Attorney John Betts served fifteen days in jail on a criminal contempt conviction. We reversed his conviction and vacated the sentence, concluding that the court order he purportedly had transgressed was not sufficiently specific to support a conviction for contempt.
In re Betts,
I. BACKGROUND
We recounted in detail the events that led to Betts’ conviction and imprisonment for contempt in our previous opinion. For present purposes, we need reiterate only a few key facts.
Ironically, Betts found himself charged with contempt in the course of defending a colleague, Kenneth Kozel, against identical charges. On Kozel’s behalf, Betts had filed a motion to disqualify the district judge assigned to hear the matter. After an initial hearing on May 9, 1989, at which the district court heard argument and set a briefing schedule, the motion was taken under advisement. On June 5, 1989, the court issued an order setting the matter for a final hearing on June 19. Approximately thirty minutes before the June 19th hearing began, the court received in the mail a letter from Betts explaining that neither he nor Kozel would be present:
I have received a notice from you regarding an additional oral argument in this matter for the 19th in Springfield. I just simply am not available for that day regardless of how much I try to re-arrange matters. It had been my understanding from the previous time (May 9th) that you would rule by mail.
So that the administration of justice is not in anyway [sic] delayed, I would respectfully inform the court that my client has waived his right to be there and to present any additional matters before the court. Our position has already been presented thru [sic] prior oral argument and in the written matter submitted previously. We assume that you do not have any questions for us or we would have heard from you in writing. We have nothing further to add.
The hearing proceeded in the absence of the defense, and the court denied the disqualification motion. At the government’s request, the court also directed federal marshals to arrest Betts and Kozel for having willfully disobeyed its June 5th order by failing to attend the hearing. Kozel surrendered two days later, but convinced the court to quash the warrant for his arrest on the ground that his presence at the June 19th hearing was not compelled either by statute or by the June 5th order. Betts waited several weeks before he surrendered. He was then released on bond subject to the usual conditions, including a requirement that he appeal’ as commanded at all proceedings on the contempt charge against him.
The district court postponed resolution of the charge against Betts until it had resolved the original contempt charges against Kozel. After Kozel was convicted on two counts of contempt, 1 the district court ordered Betts to *1281 appear on December 8, 1989 to show cause why he should not be held in contempt for failure to attend the June 19th hearing. 2 Betts failed to appear on December 8, although Kozel (switching rules from client to counsel) appeared on his behalf. Kozel explained that Betts could not be present because he was hiding somewhere in the Chicago area to elude an outstanding warrant for his arrest in Ford county. The district court rescheduled the hearing for December 28.
Kozel appeared for the December 28th hearing but once again, Betts did not. His patience exhausted, the district judge issued another warrant for Betts’ arrest. Federal marshals apprehended Betts on January 18, 1990, and he remained in custody until his trial on the contempt charge six days later. The district court found that Betts had willfully disobeyed its order to appear for the June 19th hearing and was thus guilty of violating 18 U.S.C. § 401(3).
3
In re Betts,
On appeal, we reversed Betts’ conviction and vacated his sentence.
4
We noted that a conviction for criminal contempt requires a willful failure to comply with a lawful order of reasonable specificity.
When an appearance is required, the court’s language must be very direct. There should be no doubt or uncertainty as to what is meant- Here, it is impossible to discern from the way the order is phrased that Betts’ personal appearance was required. The court neither ordered the parties to appear for argument, nor did it indicate that Betts’ presence was indispensable for it to render a decision. If a court order is ambiguous, “it precludes the essential finding in a criminal contempt proceeding .of willful and contumacious resistance to the court’s authority.” United States v. Joyce,498 F.2d 592 , 596 (7th Cir.1974). Thus, it cannot be said that Betts’ failure to appear at the June 19, 1989 hearing violated a court order, much less that the violation was willful.
The sight of an officer of the court being led away to jail .does not make a pretty picture. Some attorneys — -and, as we have seen over the past few years, even some judges — break laws and deserve prison sentences. Betts did not. We are certain that the antics of Betts and Kozel tried the patience of the court.... At a time when courts have to engage in judicial “triage” to accommodate the frightening number of drug and other cases clogging their dockets, see Labaton, Scales of Justice Off Balance, N.Y.Times, Dee. 29, 1989, at Al, col. 1, Betts and Kozel papered several courts (including this one) with numerous filings that distracted us from more pressing matters. This, however, is not a punishable crime. Given the fact the June 5, 1989, *1282 docket order did not state that the presence of Betts was de rigueur, Betts’ conviction and resulting sentence cannot stand.
