IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 41328
RBRT GROVES, aka ROBERT GEORGE )
GROVES, III, ) 2014 Opinion No. 31
)
Petitioner-Appellant, ) Filed: April 21, 2014
)
v. ) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
)
STATE OF IDAHO, )
)
Respondent. )
)
Appeal from the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District, State of Idaho,
Jerome County. Hon. John K. Butler, District Judge.
Order dismissing petition seeking exemption from registration as a sex
offender, affirmed.
Fuller Law Offices, Twin Falls, for appellant. Daniel S. Brown argued.
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; Cheryl Emmons-Meade, Deputy
Attorney General, Boise, for respondent. Cheryl Emmons-Meade argued.
________________________________________________
WALTERS, Judge Pro Tem
Under the Sexual Offender Registration Notification and Community Right-to-Know Act
(SORA), 1 Robert 2 Groves is required to register as a sex offender because he was convicted of
lewd conduct with a minor under sixteen. Under the law applicable at the time of his conviction,
Groves would have been eligible to petition for an exemption from the duty to register after
serving his sentence. But, before Groves was able to petition for an exemption, the law was
1
The “SORA” abbreviation reflects the prior short title of the act, the “Sex Offender
Registration Act.” Idaho Code § 18-8301 (1993). As a matter of consistency, Idaho appellate
courts have continued to use to this abbreviation despite the adoption of a new short title. See,
e.g., Bottum v. Idaho State Police, Bureau of Criminal Identification Cent. Sex Offender
Registry, 154 Idaho 182, 183, 296 P.3d 388, 389 (2013); State v. Johnson, 152 Idaho 41, 42, 266
P.3d 1146, 1147 (2011).
2
The caption has an alternative spelling of Groves’s first name, “RBRT.”
1
amended to prohibit those convicted of lewd conduct from being granted an exemption. When
Groves sought an exemption, the district court ruled that the amendments were to be applied
retroactively and denied Groves’s request for an exemption. On appeal, Groves argues that the
retroactive application of the amendments is unconstitutional. We affirm.
I.
BACKGROUND
On May 22, 2000, Groves pleaded guilty to lewd conduct with a minor under sixteen in
violation of Idaho Code § 18-1508. On July 17, 2000, Groves was sentenced to a unified term of
ten years in prison with five years fixed. However, the court retained jurisdiction pursuant to
I.C. § 19-2601(4). After the term of retained jurisdiction ended, the court placed Groves on
probation for ten years. After the ten years elapsed, Groves was discharged from probation on
July 7, 2011. As an additional consequence of his conviction, Groves was required to register as
a sex offender unless granted an exemption from the duty to register. I.C. §§ 18-8304, 18-8307,
18-8310.
In 2013, Groves filed a petition to be exempted from registration requirements pursuant
to I.C. § 18-8310. In support of his petition, he submitted an affidavit stating that he had
completed probation, had paid all fees, had not committed additional sex offenses, had
undergone sex offender treatment, and had been deemed a low risk to reoffend. The district
court held that although Idaho Code § 18-8310 generally authorizes the court to exempt a sex
offender registrant from the duty to register, the court may not provide this relief to “an offender
who has been convicted of an aggravated offense.” I.C. § 18-8310. Idaho Code § 18-8303
defines “aggravated offense” to include lewd conduct with a minor under sixteen. On this basis,
the court ordered Groves to show cause why his petition should not be dismissed.
In response to the order to show cause, Groves argued that the denial of his petition
would violate the Ex Post Facto Clauses of the United States and Idaho Constitutions. The
provisions cited by the district court were not the provisions in effect when Groves was
convicted. Indeed, under the law applicable at the time of Groves’s conviction, he would have
been able to seek relief under I.C. § 18-8310. Groves did not claim that the court erred by
concluding that the amendments had retroactive effect; he concedes that Idaho courts have ruled
that the amendments are applied retroactively. Instead, he claimed that the retroactive
2
application of the amendments, precluding relief, amounts to an unconstitutional ex post facto
law.
The district court held a hearing on the ex post facto challenge. At the end of that
hearing, the court directed both parties to file written briefs. Groves acknowledged that prior
Idaho decisions have held that SORA is to be applied retroactively and that this retroactivity
does not violate the Ex Post Facto Clause because the regime is civil in nature. However,
Groves argued that no Idaho court has ruled on whether the amendments prohibiting him from
being exempted from the duty to register are constitutional. He attempted to distinguish the
Idaho precedents, analyzing SORA generally, from the effects of the later amendments. He
argued that the amendments preclude relief and affirmatively burden offenders who expected to
be eligible for relief and, relying upon that expectation, complied with all of the terms of
probation, sought treatment, and otherwise attempted to become good candidates for relief.
