OPINION
Appellant Evan Arthur Hook, an Arizona prisoner, filed a petition for habeas corpus alleging he had not been allowed credit on his prison sentence for 236 days of presentence confinement. He asserted that since his prison sentence was for the maximum term allowed by the applicable Arizona statute depriving him of this credit denied him equal protection of the law. He asked that the state be required to deduct the presentence time served from his sentence. Appellant also asserted that the district attorney “inferred and implied” that he would get credit for time served if he pleaded guilty, and that this “acted as further inducement for petitioner to enter a plea of guilty.” The district court held “there is no federal constitutional right to credit for time served prior to sentence,” and denied the writ. The court did not discuss the allegation that an unkept promise had induced appellant’s guilty plea.
The court granted appellant a certificate of probable cause, and he appealed.
Under Williams v. Illinois,
The Arizona court sentenced appellant to 9-to-10 years on each of two counts of forgery with a credit card, A. R.S. §§ 13-1074, 13-1649, and 13-1650, the sentences to run concurrently. The maximum imprisonment authorized by the statute was ten years on each count. The district court believed appellant had not been sentenced to the maximum because the • sentences were to be served concurrently rather than consecutively. But we held in Lee v. United States,
Nor does the fact that appellant was given a minimum term of nine years alter the fact that he was sentenced to the maximum term of ten. Whatever the minimum term Hook could serve, he was potentially liable to serve the statutory maximum. The fact that he might be paroled at an earlier point in time is irrelevant. He retains the right not to have that statutory maximum extended by reason of indigency. Appellant is therefore entitled to time served for any period of presentence confinement suffered due to indigency.
This may not dispose of the plea-bargaining issue. On remand the district court may determine that some of the 236 days of presentence confinement was not served because of an offense for which appellant was sentenced to a maximum term, or was not served because of appellant’s indigency. As we read appellant’s allegations, he charges that he was induced to plead guilty by an understanding that all of the time he had served, for whatever reason, would be credited to his sentence.
It is not clear, however, whether appellant has alleged an actionable bargain, or merely an unreasonable and mistaken subjective impression on his part.
Compare
United States ex rel. Curtis v. Zelker,
We add this caveat: Assuming adquate allegations of an unkept promise by the prosecutor are tendered and established by proof on remand, it is not clear that appellant would be entitled to specific performance of the promise as distinguished from a right to withdraw his guilty plea, unless it also appeared that the judge participated in the agreement.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings.
