[J-100-2019] [MO: Donohue, J.]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
MIDDLE DISTRICT
OTTO YOUNG, : No. 1 MAP 2019
:
Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the
: Commonwealth Court dated June
: 12, 2018 at No. 361 CD 2016
v. : Reversing the Order of the
: Pennsylvania Board of Probation
: and Parole dated February 24, 2016
PENNSYLVANIA BOARD OF PROBATION : and Remanding.
AND PAROLE, :
: ARGUED: November 20, 2019
Appellant :
CONCURRING OPINION
JUSTICE WECHT DECIDED: February 19, 2020
I join the Majority opinion in full. I write separately to note my respectful
disagreement with the suggestion in Chief Justice Saylor’s concurrence that credit awards
in some future case could be made subject to conditions the violation of which might result
in their subsequent rescission.
It is well-settled that an administrative agency may not exercise powers beyond
those “conferred upon it by the Legislature in clear and unmistakable language.” Hudson
v. Pa. Bd. of Prob. & Parole, 204 A.3d 392, 399 (Pa. 2019) (quoting Aetna Cas. & Sur.
Co. v. Commonwealth, Ins. Dep’t, 638 A.2d 194, 200 (Pa. 1994)). When faced with the
recommitment of a convicted parole violator, the Parole Code permits the Board, “in its
discretion, [to] award” full, partial, or no “credit . . . for the time spent at liberty on parole.”
61 Pa.C.S. § 6138(a)(2.1). Conspicuously absent from the statute’s text, however, is
language authorizing the Board to rescind credit once it has been “given” or “award[ed].”
See id. § 6138(a)(2), (2.1). If the General Assembly had intended to allow the Board to
claw back previously-awarded credit, surely it could and would have employed terms like
“revoke,” “rescind,” or “forfeit,” as it did elsewhere in the Parole Code.1 It did not. Nor did
our legislature include language signifying that credit could be awarded conditionally, to
be retaken at the Board’s will or whim upon the occurrence of some future transgression.
This, too, lends credence to the view that credit, once awarded, vests in the recommitted
parolee for all time.
In cautioning against reading the Commonwealth Court’s opinion here as
“preclud[ing] the Board from . . . imposing reasonable, express conditions” on credit
awards, Con. Op. at 2 (Saylor, C.J.), the Chief Justice invokes this Court’s decision in
Pittman v. Pennsylvania Board of Probation and Parole, 159 A.3d 466 (Pa. 2017), for the
truism that “the Board has the broadest of discretion over many decisions regarding
parolees.” Id. at 474. But just as we recognized in Pittman that the Board abuses that
discretion when it fails to perform an act expressly commanded by the Parole Code, so,
too, does the Board contravene the statute when it assumes a power—pertinently, that
of rescission—not afforded to it by the enactment’s plain language. The Parole Code
does not, sub silentio, permit the Board to achieve by proviso a result, i.e., the loss of
previously-awarded credit, for which the General Assembly declined to provide “in clear
and unmistakable language.” Hudson, 204 A.3d at 399. The power to give a thing does
1 See, e.g., 61 Pa.C.S. § 5902(e.1)(1)(iii) (stating that, with respect to an employee
of a state correctional institution, the chief administrator may “revoke the ability of the
employee . . . to carry or store a firearm and ammunition”); id § 6113(a)(2) (“[N]o person
shall be paroled or discharged from parole or have his parole revoked, except by a
majority of the entire membership of the board.”); id. § 6122(b)(2) (“Any person who
violates any of the provisions of this section . . . [s]hall forfeit that person’s office or
employment, as the case may be.”); id. § 6143(c) (“If the United States Immigration and
Customs Enforcement is unable to or does not deport the inmate, the inmate shall be
returned to the custody of the department and the board shall rescind the inmate’s
parole.”).
[J-100-2019] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 2
not inherently include the power to take that thing away. It would be an unusual exercise
in statutory construction to interpret verbs intentionally chosen also to encompass their
antonyms. As I am aware of no cases in which the Board previously has attempted to
attach conditions to credit awards, even tacitly advancing a theory which might inspire the
Board to begin doing so now risks opening the floodgates of future litigation over its
propriety.
In any event, Chief Justice Saylor rightly observes that we lack the benefit of
advocacy on the issue, as it has not been presented here and would not control this case.
The General Assembly is free, of course, to amend the Parole Code to clarify its view on
the hypothetical circumstances identified by the Chief Justice’s concurrence.
Justice Todd joins this concurring opinion.
[J-100-2019] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 3