Furthermore, he argued that the district court denied him due process of law by prohibiting him
from adducing testimony showing the impact of the registration requirement. After the hearing
and after the briefing was submitted, the court denied Groves’s petition. Groves timely
appealed.
II.
ANALYSIS
Both the Idaho and United States Constitutions prohibit ex post facto laws. See U.S.
CONST. art. I, § 9, cl. 3; U.S. CONST. art. I, § 10, cl. 1; IDAHO CONST. art. I, § 16. 3 “[T]he ex post
facto doctrine prohibits a state from retroactively increasing the punishment for criminal acts.”
State v. Gragg, 143 Idaho 74, 75, 137 P.3d 461, 462 (Ct. App. 2005). However, “civil
proceedings” do not amount to a violation of the Ex Post Facto Clauses. Id. at 76, 137 P.3d at
463. Determining whether “a statutory scheme is civil or criminal is a question of statutory
construction.” Id.; see Smith v. Doe, 538 U.S. 84, 92 (2003). The process of statutory
construction begins by determining “whether the legislature, in establishing the penalizing
mechanism, indicated either expressly or impliedly a preference for one label or the other.”
3
This Court has held that where a party fails to make an argument that the Idaho
Constitution should be applied differently from the analogous federal provision, we will assume
the provisions are coextensive. State v. Gragg, 143 Idaho 74, 76, 137 P.3d 461, 463 (Ct. App.
2005)
3
Gragg, 143 Idaho at 76, 137 P.3d at 463. Thereafter, a seven-factor, nonexhaustive test is used
to determine whether the effects of the regime are so punitive so as to overcome the State’s
intention to create a civil proceeding. Smith, 538 U.S. at 92.
A long line of Idaho cases have upheld SORA over ex post facto challenges. In Bottum
v. Idaho State Police, Bureau of Criminal Identification Cent. Sex Offender Registry, 154 Idaho
182, 296 P.3d 388 (2013), the Idaho Supreme Court reviewed, in part, the historical evolution of
SORA:
In 1998, the legislature repealed the Sex Offender Registration Act,
Ch. 411, § 1, 1998 Idaho Sess. Laws 1275, 1276, and it enacted the Sexual
Offender Registration Notification and Community Right-to-Know Act (SORA),
id., § 2, at 1276-90. That act was codified as Idaho Code §§ 18-8301 through 18-
8326. It also expressly applied retroactively to persons who had been convicted
of specified crimes before the statute was enacted. It applied to any person who:
Pleads guilty to or has been found guilty of a crime covered
in this chapter prior to July 1, 1993, and the person, as a result of
the offense, is incarcerated in a county jail facility or a penal
facility or is under probation or parole supervision, on or after
July 1, 1993.
Id. at 1278. The crimes covered by the chapter included lewd conduct with a
minor child in violation of Idaho Code section 18-1508, id. at 1278 (codified as
I.C. § 18-8304(1)(a)), the crime of which [the petitioner] had been convicted
before the statute was enacted. Because he was still on probation on July 1, 1993,
the statute applied retroactively to him.
As originally enacted, Idaho Code section 18-8310 permitted certain sex
offenders to petition the district court to be exempted from the duty to register as
a sex offender once ten years had elapsed from the expiration of their period of
probation. Id. at 1282. The only sex offenders excluded from that opportunity
were violent sexual predators. Id.
In 2001, the legislature amended section 18-8310 to provide that any
offender who had been convicted of an “aggravated offense” also could not
petition to be exempted from the duty to register. Ch. 194, § 3, 2001 Idaho Sess.
Laws 659, 661. It defined an aggravated offense [in I.C. § 18-8303] to include
lewd conduct only if the victim was less than twelve years of age. Id. at 659.
In 2009, the legislature amended the definition of aggravated offense [in
I.C. 18-8303] to provide that lewd conduct was an aggravated offense, regardless
of the age of the victim. Ch. 250, § 1, 2009 Idaho Sess. Laws 761, 761. That
amendment was approved on April 29, 2009, id. at 764, and became effective on
July 1, 2009, I.C. § 67-510.
Bottum, 154 Idaho at 183-84, 296 P.3d at 389-90. Since SORA was enacted, the statute and its
amendments have been frequently litigated. In 1999, the Idaho Supreme Court held that
“Idaho’s Sexual Offender Registration Act provides an essential regulatory purpose . . .
