09/20/2017
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT NASHVILLE
April 13, 2017 Session
ERIC S. STONE v. TENNESSEE BOARD OF PAROLE
Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County
No. 15-1487-IV Robert E. Lee Davies, Senior Judge
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No. M2016-01730-COA-R3-CV
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Petition for writ of certiorari; inmate appeals the trial court’s order affirming the
Tennessee Board of Parole’s decision to rescind its earlier grant of parole and deny
parole. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed
RICHARD H. DINKINS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANK G.
CLEMENT, JR., P.J., M.S., and W. NEAL MCBRAYER, J., joined.
David L. Raybin, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Eric Stone.
Herbert H. Slatery, III, Attorney General and Reporter; Andrée Blumstein, Solicitor
General; Pamela S. Lorch, Senior Counsel, for the appellee, Tennessee Board of Parole.
OPINION
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Eric Stone is an inmate at Bledsoe County Correctional Complex, serving a 25-
year sentence for manufacturing methamphetamine. On March 16, 2015, Mr. Stone had
a parole hearing; there were no letters sent in opposition to Mr. Stone being granted
parole in advance of the hearing, and at the hearing, no one testified against his parole.
On March 19 the Tennessee Board of Probation and Parole (“the Board”) accepted the
recommendation of the hearing officer and granted Mr. Stone parole, with an effective
release date of June 8, 2015.
After the decision to grant parole was made, the Board received letters from
District Attorney General Lisa S. Zavogiannis and Warren County Sheriff Jackie
Matheny stating they were unaware of the parole hearing and that they opposed his
parole. General Zavogiannis’ letter stated, inter alia, that she “adamantly opposed”
parole based upon Mr. Stone’s “lengthy history of criminal behavior” and his repeated
parole violations. Sheriff Matheny’s letter stated he opposed Mr. Stone’s parole based on
his “past history,” that the Warren County Sheriff’s Department had expended substantial
human and financial resources “making cases and arresting Mr. Stone,” and that he had
agreed to serve 45 percent of his 25-year sentence under the terms of his plea agreement.
On May 11, Mr. Stone was notified that, as a result of “new information received after
[the parole] hearing,” the Board had voted to schedule a pre-parole rescission hearing on
June 16.
At the June 16 hearing, the hearing officer opened by stating that the hearing was
being held “because the board received significant new information not presented at the
[parole] hearing,” that the hearing officer wanted to “go over this information again with
you to make sure that the board has everything they need to decide if your parole should
be rescinded,” and that the hearing officer would be making a nonbinding
recommendation to the Board in that regard. At the conclusion of the hearing, the officer
summarized his recommendation:
Mr. Stone this isn’t an easy decision for me. I -- don’t know if I
would have done the hearing -- your previous hearing different than your
other hearing officer, or not, but that’s neither here nor there.
You know, you -- we went -- we went through the whole thing.
They granted you. They came and talked to your mom. A release plan
was approved. And then they pulled it back due to these -- this opposition
that we got.
I don’t really think the opposition gave me more -- any more
information than what I already had about you. I mean, we -- we knew
every time you violated. We knew all your charges and everything else.
So that being said, I’m just going to leave it that the previous
decision remains. The board will make the final decision on that though.
By notice dated July 8, Mr. Stone was advised that the Board declined to grant him
parole, based on a “substantial risk that the offender will not conform to the conditions of
his release” and that “[r]elease from custody at this time would depreciate the seriousness
of the crime . . . or promote disrespect of the law.”1 The notice advised Mr. Stone of his
1
Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-35-503(b) sets a limitation on eligibility for parole; the portions
of the statute cited in the July 8 notice are subparagraphs (1) and (2):
(b) Release on parole is a privilege and not a right, and no inmate convicted shall be
granted parole if the board finds that:
(1) There is a substantial risk that the defendant will not conform to the conditions of the
release program;
2
right to appeal the decision pursuant to Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-28-
105(d)(11), by sending a request to the Appeals Unit of the Board within 45 days. Mr.
Stone, through counsel, sent a letter to the Board on August 20, appealing the decision
and asserting that the Board made “significant procedural errors” in rescinding his parole.
