548 F.2d 699 | 7th Cir. | 1977
Lead Opinion
These habeas-corpus actions challenge state sentences as having been imposed without consideration of presentence custody resulting from defendants’ financial inability to make bail. In Faye v. Gray, 541 F.2d 665 (7th Cir. 1976), this court held that the equal-protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires a state sentencing judge to consider such presentence custody in sentencing, even though the total time imposed by the sentence and the presentence custody does not exceed the statutory maximum. Left undecided by that case is the question now before us: whether there should be a presumption that the required consideration was given to the presentence custody, as the District Court held in these cases, thereby placing on the petitioner in a federal habeas corpus proceeding the burden of showing that such consideration was not given. We hold that such a presumption may not be erected, and that the burden is on the state to show that the presentence jail time was considered in sentencing.
Johnson, petitioner in No. 76 — 1550, escaped from the Wisconsin Correction Camp System in December 1974 while serving two concurrent three-year sentences. On March 7, 1975, he was arrested on another charge in Salem, Oregon. Shortly thereafter, a Wisconsin detainer was filed, and on March 27, 1975, petitioner, having waived extradition, was returned to the Dane County Jail in Wisconsin to await trial on an escape charge. On April 14, he pleaded guilty to that charge and was sentenced to the statutory minimum of one year, to run consecutively to his earlier sentence. The maximum sentence that could have been imposed was five years.
The transcript of the hearing on April 14 contains no mention of the 39-day period petitioner spent in custody between his arrest in Oregon and the sentencing on the escape charge in Wisconsin. Subsequently, however, in an order denying petitioner’s motion for post-conviction review under Wis.Stat. § 974.06, the sentencing judge found that petitioner had been confined for 39 days because of his inability to post bail,
In April 1976 petitioner filed this federal habeas-corpus action asserting that his right to equal protection had been violated by the alleged failure of the sentencing judge to credit the presentence jail time.
Smith, petitioner in No. 76 — 1582, received indeterminate sentences totaling twelve years upon conviction under a Wisconsin indictment charging offenses for which the total maximum imprisonment was twenty-seven years and six months. When sentenced he had already been in custody 134 days because of financial inability to make bail. The record of the sentencing, which occurred in 1973, prior to the Byrd decision, does not show whether the judge gave consideration to the presentence custody in fixing the sentence.
In ruling on Smith’s federal habeas-corpus petition, the District Court noted that the total of presentence custody and sentences imposed did not exceed the statutory maximum, held that there was therefore a presumption of crediting, and dismissed the petition.
“the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment requires that the statutory ceiling placed on imprisonment for any substantive offense be the same for all defendants irrespective of their economic status.”
As the Faye opinion pointed out, this principle has been applied to require crediting whenever the sentence imposed, plus the presentence custody, exceeds the statutory maximum,
In reaching this conclusion, we have considered the Supreme Court’s decision in McGinnis v. Royster, 410 U.S. 263, 93 S.Ct. 1055, 35 L.Ed.2d 282 (1973), holding that a state that gives good-time credit for a prison sentence need not give such credit for presentence incarceration in a county jail. The Court concluded that, because a purpose of the legislative classification, albeit not the “overriding” one, was to foster the prison rehabilitation program, it was rational and justifiable to exclude time spent in jails, which had no rehabilitation programs. Id. at 274-277, 93 S.Ct. 1055. No comparable basis has been suggested for distinguishing between presentence time and prison time in the cases before us.
Accordingly, extrapolating from Williams v. Illinois and Faye v. Gray, the equal-protection clause requires consideration by the sentencing judge of presentence custody resulting from inability to post bond. By this we mean that the judge must view that custody as punishment imposed for the offense and determine how much additional custody is appropriate in light of the time already served.
There remains to be decided the question the Faye court did not need to reach, viz., whether, in the absence of a showing by the prisoner that the presentence custody was not given the consideration the Constitution requires, a federal court in a habeas-corpus action will presume that it was considered. The answer to this question would seem to lie in the nature of the right asserted. Before Williams v. Illinois, supra, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit held that, where a statutory scheme required the crediting of an indigent’s presentence jail time, it would conclusively presume that such credit had been given by the sentencing court “[wjherever it is possible, as a matter of mechanical calculation, that [it] could have been given.” Stapf v. United States, 125 U.S.App.D.C. 100, 367 F.2d 326, 330 (1966). Accord, Holt v. United States, 422 F.2d 822 (7th Cir. 1970). Since Williams the Fifth Circuit has adopted a similar presumption, see Parker v. Estelle, 498 F.2d 625, 627 (5th Cir. 1974), cert. denied, 421 U.S. 963, 95 S.Ct. 1951, 44 L.Ed.2d 450 (1975), in a habeas-corpus action brought by a state prisoner. This is, of course, another way of saying the credit need not be given at all in such a case. The basis for the Fifth Circuit’s position is its view that
In contrast to the Fifth Circuit, however, this court’s view in Faye, which we have reaffirmed, was that the indigent’s right to consideration of presentence detention is constitutionally based even if the total detention is below the statutory maximum.