4
registration is not an additional punishment; it does not extend a sentence.” Ray v. State, 133
Idaho 96, 101, 982 P.2d 931, 936 (1999). Ray predated Smith, 538 U.S. 84, the most recent
United States Supreme Court decision on this matter. In light of Smith, this Court reexamined
SORA in Gragg, 143 Idaho at 76, 137 P.3d 463. In that case, we observed that the express
objective of the Idaho Legislature is civil: “to assist efforts of local law enforcement agencies to
protect communities by requiring sexual offenders to register with local law enforcement
agencies and to make certain information about sexual offenders available to the public.” Id.
(quoting I.C. § 18-8302). Moreover, after considering the most salient portions of the seven-
factor test, we concluded that the effects of sex offender registration are not so punitive as to
override the legislative intent to create a civil, regulatory scheme. Gragg, 143 Idaho at 77, 137
P.3d at 464.
Groves does not ask us to revisit these decisions and concedes that SORA is generally
civil in nature. On appeal, his claim is narrower. He takes issue with the retroactive application
of the 2001 and 2009 amendments to SORA. 4 As amended, SORA defines Groves’s offense as
an aggravated offense and precludes those who have committed aggravated offenses from
obtaining an exemption from the sex offender registration requirement. See I.C. § 18-8303,
8310. Prior Idaho decisions unequivocally hold that these amendments are to be applied
retroactively unless such application results in a constitutional violation. Bottum, 154 Idaho at
184, 296 P.3d at 390. Here, Groves claims that retroactive application of the amendments
violates the Ex Post Facto Clauses of the Idaho and United States Constitutions. Accordingly, in
order for us to determine whether the district court erred by applying the amendments
retroactively, we must address Groves’s narrow ex post facto challenge.
4
At oral argument, and in his briefing, Groves made clear that he has misread the statutory
history. For example, he stated that “In 2011, as set forth above, the legislature amended the
definition of aggravated offense to include lewd conduct as an ‘aggravated offense,’ regardless
of the age of the victim.” Similarly, at oral argument, Groves repeatedly claimed that the 2011
amendment had been applied to his case to preclude relief. The amendment at issue, which
rendered all lewd conduct convictions “aggravated offenses” regardless of whether the victim
was younger than twelve years old, was enacted in 2009. See 2009 Idaho Sess. Laws ch. 250,
§ 1 at 761. In 2011, the legislature amended the definition of “aggravated offense” to include
substantially similar crimes committed outside of Idaho, but that amendment is plainly irrelevant
here.
5
The Idaho Supreme Court’s decision in State v. Johnson, 152 Idaho 41, 43, 266 P.3d
1146, 1148 (2011) addressed this issue, but its analysis does not amount to binding precedent. In
that case, Johnson filed his petition in a previously dismissed criminal case. Id. Because the
dismissal was the functional equivalent of a judgment, the case became final and the court lost
jurisdiction forty-two days after the dismissal was entered. Id. at 47, 266 P.3d at 1152. On that
basis, the Supreme Court vacated the district court’s decision for lack of jurisdiction. Id. at 48,
266 P.3d at 1153.
The Idaho Supreme Court has ruled that when a “statement is not necessary to decide the
issue presented to the appellate court, it is considered to be dictum and not controlling.” State v.
Hawkins, 155 Idaho 69, 74, 305 P.3d 513, 518 (2013). In Johnson, the jurisdictional analysis
was the only analysis “necessary to decide the issue presented” to the Court. Accordingly, the
Court’s analysis of the ex post facto issue is dicta and does not control. Nonetheless, we can
consider Johnson as persuasive authority and view the ex post facto analysis as “judicial
guidance.” Johnson, 152 Idaho at 47, 266 P.3d at 1152. Moreover, because we find its
reasoning persuasive, we adopt it here.
The facts in the Johnson case closely mirror the facts of this case. Johnson was convicted
of a sex offense before the 2001 amendments to SORA. Id. at 42, 266 P.3d at 1147. He was
sentenced to probation and was eventually discharged from probation. Id. at 43, 266 P.3d at
1148. After the 2009 amendments to SORA had become effective, Johnson filed a petition
seeking an exemption from the registration requirement. Id. Under the version of I.C. § 18-8310
that applied at the time of his conviction, Johnson would have been eligible to seek an exemption
from the registration requirement. Id. However, by the time Johnson filed his petition, the 2001
and 2009 amendments had become effective. Id. Those amendments defined Johnson’s crime as
an aggravated offense and precluded the granting of an exemption for a person convicted of an
aggravated offense. Id. Johnson claimed, inter alia, that the “amendments run afoul of the U.S.
Constitution’s prohibition of ex post facto laws.” Id.