By letter dated November 5, 2015, the Parole Administrator advised Mr. Stone
that “your allegation of significant procedural errors by the Hearing Official(s) was not
substantiated,” and his appeal had been denied; the notice further advised that “[t]his
disposition is final and there is no further appeal recourse to you on this matter through
the Tennessee Board of Parole.” Notwithstanding the latter representation, the Parole
Administrator notified Mr. Stone by letter dated December 3 that “a review of the record
of [the June 15, 2015 parole grant hearing] warrants further review by the Board as to
whether a new hearing will be held”; that his file had been sent to the Board for further
review; and that he would be notified of the decision when the review was completed.
On December 9, Mr. Stone filed a Petition for Writ of Certiorari in Davidson
County Chancery Court, seeking review of the Board’s decision to rescind his parole. On
December 14, the Parole Administrator sent Mr. Stone a letter advising him that the
Board had granted his request for an appeal hearing, and on January 21, 2016, Mr.
Stone’s counsel was notified that the appeal hearing had been set for February 26.
On January 25, Mr. Stone filed a motion in the certiorari proceeding seeking a stay
of the administrative proceeding; he asserted that the Board’s initial decision to deny Mr.
Stone’s appeal and statement that no further relief was available from the Board were
final decisions for purposes of challenging the rescission of his parole. The Board
responded, opposing the motion and moving the court to stay the certiorari proceeding on
the ground that the administrative proceeding was not yet complete. The court denied
both motions on February 19, 2016.
The appeal hearing was held on February 26. The hearing officer explained that
the hearing had been granted because Mr. Stone had not been provided with copies of the
March 25, 2015 letters from General Zavogiannis and Sheriff Matheny prior to the June
16, 2015 hearing and that the hearing would proceed first to determine whether the
previous recommendation that Mr. Stone be granted parole should be rescinded, and, if
so, to hold a new parole hearing.2 The hearing officer then allowed Mr. Stone and his
(2) The release from custody at the time would depreciate the seriousness of the crime of
which the defendant stands convicted or promote disrespect for the law;
2
The hearing officer stated:
Gentlemen my job today is to make a recommendation to the Board. And that
recommendation - - because this new hearing was granted today, we’re basically going to
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counsel to state “the reasons you feel like or you would ask the Board to - - to let that
previous decision [to grant parole] remain.” After Mr. Stone and his counsel responded,
the hearing officer ruled:
The fact that the letters came in and the Board’s procedure when --
after a -- after the votes have been done in a particular case, if -- if things
come to light, if new information becomes available, whether it be
opposition letters or letters of support or new convictions or judgments,
anything that triggers that, the Board will always come back and revisit the
case. And that’s what they did in this case, sir, because of the letters.
Now, I understand your position today, sir. I will be making a
recommendation to the Board.
And, again, I have -- I have two options, Gentlemen: To let the
previous decision remain or to rescind that decision -- or recommend to
rescind it and go to a grant hearing. Now, these letters came in after the
initial date. The Board was not aware of the letters at the time when they --
when they initially voted. All right.
Based on that new information today, Gentlemen, my
recommendation to the Board as to the rescission is going to be that they
rescind that previous decision and that we go to a grant hearing today.
So, Gentlemen, what we will be doing now is going into a -- a -- a
grant hearing on the sentence. And we’ll go over some more facts in just a
moment, and we’ll let you give me some more information, if you want to,
sir. We’ll be going over your prior record.
And at the conclusion of this hearing, I will be making a
recommendation whether or not to recommend to the Board that you be
granted parole or declined parole.
The original decision, Mr. Raybin [counsel for Mr. Stone], was to
parole, with an effective date in June. That date has passed. So, technically,
to let the previous decision remain -- well, we have passed that date. So I
am going to recommend to rescind that decision and go into a grant
hearing.
All right. Mr. Stone, we are seeing you today on a 25-year sentence
out of Warren County for Schedule II drug charges. It’s 25 years at 45
percent.
re-do the rescission hearing. And we’ll be going over the information that we had
previously.
And at the conclusion of this hearing I will be making a recommendation to the
Board whether or not to let the previous decision remain or to rescind that previous
decision. And if my recommendation is to rescind that previous decision, then we would
initially go to a grant hearing on your 25-year sentence.
