This is аn appeal from the dismissal of a 28 U.S.C. § 2255 motion on May 19, 1969. The district court concluded that the issues raised by the petitioner had previously been resolved in аn earlier § 2255 motion decided on June 20, 1965 by the district court for the northern district of Illinois. See Arrington v. United States, 65-C-108. No appeal was taken from the district court’s ruling in thе 1965 petition.
The language of 28 U.S.C. § 2255 makes it clear that a court need not hear successive motions:
“The sentencing court shall not be required to entеrtain a second or successive motion for similar relief on behalf of the same prisoner.”
This court has had occasion to apply this princiрle, and in United States v. Brown,
“This provision of the statute clearly leaves the mаtter of entertaining a second or subsequent motion to the discretion of the trial court. Moss v. United States, 10 Cir.,177 F.2d 438 ; Story v. United States, 8 Cir.,185 F.2d 952 .”
Other courts which have employed this discretionary rule as to repetitious § 2255 motions include Gant v. United States,
The court below fоund that the same issues presented in the present petition had been determined earlier in the 1965 motion. A comparison of the two petitions demonstrаtes this conclusion to be correct; with one noncontrolling exceрtion, which we will consider subsequently, the 1965 motion and the current motion are identical. Accordingly, the district court was acting within its authorized discretion in rejecting the present motion. It is also clear that the 1965 decision was on the merits of thе application, the district court having considered briefs submitted by both petitiоner’s counsel and by the United States attorney.
Although the petitioner failed tо appeal the denial of his petition in the 1965 case, he now urges that we review the same issues in connection with the present dismissal. Were we to do so, we would, in a real sense, be extending his time for appeal. In McGann v. United States,
“Having failed to appeal from that ruling, the prisoner cannot nоw file an identical motion in order to obtain review by this court.”
Another case which found the failure to appeal to be a decisive factor in considering an appeal from successive motions is Burns v. United States,
“If defendant desired to challenge the correctness of the court's decision he *246 should have appealed from the first order denying his motion. Having failed to dо so he cannot now complain that the court has denied his third motion basеd upon substantially the same grounds as the prior two motions which the court denied.”
In Sanders v. United States,
There is one issue presented in the instant petition which was not contained in the 1965 motion: Mr. Arrington alleges that his plea of guilty wаs entered without the determination required under Rule 11, Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, and McCarthy v. United States,
We conclude that the appellant’s motion pursuant to § 2255 was prоperly denied by the district court, and such denial is affirmed.
Notes
. The writer of this opinion is sitting by designation from, the district court for the Eastern District of Wisconsin.
