This cause was before us on a prior occasion, United States v. Williamson, 5 Cir., 1958,
On the Government’s appeal this Court reversed and remanded the cause for a determination and imposition of a proper sentence. The district court apparently believed that the opinion of this Court gave it a choice only between the twenty-year sentence on the conviction for entry and the eight-year concurrent sentences for larceny. The district court considered whether it should require or permit Williamson to be brought before it for its further proceeding. A decision against such action was reached. An order was made reinstating the original twenty-year sentence and vacating the eight-year sentences. From this order Williamson has appealed.
On the former appeal it was decided by this Court that the decision in the Prince case did not require a holding that there was a merger of the offenses. Our conclusion was that it was the pyramiding of penalties which is proscribed. We held, or so intended, that although the provision against pyramiding prevented the imposition of sentences aggregating more than the twenty-year maximum, the district court was required to exercise its discretion in fixing a penalty not exceeding that maximum. It was not required to adhere to either of the sentences originally imposed. Its duty was to resentence rather than to vacate one part and reinstate another part of the original sentence. Cf. Prince v. United States, supra.
We adhere to the conclusions announced in our earlier opinion. It may be that the two offenses defined by 18 U.S.C.A. § 2113(a), of entering a bank with the intent to commit a felony, for which the penalty is twenty years, and the completed offense of robbing the bank, for which the penalty is twenty years, are merged. The opinion in the Prince case so indicates and its language is quoted in the opinion in the recent case of Heflin v. United States,
On the present appeal the appellant makes two specifications of error. One of these is that the district court entered its order while the appellant’s petition for certiorari from our decision on the former appeal was pending. This point is abandoned by the appellant. It is clearly without merit. The petition for certiorari has been denied.
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The other claim of the appellant is that he was not brought before or given an opportunity to be before the court when his sentence was changed. The Government says that this contention is untenable, reminding us that 28 U.S.C.A. § 2255 expressly provides that “A court may entertain and determine such motion without requiring the production of the prisoner at the hearing.” There is no doubt that a prisoner’s presence before the court is not required for a determination as to whether, in a Section 2255 proceeding, a sentence should be set aside where there is no fact issue. United States v. Hayman,
Reversed and remanded.
