Ducksworth v. State

Decision Date04 December 2012
Docket NumberNo. 2011–CP–01671–COA.,2011–CP–01671–COA.
Citation103 So.3d 762
PartiesMichael DUCKSWORTH, Appellant v. STATE of Mississippi, Appellee.
CourtMississippi Court of Appeals

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

Michael Ducksworth, appellant, pro se.

Office of the Attorney General by W. Glenn Watts, attorney for appellee.

Before IRVING, P.J., CARLTON and MAXWELL, JJ.

MAXWELL, J., for the Court:

¶ 1. Michael Ducksworth's motion for post-conviction relief (PCR) claiming an “illegal-sentence” is really a challenge to his parole-eligibility date. The Forrest County Circuit Court found Ducksworth's motion was untimely based on the PCR statute's three-year time-bar. We too find Ducksworth's motion was filed too late—not because of the PCR statute's three-year time limit but because the issue of his parole eligibility is moot.

¶ 2. A case is moot when a the relief sought would be of no practical benefit. By the time Ducksworth filed his motion, the Mississippi Parole Board had acknowledged Ducksworth's parole eligibility but denied him parole. Because Ducksworth has already received the remedy he seeks—a parole hearing—we affirm the judgment dismissing his motion.

Background

¶ 3. In May 2009, Ducksworth filed a claim through the Mississippi Department of Corrections' Administrative Remedy Program.1 He asserted his parole-date eligibility date had been miscalculated.

¶ 4. Ducksworth is serving two consecutive life sentences for murder. Ducksworth had pled guilty to both homicides, and his judgment of conviction was entered in March 1989. The judgment ordered the two back-to-back life sentences to run concurrently with a five-year burglary sentence. According to Mississippi's parole-eligibility statute, Ducksworth had to serve at least one fourth of his burglary sentence and ten years for each murder sentence before becoming eligible for parole. SeeMiss.Code Ann. § 47–7–3(1) (Rev.2011). Because the burglary sentence was concurrent with the life sentences, he became parole eligible in August 2008, the twentieth anniversary of his incarceration, when factoring in earned time.

¶ 5. According to records attached to Ducksworth's motion, back in January 2003 the MDOC calculated his parole-eligibility date to be November 2009. The MDOC had calculated this date by starting with Ducksworth's parole-eligibility date for the burglary sentence, November 9, 1989, and adding on twenty years for the murder sentences. Ducksworth claims this made his burglary sentence consecutive, not concurrent, contradicting his sentencing order.

¶ 6. On October 6, 2009, the Parole Board took action. Acknowledging Ducksworth's parole-eligibility date as August 5, 2008, the Parole Board denied Ducksworth parole for a litany of reasons,2 including an insufficient amount of time served, and continued his next parole hearing until October 2012.

¶ 7. In May 2011, Ducksworth filed a PCR motion in the Forrest County Circuit Court. He claimed his sentence was “illegal” because “his parole date was not honored on the day he should have become eligible by the fact that his general burglary conviction ran consecutively with his two (2) life sentences [,] when this court ordered the burglary sentence to run concurrently with the two (2) life sentences[.]

¶ 8. The circuit court summarily dismissed Ducksworth's motion based on Mississippi Code Annotated section 99–39–5(2) (Supp.2012), which requires a petitioner to file his PCR motion within three years of the entry of a judgment following a guilty plea, with certain exceptions not present in Ducksworth's case.

¶ 9. Ducksworth timely appealed.3

Discussion

¶ 10. Ducksworth claims he received an illegal sentence. He does so because the right to a legal sentence is a fundamental constitutional right, and an illegal-sentence claim is not subject to section 99–39–5(2)'s three-year time limit. See, e.g., Ivy v. State, 731 So.2d 601, 603 (¶¶ 13–14) (Miss.1999) (holding “that errors affecting fundamental constitutional rights, such as the right to a legal sentence, may be excepted from” the three-year time-bar); Weaver v. State, 785 So.2d 1085, 1087 (¶ 6) (Miss.Ct.App.2001) (holding PCR motions “alleging an illegal sentence are not subject to the time[-]bar”).

¶ 11. But what Ducksworth is really challenging is the MDOC's calculation of his parole-eligibility date. In other words, he is not arguing the circuit court illegally sentenced him to a five-year sentence for burglary and two consecutive life sentences for murder. Instead, he takes issue with how the MDOC calculated his parole-eligibility date based on those sentences.

¶ 12. [P]arole eligibility is a matter of legislative grace [.] Rochell v. State, 36 So.3d 479, 482 (¶ 9) (Miss.Ct.App.2010) (citations omitted). It is not a matter of fundamental constitutional rights because “prisoners have no constitutionally recognized liberty interest in parole.” Vice v. State, 679 So.2d 205, 208 (Miss.1996) (quotations and citations omitted).

¶ 13. While Ducksworth's parole-eligibility claim does not fall within the fundamental-constitutional-rights exception, we find section 99–39–5(2)' s three-year time limit inapplicable to a parole-eligibility claim.