Applying this standard to the cases at bar, we reverse the District Court judgments. In neither ease does the record of the sentencing hearing contain any reference to presentence custody. The sentencing judge’s statements in Johnson, at the subsequent state post-conviction proceeding, that he was aware of the Byrd decision and that he “strongly suspeet[ed]” he had considered the presentence custody, do not establish that Johnson was accorded his right to equal protection. Because, as we must therefore assume, Johnson’s sentence was fixed without reference to presentence custody, he was entitled to credit for as much of that custody as resulted from his financial inability to make bail. Cf. Stapf v. United States, supra, 367 F.2d at 330. To “consider” the presentence custody in the state post-conviction proceeding, but leave the sentence unchanged, as the sentencing judge did here, was tantamount to increasing the sentence in violation of Johnson’s equal-protection rights. On remand in Johnson, a writ will be issued ordering the release of petitioner upon completion of the one-year sentence, less the presentence time during which he was eligible for bail, as determined by the District Court. In Smith, unless the state can establish by the sentencing judge’s testimony that, despite the silence of the sentencing record on the point, he gave the required consideration to presentence custody, Smith is entitled to credit for that custody. We remand Smith to give the state an opportunity to make such proof, if it sees fit to attempt to do so.
Our ruling need not result in a flood of post-conviction proceedings in either state or federal courts in Wisconsin. The state can grant administrative relief in cases in which it ascertains either that appropriate consideration was not given or that it cannot be determined whether consideration was given. Those relatively few cases that cannot be resolved administratively will of course have to be processed by the courts.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
SUPPLEMENT TO OPINION
On the day the above opinion was issued, the Office of the Wisconsin Attorney Gen
. While the facts underlying this finding do not appear in the record, the state concedes its correctness and does not argue that a captured escapee in petitioner’s position is ineligible for
. Faced only with the issue of credit against a maximum sentence, the Wisconsin court took the opportunity to require sentencing judges to consider presentence custody in all cases:
“We further hold that, in imposing any sentence, the court must, in exercising its discretion, take into consideration, in determining the length of sentence to be imposed, the time the defendant spent in preconviction custody . . . even though the time spent in custody, when added to the sentence, would be less than the maximum.”
The court added that the effect of this ruling was to make mandatory what had previously been permissive. 65 Wis.2d at 425, 222 N.W.2d at 702.
. Petitioner also raised a double-jeopardy claim in this regard, but petitioner’s counsel conceded at oral argument that the court’s opinion in Faye v. Gray, 541 F.2d 665, 667 (7th Cir. 1976), has made such an argument untenable.
. The court’s citation of Monsour v. Gray, 375 F.Supp. 786 (E.D.Wis.1973), following this statement, could perhaps be construed as indicating the court’s belief that only a clear refusal to consider presentence jail time, as in that case, would be a sufficient abuse of discretion to present a constitutional question cognizable on a habeas petition.
. In addition to the cases cited in Faye, supra, 541 F.2d at 667, see Hart v. Henderson, 449 F.2d 183, 185 (5th Cir. 1971); Culp v. Bounds, 325 F.Supp. 416, 419 (W.D.N.C.1971). See also White v. Gilligan, 351 F.Supp. 1012 (S.D.Ohio 1972) (three-judge court).
. See cases cited in Faye, supra, 541 F.2d at 668.
. In view of the inconsistency between the positions taken by this court and the Fifth Circuit, this opinion has been circulated among all the judges of this court in regular active service. No judge favored a rehearing in banc.
Concurrence in Part
(concurring in part, and dissenting, in part).
I agree that an indigent defendant is constitutionally entitled to receive credit against his sentence for that period of pretrial incarceration which resulted from his inability to post bond. But I also consider it both constitutional and desirable to rebuttably presume that such credit was given by the trial judge at the time of sentencing, and to impose upon petitioner the burden of proof to the contrary. See, Faye v. Gray, 541 F.2d 665, 669 (7th Cir. 1976; Campbell, dissenting).
In my view, the record in No. 76-1550 rebuts any such presumption, and accordingly I concur in the result reached by the majority with respect to that appeal. The record in No. 76-1582, on the other hand, does not reveal whether, in sentencing the petitioner, the trial court gave credit for time served in confinement prior to trial. Accordingly, I would presume that credit was given and would find that petitioner has not satisfied his burden of proof to the contrary — i.e. the burden to present evidence sufficient to rebut the presumption. I therefore respectfully dissent from the result reached by the majority in No. 76-1582.