Court Opinion

ID: 9380125
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-17 14:04:16.48726+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:16:48.177820
License: Public Domain

RENDERED: MARCH 10, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
                        NOT TO BE PUBLISHED

                 Commonwealth of Kentucky
                              Court of Appeals
                               NO. 2022-CA-0503-MR

JASON BAILEY                                                         APPELLANT

                APPEAL FROM FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT
v.              HONORABLE THOMAS D. WINGATE, JUDGE
                        ACTION NO. 21-CI-00777

COOKIE CREWS                                                           APPELLEE

                                    OPINION
                                   AFFIRMING

                                  ** ** ** ** **

BEFORE: CETRULO, JONES, AND MCNEILL, JUDGES.

JONES, JUDGE: Jason Bailey, pro se, appeals from an order of the Franklin

Circuit Court entered on March 23, 2022, dismissing his petition for a declaration

of rights. Having carefully reviewed the record in conjunction with all applicable

legal authority, we affirm.
                                   I. BACKGROUND

             Bailey is currently an inmate serving a twenty-three-year sentence in

the custody of the Kentucky Department of Corrections (DOC). Bailey was

convicted of multiple charges including first-degree burglary in Daviess County.

Upon entering DOC custody, Bailey was classified at twenty percent parole

eligibility and later paroled on September 1, 2015. He was subsequently

transferred to Community Transition Services Russell (CTS-Russell) where he

participated in a substance abuse treatment program for one hundred eighty days

before he was released to the supervision of the Office of Probation and Parole.

             Sometime after his exit from CTS-Russell, DOC determined Bailey’s

release on parole was in error, as he was required to have been classified as a

violent offender in connection with his first-degree burglary conviction, thereby

requiring him to serve a minimum of eighty-five percent of his sentence before he

was eligible for parole. He was reincarcerated after forty-three days under

Probation and Parole supervision, bringing his total number of days erroneously

out on parole to two hundred twenty-three days.

             Bailey filed administrative challenges with DOC after this time was

not factored into the calculation of his parole eligibility date under the eighty-five

percent threshold. After unsuccessful attempts at obtaining the relief sought

through administrative procedures, he filed a petition for a declaration of rights in

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Franklin Circuit Court. Counsel for DOC filed a motion to dismiss on the grounds

that insufficient proof was attached to the petition demonstrating that Bailey

exhausted his administrative remedies as required by KRS1 454.415 and that DOC

had sole jurisdiction regarding questions of parole eligibility and release. The

circuit court ruled that the petition contained sufficient proof that Bailey exhausted

his administrative remedies but ultimately dismissed the action; the court agreed

with DOC’s argument that it lacked authority to involve itself in determinations of

awarding custody credit after sentencing. Bailey filed this appeal, naming DOC

Commissioner Cookie Crews as the appellee.

                                 II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

                “A petition should not be dismissed for failure to state a claim upon

which relief can be granted unless it appears the pleading party would not be

entitled to relief under any set of facts which could be proved[.]” Gray v.

Department of Corrections, 606 S.W.3d 645, 651 (Ky. App. 2020) (internal

quotation marks and citation omitted). “[T]he pleadings should be liberally

construed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, all allegations being taken as

true.” Id. Dismissal is a question of law which is reviewed de novo. Id.

1
    Kentucky Revised Statutes.

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                                   III. ANALYSIS

             On appeal, Bailey argues that he is entitled to custody credit of one

hundred eighty days for the time spent at CTS-Russell in calculating his eighty-

five percent parole eligibility date with the remaining forty-three days to be applied

toward his release date. Before addressing the merits of the arguments concerning

this request, we first discuss the threshold issue of whether sufficient proof was

furnished to indicate that Bailey exhausted his administrative remedies.

