¶1 Jоhn Wigglesworth filed a complaint against Governor Jane Hull and Deputy Warden Rick Mauldin of the Arizona Department of Corrections alleging violation of his constitutional rights when former Governor J. Fife Symington III declined to commute his sentences. He appeals from the trial eourt’s dismissal of his complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. 1
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶ 2 In reviewing the trial court’s dismissal, we take the material allegations of the complaint as true.
See Aldabbagh v. Arizona Dep’t of Liquor Licenses and Control,
¶3 Wigglesworth applied to the Arizona Board of Executive Clemency (the “Board”) for a commutation of his sentences. At a heаring on March 7, 1995, the Board recommended that his sentences be reduced to eight years and submitted this recommendation to Governor Symington, who for unknown reasons declined to follow it.
¶ 4 Wigglesworth then filed this suit claiming that his constitutional rights had been violated. The trial court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6), Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure (“Rule”), and dismissed the complaint with prejudice. Wigglesworth then filed a motion to vacate the judgment pursuant to Rule 59, which was also denied. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
Due Process Claim
¶ 5 Wigglesworth first argues that the trial court improperly dismissed his com
plaint
¶ 6 An inmate’s interest in commutation of his sentence does not by itself trigger due process protections because there is no entitlement to reduction of a valid sentence.
See Connecticut Board of Pardons v. Dumschat,
¶ 7 In 1994, our legislature created a procedure for disproportionality review to “equalize some of the disparity between sentences imposed under the former sentencing statutes and those imposеd under the revised statutes.”
State v. Nguyen,
¶ 8 Wigglesworth now argues that, once the Board determined that his sentences were excessive and recommended that Governor Symington reduce them to eight years, he had a justifiable expectation that his sentences would in fact be reduced and that this expectation was protected by the Due Process Clause. While equity might support that result, our present law of commutation does not. Although the disproportionality review procedure contains mandatory standаrds governing the Board’s conduct and establishes defined criteria for its determinations, it establishes no corresponding criteria whatsoever for the governor’s response to the Board’s recommendation. The governor’s discretion to grant or deny commutation remains totally unfettered.
3
See Woratzeck v. Arizona Bd. of Exec. Clemency,
¶ 9 Arizona’s present unstructured gubernatorial commutation procedure thus exposes “the heart of executive clemency, which is to grant clemency as a matter of grace.”
Ohio Adult Parole Authority v. Woodard,
¶ 10 Given this history, courts traditionally have taken the position that clemency lies outside the adjudicative process and generally escapes review by the courts.
4
See, e.g., Dumschat,
¶ 11 Because the legislature’s disproportionality review standards place no substantive limitations on an Arizona governor’s discretion to grant or deny commutation via standards similar to the standards imposed on the Board, it places a governor’s commutation decision outside the adjudicatory process.
See id.,
at 1023. This procedure also fails to create a protected liberty interest regardless of the Board’s recommendation of commutation.
See Olim v. Wakinekona,
¶ 12 In reviewing a motion to dismiss, we determine whether the complaint, construed in a light most favorable to the plaintiff, sufficiently sets forth a valid claim.
See Al-dabbagh,
Eighth Amendment Claim
¶ 13 Wigglesworth next argues that his complaint properly claimed a violation of the Eighth Amendment guarantee against cruel
¶ 14 The Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution and art. 2, § 15 of the Arizona Constitution prohibit the infliction of cruel and unusual punishment. However, “what is cruel and unusual is not so clear.”
State v. DePiano,
¶ 15 Notwithstanding this legislative prerogative, the Supreme Court has recognized that the Eighth Amendment does forbid extreme sentences grossly disproportionate to culpability.
5
See Harmelin v. Michigan,
¶ 16 In assessing gross disproportionality, a court should focus on the offense generally without analyzing the particular circumstances of the сrime or the offender.
See id.
In
Harmelin,
the Supreme Court held that even a sentence of life imprisonment without possibility of parole for possession of 672 grams of cocaine did not violate the Eighth Amendment, because, given the correlation between drugs and crime, “the Michigan Legislature could with reason conclude that the threat posed to the individual and society by possession of this large an amount of cocaine — in terms of violence, crime, and social displacement — is momentous enough to warrant the deterrence and retribution of a life sentence without parole.”
¶ 17 Like the sentence in
Harmelin,
Wigglesworth’s harsh life sentences for two counts of possession of a narcotic drug for sale and one count of transportation of a narcotic drug for sale did not violate the
Harmelin
gloss on the Eighth Amendment, a conclusion more ineluctable given that he was sentenced under a recidivist statute. As the Court noted in
Rummel,
recidivist statutes such as the one applying to Wiggles-worth reflect the states’ interest “in dealing in a harsher manner with those who by repeated criminal acts have shown that they are simply incapable of conforming to the norms of society as established by its criminal law.”
¶ 18 Given this current interpretation of the Eighth Amendment, it is irrelevant to Wigglesworth’s claim that our legislature revised the sentencing scheme after the сommission of his crimes and that the Board’s careful analysis found his sentence “excessive” compared to the current penal scheme. The fact that penalties for his crimes have recently been reduced does not render his punishment under earlier statutes “cruel and unusual.” The legislature expressly provided that the revised A.R.S. section 13-604.02 would not affect persons convicted of an offense committed before Januаry 1, 1994.
See
1993 Ariz. Sess. Laws, Ch. 255, § 101. Notwithstanding the revisions to this statute, because Wigglesworth’s sentences under the previous statute did not constitute cruel and unusual punishment, the trial court properly held that his complaint
Equal Protection Claim
¶ 19 Wigglesworth also contends that his complaint set forth a claim for violation of his equal protection rights because Governor Symington arbitrarily commuted the sentences of some othеr inmates but not his. The equal protection clauses of the state and federal constitutions “generally require that all persons subject to state legislation shall be treated alike under similar circumstances.”
