Petitioner challenges the validity of
former
OAR 291-100-110 (Sept 20,1993), an administrative rule promulgated by the Oregon Department of Corrections (DOC).
See
ORS 183.400 (providing for Court of Appeals’ determination of the validity of administrative rules). He asserts that the rule violates his right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and that it “authorizes [the] Department of Corrections to act as a Judicial Branch.”
1
We limit our review to “the face of the rule and the law pertinent to it.”
AFSCME Local 2623 v. Dept. of Corrections,
Former OAR 291-100-110 (Sept 20, 1993) was adopted by DOC to allow it to compute the term of an inmate sentenced pursuant to ORS 137.635, a provision that (1) requires the trial court to impose a determinate sentence and (2) makes the convicted defendant ineligible for probation, parole, earned time, or temporary leave. 2 A trial court is required to impose a sentence under ORS 137.635 when a defendant is convicted of any of the felonies listed in the statute, if the defendant also has a prior conviction for one of the enumerated felonies. Although the statute currently includes a requirement that the trial court note in the judgment whether the sentence was being imposed pursuant to the statute, that requirement was added after petitioner’s conviction and after promulgation of the rule he challenges.
*402 The challenged rule generally repeats the requirements of ORS 137.635 and sets out a procedure for DOC to determine — by examining records of prior convictions— whether an inmate was sentenced under ORS 137.635. As noted, petitioner challenges the rule on the ground that it does not provide for a hearing and that it allows DOC to “act as a Judicial Branch,” thereby violating separation-of-powers principles. We begin with petitioner’s due process argument.
The challenged rule does not, on its face, provide for a hearing as part of the process of determining whether an inmate was sentenced pursuant to ORS 137.635. But even assuming that an individual would have a due process right to a hearing regarding that determination, nothing in the rule prevents DOC from holding such a hearing.
Cf. MacPherson v. DAS,
We also reject petitioner’s argument that DOC is impermissibly performing a judicial function. As an initial matter, contrary to petitioner’s apparent belief that the rule allows DOC to “put petitioner under ORS 137.635,” the rule performs a different function: It provides a procedure under which DOC can determine whether the
trial court
sentenced an inmate under ORS 137.635, so that DOC can carry out the sentence imposed by the court. In any event, DOC does not impermissibly perform a judicial function by determining if an inmate is subject to ORS 137.635. Even if DOC in some sense “adjudicates” an inmate’s status as subject to ORS
*403
137.635, its determination does not offend separation-of-powers principles, because an inmate may challenge its determination through judicial review.
See Baxter v. Monmouth City Council,
Former OAR 291-100-110 (Sept 20, 1993) held valid.
Notes
To the extent that petitioner’s brief can be read to raise other arguments, we reject them without discussion.
Under the sentencing guidelines, which became effective in 1989, all sentences became determinate. Accordingly, when ORS 137.635 became effective in 1990, it remained for DOC (before enactment of the current requirement that the trial court indicate the applicability of ORS 137.635) to determine as a matter of law whether the convicted defendant was eligible for probation, parole, earned time, or temporary leave.
