Case Title: State ex rel. Hodges v. Hon. Asel

Citation: 

Docket Number: SC94886

State: missouri

Court: Missouri Supreme Court

Date: 2015-05-26T00:00:00Z

Document:
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SUPREME COURT OF MISSOURI 
en banc 
State ex rel. James Dean Hodges,  
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
 
Relator, 
 
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
vs. 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
No. SC94886 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
The Honorable Jodie Asel and  
 
) 
George Lombardi,  
 
 
) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
) 
 
 
 
Respondents.  
) 
 
Original Proceeding in Mandamus 
 
Opinion issued May 26, 2015 
 
James Hodges filed a petition for a writ of mandamus, requesting his 
immediate release on probation pursuant to section 217.362.3.1  Mr. Hodges 
argues that section 217.362.3 requires his immediate release on probation because 
he successfully completed the long-term substance abuse treatment program 
established by section 217.362.  Section 217.362.3 does not require the immediate 
release of an individual who, like Mr. Hodges, was sentenced as a “chronic 
offender” pursuant to section 577.023.6(4) and is ineligible for probation until 
serving a minimum of two years in prison.  The petition for writ of mandamus is 
denied. 
                                                 
1 All statutory citations are to RSMo Supp. 2012 unless otherwise noted.  
 
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I. Facts 
On June 24, 2013, Mr. Hodges pleaded guilty to one count of driving while 
intoxicated as a chronic offender.  The circuit court determined that Mr. Hodges 
qualified as a chronic offender pursuant to section 577.023.6(4) and sentenced him 
to five years in prison.  The circuit court ordered that Mr. Hodges be placed in the 
long-term substance abuse treatment program established by section 217.362.   
Mr. Hodges successfully completed the treatment program, prior to serving 
two years.  The Missouri Board of Probation and Parole informed the circuit court 
that Mr. Hodges successfully completed the program.  The board advised the court 
that Mr. Hodges would be eligible for probation on June 8, 2015.2  The circuit 
court adopted the board’s recommendation and directed that Mr. Hodges be 
released on probation on June 8, 2015. 
Mr. Hodges filed a motion for release.  Mr. Hodges asserted that he was 
entitled to immediate release because he successfully completed the section 
217.632 treatment program.  The circuit court overruled the motion.  The court 
noted that Mr. Hodges was sentenced as a chronic offender pursuant to section 
577.023.6(4) and was required to serve a minimum of two years imprisonment 
before he could be eligible for parole.  The court further noted that it did not object 
to Mr. Hodges’ release “under Chapter 217” if the department determined that Mr. 
                                                 
