Plaintiff appeals from the trial court’s sua sponte dismissal of his habeas corpus petition in which he alleged that the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision (Board) unlawfully deferred his release date. We reverse and remand.
Plaintiff was sentenced to life in prison for a murder he committed in June 1977. The Board set a parole release date of December 4,1996, but later deferred parole by order, stating:
“The Board has received a psychological evaluation on inmate dated 03/25/1998.
“The Board, based on all the information it is considering at this hearing finds that the doctor’s diagnosis coupled with all the information it is considering, does result in a finding of a present severe emotional disturbance such as to constitute a danger to the health and safety of the community. The Board has considered this matter under the laws in effect at the time of the commitment offense(s).
“The Board defers release date for 24 months for a projected parole release date of 12/04/2000, for a total of 276 months. A review will be scheduled in 6/2000 with a current psychological evaluation.”
(Emphasis added.)
Plaintiff filed a petition for habeas corpus relief, asserting that the Board deferred his parole release date in violation of constitutional prohibitions against application of ex post facto laws. Plaintiff specifically asserted that ORS 144.125(3), which grants the Board authority to defer parole based on a finding of a “present severe emotional disturbance,” was not in effect in June 1977, when plaintiff committed the crime. See Or Laws 1977, ch 372, § 6, codified as ORS 144.125. 1
The trial court dismissed plaintiffs petition
sua sponte,
citing “the reasoning set forth in
Weidner v. Armenakis,”
In
Weidner,
the Board deferred the plaintiffs release date, applying both the 1991 and 1993 versions of ORS 144.125(3), even though the plaintiffs crimes were committed before the effective date of the 1993 amendments. We determined that the Board’s application of the 1993 statute violated the
ex post facto
provisions of the state and federal constitutions.
Weidner,
Defendant concedes that the trial court erroneously relied on
Weidner
but argues that we should affirm the trial court’s ruling anyway. The disposition that defendant urges
can be characterized as an affirmance based either on “harmless error” or the “right for the wrong reason” doctrine. The primary principle underlying those doctrines is that a trial court will not be “gratuitously reversed,” and if the trial court’s result is, ultimately, correct, it will be affirmed on alternative grounds to avoid an unnecessary remand.
State ex rel Juv. Dept. v. Pfaff,
In the context of a
sua sponte
dismissal of a habeas corpus petition, we will affirm on a “right for the wrong reason” or “harmless error” basis only if it is evident from the face of the plaintiffs petition that the dismissal ultimately is correct.
Compare Gomez v. Maass,
We cannot say the same in this case. As a first alternative basis for affirming the dismissal of the petition, defendant argues that plaintiff did not plead facts showing that no
other timely remedy is available. More specifically, defendant contends that,
Defendant’s second alternative argument is that the Board’s extension of plaintiffs parole release date was nevertheless correct because the applicable statutes and rules gave the Board discretion to consider a prisoner’s mental or physical makeup. Thus, defendant essentially argues that the Board’s finding that plaintiff suffers from a “present severe emotional disturbance” is a lawful basis for extending his parole release date, even if that particular language was not yet expressed in the statutory scheme.
In making that argument, defendant presents an exhaustive discussion about which statutory scheme and administrative rules should be applied to this case and which the Board in fact applied. We decline to resolve that debate with the case in its current posture. To decide if defendant is correct, we would first have to determine which of the many administrative rules and statutes cited by the parties were in effect at the relevant time. Although resolution of that dispute is ultimately a legal inquiry, determining which superseded version of the administrative rules and statutes was in effect at which points in time is not necessarily a straightforward exercise.
Our consideration of alternative arguments for affirming when they are presented for the first time on appeal is discretionary.
See State v. Rogers,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
ORS 144.125 (1977), which became effective a few months after plaintiff committed the offense in question, provided, in part:
“(3) If a psychiatric or psychological diagnosis of present severe emotional disturbance has been made with respect to the prisoner, the board may order the postponement of the scheduled parole release until a specified future date.”
A trial court may dismiss a meritless petition on its own motion as long as it states its reason for the denial and “indicatefsl the petition’s shortcomings ‘so that they can be remedied.’
"Jones v. Armenakis,
As noted, the reasoning in
Weidner
was readopted and reaffirmed in
Merrill.
We refer to
Weidner
rather than to
Merrill
because
Weidner
contains our full analysis.
See Godleske v. Morrow,
Perhaps tellingly, defendant cites ORS 34.680(1) and McClintock as detailing the appropriate standard of our review. Defendant overlooks that the posture of this case is different because the trial court dismissed sua sponte, before the filing of a return, the replication, if any, and supporting evidence as permitted under “summary judgment”-like procedure contemplated by ORS 34.680(1).
