Jeffery Wayne WANSLEY, Petitioner-Appellee, v. MISSISSIPPI DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS; Emmitt Sparkman, Respondents-Appellants.
No. 13-60348.
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit.
Oct. 2, 2014.
766 F.3d 309
Agreeing not to impose a blanket stay on direct appeal, but not having convinced colleagues whom I respect as to the scope of the stay that is appropriate, I would grant the State‘s independent request to expedite its appeal of an underlying issue that has complexity which divides courts, as well as profundity which divides convictions deeper than the rules of law courts must apply.
Jerrolyn M. Owens, Office of the Attorney General, Jackson, MS, for Respondents-Appellants.
Before DAVIS, DENNIS, and COSTA, Circuit Judges.
GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge.
The Mississippi Department of Corrections denied Jeffery Wayne Wansley a parole hearing based on its view that he received an enhanced penalty, which renders a prisoner ineligible for parole in Mississippi. In seeking federal habeas corpus relief, Wansley argues that his sentence was not enhanced, and that the denial of a hearing violated state law and therefore deprived him of a liberty interеst protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The district court granted his petition, ordering a parole hearing. On appeal, Respondents argue that the discretionary nature of Mississippi‘s parole regime mеans there is no liberty interest that gives rise to a federal constitutional issue.
I.
In 1999, Wansley was convicted of selling cocaine within 1,500 feet of a church in Mississippi state court. When Wansley was charged and convicted, the maximum sentence for sеlling cocaine was 30 years.
In Mississippi, prisoners convicted of felonies with enhanced penalties are not eligible for parole.
Wansley sought relief through MDOC‘s Administrative Remedy Program. He argued that since his 30-year sentencе did not exceed the statutory maximum for selling cocaine absent the enhancement, MDOC had erred in finding that he received an enhanced sentence. MDOC responded that Wansley was ineligible because, regardless of the sentence he received, a jury found him guilty of selling cocaine within 1,500 feet of a church. The record does not reveal whether Wansley proceeded beyond the first step of the program.
Wansley then filed a motion for clarification in the Mississippi Suрreme Court, requesting that the court clarify this sentence discrepancy. The court denied his motion, stating only that it was not well taken. Wansley then filed a similar motion in Mississippi trial court; it was denied on the ground that the court lacked jurisdiction to cоnsider a petition for post-conviction relief without the Mississippi Supreme Court‘s approval.
Wansley then filed a pro se habeas corpus petition in federal court, claiming that he was eligible for parole under Mississippi law. Respondents moved to dismiss beсause (1) Wansley‘s claim did not allege a violation of federal law cognizable in federal habeas corpus review, and (2) Wansley‘s sentence was enhanced by virtue of his conviction of selling cocaine within 1,500 feet of a church.
Thе district court appointed counsel to represent Wansley. His subsequent briefs argued that, by denying him a parole hearing to which he was entitled under Mississippi law, MDOC deprived him of a liberty interest in violation of the Due Process Clause.
The magistrate judgе recommended ruling against Wansley, finding that Mississippi law did not create a liberty interest in parole that implicated due process protections and, in the alternative, that the denial of relief by the Mississippi Supreme Court was not unreasonable. The district court did not adopt the magistrate judge‘s recommendation. Instead, it first determined that Wansley had exhausted his remedies by fairly present[ing] his issue to the Mississippi Supreme Court. It then addressed Wansley‘s eligibility for a parole hearing under Mississippi law. Citing a Mississippi Court of Appeals decision, see Pearson v. State, 64 So.3d 569, 577 (Miss.Ct.App.2011), the district court concluded that because the sentencing judge in Wansley‘s case had declined to exceed the nonenhanced statutory maximum, Wansley had not received аn enhanced sentence and was therefore eligible for a parole hearing.
The district court then turned to the constitutional issues. Acknowledging that Mississippi law does not create a constitutionally protected liberty interest in pаrole itself because parole is discretionary, it held that Wansley nonetheless had a constitutional right to a parole hearing. Relying on Hicks v. Oklahoma, 447 U.S. 343, 100 S.Ct. 2227, 65 L.Ed.2d 175 (1980), it found that Wansley has a liberty interest in having MDOC compute his sentence in accordance with the sеntencing authority‘s exercise of discretion, and that he was
II.
A fеderal court may issue a writ of habeas corpus only if a state prisoner is in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.
Parole, however, is discretionary in Mississippi, so prisoners in the state have no liberty interest in parоle. See
But an expectation of receiving process is not, without more, a liberty interest protected by the Due Procеss Clause. See Olim v. Wakinekona, 461 U.S. 238, 250 n. 12, 103 S.Ct. 1741, 75 L.Ed.2d 813 (1983); accord Ladd v. Stephens, 748 F.3d 637, 644 (5th Cir.2014) (holding that it is where there is ‘a significant substantive liberty interest [at stake]’ that a state law entitles the petitioner to a set of core procedural due process protections); Elliott v. Martinez, 675 F.3d 1241, 1245 (10th Cir.2012) (noting, regarding the Due Process Clause, thаt the protected interests are substantive rights, not rights to procedure). We may only question states’ procedures when they are fundamentally inadequate to vindicate [a] substantive right[]. Dist. Attorney‘s Office for Third Judicial Dist. v. Osborne, 557 U.S. 52, 69, 129 S.Ct. 2308, 174 L.Ed.2d 38 (2009).
Accordingly, when a prisoner has no liberty interest in obtaining parole he cannot complain of the constitutionality of procedural devices attendant to parole
Hicks v. Oklahoma, on which the district court relied, does not establish that there is a liberty interest in a parole hearing. That case involved the question of what the Due Process Clause required after a defendant was sentenced pursuant to a 40-year mandatory sentencing statute later held tо be unconstitutional. Hicks, 447 U.S. at 345. A 40-year sentence, or sentence of any length for that matter, undoubtedly implicates a defendant‘s liberty interest---one that arises from the federal constitution itself without recourse to the state-created liberty interest inquiry. Hicks was therefore only concerned with the second step of what process is due once a liberty interest is implicated.
Whether or not Wansley is entitled to a parole hearing as a matter of Mississippi law, the discretionary naturе of the state‘s parole system ends the federal due process inquiry.6 Any relief he is entitled to under Mississippi law must be obtained in the courts of that state. We therefore REVERSE the judgment of the district court and DISMISS Wansley‘s petition.
GREGG COSTA
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