¶ 14. This court has recognized parole-eligibility claims as original actions that can be brought in circuit court. Lattimore v. Sparkman, 858 So.2d 936, 938 (¶¶ 6–7) (Miss.Ct.App.2003) (citing Wilson v. Puckett, 721 So.2d 1110, 1111–12 (¶¶ 5–10) (Miss.1998); Williams v. Puckett, 624 So.2d 496, 497 (Miss.1993); Hill v. State, 838 So.2d 994, 997–98 (¶ 11) (Miss.Ct.App.2002)).4 Citing Lattimore with approval, the supreme court recently affirmed the circuit court's jurisdiction to consider a parole-eligibility claim and considered such a claim on appeal. Keys v. State, 67 So.3d 758, 760 (¶¶ 8–9) (Miss.2011). While the supreme court also cited the PCR statute as a source of jurisdiction, id. at (¶ 7), the supreme court did not apply section 99–39–5(2)'s three-year time limit, or any of its exceptions, to the inmate's parole-eligibility claim. See Keys, 67 So.3d at 760–61 (¶¶ 10–12).

¶ 15. Applying section 99–39–5(2)'s three-year time limit would lead to an absurd result. Unlike a sentencing claim, which is based on the trial court's sentencing order entered as part of the judgment of conviction, a parole-eligibility claim is based on the MDOC's actions after the entry of the judgment of conviction. But section 99–39–5(2) requires that, when a defendant pleads guilty, a PCR motion “shall be made ... within three (3) years after entry of the judgment of conviction.” The entry of a judgment of conviction based on Ducksworth's guilty pleas occurred on March 10, 1989. Were section 99–39–5(2) applicable, the time for Ducksworth to file his parole-eligibility claim would have expired in March 1992—eleven years before the MDOC miscalculated his parole-eligibility date as November 2009, instead of August 2008. Thus, we find section 99–39–5(2)'s three-year time limit did not apply to Ducksworth's parole-eligibility claim.

¶ 16. That said, we still find Ducksworth's motion, filed with the circuit court in May 2011, was properly dismissed for being filed too late. At the time Ducksworth filed his motion, his parole-eligibility claim was moot.

¶ 17. A case is moot so long as a judgment on the merits, if rendered, would be of no practical benefit to the plaintiff or detriment to the defendant.” Fails v. Jefferson Davis Cnty. Pub. Sch. Bd., 95 So.3d 1223, 1225 (¶ 10) (Miss.2012) (quoting Gartrell v. Gartrell, 936 So.2d 915, 916 (¶ 8) (Miss.2006)). By the time Ducksworth filed his PCR motion, the Parole Board had acknowledged Ducksworth's parole eligibility of August 2008, had given him a hearing in October 2009, and had denied him parole. So the circuit court's consideration of Ducksworth's claim that his parole-eligibility date was actually August 2008 would be of no practical benefit to Ducksworth. Had he brought the matter to the circuit court's attention before August 2008, the circuit court could have ordered the MDOC to recalculate Ducksworth's parole-eligibility date. But by 2011, any controversy regarding Ducksworth's parole-eligibility no longer existed. See id. (holding appellate court's have no authority to review actual controversies that...

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8 cases
  • Trotter v. State
    • United States
    • Mississippi Supreme Court
    • September 13, 2016
    ...recognizedas original actions that can be brought in circuit court outside the three-year time limit." (citing Ducksworth v. State, 103 So. 3d 762, 764 (Miss. Ct. App. 2012)). The circuit court, however, ruled that Trotter's petition was barred as a successive writ: "The Petitioner's presen......
  • Ducksworth v. State, 2014–CP–00921–COA.
    • United States
    • Mississippi Court of Appeals
    • August 18, 2015
    ...Ducksworth filed a PCR motion in May 2011 because Booth was released on parole in 2009 while Ducksworth was not. See Ducksworth v. State, 103 So.3d 762 (Miss.Ct.App.2012). In the PCR motion, Ducksworth argued that he received an illegal sentence and challenged how the Mississippi Department......
  • Wansley v. Miss. Dep't of Corr., CAUSE NO. 4:10-CV-149-CWR-FKB
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Southern District of Mississippi
    • April 30, 2013
    ...discretionary and in the hands of the Mississippi Parole Board. The former is a cognizable theory of relief. See Ducksworth v. State, 103 So. 3d 762, 764 (Miss. Ct. App. 2012) ("This court has recognized parole-eligibility claims as original actions that can be broughtin circuit court."); L......
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    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Southern District of Mississippi
    • September 30, 2013
    ...18, 2013)(entertaining an appeal of a state prisoner concerning the eligibility of earned-release supervision); Ducksworth v. Mississippi, 103 So.3d 762 (Miss. Dec 4, 2012)(considering an appeal of a motion for postconviction relief challenging the calculation of a parole eligibility date);......
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