Lead Opinion
FACTS
¶2 On October 19, 1994, Turay was committed as a sexually violent predator under the community protection act, chapter 71.09 RCW. His history of sexually violent crimes includes convictions for third degree rape committed in 1977, second degree rape in 1979, and second degree rape in 1985. On October 24, 1989, he was released on parole. Parole was revoked after Turay was found guilty of committing fourth degree assault on June 5, 1990, on a woman flight attendant staying in a hotel, and of failing to submit to a polygraph. Turay was returned to the Department of Corrections to complete his sentence on the 1979 rape.
¶3 On December 15, 1993, while Turay was still incarcerated, the King County Prosecutor petitioned for Turay’s commitment as a sexually violent predator. The petition did not allege that Turay had committed a “recent overt act,” an act that either caused harm of a sexually violent nature or created a reasonable apprehension of such harm.
¶4 At the commitment trial
¶5 Turay challenged his commitment by both appeal and personal restraint petition, consolidated in In re Detention of Turay,
¶6 On October 1, 2003, Turay filed this, his fourth, personal restraint petition.
¶7 The State contends that Turay’s personal restraint petition should be dismissed as an abuse of the writ. Initially, we agree with the United States Supreme Court that the government has the burden of pleading abuse of the writ. McCleskey v. Zant,
¶8 A prisoner’s second or subsequent personal restraint petition that raises a new issue for the first time will not be considered if raising that issue constitutes an abuse of the writ. In re Pers. Restraint of Jeffries,
¶9 RCW 10.73.140, which concerns the Court of Appeals’jurisdiction to decide successive personal restraint petitions raising new issues, does not apply to personal restraint petitions filed in this court. In re Pers. Restraint of Johnson,
¶10 Before a person can be civilly committed, due process requires proof that he or she is both mentally ill and presently dangerous. Addington v. Texas,
¶11 Following Young, the court considered whether the recent overt act requirement applies under particular circumstances. In re Detention of Henrickson,
¶12 Turay argues that Albrecht controls his case, reasoning that like the petitioner in Albrecht, he was released into the community following incarceration on a sexually violent offense. He maintains that because the State failed to plead and prove a recent overt act, his commitment as a sexually violent predator violates due process. The State says, how
¶13 The issue Turay has raised was not raised in his first or second personal restraint petitions.
¶14 Turay maintains, however, that availability for purposes of abuse of the writ means the “new case” relied upon was available when the earlier petition was filed, citing In re Personal Restraint of Greening,
¶15 Greening does not support Turay’s argument. In Greening, the petitioner’s firearms enhancements were imposed consecutively. At the time he was sentenced a Court of Appeals decision construed the relevant former statute to mean the enhancements had to be imposed consecutively to each other. After the petitioner was sentenced, but before he filed his first personal restraint petition, we overturned the Court of Appeals’ decision. Thereafter, the petitioner filed his first personal restraint petition and then the second petition at issue in Greening. We said our decision on the firearms enhancements was a significant intervening change in the law for purposes of the exception to the time bar in RCW 10.73.090-.100 but determined, for abuse of the writ purposes, that the “decision” was “available” when the petitioner filed the first petition. Greening,
¶16 We did not adopt a new standard in Greening that turns on whether the specific case relied on was available at the time the earlier petition was filed. When discussing availability, we specifically quoted Jeffries’ language referring to a “ ‘new issue that was “available but not relied” ’ ” on in the earlier petition. Greening,
¶18 If intervening case law has made a claim available that was not previously available, then we would not find an abuse of the writ. However, the claim that Turay makes was available under Young.
