The question raised by this appeal is whether a federal habeas corpus petition made under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 may include a challenge to an order of restitution imposed as part of the sentence, where that order does not amount to custody. We conclude that it may not.
I. Background
Petitioner-Appellant, John F. Kaminski, was sentenced to a term of imprisonment in the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (Pooler, /.) and ordered to pay restitution after pleading guilty to one count of arson. Restitution to Kaminski’s insurance company was ordered in the amount of $21,180 on a schedule that required Kaminski to pay ten percent of his gross income while in prison and thereafter the greater of $100 per month or ten percent of his gross income. Kaminski did not take a direct appeal from his sentence or conviction.
Two years ago, while incarcerated, Ka-minski filed a habeas corpus petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 challenging both his sentence of incarceration and .the order of restitution. The district court (Scullin, C.J.) denied the petition in its entirety. With respect to Kaminski’s claims relating to the restitution order, the court reasoned that since an attack on an order of restitution does not assert the right of the petitioner to be released from custody but, rather, only the right to be free of a monetary penalty, § 2255 does not, by its terms, provide a basis for the claim.
The district court noted, however, that “the Second Circuit has not definitively ruled on the issue of whether § 2255 is limited to claims of unlawful custody and therefore does not extend to the monetary penalties imposed by the judgment.” In view of this, the court granted a certificate of appealability as to whether § 2255 may be used to challenge the restitution order, with respect to which Kaminski claimed that the trial court had failed to consider statutorily mandated factors and had wrongly considered certain legislative amendments enacted after Kaminski’s guilty plea. 1
*86 II. Does the restitution order constitute custody ?
We review de novo a district court’s denial of a 28 U.S.C. § 2255 petition.
Frederick v. Warden, Lewisburg Corr. Facility,
A prisoner in custody under sentence of a court established by Act of Congress claiming the right to be released upon the ground that the sentence was imposed in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States, or that the court was without jurisdiction to impose such sentence, or that the sentence was in excess of the maximum authorized by law, or is otherwise subject to collateral attack, may move the court which imposed the sentence to vacate, set aside or correct the sentence.
28 U.S.C. § 2255. It is not disputed that Kaminski was “in custody” by virtue of his imprisonment at the time his petition was filed. It is clear, therefore, that Kamin-ski’s attacks on his sentence of incarceration were properly considered on their merits as part of his § 2255 petition.
See Scanio v. United States,
But the question remains: How does the phrase “claiming the right to be released” affect the meaning of the text that follows it? If the phrase had omitted the words “the right to be released upon the ground,” and had said simply “a prisoner ... claiming ... that the sentence was imposed in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States,” then § 2255 might comfortably be read to permit a federal prisoner to challenge any allegedly illegal aspect of his or her sentence. The words “claiming the right to be released” are in the statute, however. And, in order to give them meaning, it is argued that they must be read to exclude from federal habeas review at least those petitions that contain no claims relating to a prisoner’s custody, no claims, that is, that cannot be construed as demands to be “released” from custody. On this reading, it would follow that a petitioner who challenges just the restitution portion of his sentence is asserting his *87 right to be released from custody only if the restitution order itself amounts to a form of custody.
Several circuits have held that neither a fíne nor an order of restitution amounts to custody.
See, e.g., Barnickel v. United States,
Whether a fine or restitution order could ever be such a restraint on the liberty of a petitioner as to amount to custody is a question we need not reach today, however. The order in the instant case, limited as it is to payment on a monthly basis- of the greater of ten percent of Kaminski’s monthly income or $100, plainly does not come close to doing so. That being so, we conclude that the restitution order before us does not bring about custody, and, therefore hold that an attack on that order would not, without more, seek release from custody.
III. Are challenges solely to-noncustodial punishments cognizable in § 2255 habeas?
That said, we agree with the other circuits that have held that § 2255 may not be used to bring collateral challenges addressed solely to noncustodial punishments like the one at issue here.
