GILLETTE, J.
These two parole eligibility cases have been consolidated in this court for purposes of opinion. They concern the scope of authority of the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision (board) to consider for parole persons who had been convicted of aggravated murder and sentenced to life in prison with a minimum of 30 years imprisonment, but who, 20 years later, are found by the board to be capable of rehabilitation within a reasonable period of time. In Janowski/Fleming v. Board of Parole, 349 Or. 432, ___, ___ P.3d ___ (2010) (decided this date), we hold that the board has the authority to override a prisoner's 30-year mandatory minimum sentence for aggravated murder and to release the prisoner after 20 years in prison on a finding that the prisoner is capable of rehabilitation within a reasonable period of time. We also hold that, in such an event, the board must use the applicable matrix rules in effect at the time of the commission of the underlying offenses to determine when the prisoner should be released. Id. at 468, 245 P.3d at 122-123. The two cases now before us involve an additional circumstance not present in Janowski/Fleming, viz., each prisoner was sentenced by a trial court to two consecutive life sentences with 30-year mandatory minimum terms of imprisonment for aggravated murder. Nonetheless, each prisoner, after 20 years of imprisonment on the first of the prisoner's consecutive sentences, was found by the board to be capable of rehabilitation within a reasonable period of time.
The Court of Appeals concluded that the outcome of these cases was controlled by this court's decision in Norris v. Board of Parole, 331 Or. 194, 13 P.3d 104 (2000), cert. den., 534 U.S. 1028, 122 S.Ct. 562, 151 L.Ed.2d 437
Both the board and the prisoners sought review of those decisions, and we allowed their petitions for review. The facts relevant to our disposition of these cases are procedural and are not in dispute. In September 1984, prisoner Severy killed his father and brother in the family home and then set fire to the house to conceal his crimes.
In February 1985, prisoner Wilson shot and killed his friend's parents.
After Severy and Wilson had been incarcerated for 20 years, each sought and was given a hearing under ORS 163.105(2)
Both Severy and Wilson sought judicial review of the board rulings in the Court of Appeals, which, as noted, held in each instance that the case was controlled by this court's decision in Norris. The board seeks review in Severy's case, arguing that applicable statutes do not permit the board to override the 30-year mandatory minimum sentences for aggravated murder and that the Court of Appeals should not have relied on Norris because, in its view, Norris was wrongly decided. Severy and Wilson also seek review, contending that the board did have the authority to override the mandatory minimum sentences for aggravated murder, but likewise contending that Norris was wrongly decided, albeit in a different way than that argued by the board.
In Janowski/Fleming, this court today addresses the issue of the board's authority, under ORS 163.105 (1985), to override a 30-year mandatory minimum sentence and to set a prisoner's eligibility for release on parole after 20 years if it finds that the prisoner is likely to be rehabilitated within a reasonable time. ORS 163.105 (1985) required the trial court to impose a 30-year mandatory minimum sentence for persons who had been sentenced to life imprisonment for aggravated murder. However, it further provided:
In Janowski/Fleming, we hold that that statute does give the board authority to make a prisoner who had been sentenced by a court to a 30-year minimum prison term for aggravated murder eligible for release after he has
We therefore turn to the question that is central to these two consolidated appeals: What is the effect of our holding in Janowski/Fleming on cases in which a prisoner has been convicted of more than one aggravated murder and in which the trial court ordered the prisoner to serve consecutive sentences of life in prison with 30-year mandatory minimum terms of imprisonment? Because the Court of Appeals concluded that the answer to that question was controlled by this court's earlier decision in Norris, and because all parties in this case argue that Norris was wrongly decided, we begin with a brief summary of the facts in Norris and its principal holdings.