             In an action brought by an inmate, KRS 454.415(3) requires that the

inmate “attach to any complaint filed documents verifying that administrative

remedies have been exhausted.” A review of the appellate record demonstrates

that Bailey attached to his original petition a copy of a September 7, 2021, review

form filed pursuant to Kentucky Corrections Policies and Procedures (CPP) 17.4

which specifically requested that he receive a credit of one hundred eighty days

toward his parole eligibility date, with the remaining forty-three days to be applied

to “the end of [his] sentence.” (Record (R.) at 16-17.) Also attached to his petition

was the response received from Eastern Kentucky Correctional Complex’s

offender information supervisor as well as all necessary documentation related to

his appeal to the Offender Information Services Branch in Frankfort denying this

request. (R. at 18.)

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             In its motion to dismiss before the circuit court, DOC argued that

Bailey previously raised this issue with DOC around May 2020, and by failing to

attach his CPP 17.4 review and appeal forms in relation to the prior administrative

action, he failed to furnish a complete record evidencing he exhausted his

administrative remedies. (R. at 2-4.) The circuit court ruled that, while he failed to

furnish proof with respect to the May 2020 administrative action, there was

sufficient proof supplied in relation to the September 2021 action to warrant

review. (R. at 40-41.)

             The purpose of KRS 454.415(3) is not only to verify that the

administrative process was utilized, but also to show that the administrative agency

was first afforded an opportunity to address the substantive arguments raised in the

judicial proceeding. See Houston v. Fletcher, 193 S.W.3d 276, 278 (Ky. App.

2006). Based on a thorough review of the record, we agree with the circuit court’s

ruling that Bailey supplied sufficient proof he exhausted all available

administrative remedies relating to the September 2021 action. The claims for

relief asserted in the September 2021 administrative action match those raised in

his petition thus evidencing that DOC had an opportunity to address them before

he filed for judicial relief. See Houston, 193 S.W.3d at 278 (emphasis added)

(“Although [appellant] did attach to his circuit court petition documents indicating

that the Warden had heard and denied his appeals, there is no documentation

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setting forth the grounds of three of his four appeals. It is impossible to determine

whether the arguments in [Appellant’s] petition for declaration of rights were

identical to those raised before the Warden.”). The inclusion of all administrative

responses with the petition further provides the ability to review the basis upon

which the administrative reviews were denied. Id. (“Additionally, the court was

not able to conduct a meaningful review of [appellant’s] claims because it received

no evidence as to the basis on which the Warden had denied the appeals.”).

             Turning to the merits of this case, the circuit court’s underlying ruling

and DOC’s argument on appeal rely on Bowling v. White, 480 S.W.3d 911 (Ky.

2015), to assert that the executive branch, through DOC, has exclusive jurisdiction

over issues concerning the award of credit after entry of sentence thereby depriving

the judiciary of jurisdiction to grant relief. Specifically, the circuit court’s order

and DOC’s motion to dismiss quote the language in Bowling which states:

             The judiciary had the exclusive power over the front end
             of the sentence, that is, the power to render the sentence
             and to award custody credit against it. (The executive
             branch was bound by those determinations in carrying
             out the sentence, as they were incorporated into a binding
             judgment.) But the executive branch had exclusive
             power over the back end of a sentence, that is, the power
             to award good-time credit, to parole, to conditionally
             discharge a convicted person, or to otherwise determine
             when the sentence had been served out or the person was
             otherwise entitled to release.

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480 S.W.3d at 916. This is an overly broad interpretation of the language in

Bowling which requires contextualization.

             In Bowling, the issue on appeal concerned DOC’s authority under

KRS 532.120(3), after it was amended in 2011, to grant presentencing custody

credits to an inmate after a circuit court declined to do so in a sentencing order

entered in 1996. Before its amendment in 2011, KRS 532.120(3) vested sole

authority to grant presentencing custody credits with the sentencing court while the

statute’s 2011 revision granted authority to DOC “in cases involving a felony

sentence.”

