JOSEPH BOYD RICKMAN v. COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
Record No. 161489
Supreme Court of Virginia
December 28, 2017
JUSTICE D. ARTHUR KELSEY
PRESENT: All the Justices; FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF CHESTERFIELD COUNTY, David E. Johnson, Judge
OPINION
Joseph Boyd Rickman appeals a civil-commitment order entered pursuant to the Sexually Violent Predators Act,
I.
In 2003, Rickman was convicted of five counts of aggravated sexual battery, two charges of forcible sodomy, one charge of abduction of a minor, one charge of object sexual penetration, one charge of taking indecent liberties with a minor, and one charge of contributing to the delinquency of a minor. The circuit court sentenced Rickman to 75 years of imprisonment with 60 years suspended. The charges arose from Rickman‘s sexual abuse of two biological children and two step-children over a period of several years.
In contemplation of his impending release from custody, on August 28, 2015, the Commonwealth filed a petition to have Rickman civilly committed. Pursuant to
Seeking to set a date for the probable-cause hearing, the parties exchanged a series of emails beginning in September 2015. They attempted to find an available date for the assistant attorney general, the Commonwealth‘s expert, Rickman‘s court-appointed counsel, and the circuit court. Rickman‘s counsel initially asked the assistant attorney general for suggested dates within the 90-day period. 1 J.A. at 77. The parties eventually settled on January 8, 2016, as the most convenient and mutually available date.
In an email to the assistant attorney general and to a circuit court docket clerk, Rickman‘s counsel acknowledged that she was available on January 8, 2016, but advised that she [would] need to note an objection if the circuit court set the hearing beyond the 90-day period. Id. at 87. However, at no point prior to the expiration of the 90-day period did either party file a motion for a continuance to extend the time for a hearing beyond 90 days or otherwise seek the intervention of the court.
Over the course of several hearings, the circuit court found probable cause that Rickman was a sexually violent predator and subsequently addressed the merits of the SVPA petition. Upon reviewing the factors set forth in
II.
Rickman argues on appeal that the SVPA petition should have been dismissed with prejudice because the circuit court set the probable-cause hearing beyond the 90-day period required by
A. THE MANDATORY-DIRECTORY DISTINCTION
Our reasoning begins with the nuanced but stark demarcation between rights and remedies that exists in nearly every area of jurisprudence. While judicial remedies are necessarily premised on the violation of . . . legal rights, the law treats the choice or calculation of the related relief as a separate and distinct task. Kent Sinclair, Sinclair on Virginia Remedies § 1-1, at 1-4 (5th ed. 2016). A party to a contract, for example, has a legal right to hold another party to his contractual promises. But if that right is breached, the aggrieved party can recover monetary damages only to the extent he suffers any. The same can be said for a victim whose rights have been violated by a tortfeasor‘s negligence. Even so, in neither of these scenarios would we say that the inability to obtain a remedy really meant no right ever existed in the first place. In the traditional lexicon of the law, the existence of a right is the first, necessary step — not the final, sufficient step — toward obtaining a remedy.1
The distinction between mandatory and directory statutes embraces this dichotomy. The common canard is that a mandatory statute uses a shall command and actually means shall whereas a directory statute uses a shall command but really means may. See, e.g., Chahoon v. Commonwealth, 61 Va. (20 Gratt.) 733, 778-79 (1871) (Staples, J., dissenting) (characterizing a statute held to be directory as able to be disposed of when in the way of the caprice or will of the judge and able to be disregarded at the pleasure of the court). This reductionist view sounds pithy but is too simplistic.
Conversely, a shall command in a directory statute carries no specific, exclusive remedy. Instead, it empowers the court to exercise discretion in fashioning a tailored remedy, if one is called for at all. As one commentator has succinctly explained:
The terms mandatory and directory are only descriptive of the effect that should be given to a statutory provision. There is no essential difference in statutes whereby their mandatory or directory character can be identified in order to determine their effect. No statutory provisions are intended by the legislature to be disregarded; but where the consequences of not obeying them in every particular are not prescribed, the courts must judicially determine them.
3 Norman J. Singer & J.D. Shambie Singer, Sutherland‘s Statutes and Statutory Construction 2 (7th ed. 2008). The issue in this context is not so much one of construction or interpretation but rather of application. Theodore Sedgwick, A Treatise on the Rules Which Govern the Interpretation and Application of Statutory and Constitutional Law 369 (1857). Even when [t]he statute is sufficiently clear, the question remains, what shall be the consequence of a disobedience of its directions? Id.
Under Virginia law, the use of the term ‘shall’ in a statute is generally construed as directory rather than mandatory, and, consequently, no specific, exclusive remedy applies unless the statute manifests a contrary intent. Hood v. Commonwealth, 280 Va. 526, 541, 701 S.E.2d 421, 429-30 (2010) (quoting Jamborsky v. Baskins, 247 Va. 506, 511, 442 S.E.2d 636, 638 (1994)). We have repeatedly reaffirmed this principle in a variety of contexts. Tran v. Board of Zoning Appeals, 260 Va. 654, 657-58, 536 S.E.2d 913, 915 (2000); see also Coleman v. M‘Murdo, 26 Va. (5 Rand.) 51, 82 (1827) (opinion of Green, J.) ([W]hen a statute gives a right and does not prescribe the remedy, the Courts are bound to devise the proper remedy . . . .).