¶19 Next, Turay’s counsel maintained in oral argument that our reliance on Kuhlmann in Jeffries means that we have also adopted a requirement that counsel deliberately withheld the issue in the prior petition before an abuse will be found under state law. We do not agree. Jeffries itself did not apply such a standard. Instead, the court found abuse of the writ with regard to two issues on the basis that the “legal theories underlying [the petitioner’s] present challenges to [a jury interrogatory regarding mitigating circumstances were] not based on intervening case law, and could have been identified and argued when [the petitioner] filed the prior petitions.” Jeffries,
¶20 We are aware that dictum in Stoudmire indicates that under Jeffries an abuse of the writ should not be found unless the failure to raise the issue earlier was a delaying tactic. Stoudmire,
¶ 21 Of course, an inexcusable neglect standard necessarily implies that some failures to raise an issue in an earlier personal restraint petition may be excused. When McCleskey was decided, the Court determined that the same cause and prejudice standard would apply to the failure to raise a claim as applies to excuse in federal habeas proceedings the procedural default of a claim in state court. Thus, to excuse the failure to raise an issue in an earlier petition, the petitioner had to show objective cause, i.e., some external impediment preventing the construction or raising of the claim, such as government interference or the reasonable unavailability of the factual or legal basis for the claim, and actual prejudice. McCleskey,
¶22 After McCleskey was decided, Congress passed the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214 (1996) (AEDPA). The Court subsequently reaffirmed that “ ‘the doctrine of abuse of the writ refers to a complex and evolving body of equitable principles informed and controlled by historical usage, statutory developments, and judicial decisions.’ ” Felker v. Turpin,
¶23 Under state law, as explained in Jeffries, we recognized that the failure to raise an issue in an earlier petition may be excused where a claim is based on newly discovered evidence or an intervening change in case law that was unavailable when the earlier petition was filed. Jeffries,
¶24 We also find no basis here for any exception comparable to the actual innocence exception under federal law. Turay is not confined pursuant to a criminal conviction, and there is no issue of innocence to consider.
¶25 We dismiss the personal restraint petition as an abuse of the writ.
Johnson, Ireland, Bridge, Owens, and Fairhurst, JJ., concur.
Notes
Turay had an earlier commitment trial where a less than unanimous jury determined he was a sexually violent predator. Following this court’s holding in In re Personal Restraint of Young,
While we relied on federal law in Jeffries,
That the present petition is a second, third, fourth, or successive petition is not dispositive. The abuse of the writ doctrine may apply to dismiss a second or successive petition. Jeffries,
We determined in Stoudmire,
We note that the Court in McCleskey cited federal cases decided in the 1980s for the proposition that “a petitioner may abuse the writ by failing to raise a claim through inexcusable neglect.” McCleskey,
In clarifying that an inexcusable neglect standard applies rather than deliberate withholding, we emphasize that an abuse of the writ may be found where there is no ill intent or improper pursuit of goals such as prolonging postconviction review through piecemeal argument. We do not ascribe any such motive to Turay’s counsel.
Turay argues that United States Supreme Court cases hold that a state court must provide a forum and consider a due process challenge such as he makes on the merits regardless of procedural bars. He reasons that Fiore v. White,
We grant Turay’s motion to take judicial notice of briefing filed in Turay II. In light of our decision, we do not reach the issue raised by the State’s cross-motion and therefore deny it.
Concurrence Opinion
¶27 Now, the abuse of the writ doctrine has mutated to serve a new purpose: docket management. Dismissing a case on abuse of the writ has become essentially an administrative function, allowing courts to winnow down their dockets. While I have great sympathy for the expanding work load of the judiciary, I concur with Justice Sanders that the touchstone should be equity, and I would allow successive petitions upon a showing of good cause why the argument was not raised earlier.
¶28 The purpose of the great writ of habeas corpus (and thus integral to its successor, the personal restraint petition) is to police illegal restraint. See Horace G. Wood, A Treatise on the Legal Remedies of Mandamus and Prohibition, Habeas Corpus, Certiorari, and Quo Warranto 111 (Charles F. Bridge ed., Fred B. Rothman & Co. 3d ed. 2002) (1896). The trend toward summary dismissal undermines this vital purpose. I do not favor the creation of new rules, or the
¶29 I respectfully concur in the result only.
Dissenting Opinion
¶ 30 (dissenting) — Absent proof of a recent overt act, Richard Garrett Turay has been unlawfully imprisoned as a sexually violent predator since 1994. However, the majority dismisses Turay’s personal restraint petition (PRP), claiming the petition is an abuse of the writ.
¶31 Turay had been incarcerated for second degree rape but was later released on parole. After months of freedom he was reincarcerated for a parole violation. At that point the State filed its sexual predator petition, seeking further incarceration under the sex predator statute. He was convicted at trial but without proof of a recent overt act. Turay challenged the judgment by direct appeal and simultaneous personal restraint petition. We dismissed the PRP because it addressed the same issues as the direct appeal. In re Det. of Turay,
¶32 After Turay lost the appeal, he filed a second PRP, arguing this civil commitment statute was unconstitutionally punitive. This court dismissed the second PRP in light of a recent United States Supreme Court case. Turay then filed a third PRP in May 2002, which we dismissed as a mixed petition. In re Pers. Restraint of Turay,
¶33 On October 1, 2003, Turay filed his fourth and instant PRP, now at issue.
