GLOVER v PAROLE BOARD
Docket No. 111221
Supreme Court of Michigan
Decided July 13, 1999.
Argued January 22, 1999 (Calendar No. 12).
460 Mich. 511
In an opinion by Justice BRICKLEY, joined by Chief Justice WEAVER, and Justices CAVANAGH, KELLY, and YOUNG, the Supreme Court held:
1. Persons serving parolable life terms who are denied parole are entitled under
2. While
Justice TAYLOR, joined by Justice CORRIGAN, concurring, stated that the remand ordered by the Court of Appeals should be affirmed on the basis of
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Neal Bush and John F. Royal for plaintiff-appellee.
Jennifer M. Granholm, Attorney General, Thomas L. Casey, Solicitor General, and Chester S. Sugierski, Jr., Assistant Attorney General, for defendant-appellant.
Amici Curiae:
Barbara R. Levine for Prisons and Corrections Section, State Bar of Michigan.
Jeanice Dagher-Margosian and Stuart G. Friedman for American Civil Liberties Union Fund of Michigan and Criminal Defense Attorneys of Michigan.
BRICKLEY, J. We granted leave to appeal in this case to review the propriety of the Court of Appeals holdings that (1) an individual serving a parolable life sen-
Although we reverse the Court of Appeals holding regarding the due process and OMA questions, we affirm the remand to the parole board for a more detailed written explanation on the basis of
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
On January 19, 1976, then twenty-one-year-old Mary Glover and her husband decided to steal some money from a gas station in Shiawasee County. While Ms. Glover‘s husband kept the attendant busy, Ms. Glover removed some money from a cash register. The Glovers were detained by gas station employees when the till was found to be open. Ms. Glover‘s husband slipped Ms. Glover a handgun he had and asked her to hide it. Ms. Glover hid the gun in the ladies’ room toilet. A few minutes later, Ms. Glover‘s husband asked Ms. Glover to retrieve the gun so they could escape. Ms. Glover retrieved the gun and handed it to her husband. While attempting to escape apprehension, Ms. Glover‘s husband shot three people. One of the victims died immediately, and two others were seriously wounded. Ms. Glover was charged with one count of felony murder and two counts of assault with intent to commit murder. Pursuant to a plea bargain entered into after two days of trial, Ms. Glover pleaded guilty to one count of second-degree murder and two counts of assault with
In 1994, i.e., after eighteen years of incarceration, the parole board voted to move Ms. Glover‘s request for parole to a public hearing. The successor judge4 declined to exercise his right under
A public hearing was held on May 25, 1994. As the Court of Appeals stated:
Appellant‘s case might be described as a cause celebre. Her many supporters submitted letters5 and gave testimony
Notes
I write in support of a grant of parole to Mary Glover.
As a federal judge I have for many years been involved in the correctional system as it affects women in this State. The Department of Corrections and I have been working toward and reaching a balanced constitutional view of women in prison.
The case that has been the mechanism through which positive results have occurred bears Mary Glover‘s name. She, together with other women, are the persons involved in the original class action suit which came before me. Her contribution and presence in that case have always been positive.
It is because of my recognition of her contribution that I am motivated to write this letter to you. She has distinguished herself
However, relatives and friends of the victims, as well as community members, opposed parole6 for various reasons, not the least being the tragic loss they had experienced as a result of appellant‘s acts.
[226 Mich App 655, 657-658; 575 NW2d 772 (1997).]
At the conclusion of the hearing, the chairperson of the parole board stated in pertinent part:
as an inmate over many years in assisting not only to improve the attitude of women inmates toward a realistic accommodation of their condition, but she also has grown as a person in that effort. It is for these reasons that I write in support of her request.
Also adduced at the hearing was Ms. Glover‘s receipt of twenty-nine misconducts during her incarceration.
On August 1, 1994, the parole board issued the following Notice of Action declining to grant parole:
After full consideration of the positions taken by those testifying at the public hearing and consideration of the adjustment, attitude and behavior of the prisoner, the parole board withdraws interest in proceeding toward parole at this time. You will next be interviewed by the parole board five years from your most recent interview as indicated in the official date above.
Ms. Glover sought judicial review of this denial with the circuit court, complaining that the parole board had not provided a sufficiently detailed statement explaining its decision to deny her parole, that the parole board had violated the oma because the decision to deny parole was made without public notice, and that a recent statute7 changing the interval of a lifer‘s parole interview from every two years to every five years violated the Ex Post Facto Clauses of the federal and Michigan Constitutions.8 The circuit court rejected each of Ms. Glover‘s claims.