             At the time of the Bowling decision, there was confusion due to a

perceived conflict of the case law in Winstead v. Commonwealth, 327 S.W.3d 479

(Ky. 2010), and Bard v. Commonwealth, 359 S.W.3d 1 (Ky. 2012), regarding

whether DOC could retroactively award the omitted presentencing custody credits

after the 2011 amendment when the sentencing order was governed under the

previous version of the statute. The Kentucky Supreme Court, in the language

quoted above, only intended to explain the division of authority between the

judiciary and DOC in awarding credits in a presentencing and post-sentencing

context as it existed under the pre-2011 amendment of the law.

             The Kentucky Supreme Court never expressly or implicitly intended

to preclude judicial review over the exercise of DOC’s statutory authority to award

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sentencing credits under KRS 532.120 or other applicable statutes. To

demonstrate, we point to the Court’s holding in Caraway v. Commonwealth, 459

S.W.3d 849, 855 (Ky. 2015):

            This change to the statutory language divested the trial
            court of its prior duty and authority to ensure proper
            application of the presentencing custody credit in felony
            cases and, instead, placed it solely under the purview of
            the Department of Corrections. The sentencing court is
            empowered to award custody credit in felony cases only
            when “presentence report indicates that a defendant has
            accumulated sufficient sentencing credits . . . to allow for
            an immediate discharge from confinement upon
            pronouncement of sentence.” KRS 532.120(8).
            Otherwise, the role of the trial court under the statute as
            amended is essentially appellate in nature. See KRS
            532.120(9) (“An inmate may challenge a failure of the
            Department of Corrections to award a sentencing credit
            under this section or the amount of credit awarded by
            motion made in the sentencing court no later than thirty
            (30) days after the inmate has exhausted his or her
            administrative remedies.”). But the defendant must first
            pursue his administrative remedies with Corrections
            before this matter may be addressed by a court. Id.

(Emphasis added.) See also Woods v. Commonwealth, 599 S.W.3d 894, 897 (Ky.

App. 2020) (citing KRS 532.120(9)) (“The trial court’s seeming belief that an

inmate can never challenge the Department of Corrections’ credit calculations is

thus erroneous.”).

            Ultimately, this appeal does not concern the award of presentencing

custody credit under KRS 532.120(3) because the credits at issue are alleged to

have accrued during post-sentencing incarceration, and consequently this statute is

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inapplicable to the underlying facts. Accordingly, we look to KRS 454.415, which

states:

             No action shall be brought by or on behalf of an inmate,
             with respect to: (a) An inmate disciplinary proceeding;
             (b) Challenges to a sentence calculation; (c) Challenges
             to custody credit; or (d) A conditions-of-confinement
             issue; until administrative remedies as set forth in the
             policies and procedures of the Department of
             Corrections, county jail, or other local or regional
             correctional facility are exhausted.

             A plain reading of the statute clearly provides that judicial challenges

are available concerning sentencing calculation and custody credit disputes with

DOC provided administrative remedies are first exhausted. See Lee v. Kentucky

Department of Corrections, 610 S.W.3d 254, 262 (Ky. 2020) (citation omitted)

(“Under the plain meaning rule, when the language of a statute is clear and

unambiguous, we need not look beyond it for further indications of legislative

intent.”). Indeed, since the holding in Bowling there have been appellate decisions

rendered on the merits concerning disputes over sentencing credits and parole

eligibility. See Kentucky Department of Corrections v. Dixon, 572 S.W.3d 46 (Ky.

2019) (holding that inmate’s consecutive sentences for both violent and non-

violent offenses were aggregated and could not be separated into discrete parts for

purposes of receiving work-credit); Goben v. Keeney, 626 S.W.3d 692, 694 (Ky.

App. 2021) (determining that an inmate was eligible for parole after serving ten

years of a first-degree persistent felony offender enhanced life sentence).

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Nonetheless, while we differ from the rationale offered by the circuit court, we

nevertheless affirm its decision on separate grounds. See Kentucky Farm Bureau

Mutual Insurance Company v. Gray, 814 S.W.2d 928, 930 (Ky. App. 1991)

(citation omitted) (“[A]n appellate court, may affirm the trial court for any reason

sustainable by the record.”).

