The appellant Philip Birnbaum was indicted in the court below for violation of the mail fraud statute, 18 U.S.C.A. § 338, and the Securities and Exchange Act as аmended, 15 U.S.C.A. § 77q and, under Sec. 37 of the Criminal Code, 18 U.S.C.A. § 88, for conspiracy to violate these statutes. He was acquitted on the counts charging substantive offenses but convicted on the conspiracy count. An order was thereupon entered that sentence be suspended and that he be released on probation for a period of three years. From this order he has appealed; and motion is made to dismiss the appeal on the ground that suspension of imposition of sentence is not a final judgment from which an appeal liеs.
We think that the motion to dismiss must be allowed. The appellate jurisdiction of this court extends only to the review of “final decisions” of the District Courts, except in a limited class of cases not here material. 28 U.S.C.A. § 225. And an order suspending sentence and releasing a prisoner оn probation is in no sense a final decision. It is the mere deferring of sentence, which in a criminal case is the final judgment. “Final judgment in -a criminal case means sentence”. Berman v. United States,
While the exact question here presented has not been decided by the Supreme Court, great weight must be accorded the fact that in the Berman case, supra, that court carefully distinguished a case of this sort from one where the sentencе was imposed and only its execution suspended. In holding that appeal lay in the latter case, the court said: “Here, the imposition of the sentence was not suspended, but only its execution. The sentence was not vacated. It stood as a final determination оf the merits of the criminal charge.
To create finality it was necessary that petitioner’s conviction should be followed by sentenсe
(Hill v. [United States ex rel.] Wampler, [
The exact question before us was carefully considered by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit in United States v. Lecаto, 2 Cir.,
“The appeal from the suspensiоn of sentence was premature. The only judgment in a criminal prosecution is the sentence, and when sentence is suspended there is no judgment from which to appeal. This has been substantially the uniform ruling whenever the question has arisen, in the absence of some statute allowing an appeal. Hill v. People,10 N.Y. 463 ; People v. Bork,78 N.Y. 346 ; People v. Markham,114 App.Div. 387 ,99 N.Y.S. 1092 ; People v. Flaherty,126 App.Div. 65 ,110 N.Y.S. 699 ; State v. Vaughan,71 Conn. 457 ,42 A. 640 ; Fleet v. State (Md.)21 A. 367 ; Symington v. State,133 Md. 452 ,105 A. 541 ; Com. v. Carver,224 Mass. 42 ,112 N.E. 481 ; State v. Brewer (N.J.Sup.)59 A. 31 ; State v. Bongiorno,96 N.J.L. 318 ,115 A. 665 ; State v. McKettrick,13 S.C. 439 ; Gibson v. State,96 Tex.Cr.R. 428 ,257 S.W. 1101 ; People v. Hartman,23 Cal.App. 72 ,137 P. 611 . * * * When Congress passed the Probation Law (18 U.S.C.A. §§ 724-727) it must be understood to have intended the system so established to be construed in the same sense as it had been in the states from which it was borrowed, Metropolitan R. Co. v. Moore,121 U.S. 558 , 572, 573,7 S.Ct. 1334 ,30 L.Ed. 1022 . Nor is there any serious injustice involved; a defendant may at any time insist upon the imposition of sentence, if so minded, and if he prefers to remain under prоbation rather than to take his chances, no grave evil results. At any rate, if it be thought desirable that he should have an appeal, thе law is too well settled for us to change it.”
Upon the oral argument, we were impressed, or at least the writer was, by the fact that relеase under probation necessarily involves a limitation upon the liberty of the accused, and also by the importance of securing a prompt review of the errors alleged to have been committed upon the trial. Further consideration, however, has convinced us that little weight should be given these considerations. An accused whose liberty is limited pending sentence is certainly in no worse case than an accused deprived of his liberty pending trial. Ordinarily he welcomes the opportunity to have sentence suspendеd and to be admitted to probation. If he objects to probation and desires a sentence from which he can appeаl for the purpose of reviewing the trial, all that he need do is ask that sentence be imposed. It is true, as argued, that the statute vests in the trial judge discretion either to suspend the sentence or merely to suspend its execution; but it would unquestionably amount to an abuse of thе discretion thus vested for the judge to refuse to impose sentence when requested by one who desired a final judgment from which he might prosecute an appeal. Such an abuse of discretion could be corrected by mandamus or by proceeding in the nature thereof. There is little danger, however, that trial judges will refuse to pronounce final judgments from which appeals can be prosecuted, where parties desire to appeal. The danger is rather that the efficiency of the system of appellate review provided by statute may be appreciably impaired if fragmentary appeals in criminal cases are permitted.
For the reasons stated, the appeal will be dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