¶34 In re Personal Restraint of Jeffries,
¶35 The touchstone for abuse of the writ is equity, and equity’s goal is “ ‘to do substantial justice.’ ” Hough v. Stockbridge,
¶36 The majority dismisses Turay’s current PRP as an abuse of the writ because it allegedly raises a previously available issue. Majority at 50-51. Turay claims the State was required to prove a recent overt act but failed to do so, contrary to intervening case law—our decision in In re Detention of Albrecht,
¶37 Albrecht was not decided until after Turay filed his previous petitions.
¶38 I disagree. Albrecht is “intervening case law” upon which Turay may now properly rely. That decision was previously unavailable. Turay cannot be faulted for failure to anticipate a decision which was yet to be made.
¶39 Young’s holding was clear, express, and unequivocal: “we hold that the State must provide evidence of a recent overt act in accord with [In re] Harris [,
¶40 The literal language of Young established a bright line rule: the State must prove a recent overt act only when the individual is not incarcerated on the day the commitment petition is filed. The physical location of the individual on that date is outcome determinative according to Young. Turay had no claim under Young because he was imprisoned on the day the State filed the commitment petition. Proof of a recent overt act was unnecessary as per Young.
¶41 Subsequent to Young, In re Detention of Henrickson,
In order to commit a nonincarcerated individual as a sexually violent predator, the State must also prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the individual has committed a recent overt act evidencing his or her status as a sexually violent predator. As long as the individual is in custody on the day the petition is filed, however, the statute does not require proof of a recent overt act.
When, on the day a sexually violent predator petition is filed, an individual is incarcerated for a sexually violent offense, or for an act that would itself qualify as a recent overt act, due process does not require the State to prove a further overt act occurred between arrest and release from incarceration.
Henrickson,
¶42 Then comes Albrecht. That case changed the law 180 degrees from Young by squarely holding mere incarceration is insufficient to relieve the State of its burden to prove a recent overt act. Albrecht,
|43 Contrary to Young’s bright line rule, Albrecht held the mere fact of incarceration is now insufficient; release into the community preceding the current incarceration requires proof of a recent overt act. Although I would argue the rule in Albrecht is a good one, it cannot be understood from Young or Henrickson. Hence Albrecht was intervening case law not previously “available.” Turay should not be penalized for lack of clairvoyance.
¶44 Albrecht’s dissent even claimed “that the majority is overruling Henrickson” and was uncertain “[w]here the majority opinion leaves our holding in Henrickson.” Albrecht,
¶45 Even assuming Albrecht is not intervening case law upon which Turay may justifiably rely, the majority also rejects Turay’s argument that the omission of an issue in a previous petition must be intentional to abuse the writ,
¶46 The majority relies on federal law to support the inexcusable neglect standard without duly considering the intentional standard developed under our state’s jurisprudence. See McCleskey v. Zant,
¶47 But even under the inexcusable neglect standard, Turay’s petition is proper. The United States Supreme Court has noted two situations in which a court may excuse a procedural default and examine the merits of the case: upon a showing of cause and prejudice, or when there is a fundamental miscarriage of justice. McCleskey,
¶48 The majority dismisses the cause and prejudice exception as applied to Turay for the same reasons it rejected his Albrecht argument—the majority asserts the law has not changed enough to make Turay’s overt act claim previously unavailable. Majority at 55-56.1 disagree for the reasons stated. A significant development of legal authority is an objective cause, and it is good cause to protect anyone from deprivation of liberty absent proof from the State of all necessary elements to justify a civil commitment under the statute and constitution.
¶49 Likewise, the majority a priori rejects the fundamental miscarriage of justice standard when applied to civil commitments. The majority reasons that no innocent person can be “punished” when the confinement is “civil,” not “criminal.” Majority at 56. The majority’s argument completely ignores reality and precedent.
¶50 The technical distinction between a criminal incarceration and a civil commitment is meaningless to a person in Turay’s situation. In both cases, the person is not free to come and go as he pleases, and his liberty has been lost to incarceration. Civil incarceration is, according to the United States Supreme Court, “a massive curtailment of liberty.” Humphrey v. Cady, 405 U.S. 504, 509,
¶51 Turay’s personal restraint petition does not abuse the writ. He is entitled to his day in court to test his incarceration against recent case law developments. The petition should be granted because the State failed to plead
152 I dissent.
Alexander, C.J., concurs with Sanders, J.
We decided Albrecht on August 1, 2002. Turay’s most recent PRP before the current one was filed in May 2002.
The legislature codified the recent overt act requirement following Young. See Albrecht,