For example, a statute requiring that a court shall schedule within a certain period of time a hearing on a grievance appeal is directory and procedural rather than mandatory and jurisdictional, because it merely directs the mode of proceeding by the circuit court. Horner v. Department of Mental Health, Mental Retardation & Substance Abuse Servs., 268 Va. 187, 194, 597 S.E.2d 202, 206 (2004). A statute requiring that a copy of the jury venire panel shall be given to counsel 48 hours before trial is directory rather than mandatory, and [t]hus, a failure to comply with those provisions is not a per se basis for reversing a trial court‘s judgment in either a civil or a criminal case. Butler v. Commonwealth, 264 Va. 614, 620, 570 S.E.2d 813, 816 (2002). A statute requiring a board of zoning appeals to hear and decide a case within 90 days is directory rather than mandatory, and thus, an appeal decided outside that time frame need not be dismissed in the absence of prejudice. Tran, 260 Va. at 658, 536 S.E.2d at 916.2
B. THE SVPA‘S SCHEDULING REQUIREMENT
We appreciate the analogy to the Speedy Trial Act but find it unpersuasive. The Speedy Trial Act expressly includes two shall commands: (1) a trial shall be scheduled within certain time limits and (2) if the court inexcusably fails to do so, the defendant shall be forever discharged from prosecution for such offense.
Unlike the Speedy Trial Act, the SVPA conspicuously omits any shall command requiring dismissal of the petition as the specific, exclusive remedy for a scheduling violation. Because of this omission, which we presume to be purposeful,3 the SVPA‘s scheduling requirement serves as a directory, not mandatory, statutory command. The structure of the SVPA confirms this conclusion. A dismissal of an SVPA petition after the respondent has been released from incarceration, assuming he remains so,4 would effectively extinguish the statutory predicate for considering a later-filed petition. See Townes v. Commonwealth, 269 Va. 234, 240-41, 609 S.E.2d 1, 4 (2005) (holding that a prisoner must be serving an active sentence for a sexually violent offense . . . at the time he is identified as being subject to the SVPA).5 This dismissal-with-prejudice consequence would result even if the respondent suffered zero prejudice and even if the delay was a single day beyond the 90-day period. There could be no doubt that such a result would be warranted if the SVPA‘s text expressly required it. But it does not. And we
That is not to say that dismissal of an SVPA petition, despite its consequential finality, can never be an appropriate remedy for a violation of the statutory scheduling deadline. A circuit court always has the discretion to dismiss an SVPA petition if due-process concerns justify that remedy. See, e.g., Tran, 260 Va. at 658, 536 S.E.2d at 916 (stating that a violation of a directory statute may result in dismissal if due process concerns are not met (emphasis added)). Included among the range of additional options are orders granting a conditional, temporary release of a respondent, orders expediting the SVPA proceeding, and orders allowing or disallowing evidence at the probable-cause hearing. The court should make its discretionary, remedial decision based upon a commonsense balancing of the prejudice, if any, to the respondent, the length of the delay, the reasons for the delay, and the presence, if any, of bad faith by the Commonwealth in the scheduling process. Cf. Barker, 407 U.S. at 530 & n.30 (employing an analogous balancing test under the Sixth Amendment).
C. RICKMAN‘S DELAYED HEARING
In this case,
The circuit court held that Rickman waived his right to a hearing within the 90-day period by acquiescing to a hearing date beyond the deadline and by failing to file an objection prior to the expiration of the deadline. The court acknowledged the email exchange between counsel and a docket clerk of the circuit court, in which Rickman‘s counsel sought to preserve the objection to the hearing date. See 1 J.A. at 277-78. The court, however, pointed out that it acts on properly filed motions; it does not act on emails and further found that the facts embodied in the various emails do not support [Rickman‘s] contention that an objection was noted. Id. at 285.
We need not address the circuit court‘s waiver rationale because we hold that, even if Rickman did not waive his objection, the SVPA does not require dismissal with prejudice as the specific, exclusive remedy for the claimed scheduling violation. The statute includes no prohibitory or limiting language that prevents [the circuit court] from proceeding or that renders the result of the proceeding invalid. Butler, 264 Va. at 619-20, 570 S.E.2d at 816. By itself, that observation ends this appeal because the only remedy Rickman sought from the circuit court — a dismissal with prejudice — was not required as a matter of law. He did not claim that the delay in any way prejudiced his defense of the SVPA petition. Nor did he request a conditional release pending the delayed probable-cause hearing or assert that the court should have allowed or disallowed evidence at the probable-cause hearing because of the delay.
For this reason, the circuit court did not abuse its discretion by refusing to dismiss the SVPA petition. We thus affirm and leave untouched the circuit court‘s ultimate determination that Rickman‘s status as a sexually violent predator required involuntary, secure inpatient treatment because no suitable less restrictive alternative existed.6
III.
In sum, the circuit court did not err by denying Rickman‘s motion to dismiss the SVPA petition on the ground that the probable-cause hearing did not occur during the 90-day period as required by
Affirmed.