Johnson raised the same claim Groves does on appeal, a narrow claim that the retroactive
application of the 2001 and 2009 amendments to SORA violates the Ex Post Facto Clauses of the
United States and Idaho Constitutions. Id. at 45, 266 P.3d 1150. The Court noted that the
amendments were intended as “technical amendments and updates.” Id. (quoting Statement of
Purpose, H.R. 178, 60th Leg., 1st Reg. Sess. (Idaho 2009)). It then concluded that “there is no
6
reason to infer that the Legislature intended these ‘technical amendments and updates’ as
anything other than civil and nonpunitive.” Id. Turning to the effects prong of the ex post facto
analysis, the court concluded that “the fact that a sexual offender, convicted of a certain class of
crime, may be required to register for life is not so punitive that it overrides SORA’s regulatory
purpose.” Id. at 46, 266 P.3d 1151.
In short, Johnson considered and addressed Groves’s claim and found no constitutional
violation. While the procedural posture of Johnson limited the ability of the Court to issue a
binding holding, we are not so constrained. We adopt the reasoning of Johnson and reach the
same conclusion. 5
While the reasoning we adopt from Johnson is sufficient to deny Groves’s claim, we note
an additional basis for our conclusion that the retroactive application of the amendments to
SORA is not unconstitutional. In Gragg, the defendant committed a sex offense in 1989.
Gragg, 143 Idaho at 74, 137 P.3d at 461. The original SORA was enacted in 1993. Under the
law applicable at the time of his offense and conviction, Gragg had no duty to register. After he
5
Groves argued, at length, that we should distinguish Johnson on two, independent
grounds. First, he argued that Johnson is distinguishable because it did not address the act as
amended. As stated in note 4, supra, Groves has misread the legislative history. Johnson was
decided after the 2009 amendment and explicitly references language added in the 2009
amendment. See, e.g., Johnson, 152 Idaho at 43, 266 P.3d at 1148 (2011) (for example, the case
noted that “An ‘aggravated offense’ is, among others, a violation of § 18-1506, ‘if at the time of
the commission of the offense the victim was below the age of thirteen years.’” The language
regarding victims under thirteen years of age was added in the 2009 amendment.). Because the
portion of the statute Groves challenges was part of the statute when Johnson was decided, we
cannot distinguish Johnson on that basis.
Groves also argues that Johnson does not address his claim that the registration system is
irrational or arbitrary. He argues that he should be permitted to show that he is not a risk to
reoffend and, if he did so, it would be irrational to require a person with a low risk to reoffend to
continue to register. Johnson addressed a substantially similar claim:
Johnson highlights the fact that the 2009 amendments would forever preclude him
from petitioning for exemption despite the apparent likelihood that he will not
reoffend. . . . The Ex Post Facto Clause does not preclude a State from making
reasonable categorical judgments that conviction of specified crimes should entail
particular regulatory consequences. . . . The State’s determination to legislate with
respect to convicted sex offenders as a class, rather than require individual
determination of their dangerousness, does not make the statute a punishment
under the Ex Post Facto Clause.
Johnson, 152 Idaho at 45, 266 P.3d at 1150 (internal citations and quotations marks omitted).
7
was convicted, SORA was enacted and imposed a duty to register retroactively. Nonetheless, we
held that the Ex Post Facto Clauses were not violated by requiring Gragg to register as a sex
offender. In our view, the effects of retroactivity on Gragg, compelling him to register when he
had no prior duty to do so, is significantly more burdensome than the effects of retroactivity on
Groves. The retroactive effect of imposing registration requirements for the first time was a
substantial change. Requiring Groves to continue registering is a burden, but is a lesser burden.
This is especially true because the decision to grant an exemption under I.C. § 18-8310 is
discretionary and requires a finding that one is “‘not a risk’ to reoffend.” State v. Kimball, 145
Idaho 542, 546, 181 P.3d 468, 472 (2008), abrogated on other grounds by Verska v. Saint
Alphonsus Reg’l Med. Ctr., 151 Idaho 889, 265 P.3d 502 (2011) (quoting I.C. § 18-8310).
Because we did not conclude that the effects of retroactivity rendered SORA punitive in Gragg,
we find no basis to do so here, where the effects are less burdensome.
As an alternative basis for relief, Groves claims he has been denied due process of law.
The record shows that the district court determined that Groves was entitled to a hearing. The
record shows that the hearing did, in fact, occur. We do not have a transcript of that hearing, but
the minutes of that hearing appear in the record. From that scant record, it appears that Groves
was denied the ability to call witnesses because he failed to provide notice of his intent to do so.