Victorious on appeal, Betts returned to the district court requesting a certificate of innocence under 28 U.S.C. § 2513, which would permit him to seek compensation in the Claims Court for his incarceration. The government opposed the petition, arguing that Betts had brought about his own prosecution through misconduct or neglect. See § 2513(a)(2). The district court agreed:
Betts clearly brought about his own prosecution through his own neglect and misconduct. Betts waited until the last moment to inform the Court that it was simply not convenient for him to appear at a scheduled hearing. After being apprehended, Betts violated a condition of his bond and attempted to avoid prosecution because of an outstanding arrest warrant issued by an Illinois court. In fact, it is uncertain that Betts would ever have appeared had he not been apprehended by the federal marshals.
Betts appeals from the denial of his petition. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
See Rigsbee v. United States,
II. ANALYSIS
A. The Statute
Our analysis necessarily begins with the language of section 2513. A separate statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1495, waives the government’s sovereign immunity and allows suits for wrongful imprisonment in the Claims Court. 5 But section 2513 establishes the conditions under which such relief may be granted:
(a) Any person suing under section 1495 of this title must allege and prove that:
(1) His conviction has been reversed or set aside on the ground that he is not guilty of the offense of which he was convicted, or on new trial or rehearing he was found not guilty of such offense, as appears from the record or certifícate of the court setting aside or reversing such conviction, or that he has been pardoned upon the stated ground of innocence and unjust conviction and
(2) He did not commit any of the acts charged or his acts, deeds, or omissions in connection with such charge constituted no offense against the United States, or any State, Territory or the District of Columbia, and he did not by misconduct or neglect cause or bring about his own prosecution.
Section 2513(b) requires either a court certificate or a pardon attesting to proof of these facts. Section 2513(e) caps the potential damages at $5,000.
B. Timeliness of the Appeal
Before reaching the merits, we must consider the government’s contention that Betts’ appeal is untimely. The district court’s order denying the petition for a certificate of innocence was docketed on August 8, 1991. Betts filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment on August 14, 1991, which was denied the same day. The notice of appeal was not filed until September 9,1991 — within the sixty days allowed for appeal in a civil action to which the government is a party, but well beyond the ten days allowed for appeal in a criminal case. See Fed.R.App.P. 4(a), (b). The timeliness of the appeal therefore turns on whether the proceedings in the district court were civil or criminal in nature. The government contends that a petition for a certificate of innocence is necessarily a criminal matter because it requires the court to determine whether the petitioner committed a crime. The government also points out that Betts filed his petition under the same miscellaneous case number assigned to his criminal contempt proceeding, rather than seeking to have a separate, civil docket number assigned to the petition.
*1283
We must at the outset reject the notion that the type of docket number affixed to the petition by the district court clerk or by the petitioner himself determines whether the proceeding is criminal or civil. Here, of course, the clerk assigned a neutral “miscellaneous” number to the contempt proceeding, and Betts used the same number in filing his section 2513 petition. But even if the petition had been assigned a criminal docket number, it would be of no moment. Motions that are technically filed “in” criminal proceedings may nonetheless be treated as civil for purposes of Appellate Rule 4.
See United States v. Taylor,
We agree with the Sixth Circuit that a petition for a certificate of innocence is civil in nature.
See United States v. Brunner,
Betts accordingly had sixty days in which to appeal the district court’s ruling, and he did so within that time. The government’s motion to dismiss the appeal is therefore denied. 6
C. Merits
Whether or not a petitionér is entitled to a certificate of innocence under section 2513 is a question committed to the sound discretion of the district court.
Rigsbee,
We start from the premise that sections 1495 and 2513 were meant to provide compensation only to those who can show that they are innocent of any criminal offense. As the Claims Court has explained:
The purpose of these statutes is to partially right an irreparable wrong done to a *1284 United States citizen who was wrongfully imprisoned through financial compensation. McLean v. United States,73 F.Supp. 775 , 778 (D.C.S.C.1947). However, the legislative history indicates that Congress did not intend to indemnify every imprisoned person whose conviction had been set aside. United States v. Keegan,71 F.Supp. 623 , 635 (D.C.N.Y.1947). Former United States Attorney General Cummings, in a letter embodied in the Report of the Senate Judiciary Committee [Report No. 202, 75th Congress, 1st Session] elaborated on the purpose and intent of the Unjust Conviction Act:
Ideal justice would seem to require that in the rare and unusual instances in which a person has served the whole or part of a term of imprisonment, is later found to be entirely innocent of the crime of which he was convicted, should receive some redress. On the other hand, reversals in criminal cases are more frequently had on the ground of insufficiency of proof or on the question as to whether the facts charged and proven constituted an offense under some statute. Consequently, it would be necessary to separate from the group of persons whose convictions have been reversed, those few who are in fact innocent of any offense whatever.