In Norris, the prisoner had committed two aggravated murders and one attempted murder in 1978. After he was convicted of those crimes in 1979, the trial court imposed two consecutive life sentences on the aggravated murder counts, each to be served without the possibility of parole for 20 years. (Such sentences were authorized under ORS 163.105(2) (1977).) The court also imposed a concurrent 20-year term of imprisonment on the attempted murder conviction. At the time that Norris committed his crimes, ORS 163.105(3) (1977) permitted a prisoner who had been convicted of aggravated murder under ORS 163.105(2) (1977) to seek a hearing before the board after 15 years of incarceration to determine if he was likely to be rehabilitated within a reasonable period of time. Subsection (4) of that same statute provided that, if the board found that the prisoner was capable of rehabilitation and that the terms of his confinement should be changed to life in prison with the possibility of parole, the board was required to enter an order to that effect.
In 1993, after Norris had been incarcerated for 15 years, he sought and was granted a rehabilitation hearing, and the board found that he was likely to be rehabilitated within a reasonable period of time. The board set a release date for July 2018, after Norris had served the judicially ordered 40 years in prison (i.e., after he had served two consecutive 20-year mandatory minimum terms). Norris petitioned for judicial review in the Court of Appeals.
While judicial review was pending, the board withdrew its order for reconsideration. Ultimately, the board issued an order on reconsideration making two findings. First, it reiterated its finding that Norris was capable of rehabilitation within a reasonable time; consequently, it applied the matrix then in effect and concluded that the appropriate matrix range for both counts of aggravated murder was 20 to 28 years, which was less than Norris's judicially ordered 40-year minimum prison term. Second, it found that it should not alter Norris's minimum term of confinement, because 20 years for each count was the appropriate sanction for Norris's
Norris renewed his petition for judicial review in the Court of Appeals. Among other things, Norris argued that, because the board had found him to be capable of rehabilitation, the minimum terms imposed by the trial court were "nullified" and the board had to use the matrix system to set a release date. The board, in response, contended that ORS 163.105(4) required it to make two independent and coequal findings before it could change the terms of a prisoner's confinement: "(1) that [the prisoner] was capable of rehabilitation and (2) that the terms of confinement should be changed to life with the possibility of parole." Norris, 331 Or. at 200, 13 P.3d 104 (emphasis added). Alternatively, the board argued that, even if the issue were unitary and it therefore was required to change the "terms of [the prisoner's] confinement," it still had no authority to override the consecutive, 20-year mandatory minimum sentences. After considering those arguments, the Court of Appeals ruled that a decision by the board that a prisoner was likely to be rehabilitated within a reasonable period of time necessarily included a finding that the terms of confinement must be changed. Norris v. Board of Parole, 152 Or.App. 57, 66, 952 P.2d 1037 (1998). However, the court did not go on to direct the board to take any particular action. Instead, it remanded the case to the board for further proceedings. Id. at 66-67, 952 P.2d 1037. Norris then sought review in this court.
This court in Norris began by considering what the board was required to find at a rehabilitation hearing under ORS 163.105 (1977) and ultimately held "that the legislature intended that, in a hearing held under ORS 163.105(3) (1977), the Board must find only whether the prisoner is capable of rehabilitation." Norris, 331 Or. at 207, 13 P.3d 104. The court then turned to consider the effect of that conclusion on Norris, who was subject to two consecutive 20-year mandatory minimum sentences. The court's analysis in that regard was as follows:
Norris, 331 Or. at 207-08, 13 P.3d 104 (emphasis and ellipses in original).
The board complains that, in the foregoing passage, the court held, without any explanation or analysis, that the prisoner's second mandatory minimum sentence began to run the moment that the board found that he was capable of rehabilitation, and nothing in the statute or its context suggests that result. The board also criticizes that passage for concluding, at one point, that the board's "likely to be rehabilitated" finding means that a prisoner who is subject to two consecutive mandatory minimum sentences is "entitled" to begin serving the second sentence, but stating elsewhere that he merely is "eligible" for parole on such a finding.
The prisoners, for their part, point out that the plain words of ORS 163.105(3) (1977) required the board to conduct Norris's rehabilitation hearing 15 years "from the date of imposition of a minimum period of confinement pursuant to subsection (2) of this section," and that the trial court had "imposed" both of Norris's consecutive sentences on the same date. Under the plain words of the statute, therefore, the board was required to conduct the rehabilitation hearing for both aggravated murder sentences at the same time. They argue that the court ignored that statutory wording entirely when, in the passage quoted above, it required Norris to wait another 15 years, and to seek a second rehabilitation hearing on the second aggravated murder sentence, before he could become eligible for parole under ORS 163.105 (1977).