See Blaik v. United States,
IV. Are challenges to noncustodial punishments cognizable in a § 2255 petition when joined with challenges to custody?
The above cited cases do not, however, suffice to decide the appeal before us. Ka-minski’s petition not only attacks the restitution order, it also contains claims that his sentence of incarceration was, in part, illegal. We must, therefore, decide whether, pursuant to § 2255, a claim that does not seek the release of the petitioner from custody may, nonetheless, be raised in a petition that also includes at least one claim challenging custody.
The statute’s text does not unambiguously answer the question. Kaminski pro
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poses a reading of § 2255 under which a prisoner who files a § 2255 petition seeking release may also ask that other, noncustodial aspects of his sentence be “vacate[d], set aside or corrected],” 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The government, instead, urges an interpretation of § 2255 that would limit § 2255 attacks to the custodial aspects of sentences that impose both custodial and noncustodial punishments. Kaminski’s reading may not be the most natural construction of the provision, but, looking solely at the text of § 2255, it is a plausible one. We must, therefore, examine the statute contextually to see which meaning is more consistent with its purpose.
See United States v. Orlandez-Gamboa,
Nearly every circuit to consider the issue has concluded that an order of restitution may not be attacked in a § 2255 petition, even if the petition also alleges error in the sentence of imprisonment.
See United States v. Hatten,
Along these lines, the Ninth Circuit has recently expanded its holding in
Kramer,
and now bars claims relating to an order of restitution even when those claims are accompanied in the petition by challenges to the petitioner’s incarceration. The court stated, “To determine whether a given claim is cognizable under § 2255, we focus on the relief sought in the claim itself, not on relief sought in other claims mentioned elsewhere in the motion. Non-cognizable claims do not morph into cognizable ones by osmosis.”
United States v. Thiele,
If the avoidance of frivolous claims were the sole rationale for these holdings, however, it might seem that those petitioners who had serious collateral claims against custodial sentences should at the same time be permitted to attack the noncustodial punishments to which they had been sentenced. A “pendent” jurisdiction to challenge such noncustodial punishments might then seem appropriate. But, in fact, this approach runs against more fundamental rationales for the prevailing rule barring § 2255 challenges to fines and restitution orders.
As the Fifth Circuit stated in
United States v. Segler. “A
convicted defendant who receives an allegedly erroneous fine ... cannot seek post-conviction relief under § 2255, and neither should a petitioner who is both fined and imprisoned have an opportunity to assert an identical fine-related claim under § 2255. Our reading of the plain language of § 2255
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suggests no reason why Congress would have intended to treat these two identical ... claims differently.”
Habeas lies to allow attacks on wrongful custodies. There is therefore no reason why the presence of a plausible claim against a custodial punishment should make a noncustodial punishment more amenable to collateral review than it otherwise might be. This is the significance of the congruence argument made by the Fifth Circuit in Segler and the First Circuit in Smullen. Collateral relief from noncustodial punishments is not made more readily available to a petitioner just because that petitioner happens at the time to be subject also to custodial penalties. And, the mere fact that the sentencing court chose to impose incarceration on a defendant in addition to restitution does not, as to the restitution order, distinguish that defendant from someone who, having been convicted, received a punishment that did not include any custodial element. 3 This is the position that most of the circuit courts that have considered the matter have taken, and it is the position to which we adhere today.
V. May a petitioner who is in custody potentially challenge the non-custodial aspects of his sentence through extraordinary units like coram nobis?
The author of this opinion believes that the congruence argument, discussed in Section IV of this opinion, is made coherent by a brief consideration of whether, in some circumstances, collateral relief from non-custodial punishments may be available to prisoners through the use of extraordinary writs such as coram nobis. Because the discussion in this Section, V., is not strictly necessary to resolve the case before us, the other members of the panel do not join this discussion and express neither agreement nor disagreement with it.
To say that habeas challenges are restricted to those situations in which freedom from custody is at stake is not to foreclose other collateral attacks in some cases where lesser interests are involved. Indeed, the Seventh Circuit in
Barnickel v. United States
has said that it is precisely in such cases that the writ of coram nobis may be used.