Thereafter, in his written briefing to the district court, Groves claimed that he should be provided
a hearing to present evidence and testimony regarding the impact of the legislative amendments
because the amendments create a “badge of infamy.” 6 The district court ruled that the
amendments did not label or categorize Groves in any manner; therefore, no additional procedure
was required.
6
From the briefing, both below and in this Court, it is not clear if Groves is also
complaining that he should have been permitted to testify at the hearing. Both below, and on
appeal, Groves’s due process argument has little legal support or citation. In our view, he has
provided legal authority solely for his contention that the amendments create a “badge of
infamy.” To the extent he intends his due process claim to assert additional errors, these are
unsupported by legal citations or argument. We decline to consider those additional claims.
State v. Zichko, 129 Idaho 259, 263, 923 P.2d 966, 970 (1996) (“When issues on appeal are not
supported by propositions of law, authority, or argument, they will not be considered.”).
8
In support of his contention that he was denied due process of law, Groves cites an Idaho
Supreme Court decision that held that Idaho’s system for designating a person a “violent sexual
predator” failed to comport with the constitutional requirement of procedural due process. Smith
v. State, 146 Idaho 822, 827, 203 P.3d 1221, 1226 (2009). It held that “where a person’s good
name, reputation, honor, or integrity is at stake because of what the government is doing to him,
notice and an opportunity to be heard are essential.” Id. (quoting Wisconsin v. Constantineau,
400 U.S. 433, 437 (1971)). In that case, the Court reasoned that the “violent sexual predator”
designation functions as a “badge of infamy” because it affirmatively labels an offender. Smith,
146 Idaho at 827, 203 P.3d at 1226. Furthermore, the designation “is based upon a factual
determination of probable future conduct; i.e., that the offender poses a high risk of committing
an offense or engaging in predatory sexual conduct.” Id. at 828, 203 P.3d at 1227.
We conclude that the holding in Smith regarding “violent sexual predators” is inapposite
and further conclude that the reasoning in Smith shows that Groves’s due process claim is
meritless. In that case, the Court distinguished “the duty to register as a sex offender” from
being designated a “violent sexual predator” because the former “is triggered simply by reason of
conviction for a specified crime.” Id. It reasoned that because the duty to register is triggered
“solely on the fact of conviction of a predicate offense” and because an offender was provided
due process to dispute that charge prior to his conviction, he is not entitled to additional due
process. Id.
The determination that an offense is an “aggravated offense” is analogous to the
determination of which offenders must register and is not analogous to designating a person a
“violent sexual predator.” As is relevant here, I.C. § 18-8303 defines an “aggravated offense”
and does so by reference to the crime charged. This is analogous to the provision in I.C. § 18-
8304 that sets forth the crimes that trigger a duty to register. Both the duty to register and
eligibility to seek an exemption from the duty to register are triggered “simply by reason of
conviction for a specified crime.” Moreover, designating an offense an “aggravated offense”
does not affix any “badge of infamy” because it is a classification of the offense, not the
offender. Moreover, unlike the “violent sexual predator” label, the determination that an offense
is aggravated does label a person as having been specifically found to be likely to engage in any
9
specific conduct in the future. Finally, Groves was afforded procedural due process prior to his
conviction. For these reasons, Groves was not entitled to additional procedural due process. 7
III.
CONCLUSION
We adopt the reasoning set forth in Johnson and conclude, as the Idaho Supreme Court
did, that the 2001 and 2009 amendments to SORA are applied retroactively to prohibit those
convicted of aggravated offenses from seeking exemptions from the duty to register as a sex
offender. This retroactive application does not amount to an impermissible ex post facto law.
Furthermore, a sex offender is not entitled to additional procedural due process in determining
whether his offense is an aggravated offense. The process the offender was entitled to was given
prior to conviction. For these reasons, the judgment of the district court dismissing the petition is
affirmed.
Judge GRATTON and Judge MELANSON CONCUR.
7
As explained above, Johnson is not binding. We briefly note that the Johnson Court
reached the same conclusion on nearly identical facts:
Johnson’s last theory is that applying the 2009 SORA amendments to him,
and thus denying him the opportunity to petition for exemption from registration,
would violate his right to due process. Johnson argues that the State cannot attach
a “badge of infamy” upon him, based on his risk of re-offense, without affording
him a chance to be heard. . . . the 2009 amendments do not actually create a new
label or offender status. . . . The 2009 amendments do not attach additional
notoriety to his registration status, but, rather, just affect his ability to petition for
exemption. Thus, he has not been deprived of due process.
Johnson, 152 Idaho at 46, 266 P.3d at 1151.
10