2 Mr. Hodges was received by the Department of Corrections on June 28, 2013.  Mr. 
Hodges’ release date was calculated as June 8, 2015, because he received 20 days of jail-
time credit for time served prior to imprisonment in the Department of Corrections.  
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Hodges was “eligible for release despite” the mandatory minimum two year’s of 
imprisonment required by section 577.023.6(4).  
Mr. Hodges filed the instant petition for a writ of mandamus arguing that he 
is entitled to immediate release on probation pursuant to section 217.362.3.  As 
established below, section 217.362.3 does not require the circuit court to 
immediately release a chronic offender prior to serving the two years of 
imprisonment mandated by section 577.023.6(4).  Instead, as the circuit court 
ordered, Mr. Hodges is eligible for release on probation on June 8, 2015. 
II. Standard of Review 
This Court has authority to “issue and determine original remedial writs.”  
Mo. Const. art. V, § 4.1.  “A writ of mandamus may issue upon proof of a “clear, 
unequivocal specific right to a thing claimed.”  U.S. Dept. of Veterans Affairs v. 
Boresi, 396 S.W.3d 356, 359 (Mo. banc 2013).  When a statutory right is at issue, 
a court must analyze the statute or statutes under which the relator claims the right.  
Jones v. Carnahan, 965 S.W.2d 209, 213 (Mo. App. 1998).  When, as in this case, 
two statutes are involved, this Court will apply both statutes unless the statutes 
conflict and cannot be reconciled.  South Metro. Fire Prot. Dist. v. City of Lee’s 
Summit, 278 S.W.3d 659, 666 (Mo. banc 2009). 
III. Mr. Hodges is not entitled to immediate release 
Mr. Hodges argues that section 217.362.3 requires his immediate release on 
probation because he successfully completed the treatment program.  Mr. Hodges’ 
argument is without merit because section 217.362.3 does not require the circuit 
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court to immediately release a chronic offender before the offender serves two 
years of imprisonment as required by section 577.023.6(4).  Both statutes apply to 
Mr. Hodges, and the statutes do not conflict. 
Section 577.023.6(4) provides that “[n]o chronic offender shall be eligible 
for parole or probation until he or she has served a minimum of two years 
imprisonment.”  Section 577.023.6(4) provides unequivocally and without 
exception that Mr. Hodges, like all chronic offenders, must serve at least two 
years’ imprisonment.    
Section 217.362.3 provides: “[u]pon successful completion of the program, 
the board of probation and parole shall advise the sentencing court of an 
offender’s probationary release date thirty days prior to release.  If the court 
determines that probation is not appropriate the court may order the execution of 
the offender’s sentence.”   The plain language of section 217.362.3 requires only 
that the board advise the circuit court of the offender’s probationary release date 
thirty days prior to release.  The requirement that the board advise the court of the 
release date means that the board, not the court, is responsible for calculating the 
offender’s release date.  Once the board advises the court of the release date, the 
statute gives the court the option of not releasing the offender on probation.  There 
is no language in section 217.362.3 requiring circuit court to grant probation to 
Mr. Hodges or any other chronic offender prior to serving two years imprisonment 
as required by section 577.023.6(4).    
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The conclusion that a chronic offender is not entitled to immediate release 
upon completing the treatment program is further supported by the fact that 
section 577.023.6(4), enacted after section 217.362,3 specifically provides that no 
chronic offender shall be released on “probation or parole” prior to serving two 
years imprisonment.  “Parole” is the conditional release of an offender from 
imprisonment prior to the expiration of his or her term.  Section 217.650(4).  
“Probation” is the conditional release of an offender by the court upon being found 
guilty and prior to being imprisoned.  Section 217.650(7).   Section 217.632.2 
authorizes courts to sentence an offender to treatment for up to two years and 
specifically provides that “[e]xecution of the offender’s term of incarceration shall 
be suspended pending completion of said [treatment] program.”  Therefore, if a 
chronic offender completes a section 217.632 treatment program, his or her release 
from the treatment program would be probation, not parole.  By providing that no 
chronic offender can be released on probation or parole before serving two years 
imprisonment, section 577.023.6(4) specifically accommodates those situations in 
which a chronic offender successfully completes the program and is eligible for 
“probationary release” pursuant to  section 217.362.3.  The statutes are consistent 
and do not conflict.   
Mr. Hodges’ argument that he is entitled to immediate release is not based 
on the plain language of section 217.362.3.  Instead, Mr. Hodges relies on 
statements in State ex rel. Salm v. Mennemeyer, 423 S.W.3d 319 (Mo. App. 2014), 
                                                 
3 Section 577.023.6(4) was enacted in 2005.  Section 217.632 was last amended in 2003.  
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and State ex rel. Sandknop v. Goldman, 450 S.W.3d 499 (Mo. App. 2014).  In both 
cases, the court of appeals stated that section 217.362.3 requires that “upon an 
offender’s successful completion of the long-term treatment program, the trial 
court must: (1) allow the offender to be released on probation; or 2) determine that 
probation is not appropriate and order execution of the offender’s sentence.”  
Sandknop, 450 S.W.3d at 502 (quoting Salm, 423 S.W.3d at 321).  Neither case, 
however, dealt with the interplay between section 217.362.3 and section 
577.023.6(4).  Salm did not involve a chronic offender.  While Sandknop involved 
a chronic offender, the court of appeals specifically declined “to reach the question 
of whether section 217.362 and section 577.023 conflict” because the circuit 
court’s decision to deny probation in that case did not invoke either statute.  Id. at 
502 n.2.  Mr. Hodges’ reliance on Salm and Sandkop is misplaced because, as 
established above, the plain language of section 217.362.3 does not require the 
circuit court to immediately release a chronic offender prior to serving the two 
years of  imprisonment required by section 577.023.6(4).    
In this case, the board complied with the statute and advised the court that 
Mr. Hodges was eligible for probation on June 8, 2015.  The circuit court did not 
determine that probation was inappropriate and, instead, stated that the court did 
“not object to release under Chapter 217” if the Department of Corrections 
determined that Mr. Hodges is eligible for release despite section 577.023(4).  Mr. 
Hodges’ proposed June 8, 2015 release date satisfies the requirement that he serve 
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at least two years of imprisonment as required by section 577.023.6(4) while 
meeting all requirements imposed by the plain language of section 217.362.3. 
The petition for writ of mandamus is denied.   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
_________________________________  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Richard B. Teitelman, Judge 
 
All concur.