In addition to the foregoing criticisms of the court's reasoning in Norris (some of which, as we shall explain, we find to be well taken), we observe that the court's analysis seems to have gone astray on another point as well. The court emphasized that, because ORS 163.105(2) (1977) (the subsection under which Norris was sentenced) referred to a "defendant [] convicted of murder," that statute "provide[d] the sentence for one murder (a single crime)." Norris, 331 Or. at 207, 13 P.3d 104 (emphasis by the Norris court). The court also stated, "ORS 163.105(2) (1977) is specific regarding the sentence for such a murder." Id. From those undisputed points, which have nothing necessarily to do with the appropriate sentence for multiple counts of aggravated murder, the court made an illogical leap to the conclusion that a prisoner could receive a rehabilitation hearing under ORS 163.105(3) and (4) (1977) for only the first of two consecutive mandatory minimum sentences. Nothing in ORS 163.105(3) or (4) (1977) supports that conclusion. On the contrary, as discussed, the plain words of ORS 163.105(3) (1977) required the hearing to be held 15 years after the "imposition of a minimum period of confinement," and, as noted, at Norris's sentencing, the trial court "imposed" the minimum period of confinement for each of the two aggravated murders simultaneously.
Although this court makes every attempt to adhere to precedent, in accordance with the doctrine of stare decisis, it has, from time to time, found an earlier interpretation of a statute to be so deficient that it has concluded that some reexamination of the prior statutory construction was appropriate. See, e.g., Holcomb v. Sunderland, 321 Or. 99, 105, 894 P.2d 457 (1995) (reexamination was necessary because all the stated bases for the decision either did not apply, or were no longer correct because of later statutory enactments, or provided only marginal support for the conclusion); see also State v. Sandoval, 342 Or. 506, 512-13, 156 P.3d 60 (2007) (abrogating earlier case interpreting statute because it did not examine the words of the statute and it relied on irrelevant parts of the legislative history). This is such a case: The court's stated bases for the part of the decision in Norris concerning the timing of rehabilitation hearings in circumstances such as those faced by Norris (and Severy and Wilson) do not support its conclusions, are internally inconsistent, and ignore the words of the statute. We therefore abandon them. We turn to an examination of the provisions of ORS 163.105 (1985) without regard to the court's decision in Norris, in an effort to discern how the legislature intended to deal with prisoners who had been convicted of more than one aggravated murder and had been sentenced to serve consecutive life sentences with mandatory minimum terms of imprisonment.
For convenience, we repeat the relevant parts of ORS 163.105 (1985) here:
As we observe in Janowski/Fleming, subsection (1) is a directive to the trial court; it requires the trial court to order a defendant who has been sentenced to life imprisonment for aggravated murder to serve a minimum of 30 years in prison without the possibility of parole. Janowski/Fleming, 349 Or. at 468-469, 245 P.3d at 123. That is, 30 years is the "minimum period of confinement" that the trial court must impose pursuant to subsection (1). Subsection (2) then describes the timing of rehabilitation hearings as being "any time after 20 years from the date of imposition of a minimum period of confinement pursuant to subsection (1) of this section." (Emphasis added.) Under the plain words of that subsection, the trigger for the rehabilitation hearing is the "imposition" of
In the case of defendants Severy and Wilson, who each were tried for and convicted of two aggravated murders that were committed at the same time, the trial court imposed the minimum period of confinement for both convictions at the same time. And, when the trial court ordered those minimum periods of confinement to be served consecutively, the combined mandatory minimum sentence became the "minimum period of confinement" imposed pursuant to subsection (1).