The Court of Appeals granted Ms. Glover‘s application for leave to appeal. The Court of Appeals found the parole board‘s explanation for denying parole inadequate, stating:
In the face of a mountain of information concerning appellant‘s correctional history, the Parole Board here
The Court of Appeals held as follows: (1) no statute required the parole board to provide a written explanation for its decision to deny parole, (2) Ms. Glover nevertheless had a right under the federal and state Due Process Clauses to a written explanation of why she had been denied parole, (3) no ex post facto violation had occurred,9 and (4) the parole board had violated the OMA by making its final decision to deny parole without public notice. The Court remanded the case to the parole board so that it could provide a written explanation and retained jurisdiction, holding in abeyance consideration of the merits pending review of the board‘s written explanation. Id. at 670.10
THE BOARD‘S “EXPLANATION”
The primary issue in this case is whether Ms. Glover is entitled to a written explanation of the reason the parole board denied her request for parole. Before considering that question, however, we first must determine whether Ms. Glover has already received an adequate explanation. If she has, there is no need to remand or reach the other questions in this case.
The record of the public hearing reveals that there was substantial support for Ms. Glover‘s request for parole. Numerous letters of support had been submitted. Testimony showed Ms. Glover‘s educational achievements, her involvement in religious activities while incarcerated, her participation in individual and group psychotherapy, and a psychological report indicating that she did not need further psychotherapy. Moreover, resident unit managers filed positive reports, Ms. Glover had a confirmed offer of employment, and one of the deceased victim‘s children testified in favor of granting Ms. Glover parole.
Notwithstanding the impressive presentation on behalf of Ms. Glover, the record of the public hearing also establishes that there was significant opposition to a grant of parole. There was testimony from the surviving victim and relatives of the victims, all of whom opposed parole, along with a number of com-
that no violation of the Ex Post Facto Clauses had occurred. However, Judge GAGE dissented from the majority‘s due process and OMA holdings.
That this was a difficult decision was made clear when the chairperson of the parole board stated at the conclusion of the public hearing “we wouldn‘t be here if it wasn‘t close.” The parole board, after exercising its discretion to grant or deny parole, was required, pursuant to
DUE PROCESS
The Court of Appeals held that Ms. Glover had a federal and a state due process right13 to have the parole board provide a sufficiently detailed written explanation of its decision to deny her request for parole. In concluding that Ms. Glover‘s due process rights had been violated, the Court of Appeals relied solely upon a dissenting opinion from Greenholtz v Inmates of Nebraska Penal & Correctional Complex, 442 US 1; 99 S Ct 2100; 60 L Ed 2d 668 (1979). The Greenholtz majority held: “That the state holds out the possibility of parole provides no more than a mere hope that the benefit will be obtained . . . a hope which is not protected by due process.” Id. at 11.14 The dissenting opinion would have held that due
The United States Supreme Court is the final arbiter regarding the meaning of the federal constitution, Marbury v Madison, 5 US (1 Cranch) 137; 2 L Ed 60 (1803), and the federal judiciary is supreme in the exposition of the federal constitution. Cooper v Aaron, 358 US 1, 18; 78 S Ct 1401; 3 L Ed 2d 5 (1958). Neither the Court of Appeals nor any other court, save for the United States Supreme Court itself on rehearing or in a later case, is free to hold that the federal constitution provides a right that a majority opinion of the United States Supreme Court says it does not contain.15 Accordingly, we reverse the Court of Appeals holding that Ms. Glover‘s federal due process rights were violated when the parole board failed to provide a sufficiently detailed explanation for its decision.
The Court of Appeals also held that Ms. Glover‘s state due process rights required the parole board to
required to follow such procedural rules as a matter of federal due process“).
Amicus Curiae Prison and Corrections Section of the State Bar of Michigan argues that the continuing viability of Greenholtz has been seriously undermined by Sandin v Conner, 515 US 472; 115 S Ct 2293; 132 L Ed 2d 418 (1995). However, amicus curiae also states that “[t]he implications of Sandin for due process in the parole context are unclear” and concedes that Sandin did not purport to overrule Greenholtz. Given such circumstances, we are satisfied that Ms. Glover‘s federal due process rights were not violated by the parole board‘s terse explanation. We agree with Judge GAGE‘S conclusion that Ms. Glover has not demonstrated a protectable interest covered by due process guarantees that entitles her to a more detailed explanation of the reasons behind the parole board‘s denial of parole. 226 Mich App 680.