             While there is a lack of both statutory authority and controlling case

law specifically addressing the unique factual scenario and legal implications

presented in this appeal, a review of the Kentucky Revised Statutes is dispositive

as it concerns any credit which would lower Bailey’s parole eligibility date. Bailey

admits he was paroled, albeit inadvertently. If we accept that his erroneous time

on parole was not spent “in custody,” an award of custody credit by the DOC

would have violated sentencing statutes. It is not in dispute that Bailey is classified

as a violent offender and, per KRS 511.020(2), first-degree burglary is a Class B

felony. KRS 439.3401(3)(a) states a violent offender convicted of a “Class B

felony shall not be released on probation or parole until he has served at least

eighty-five percent (85%) of the sentence imposed.” It is plainly stated within

KRS 439.3401(4) that, “[i]n no event shall a violent offender be given credit on his

or her sentence if the credit reduces the term of imprisonment to less than [85%] of

the sentence.” Thus, service of Bailey’s sentence cannot be reduced below eighty-

five percent even when factoring in any credits he may have otherwise been

                                         -10-
entitled. As a result of the statute’s strict requirement, DOC was not afforded any

discretion to apply credits for purposes of lowering Bailey’s parole eligibility

below the eighty-five percent threshold, and it was correct in denying his request.

             Bailey’s arguments to the contrary are without merit. Despite having

failed to assert it before the circuit court in his original petition, Bailey argues

constitutional grounds for support. These arguments are unpreserved for our

review. Additionally, he articulates no specific or detailed arguments in his brief

aside from a conclusory statement of unconstitutionality located within one

subheading of his argument section. “[A] terse, conclusory assertion wholly

unaccompanied by meaningfully developed argument or citation to authority is

insufficient to merit appellate relief.” Schell v. Young, 640 S.W.3d 24, 32 (Ky.

App. 2021). Furthermore, “Kentucky courts have repeatedly held that there is no

constitutional right to parole, but rather parole is a matter of legislative grace or

executive clemency. Parole is simply a privilege and the denial of such has no

constitutional implications.” Land v. Commonwealth, 986 S.W.2d 440, 442 (Ky.

1999) (citations omitted).

             Bailey argues that his time at CTS-Russell constitutes “custody” as

defined under KRS 520.010(2), thus evidencing entitlement to credit, but that

statute is inapplicable in this context. KRS 520.010(2) defines “custody” as it

applies under KRS Chapter 520 of the Kentucky Penal Code which contains

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statutes criminalizing escape and other offenses relating to custody. It is not

applicable for purposes of calculating custody credits or parole eligibility. Even if

the statute did apply, it explicitly states that “[c]ustody . . . does not include

supervision of probation or parole or constraint incidental to release on bail[.]”

KRS 520.010(2) (emphasis added).

             Bailey also cites KRS 532.120(6) to contend that his time at CTS-

Russell constitutes time in a substance abuse treatment program which should

apply toward earlier parole eligibility. Again, reliance on the subsection of this

statute is misplaced because it only applies to presentencing custody credits

discussed in KRS 532.120(3)-(4) which, for reasons already discussed, are not at

issue in this appeal. The remaining authority cited by Bailey, KRS 439.344, would

not be applicable in this instance because subsection six (6) of this statute

explicitly disqualifies eligibility for any credit due to his violent offender status.

             In conclusion, as it concerns a credit for any time toward his release

date, the above discussed authorities cited by Bailey would lend no support for the

relief requested for the reasons already stated. Considering the clear requirements

of KRS 439.3401(4) and with Bailey having failed to plead an applicable legal

basis to advance support for his request for relief, the circuit court’s dismissal of

the petition was not in error.

                                           -12-
                                 IV. CONCLUSION

             For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the Franklin Circuit Court’s

order dismissing Bailey’s petition.

             ALL CONCUR.

BRIEF FOR APPELLANT:                      BRIEF FOR APPELLEE:

Jason Bailey, pro se                      Robert Chaney
West Liberty, Kentucky                    Frankfort, Kentucky

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