Earl Ellery Wright was convicted, on pleas of guilty, of four charges of bank robbery and one of theft from interstate shipment and was sentenced on November 7, 1966 by the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio to thirty-five years in prison, subject to the indeterminate sentence provisions of 18 U.S.C. § 4208(a)(2) [now section 4205(b)(2)].
On February 28, 1976 Wright, while incarcerated in the United States Penitentiary at Marion, Illinois, filed a complaint in the district court which had sentenced him and named as defendants the United States Board of Parole 1 and the United States of America. He complained that he first appeared before the Parole Commission in January 1967 at which time his case was “set off for five years”. He further alleged that he again appeared before the Commission in January 1972 and at that time received a three-year set off. Thereafter on October 10, 1974, plaintiff again appeared before the Commission which held that under certain guidelines established by the Commission for adult cases, his offense behavior had been rated as of the greatest severity, that he had a salient factor score of three under those guidelines and that:
Your release at this time would depreciate the seriousness of the offenses committed and thus be incompatible with the welfare of society.
You need additional institutional treatment, specifically in the area of individual counselling so as to enhance your capacity to lead a law abiding life upon your eventual release to free society.
Wright alleged further that no other explanation was given for his failure to be granted parole and that all other administrative appeals from that decision were denied.
Claiming that the guidelines and his denial of parole are “capricious, arbitrary and totally without foundation, vague and unlawful” and that the Parole Commission never gave him an opportunity for a hearing which comported with due process, Wright asked that the district court order a new hearing before the Commission which would comport with due process or in the alternative, that the court order that the plaintiff be paroled.
On consideration of a motion to dismiss filed by the respondents, District Judge William K. Thomas noted the absence of any adequate jurisdictional averments and elected to treat the case as an attack upon the petitioner’s sentence pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255. He concluded that the basis for seeking review of the petition under that statute “must lie in the change in Commission policy embodied in the decision-making guidelines the Commission promulgated several years ago to help it decide when to release prisoners.” See generally, Note, “Parole Release Decision-making and the Sentencing Process”, 84 Yale L.J. 819, 817-841 (1975). So construing the petition and in reliance upon
Kortness v. United States,
The guidelines referred to by the Commission have now been published in 28 C.F.R. § 2.20. The operation and the impact of the guidelines on the exercise of the Commission’s discretion were discussed by this court in
Ruip
v.
United States,
The habeas corpus power of federal courts over prisoners in federal custody has been confined by Congress through 28 U.S.C. § 2241 to those district courts within whose territorial jurisdiction the custodian is located.
Braden v. 30th Judicial Circuit Court,
Section 2255, however, does not grant jurisdiction to a district court over all post conviction claims, but has been conceived to be limited to those claims which arise from the imposition of the sentence as distinguished from claims attacking the execution of the sentence. The latter claim is cognizable solely under § 2241.
McNair v. McCune,
As we read the complaint of Wright, filed in the district court, it attacks not the sentence imposed, but rather the execution of that sentence by the Parole Commission’s interpretation of its guidelines. To that extent, therefore, we hold that the complaint was one which was cognizable only by a proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 2241, commenced in the district court having territorial jurisdiction over Wright’s custodian. Accordingly, because Wright was incarcerated in the Northern District of Illinois, the district court here was without jurisdiction to adjudicate those claims on the merits.
Recognizing that the complaint filed by Wright was pro se, the district court nevertheless properly construed it broadly enough to include a claim attacking his sentence under § 2255. Thus the court confronted the more difficult question of whether, as held in Kortness, supra, the sentencing court under § 2255 has the power to vacate where it appears that in imposing sentence, the court acted under the mistaken belief that the defendant would receive meaningful parole consideration under the terms of § 4208(a)(2) prior to having served one-third of his sentence.
That such power may exist in the sentencing court under § 2255 even beyond the 120-day limits for altering and amending sentences under Rule 35, finds at least some suggested recognition in
United States v. Tucker,
Since
Kortness,
the Eighth Circuit has taken care to limit the scope of its holding. In
United States v. White,
Other circuits have agreed with at least the limited holding in
Kortness, United States v. Salerno,
In
United States v. DiRusso
(DiRusso I),
The First Circuit later in
United States v. DiRusso,
In a case in which the applicability of the guidelines should have been known to bench and bar at the time of sentencing, we hold that Rule 35 provides the exclusive means of relief for the criminal defendant. Although this rule may not yield entirely satisfactory results in this case and although we sympathize with the district court’s desire to correct its error, we think our holding today is necessary to preserve the separate functions of the Parole Commission and the sentencing judge.
Not only is such action as that taken by the district court unnecessary to provide a realistic remedy in the generality of cases, but any departure from a bright line test seems to us an unwarranted and costly incursion into a judge’s subjective intent. Were it always open to a prisonerto test a judge’s intention at the time of sentencing in the light of subsequent actions of the Parole Commission, there would predictably be a flood of pro se and other petitions, accepting this invitation. See Jacobson v. United States, 542 F.2d 725 , at 727 (8th Cir. 1976). We would also foresee problems for both the sentencing and the reviewing courts. The sentencing judge would have to reconstruct its state of mind in sentencing in a particular case, perhaps one remote in time. And if the reviewing court is not to accept without question the sentencing judge’s reconstruction of his earlier intent, it would find itself in an awkward position in determining whether and why that reconstruction was unreasonable.
DiRusso II, supra, at 376
We find the foregoing logic from DiRusso II persuasive at least where the claim of mistake or error must perforce rest upon the subjective and unexpressed intention of the sentencing judge. We agree with the First Circuit that a proper respect for the separate functions of the sentencing judge and the Parole Commission under the statutory scheme permits no other construction. We leave to another day the impact of the policy guidelines where, before their adoption, the sentencing judge had clearly expressed upon the record his expectation that the defendant would be eligible for early parole consideration by the receipt of an (a)(2) sentence and also the question of the voluntariness of a negotiated plea which was made and accepted before the imposition of the guidelines upon a clearly expressed understanding concerning the imposition of an (a)(2) sentence and its consequences. We conclude that in the absence of these conditions at least, no relief is available under § 2255 based upon the unrecorded subjective intention of the sentencing judge, even though the (a)(2) sentence was imposed prior to the adoption of or the court’s knowledge of the guidelines. To permit the vacation of a sentence for such reasons beyond the time limitations provided by Rule 35 would be an unwarranted intrusion into the discretion which the trial judge by employment of the (a)(2) sentence has largely placed in the Parole Commission.
The lively concern of • sentencing judges over the well-being and future disposition of defendants whom they have been obligated to sentence is laudable indeed, and we especially appreciate the candor of the trial judge here who did not hesitate to express what had been his own personal understanding at the time of sentencing. We do not conceive, however, that this was an adequate basis for the exercise of the power to vacate the sentence under § 2255.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Congress extensively revised Chapter 311 of Title 18, United States Code, by the act of March 14, 1976, Public Law 94-233, 90 Stat. 219. The term Parole Commission will be used in this opinion, rather than Board of Parole, for sake of clarity.