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The hearing officer proceeded to conduct the second aspect of the hearing, which
consisted of his own interrogation of Mr. Stone and by Mr. Stone’s counsel. At the
conclusion of Mr. Stone’s examination and summation by his counsel, the hearing officer
stated:
So what we’re looking at here today is a Class B felony. It’s a very
serious offense, Mr. Stone. You have served some time on it. You’ve done
some good things. You don’t have any write-ups since 2011. I want to
commend you for that.
You completed, it appears, several programs. You should be
commended for that.
The previous decision we -- I have asked the Board to rescind today
because the date has passed.
This is an early release here, Mr. Stone. Your RED date being not
until 2018, June 26 of 2018. So this is considered an early release here.
Other hearing officers and -- and Board members may or may not
agree with the recommendation, and that’s – that’s their right, sir. So today
I will be making a recommendation, and that’s all it is.
Because you were on probation and on parole a couple of times --
not on this sentence but in the past -- I -- I have to consider what I consider
the big picture.
What you’ve done when you’ve been out on supervision, you’ve had
three previous violations. And that puts you in the category I would
consider a high risk. And a Class B felony, the seriousness of it, I don’t
feel like it rises to the level of early release today. The Board may or may
not agree.
So my recommendation to the Board today, Mr. Stone, is going to be
that due to the high risk and the seriousness of the offense I am going to
recommend that they decline your parole and review your case in two
years, which would be February of 2018.
Now, the Board will hear this case. They will hear the tape. They
will see the file. They may not agree with anything I say today. So that’s
not final today.
But do you understand what I am recommending, sir?
MR. STONE: Yes, sir.
[Hearing Officer]: And the Board may choose to agree with part of it
or none of it or all of it. And when your votes come, that is the final
decision. Do you understand that today, sir?
MR. STONE: Yes, sir.
The Board accepted the recommendation, and in the letter notifying Mr. Stone of its
decision to decline to grant parole, the Board cited the same reasons stated in its first
rescission letter to Mr. Stone, and set the next parole hearing for February 2018.
5
On August 9, 2016, the court issued a Memorandum and Final Order, holding that
the Board did not act illegally, arbitrarily or capriciously in rescinding the prior grant of
parole and denying Mr. Stone after the February 26, 2016 parole hearing; the court
affirmed the Board’s decision. Mr. Stone appeals, stating the following issues for review:
1. Whether the parole board acted illegally, arbitrarily, without material
evidence and in violation of rules and statutes in rescinding the petitioner’s
parole so that the previously granted parole should be reinstated.
2. Whether the parole board hearing conducted after the original petition
for certiorari was filed with the Chancery Court is a nullity and should not
be considered by the Court.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Decisions regarding parole are discretionary and are vested exclusively in the
Board of Parole, Doyle v. Hampton, 340 S.W.2d 891, 893 (Tenn. 1960), and whether
such decisions are lawful is subject to limited review under the common law writ of
certiorari. Baldwin v. Tennessee Board of Paroles, 125 S.W.3d 429, 433 (Tenn. Ct. App.
2003). Common law writ of certiorari may be used “to remedy (1) fundamentally illegal
rulings; (2) proceedings inconsistent with essential legal requirements; (3) proceedings
that effectively deny a party his or her day in court; (4) decisions beyond the lower
tribunal’s authority; and (5) plain and palpable abuses of discretion.” Willis v. Tennessee
Dep’t of Correction, 113 S.W.3d 706, 712 (Tenn. 2003) (citing State v. Willoughby, 594
S.W.2d 388, 392 (Tenn. 1980)). As this court has explained:
The scope of review under the common law writ . . . is very narrow. It
covers only an inquiry into whether the Board has exceeded its jurisdiction
or [acted] illegally, fraudulently, or arbitrarily. . . . At the risk of
oversimplification, one may say that it is not the correctness of the decision
that is subject to judicial review, but the manner in which the decision is
reached. If the agency or board has reached its decision in a constitutional
or lawful manner, the decision would not be subject to judicial review.
Powell v. Parole Eligibility Review Board, 879 S.W.2d 871, 873 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1994)
(citations omitted).
III. ANALYSIS
Mr. Stone argues that the Board acted illegally in rescinding his parole. More
specifically, Mr. Stone asserts that (1) the Board erroneously considered and gave
controlling weight to the late-filed letters of opposition, which contained no new
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information, and thus he was denied due process; and (2) the Board did not provide Mr.
Stone with an adequate reason for the rescission.
