entitled to three days of credit for his prison-based “education or rehabilitation programs” under section 1253(10)(A), and section 1253(10)(B) would not be implicated.
[¶15] We reject Roderick‘s strained construction of the statutory scheme. In section 1253(10)(A), the Legislature established a maximum of “up to 3 days per calendar month” of good time credit for an inmate‘s combined participation in prison-based “work, education or rehabilitation programs.”
[¶16] Accordingly, we conclude that the word “community” in section 1253(10)(B) modifies each of the three alternatives that immediately follow it—“work, education or rehabilitation programs.” Our reading eliminates the illogical duplication between sections 1253(10)(A) and 1253(10)(B) urged by Roderick and yields the result reached by the Superior Court—an inmate may receive up to three days of good time credit for prison-based work, education or rehabilitation programs, and up to two additional days of credit for work, education or rehabilitation programs that are community based, as described by DOC‘s policy.
[¶17] Roderick further argues that DOC cannot restrict participation in community-based programs to the last year of confinement because section 1253(10)(B) provides that the two-day deduction is “calculated from the date of commencement” of the sentence. The full clause, however, reads “calculated from
[¶18] Because DOC correctly interpreted section 1253(10)(B) to grant potential good time credit only for participation in work, education or rehabilitation programs that are community based, and because its policy does no more than give effect to that construction, the court did not err in denying Roderick‘s petition.5
The entry is:
Judgment affirmed.