Subsection (3) then brings a different phrase into play. Under that subsection, if the board unanimously finds that a prisoner is "capable of rehabilitation," then the board "shall convert the terms of the prisoner's confinement to life imprisonment with the possibility of parole." (Emphasis added.) In Norris, this court acknowledged that the word "terms" in the phrase "terms of * * * confinement" could refer to the conditions of the prisoner's confinement, but instead held that the phrase meant the length of the period of confinement that the trial court had imposed for one aggravated murder. Norris, 331 Or. at 207, 13 P.3d 104. Apparently, the court came to that conclusion solely because the trial court's imposition of a 30-year mandatory minimum sentence under ORS 163.105(1) (1977) triggered the rehabilitation hearing referred to elsewhere in the statute. See Norris, 331 Or. at 207, 13 P.3d 104 (suggesting that conclusion). However, that analysis ignores the fact that, in subsection (2), when the statute specifically referred to the sentence that the trial court imposed for aggravated murder, it used the phrase "period of confinement." The fact that the legislature chose to use a different phrase— viz., "terms of * * * confinement"—in subsection (3) suggests that it intended to convey a different meaning. In this case, we think that the phrase "terms of * * * confinement" in subsection (3) includes any conditions applicable to a period of confinement, including a condition stating that parole or any other form of release was prohibited for a mandatory minimum period and a requirement that certain periods of confinement be served consecutively. It does not refer to the sentence that the trial court imposed for one of multiple convictions for aggravated murder.
The foregoing analytical point is bolstered by the fact that the issue to be decided at the rehabilitation hearing is whether the prisoner has met his burden to prove that he is likely to be rehabilitated within a reasonable period of time. ORS 163.105(2) (1985). That determination pertains only to personal characteristics of the prisoner; it does not focus either on the offenses that the prisoner committed or on which of multiple consecutive sentences he was serving when the hearing occurred. If the board finds that a prisoner is likely to be rehabilitated within a reasonable time, it defies logic to conclude that the legislature intended the board to require the offender to make that precise showing again 20 years later. We hold that, in requiring the board to convert the "terms of the prisoner's confinement" to life with the possibility of parole, ORS 163.105(3) (1985) required the board to convert the prohibition on eligibility
So much for "terms of confinement." We turn now to the separate issue of "period of confinement." In Severy's and Wilson's cases, the trial court imposed consecutive sentences of life in prison, each with a 30-year period to be served without the possibility of parole. After Severy and Wilson each had been incarcerated for 20 years, the board unanimously found that each was capable of rehabilitation. The board then was required to convert both of Severy's and Wilson's sentences to life in prison with the possibility of parole. That "conversion" necessarily eliminated both 30-year mandatory minimum sentences, but it did not necessarily alter the consecutive nature of the prisoners' sentences that remain in force. In sum, we conclude that this court erred in Norris in holding that a prisoner sentenced to consecutive life sentences with 30-year minimums must wait until he or she has served 20 years on the second life sentence before the board may decide whether he is capable of rehabilitation.
As noted, when the board issued the orders regarding both Severy and Wilson, it properly assumed that this court's decision in Norris correctly stated the controlling law. Accordingly, the board did not consider how its decision would affect the second mandatory minimum that the trial court had imposed on Severy and Wilson. More specifically, the board did not have occasion to consider whether each prisoner would still have to serve a reduced mandatory minimum sentence of 20 years for the second offense or whether the effect of its finding that each prisoner is capable of rehabilitation meant that the matrix applied immediately. Beyond that, the board did not have occasion to consider, if the matrix applies immediately, how the second mandatory minimum should be factored, if at all, into the matrix determination. Perhaps we could resolve some of those issues in advance of the board's resolution of them. But we think that the more prudent course is to remand these consolidated cases to the board so that it may address those questions in the first instance. The board's orders resolving those issues may limit, clarify, or sharpen the issues for any further review.
The decisions of the Court of Appeals are reversed. The orders of the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision are reversed, and the cases are remanded to the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision for further proceedings.
Severy committed his crimes in September 1984 and, therefore, the 1981 version of the statute applies to his case. However, because the 1985 amendments to ORS 163.105 do not affect our analysis of Severy's case in any way, we will, for convenience, simply refer to the 1985 version at all times in this opinion.