D.K.B. v. People

Decision Date15 August 1991
Docket NumberNo. 90CA0743,90CA0743
Citation824 P.2d 68
PartiesD.K.B., Petitioner-Appellant, v. The PEOPLE of the State of Colorado, County of Fremont, Respondent-Appellee. . II
CourtColorado Court of Appeals

Paul Joseph Skok, Denver, for petitioner-appellant.

Gale A. Norton, Atty. Gen., Raymond T. Slaughter, Chief Deputy Atty. Gen., Timothy M. Tymkovich, Sol. Gen., Cheryl A. Linden, Asst. Atty. Gen., Denver, for respondent-appellee.

Richard J. Banta, Denver, for amicus curiae Colorado Criminal Defense Bar.

Opinion by Judge SMITH.

D.K.B. appeals the district court's summary order denying his petition for an order to seal the arrest and criminal records relating to his conviction for voluntary manslaughter. We reverse and remand with directions.

In 1969, D.K.B. pled guilty to voluntary manslaughter. He was fully discharged from the Department of Corrections in 1973. And, in 1990, alleging no further arrest or criminal record and that he was a productive member of society, the defendant filed the above petition, requesting a hearing on the issue of whether his privacy interest in having the records sealed outweighed the public interest in their retention.

D.K.B. filed his petition in reliance on § 24-72-308(3) C.R.S. (1982 Repl. Vol. 10) (the 1977 law). Prior to its repeal and reenactment in 1988, this statute provided in relevant part:

"(a) Any person in interest may petition the district court of the district in which the arrest and criminal records information pertaining to him is located for the sealing of all or any part of said record, except basic identification information.

(b) Upon the filing of a petition or the entering of a court order relating to the sealing of records, the court shall set a date for a hearing....

(c) (I) Upon a finding that the harm to privacy of the person in interest or dangers of unwarranted adverse consequences outweigh the public interest in retaining the records, the court may order such records, or any part thereof except basic identification information, to be sealed." (emphasis added)

The trial court denied D.K.B.'s petition on grounds that he had been convicted of voluntary manslaughter and that § 24-72-308, as repealed and reenacted in 1988, (the 1988 law) expressly limited the right to petition for a hearing on the issue of sealing arrest and criminal records to situations in which the petitioner had not been charged, or in which the case had been completely dismissed, or the defendant had been acquitted. See § 24-72-308(1)(a), C.R.S. (1990 Cum.Supp.). Accordingly, the district court concluded that, having been convicted, D.K.B. was precluded from seeking the relief he requested.

The sole issue on appeal is which law governs D.K.B.'s petition. He argues that, because his conviction was in 1969, his right to petition for a hearing was granted, and is governed, by the 1977 law. Furthermore, he argues that the district court's application of the 1988 law to his petition violates the constitutional prohibition against retrospective legislation.

We note this court's recent decision in In re R.B. & Concerning the People, 815 P.2d 999 (Colo.App.1991) wherein the result which D.K.B. seeks was reached on an "ex post facto" rationale. However, because the right here involved and the relevant statute are essentially civil in nature, as opposed to criminal, we find it necessary to deal with the 1988 statute under a "retrospective statute" analysis.

Colo. Const. art. II, § 11, does, indeed, prohibit the passage of any law "retrospective" in its application. Nonetheless, as numerous cases have illustrated, this constitutional prohibition is not triggered merely because the facts upon which the law operates occurred before the law was adopted. See Continental Title Co. v. District Court, 645 P.2d 1310 (Colo.1982); Tucker v. Claimants in re Death of Gonzales, 37 Colo.App. 252, 546 P.2d 1271 (1975).

Rather, the issue upon which unlawful retrospectivity turns is whether the law attempts to create, eliminate, or modify a substantive right or liability, or whether it relates only to remedies or methods of procedure to enforce such rights or liabilities. Smith v. Putnam, 250 F.Supp. 1017 (D.Colo.1965). See also Kardoley v. Colorado State Personnel Board, 742 P.2d 934 (Colo.App.1987). In the first instance such laws have been held to violate the constitutional prohibition. Lohf v. Casey, 330 F.Supp. 356 (D.Colo.1971). In the latter they have not. Continental Title Co. v. District Court, supra; Smith v. Putnam, supra.

Consequently, the Colorado Constitution does not bar application of the 1988 law to D.K.B.'s petition to seal the records of his 1967 conviction unless such application results in elimination or modification of a substantive right previously acquired by D.K.B.