This Court is, of course, free to find that an individual has greater rights under a Michigan constitutional provision than under its federal counterpart when compelling reasons to do so exist.16 The Court of Appeals, however, engaged in no analysis of the Michigan constitutional language independent of the federal constitutional language, nor did it examine or base its state due process ruling on the second sentence of
STATUTORY RIGHT TO A WRITTEN EXPLANATION
The Court of Appeals determined that Ms. Glover did not have a statutory right to a written explanation of the parole board‘s decision. Anticipating that this Court might disagree with the Court of Appeals due process holding, Ms. Glover maintains, as she has throughout these proceedings, that Michigan parole
The parole board‘s jurisdiction is governed by
Parole interviews are governed by
When the parole board makes a final determination not to release a prisoner, the prisoner shall be provided with a written explanation of the reason for denial and, if appropriate, specific recommendations for corrective action the prisoner may take to facilitate release.
The Court of Appeals held that the “written explanation” provision in § 35(12) is applicable only to prisoners serving indeterminate sentences. We find nothing in § 35 remotely suggesting that parolable life
We conclude that the Court of Appeals remand in the instant case was well within its authority, although its cited justification for the remand was in error. Our holding today is narrow: Our decision is
In the instant case, the parole board stated that it was denying parole after considering Glover‘s “adjustment, attitude and behavior.” However, there was testimony that Glover had adjusted well, had a good attitude, and had engaged in much good behavior. Similarly, there was also evidence of a poor adjustment, an insincere attitude, and bad behavior.22 If the record were one-sided, containing almost all negative information about the prisoner, the explanation provided
Likewise, we do not intimate that a reviewing court should remand for an explanation whenever a prisoner‘s positive factors equal or outnumber the negative factors. Rather, a remand is appropriate only when a reviewing court, after surveying the explanation given and relevant record, cannot discern, such as here, the basis of the parole board‘s decision.
OPEN MEETINGS ACT
Lastly, we consider the Court of Appeals holding that the parole board violated the OMA by deciding to deny Ms. Glover parole without public notice and in a closed, informal voting procedure.
As explained by the Court of Appeals:
Before amendment in 1987,
MCL 791.202(2) ; MSA 28.2272(2) stated:“The business which the [Michigan Corrections Commission] or the parole board may perform shall be conducted at a public meeting held in compliance with [the OMA]. Public notice of the time, date, and place of the meeting shall be given in the manner required by [the OMA].”
In 1987, the Legislature amended
MCL 791.202(2) ; MSA 28.2272(2), deleting its language concerning the Parole Board. 1987 PA 79. [226 Mich App 674.]
The Court of Appeals majority, however, found that the board was subject to the OMA because the Legislature did not amend the OMA, exempting the board when it amended
We find ourselves in agreement with the circuit court and Judge GAGE. Under the Court of Appeals majority opinion, the Legislature‘s amendment of
CONCLUSION
The Court of Appeals remand to the parole board for a more detailed explanation is affirmed. The Court of Appeals shall further consider Glover‘s appeal upon receipt of the explanation from the parole board. The Court of Appeals federal and state due process and OMA rulings are reversed.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
WEAVER, C.J., and CAVANAGH, KELLY, and YOUNG, JJ., concurred with BRICKLEY, J.
TAYLOR, J. (concurring). I join the majority in affirming the remand to the parole board for a more
I agree with the result and reasoning of the majority opinion with the exception of its holding that Glover had a statutory right to a written explanation pursuant to
On timely motion by a party, or on the court‘s own motion, the court may remand the matter to the parole board for an explanation of its decision.
The Legislature has implicitly chosen in
CORRIGAN, J., concurred with TAYLOR, J.
To whom it may concern[:] In regard to the hearing for the release of Mary Glover # A-145435. This person was sentenced to serve life imprisonment. She should not be released. I was the owner of the establishment where her crime was committed. That was the very worst day of my life. She was the one that started the happening by getting into my cash register and taking money from it. From then on it sno[w]balled into the shooting where George Root was killed—two others were wounded one of which died as a result. No amount of rehabilitation can cause her to be worthy of release. Do not turn this person loose.
No person shall be . . . deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law . . . .
No state shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law . . . .
[N]o person shall . . . be deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of law. The right of all individuals, firms, corporations and voluntary associations to fair and just treatment in the course of legislative and executive investigations and hearings shall not be infringed.