Rescissions of parole are governed by Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 1100-01-01-.12;
the portions of the regulation pertinent to the issues in this appeal are:
(1) Pre-parole Rescission.
(a) If an inmate has been granted parole and has subsequently been charged
with institutional misconduct, escape, or has been served with a warrant or
received a new felony sentence or had the certification of parole eligibility
withdrawn by the Department of Correction or has other changes in
circumstances sufficient to become a matter of record, the Board shall be
promptly notified and advised of such new circumstances.
(b) No inmate about whom notification has been made pursuant to
subparagraph (a) of this subsection shall be released on parole until such
time as the institution has been properly informed that no change has been
made in the Board’s order to parole.
(c) Upon receiving notification as required by subparagraph (a) of this
subsection, the Board may schedule a parole rescission hearing or notify the
institution that the grant of parole remains.
(2) The Pre-Parole Rescission Procedure.
(a) The rescission hearing may be scheduled, if possible, for the next docket
of parole hearings at the institution where the inmate is being held.
(b) The inmate shall be given adequate notice of the reason(s) such
rescission hearing is being conducted. Such notice shall be given at least
three (3) days prior to the scheduled date of the rescission hearing. The
reason(s) for the rescission hearing shall be stated in the notice, with the
exception of information that is considered confidential by the Board.
(c) A rescission hearing may be held in order to determine if the inmate’s
misconduct or other change in circumstances is sufficient to warrant
rescission of such inmate’s parole grant.
(d) The inmate may appear at his or her rescission hearing and may present
documentary evidence and witnesses in his or her behalf at the rescission
hearing.
(e) The inmate’s presence is not necessary at the rescission hearing if:
1. The institutional misconduct has been established by the institution’s
disciplinary committee by a finding that the inmate has violated the rules of
his or her confinement; or
2. If the misconduct has resulted in a conviction in a court of law.
(f) The Board may delay the parole grant for up to one hundred and twenty
(120) days if, in its opinion, it has insufficient information before it to reach
an informed and fair decision at the rescission hearing. Awaiting the
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disposition of institution discipline committees, new charges or
indictments, or investigating new detainers shall also be sufficient grounds
to continue a rescission hearing under this subparagraph.
(g) If the result of the process is that the inmate’s grant of parole is
rescinded, he or she shall be given written notice evidencing the reasons for
the rescission of the parole grant.
(h) A grant of parole shall not be rescinded except upon the concurrence of
two (2) Board Members.
***
(4) Appeal Procedure.
(a) An inmate whose parole has been rescinded may request an appellate
review by the Board. Such review shall be in accordance with the
procedure outlined in rule 1100-01-01-.08 (4).
Also pertinent to this appeal is Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-28-505(b), which
requires that, at least 30 days prior to a scheduled parole hearing, the Board send notice
of the date and place of the hearing to, inter alia, the district attorney general in the
county in which the crime was prosecuted and the sheriff of the county in which the
crime was committed.3
Mr. Stone contends that the letters the District Attorney and Sheriff submitted
after the hearing should have no legal effect because each had received the notice prior to
the hearing and failed to timely submit their objections or appear at the hearing. Mr.
Stone also argues that the letters were not “significant new information” within the
meaning of Rule 1100-01-01-.09(d)4 of the Rules of the Board of Parole. The Board
3
If the Board fails to provide the required notice, section 40-28-505(d) provides the following remedies:
(1) Prior to a parole or parole revocation hearing, a party to whom the board failed to
provide the notice required in subsection (b) may request the board to postpone the
scheduled hearing. Upon that request, the board may, for just cause, postpone the
scheduled parole or parole revocation hearing in order to provide a reasonable
opportunity for the party to attend the hearing and, if that party is a victim, to submit a
victim statement; and
(2) If within fifteen (15) days after a parole or a parole revocation decision has been
finalized, the board receives a written victim impact statement from a party to whom the
board failed to provide the notice required in subsection (b), the board shall consider the
statement. If the board finds that the victim impact statement warrants a new hearing, it
shall schedule the hearing, subject to all notification requirements under subsection (b).
4
Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 1100-01-01-.09(1)(d) states:
(1) Grant of Parole.
***
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contends that the opposition of the District Attorney and Sheriff was not known to the
Board until after the vote and that their opposition to Mr. Stone’s parole was “significant
new information” within the meaning of the regulation.