Our analysis of the nature of the statutory right to petition to have one's criminal record sealed, as defined in the 1977 law, persuades us that application of the 1988 law to one in D.K.B.'s position, indeed, would result in the elimination of a prior vested substantive right. Thus, such application is proscribed by the Colorado Constitution.

The statutory right defined in the 1977 law evolved directly from the rule announced in Davidson v. Dill, 180 Colo. 123, 503 P.2d 157 (1972). There, the supreme court, recognizing the economic and personal harm to an individual which results if his arrest becomes publicly known, held that arrest records compiled by government officials fall within the ambit of a citizen's right of privacy. And, consequently, justice requires that "the existence of a right of privacy in the fingerprints and photographs of an accused who has been acquitted, to be at least placed in the balance, against the claim of the state for a need for their retention."

The 1977 law essentially codified and defined the procedures for applying the Davidson rule, albeit encompassing all persons, not just those acquitted, in its scope. See People v. Whittle, 628 P.2d 169 (Colo.App.1981). And, significantly, the law incorporated the private/public interest balancing analysis applied by the Davidson court, an analysis retained in the 1988 law despite the latter law's express exclusion of persons in D.K.B.'s position.

As evidenced by the foregoing, the right to petition to have one's arrest and criminal record sealed, implemented in the statute, is a right which "rests upon equities ... has reasonable limits and restrictions and ... has some regard to the general welfare and public policy." See N. Singer, Sutherland Statutory Construction § 41.06 (4th ed.1986). It is, we conclude, a significant and fundamental substantive right which, once having vested, or become applicable to an individual, must, in the interest of fairness and justice, be protected against extinguishment by subsequent amendatory or repealing legislation.

Indeed, our conclusion was foreshadowed in People v. Wright, 43 Colo.App. 30, 598 P.2d 157 (1979) in which this court, in interpreting the statute at issue here, held that "by obtaining the sealing of their records, individuals have an effective remedy to secure their right of privacy."

In sum, the 1977 law ratified and conferred on all persons, including those convicted of a crime, the substantive right, on proper showing, to have one's arrest and criminal record sealed. See Goldsmith & Haddon, Procedures & Ethical Questions Under the Colorado Criminal Justice Records Act, 14 Colo.Law. 2193 (December 1985).

The 1988 law expressly ratified the same substantive right, but expressly limited it to those individuals whose arrest does not culminate in a conviction of, or plea of guilty to, a criminal offense.

Specifically, the 1988 law, § 24-72-308, C.R.S. (1990 Cum.Supp.), provides in relevant part "(1)(a) Any person in interest may petition the district court of the district in which any arrest and criminal records information pertaining to said person in interest is located for the sealing of all of said records, except basic identification information, if the records are a record of official actions involving a criminal offense for which said person in interest was not charged, in any case which was completely dismissed, or in any case in which said person in interest was acquitted.

....

(II) Upon the filing of a petition, the court shall set a date for hearing ...

(c) After the hearing ... is conducted and if the court finds that the harm to the privacy of the petitioner or dangers of unwarranted adverse consequences to the petitioner outweigh the public interest in retaining the records, the court may order such records, except basic identification information, to be sealed." (emphasis added)

It is undisputed that the General Assembly may, as it has here in the 1988 law, prospectively deny to a particular class of individuals a right which it has previously granted or confirmed to others by statute. However, we conclude that if the previously granted right has vested and if it derives from fundamental principles and is substantive in nature, then the General Assembly cannot do so retrospectively in light of the constitutional prohibition.

The People argue, however, that there is no issue of retrospectivity here because D.K.B. did not file his petition requesting a hearing until 1990, well after the 1988 law took effect.

The essence of the People's argument, as we perceive it, is that any substantive right D.K.B. may have possessed to petition to have his record sealed did not "vest" until he filed his petition requesting such relief. We disagree.

The issue to which the statute has been directed, throughout its various amendments and repeal and reenactments, is the competing interests in the public availability of arrest and criminal records. It is not, however, the filing of a petition which gives rise to "public availability." Rather, it is the very existence of such records as public records that creates the...

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  • People v. D.K.B.
    • United States
    • Colorado Supreme Court
    • January 11, 1993
    ...Boulder, for respondent R.C.F. Justice MULLARKEY delivered the Opinion of the Court. We granted certiorari in two cases, D.K.B. v. People, 824 P.2d 68 (Colo.App.1991), and R.C.F. v. People, No. 89CA1589 (Colo.App., Aug. 15, 1991), to consider the Criminal Justice Records Act of 1977, as ame......

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