[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 418 [As amended by order of the Supreme Court October 24, 2005.]
¶1 Petitioners Lonnie Burton and three other inmates (Burton) filed suit against the secretary of the Washington State Department of Corrections (DOC) and several DOC superintendents claiming that DOC Policy 440.000 violates RCW 72.02.045. RCW72.02.045(3) states that "[w]hen convicted persons are released from the confines of the institution either on parole, transfer, or discharge, all . . . valuable personal property in the possession of the superintendent belonging to such convicted persons shall be delivered to them." In contrast, DOC Policy 440.000, section IX limits the amount of property that DOC will ship free of charge to two boxes along with state issued transport and clothing bags.1 All excess property must be shipped at inmates' expense, donated, or destroyed. Id. Based on DOC's practices under Policy 440.000, Burton made additional claims for due process violations; fraud; conversion; violations of the Washington Criminal Profiteering Act (WCPA), chapter 9A.82 RCW; and violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968. The superior court found that the term "transfer" did not apply to intra-DOC inmate movement and dismissed all of Burton's claims pursuant to a CR 12(b)(6) motion. The Court of Appeals affirmed on other grounds, holding that "transfer" does include intra-DOC *Page 420 movement but that inmates effectively receive "constructive delivery" under Policy 440.000.
(3) The superintendent shall be the custodian of all funds and valuable personal property of convicted persons as may be in their possession upon admission to the institution, or which may be sent or brought in to such persons, or earned by them while in custody, or which shall be forwarded to the superintendent on behalf of convicted persons. . . . When convicted persons are released from the confines of the institution either on parole, transfer, or discharge, all funds and valuable personal property in the possession of the superintendent belonging to such convicted persons shall be delivered to them.
(Emphasis added.)
¶3 Burton's complaint alleges several transfers between DOC institutions where DOC required the payment of shipping costs for property in excess of the Policy 440.000 limit. The complaint requested class certification, alleging that DOC Policy 440.000 and its implementation violates the RCW 72.02.045(3) requirement that superintendents "shall" deliver all personal property to the inmate upon "transfer." Burton further alleged due process violations, fraud, conversion, violations of the WCPA, and violations of *Page 421 RICO. Burton requested several types of relief, including compensatory damages, punitive damages, treble damages, costs and attorney fees, statutory penalties, declaratory relief, an injunction, and pre- and postjudgment interest. Judge Daniel J. Berschauer granted the defendants' CR 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss before any discovery was conducted, concluding that RCW 72.02.045 did not require DOC to pay for the transport of property upon an inmate's transfer to another DOC institution. The court found the word "transfer" in RCW 72.02.045 to be ambiguous and adopted DOC's view that "transfer" means transfer to the street, rather than to another DOC institution. Because the court concluded that all of Burton's additional claims were dependent upon a violation of the statute, it did not address those claims individually, but rather dismissed the complaint entirely.
¶4 Burton appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed on other grounds. Burton v. Lehman, 118 Wn. App. 307, 309, 76 P.3d 271 (2003). The court held that "transfer" in RCW 72.02.045(3) was not ambiguous and "clearly suggests" transfers between DOC institutions. Id. at 312-13. However, the court went on to hold that the term "delivery" was ambiguous because it could refer to actual or constructive delivery. Id. at 314. The Court of Appeals reasoned that "constructive delivery" was the appropriate definition because RCW 72.02.045(3) states that the superintendent is the custodian of inmate property and WAC137-36-030(3) allows the superintendent to determine the type and amount of inmate property. Id. Using the constructive delivery definition, the court held that DOC Policy 440.000 does not violate RCW 72.02.045(3) because constructive delivery occurs when inmates are given the option to (1) arrange for pickup by a nonincarcerated person, (2) pay to ship the property, or (3) leave the property to the transferring DOC institution for donation or destruction. Id. at 310, 314. Burton's motion for reconsideration was denied, and this court granted review on June 2, 2004. *Page 422
¶6 2. Were Burton's claims for constitutional rights violations, fraud, conversion, violations of the WCPA, and violations of RICO properly dismissed pursuant to CR 12(b)(6)?
¶9 In contrast, an ambiguous statute requires judicial construction. A statute is ambiguous only if susceptible to two or more reasonable interpretations, but a statute is not ambiguous merely because different interpretations are conceivable. State v. Keller, 143 Wn.2d 267, 276, 19 P.3d 1030 (2001). If a statute is subject to more than one reasonable interpretation, the court should construe the statute to effectuate the legislature's intent. Davis v. Dep't ofLicensing, 137 Wn.2d 957, 963, 977 P.2d 554 (1999). Only where the legislative intent is not clear from the words of a statute may the court "resort to extrinsic aids, such as legislative history." Biggs v. Vail, 119 Wn.2d 129, 134, 830 P.2d 350 (1992).
¶10 Throughout this litigation, the parties' dispute has focused on the meaning of two undefined terms in RCW72.02.045(3): "transfer" and "deliver[y]." Although varying interpretations of these terms are conceivable in the metaphysical sense, we conclude that a plain language analysis of each is both necessary and sufficient to dispose of the question presented.
¶13 The Court of Appeals correctly adopted the "constructive delivery" definition, though it need not have *Page 425 concluded that the statute was ambiguous to do so. Burton,118 Wn. App. at 314. The parties themselves have not contested the use of "constructive delivery" as the correct definition, but rather they dispute its application. Burton is correct that the Court of Appeals incorrectly assumed that inmates have the option to arrange for a nonincarcerated person to retrieve excess property. See id. DOC Policy 440.000 makes no such allowance explicit, and there was no finding that Burton or any other inmate was allowed to make such arrangements. Moreover, an adoption of the Court of Appeals' reasoning would fail to take into account instances where inmates are both indigent and have no available nonincarcerated persons to take possession. Such inmates would necessarily lose possession and control over the disposition of their property — a result that is incongruent with the mandate in RCW 72.02.045(3) that a transferred inmate's property "shall be delivered to them." Rather, we conclude that constructive delivery requires significantly more.
¶14 For purposes of RCW 72.02.045(3), the phrase "all . . . valuable personal property in the possession of the superintendent belonging to such convicted persons shall be delivered to them" cannot be artificially limited. Nothing in the statute indicates that only some of an inmate's property shall be delivered, nor does it state that the property shall be delivered at such convicted person's expense. Yet this is clearly the effect of DOC Policy 440.000. Accordingly, we must conclude that the statute means exactly what it says; that is, whenever an inmate is moved between DOC institutions, DOC is responsible for ensuring that the property owned by convicted persons and held in the custody of DOC superintendents is physically relocated from the transferor institution to the transferee institution. This is the "act . . . amount[ing] to a transfer of title" required to satisfy constructive delivery in this particular context. See BLACK'S, supra, at 461. We recognize that the question of whether the transferee superintendent ultimately gives an inmate actual possession of such property *Page 426 is a separate issue, dependent upon circumstances not addressed in RCW 72.02.045(3). However, DOC may not impose a requirement that inmates must choose between having to pay shipping costs or losing their ownership.4
ALEXANDER, C.J., and C. JOHNSON, SANDERS, and CHAMBERS, JJ., concur.