The possible existence of coram nobis rounds out the Segler/Smullen congruence argument and makes it fully coherent. Se-gler and Smullen hold that the existence of a habeas challenge to the custodial elements of a sentence does not empower the petitioner in custody to challenge, through habeas, the non-custodial elements of that same sentence. And it relies for this holding, in part, on the notion that a petitioner who is in custody should not be favored in his challenge to non-custodial punishment over a petitioner who is not in custody. The potential availability of coram nobis means that the petitioner in custody is also not disfavored. This is so because the fact of his custody no more precludes his challenge to the non-custodial elements of his sentence through coram nobis (when that writ would otherwise be available) than does the fact of his custody permit him to challenge those non-custodial elements through habeas. 4
*91 There is thus an elegant symmetry in the availability of challenges to punishments. Challenges on direct appeal to either custodial or non-custodial punishments are subject to relatively few limitations. Collateral challenges are more restricted. When these collateral attacks go to something as inherently fundamental as restraints on freedom sufficient to amount to “custody,” the great writ, habeas, presumptively lies. When instead custody is not at stake, challenges can only be made through the use of extraordinary writs like coram nobis, which lie only if the challenged error is fundamental. The fact that a petitioner seeks to challenge both custodial and non-custodial punishments at the same time neither expands nor contracts the scope of either habeas or the extraordinary writs. That, I believe, is the underlying meaning of our holding today.
VI. Conclusion
“In order to invoke habeas corpus review by a federal court, the petitioner must satisfy the jurisdictional ‘in custody’ requirement of 28 U.S.C. § 2255.”
Sca-nio,
Notes
. Kaminski also argued below that his trial counsel was ineffective both in failing to object to the restitution order at trial and in failing to appeal the order. These claims, like his other objections to the restitution order, were rejected on the ground that § 2255 does not provide a basis for bringing claims relating to a restitution order. A panel of this court, thereafter, granted a motion to expand the certificate of appealability, to permit review of whether the restitution related ineffectiveness claims could be raised under § 2255. The ineffectiveness claims were, however, rejected by the district court on other grounds
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as well. As to the failure to object, the court found there was no prejudice under
Strickland v. Washington,
As granted, the certificate of appealability does not permit review of these alternative bases for the district court’s decision. And, ordinarily, unless a certificate encompasses all of the grounds for a court’s ruling on an issue, an appeal that challenges only some of the district court’s grounds will be moot.
See Rhagi v. Artuz,
In the case before us, however, we need not consider whether Kaminski has made the requisite showing. For, even if he could show that his counsel was constitutionally defective in handling the restitution order, we believe that the district court was without subject matter jurisdiction to grant the petition on that basis. This conclusion follows from our holding, see infra, that § 2255 does not provide a jurisdictional basis for a challenge to a non-custodial order of restitution.
. The Sixth Circuit's treatment of the issue is inconclusive.
Compare United States v. Watroba,
. There is one situation in which the fact that a prisoner is incarcerated may result in a challenge to an order of restitution that might not lie absent incarceration. It does not, however, affect our decision or in any way undercut Segler's congruence approach. Where a habeas challenge to incarceration results in the overturning of a conviction or of a whole sentence so that the defendant must later be resentenced in toto, the defendant on resentencing may, of course, also question the basis of any restitution that might then be assessed.
See United States v. Quintieri,
. In this respect, I note that the Fifth Circuit in
Hatten,
while denying § 2255 habeas jurisdiction in mixed custodial and noncustodial cases, also stated that coram nobis-as a means of attacking the noncustodial aspects of a sentence-was not available to an incarcerated petitioner,
by virtue
of his then being in custody.
But there is no reason to assume that
Hat-ten
's suggested limitation applies to coram nobis. True, the writ has been described as available to petitioners “no longer in custody.”
See, e.g., Fleming,
Indeed, allowing courts to entertain coram nobis challenges to noncustodial punishments-in those rare cases in which these amount to fundamental injustices and hence in which the writ applies-even though the petitioner is also in custody, is simply the converse of not allowing a court to exercise § 2255 jurisdiction to review collaterally noncustodial punishments of petitioners, like Ka-minski, who are in custody. Without, therefore, in any way suggesting that Kaminski's claims meet the stringent requirements of the writ of coram nobis, I see nothing in the definition of that writ that makes the Se-gler/Smullen congruence argument any less compelling.