It is not disputed that both the District Attorney and Sheriff received notice of Mr.
Stone’s parole hearing in accordance with Tennessee Code Annotated section 40-28-505
and Rule 1100-01-01-.06(2) of the Rules of the Board of Parole.5 The question is
whether the Board was prohibited from considering the letters in determining to hold a
pre-parole rescission hearing and, after rescinding the parole, denying him parole a
second time. Given the standard of review we apply and the substantial deference we are
obliged to give to the Board’s interpretation and application of its rules, we cannot
conclude on the record presented that the Board acted illegally, arbitrarily or
fraudulently; rather, we conclude that the Board reached the decisions in a lawful
manner.
As noted by this court in Kaylor v. Bradley, “the mere possibility of parole is not a
constitutionally protected liberty interest.” 912 S.W.2d 728, 732 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995)
(citing Greenholtz v. Inmates of Nebraska Penal & Correctional Complex, 442 U.S. 1, 7-
11 (1979)). Nonetheless, we have recognized that the Parole Board is obligated to follow
the law and its own rules, and “inmates are entitled to whatever due process arises from
the proper application of state statutes and the rules” of the Board. Wells v. Tennessee Bd.
of Paroles, 909 S.W.2d 826, 829 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1995).
The facts in the case at bar are similar to those presented in Daniels v. Traughber,
984 S.W.2d 918 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1998), wherein a prisoner who had been convicted of
second degree murder challenged, by writ of certiorari, the decision by the Board of
Paroles to rescind its earlier grant of parole. Neither the victim’s parents nor their
counsel had been notified of the parole hearing and, upon learning of the grant of parole,
submitted written victim impact statements to the Board. Id. at 920. The notice of the
hearing had been sent to the office of the District Attorney who prosecuted the case, but
she did not receive the notice; she also wrote the Board protesting the grant of parole. Id.
at 919, 920. After receiving the statements and the District Attorney’s letter, the Board
held a parole rescission hearing where it heard testimony from members of the victim’s
family and voted to rescind parole. Id. at 920. The trial court denied the application for
the writ of certiorari and dismissed the case; on appeal, this court affirmed the decision,
(d) Upon receipt of significant new information, the Board may, on its own motion,
reconsider any parole grant case prior to the release of the inmate and may reopen and
advance or delay a parole date.
5
In its response to Mr. Stone’s requests for admissions, the Board admits that notices of Mr. Stone’s
parole hearing were sent to the trial judge, the victim witness coordinator in the District Attorney’s
Office, and the Warren County Sheriff’s Department.
9
holding that the Board’s action was within the authority granted under the statutes and
that the Board did not act fraudulently, illegally, or arbitrarily in considering the victim
impact statements and holding a second hearing. Id. at 924-25.
In the case at bar, the opposition of the District Attorney and Sheriff to the grant of
parole to Mr. Stone was not known to the Board prior to the March 16, 2015 hearing; the
opposition to the grant was characterized by General Zavogiannis in her letter as
“adamant.” Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 1100-01-01-.09(1)(d) permits the Board to
reconsider a grant of parole prior to the release of an inmate where it receives “significant
new information.” The procedure to reconsider the grant of parole is governed by Tenn.
Comp. R. & Regs. 1100-01-01-.12. The due process protection available to Mr. Stone in
this circumstance is only that which “arises from the proper application of the statutes
and rules.” Wells, 909 S.W.2d at 829.
In common law certiorari proceedings, we are obliged to give substantial
deference to the agency’s interpretation of its own rules. See Moore v. Neeley, No.
W2006-00438-COA-R3-CV, 2006 WL 3371132, at *5 (Tenn. Ct. App. Oct. 6, 2006);
Jackson Exp., Inc. v. Tennessee Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 679 S.W.2d 942, 945 (Tenn. 1984).
Under the circumstances presented, the action of the Board in considering the letters of
opposition as “significant new information” and the resulting rescission of Mr. Stone’s
parole was authorized by the regulations. We do not condone the manner in which this
saga unfolded; however, the opposition to Mr. Stone receiving parole was not due to any
action or inaction on the Board’s part, and the Board is bound by law to consider
opposition to an inmate’s being granted parole. Further, Mr. Stone had no protectable
interest in any particular application of the regulations at issue.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
RICHARD H. DINKINS, JUDGE
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