Burgess,
Our prior opinion makes clear that Betts did not commit a criminal offense.
We thus turn to the second prong of section 2513(a)(2) and consider whether Betts caused or brought about his own prosecution by “misconduct or neglect.” The language of this subsection has been described as “rather indefinite.”
Keegan,
Instead, we conclude that before the petitioner can be said to have caused or brought about his prosecution within the meaning of section 2513(a)(2), he must have acted or failed to act in such a way as to mislead the authorities into thinking he had committed an offense. The clearest example would be the defendant who either falsely confesses to a crime or intentionally withholds exculpatory evidence — in common parlance, one who “takes the fall” for someone else.
Keegan
offers a more comprehensive list: “Examples of the misconduct referred to ... are ‘Where there has been ‘an attempt to flee, a false confession, the removal of evidence, or an attempt to induce a witness or an expert to give false testimony or opinion, or an analogous attempt to suppress such testimony or opinion.’ ”
The district court cited two misdeeds on Betts’ part that purportedly brought about his own prosecution: (1) Betts failed to apprise the court until the eleventh hour that he would be unable to attend the June 19, 1989 hearing; and (2) after his arrest, Betts violated a condition of his bond by failing to appear for two scheduled hearings on the contempt charge, apparently because he was busy attempting to evade the Ford County arrest warrant.
Providing the district court no more than thirty minutes’ notice of his inability to attend the June 19th hearing did not render Betts responsible for his contempt prosecution. The last-minute character of the notice understandably perturbed' the district court and the prosecutor; and perhaps, had the notice been more timely, the prosecutor would not have asked that Kozel and Betts be arrested and the district court would not have pursued the contempt charge against Betts. But to whatever degree the late notice may have raised the ire of the prosecutor and the district court, it did not “cause” or “bring about” his prosecution in the sense of misleading them as to his liability for criminal contempt. The contempt charge was premised on the assumption that Betts had a duty to attend the June 19th hearing. As our previous opinion makes clear, however, the June 5th order scheduling that hearing did not explicitly require Betts’ attendance; consequently, he was not legally obliged to appear.
Although Betts’ subsequent failure to appear for the first two hearing dates on the contempt charge may have constituted a violation of his bond, it is likewise irrelevant to whether or not he brought about his own prosecution. The contempt charge against Betts rested solely on his failure to attend the June 19th hearing.
See Betts,
The district court’s finding that Betts brought about his own prosecution through neglect or misconduct was therefore clearly erroneous. Because the record discloses no other basis for denying the petition for a certificate of innocence, we must reverse the district court’s decision.
III. CONCLUSION
Betts’ conduct before the district court leaves much to be desired, and we certainly do not suggest that courts faced with similar behavior may not impose appropriate sanctions. But Betts’ conduct was not criminal, and although it may have constituted misconduct or neglect, it did not render him responsible for the mistaken decision to prosecute him on the criminal contempt charge. We accordingly reverse the judgment of the district court. Because we conclude that Betts carried his burden of demonstrating that he did not bring about or cause his prosecution through misconduct or neglect, as well as each of the other prerequisites set forth in section 2513, we remand to the district court with directions to grant the petition for a certificate of innocence.
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS.
Notes
. Wc later affirmed Kozel's conviction.
United States v. Kozel,
. This notice indicated that the contempt charge against Betts was civil rather than criminal in nature. That designation was erroneous, as the district court later noted, because from the start the contempt citation was based on a
fait accom-pli
and was not in any way remedial in nature.
In re Betts,
. Section 401(3) grants a federal court the discretion to punish, by fine or imprisonment, ‘‘[d]isobedience or resistance to its lawful writ, process, order, rule, decree, or command.”
. Although Betts had already served his sentence by the time we ruled on his appeal, we concluded that the case was not moot in view of the collateral consequences a criminal contempt conviction might have for an attorney.
. Section 1495 provides:
The United States Court of Federal Claims shall have jurisdiction to render judgment upon any claim for damages by any person unjustly convicted of an offense against the United States and imprisoned.
. Betts asks that we sanction the government for moving to dismiss the appeal, contending that it did so in bad faith and for purposes of delay. We discern no improper purpose, however, and although we have rejected the government's argument that this is a criminal matter governed by Rule 4(b), we have not previously addressed this precise question. Moreover, as we observed in
Taylor,
. As the district court noted in
Keegan,
"[i]n order for the commission of a crime other than that with which petitioner was charged[ ] to constitute grounds for denial of his certificate, such other crime must have been 'in connection with such charge.’”