Crerand v. State,
¶20 Wigglesworth does not claim that he was improperly denied access to the disproportionality review procedure or that the Board erred in applying the statutory criteria it must follow. He argues instead that the governor treated him differently from others sentenced under the same sentencing scheme with similar offenses and similar sentences, because some of these other inmates succeeded in having their sentences reduced. He now claims that the governor must treat in the same way all inmates having the criteria defined in the disproportionality review procedure for commutation recommеndation. He also claims that we must apply strict scrutiny in examining the governor’s commutation decisions because a fundamental right is implicated regarding a member of a “suspect class,” i.e. those to whom the disproportionality review procedure intended to give relief.
¶21 Though Wigglesworth may well be one to whom the disproportionality review procedure intended relief, we must disagree that Arizona’s clemency law at prеsent mandates that result. In the first place, he had no liberty interest in the reduction of his sentence. Therefore, no fundamental right is implicated. In addition, he is not part of a suspect class.
Cf. Nguyen,
¶ 22 Moreover, while the statutory criteria applying to the Board could be made to apply to the governor, they do not do so at present. The Board’s structured review does not inhibit a governor’s unstructured decision to grant or deny commutation. While the legislature has mandated precise procedures for the Board, it has not done so for the governоr’s handling of its recommendations.
6
The backbone of this state’s present commutation procedure is that, despite the Board’s adherence to defined Criteria, a governor may nonetheless subjectively consider each case arbitrarily. Therefore, Governor Symington could consider each recommendation by the Board independently and dispose of each simply as he wished.
Cf. Dumschat,
¶ 23 Other inmates’ receipt of clemency or commutation generates no right to it. In Dmnschat, the plaintiff argued that the fact that at least seventy-five percent of all “lifers” received some favorable action from the pardon board and that virtuаlly all pardoned inmates were promptly paroled created a constitutionally protected expectancy of commutation. The Supreme Court disagreed, stating:
No matter how frequently a particular form of clemency has been granted, the statistical probabilities standing alone generate no constitutional protections; a contrary conclusion would trivialize the Constitution. The ground for a constitutiоnal claim, if any, must be found in statutes or other rules defining the obligations of the authority charged with exercising clemency-
¶ 24 Similarly, Governor Symington’s agreement to commute the sentences of others convicted of crimes similar to Wiggles-worth’s generates for him neither constitutional protections nor equal protection rights. Under our present law an Arizona governor’s discretion to act on the Board’s recommendations remains unfettered, subjective, arbitrary, and a matter of grace. We conclude that Wigglesworth’s claim was properly dismissed for failure to state a claim.
Failure to Give Statement of Complaint’s Deficiencies
¶ 25 Wigglesworth last argues that the trial court erred in dismissing his complaint without first supplying him with a statement of the complaint’s deficiencies, or, at the least, granting him leave to amend. He primarily relies on a federal ease reversing a trial court’s dismissal of a prisoner’s pro se complaint allеging constitutional violations when the court failed to notify the plaintiff of the complaint’s deficiencies so he could amend.
See Noll v. Carlson,
¶ 26 Before the trial court grants a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, the non-moving party should be given an opportunity to amend the complaint if such an amendment cures its defects.
See Sun World Corp. v. Pennysaver, Inc.,
¶ 27 First, we note that, in opposing the defendants’ motion to dismiss, Wiggles-worth never sought leave to amend the complaint. 7 He first mentioned the possibility of amending in his Rule 59 motion after dismissal occurred. Secondly, given our present law as described above, we cannot imagine that an amendment could cure the legal defects of his complaint. Because of the governor’s unfettered clemency discretion, Wigglesworth simply has no cognizable claim of constitutional violation in being deified commutation. Therefore, the trial court did not err in failing to give him an opportunity to amend his complaint.
CONCLUSION
¶ 28 We affirm the trial court’s dismissal of Wiggleworth’s complaint for failure to state a
Notes
. In his reply brief, Wigglesworth concedes that Mauldin was not responsible for commutation of his sentences and therefore apparently withdraws his appeal as to that defendant.
. The statute was amended effective January 1, 1994 and currently provides that a person сonvicted of a felony (other than those listed in subsection A of the statute) committed while on probation or parole for the conviction of another felony shall be sentenced to not less than the presumptive sentence. See A.R.S. § 13-604.02(B) (Supp.1998).
. The procedure does provide that the Board’s unanimous recommendation for commutation will automatically become effective if the governor fails to act on the recommendation within ninety days after receiving it. See 1994 Ariz. Sess. Laws, Ch. 365, § 1(G). Wigglesworth does not argue that this section applies here. Although he alleges that his hearing before the Board occurred on March 7, 1995, and that Governor Symington denied his application on August 31, 1995, he never alleges that Governor Symington received the Board’s recommendation more than ninety days prior to acting on it. In fact, a document attached to his opening brief states that, аlthough the Board recommended commutation of his sentence in March, the "packet” was not transmitted to the governor until June 7, 1995, which makes the August 31, 1995 decision within the 90-day period.
. A majority of the Supreme Court believes that, with respect to death penalty cases, at least a limited due process review applies to clemency proceedings because an inmate’s life interest deserves more protection thаn a liberty interest in release from confinement, and that life interest cannot be extinguished by the same process as a liberty interest.
See Woodard,
. Justice Scalia went so far as to say that the Eighth Amendment contains no proportionality guarantee.
. The governor's power to grant or refuse commutation may be limited by the legislature.
See State v. Marquez,
. He did amend the complaint once prior to the filing of the motion to dismiss.
