Lead Opinion
OPINION
Appellant, warden of the federal penitentiary in Petersburg, Virginia, challenges a district court order granting appellee’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The district court granted the writ based upon its determination that appellee was entitled to fifteen years of credit against his federal sentences for time served in state confinement on unrelated state offenses. We conclude, pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3568, that appellee’s federal sentences did not commence until he was received at the federal penitentiary for service of those sentences and that appellee was not entitled to receive credit against his federal sentences for the time he served in state confinement. We therefore reverse the district court’s order granting appellee’s writ of habeas corpus.
I.
Petitioner-appellee Lewis Thomas was arrested on March 31, 1970, on federal bank robbery charges and released on bond the same day. See J.A. at 52, 94, 99. While free on federal bond, he was arrested by Pennsylvania law enforcement officials on unrelated state charges, taken into state custody, and held in Holmsburg County Jail after initial confinement at the Philadelphia Detention Center. See id. at 52, 95, 99, 100. Federal officials subsequently filed a detainer with Pennsylvania state authorities to secure Thomas’ presence in federal district court for his trial on the federal bank robbery charges. Thomas was convicted of bank robbery in November 1970. Following his conviction, he was returned to state authorities.
Thomas was removed to federal court on April 23, 1971, for sentencing. He was sentenced by the district court to twenty years’ imprisonment, see id. at 47, and again returned to state authorities.
In September 1971, Thomas was again taken to federal court for trial on charges of savings & loan association robbery. Following a two-day trial, Thomas was convicted also of this federal offense and then returned to state authorities. On October 19, 1971, the federal district court sentenced Thomas to twenty-five years’ imprisonment. See id. at 48. The judgment and commitment order directed this sentence to run concurrently with the previously imposed federal sentence for bank robbery. The order made no reference to any state sentence. See id. Thomas remained in state prison following this sentencing.
On November 13, 1971, Thomas was convicted on the unrelated state charges for which he had been arrested on October 17,
Thomas remained in state custody until his release on September 24, 1986. Upon his release, Thomas was taken into custody by the United States Marshal so that he could begin service of his federal sentences. See id. at 11, 101. The Federal Bureau of Prisons calculated his federal sentence from this date, on the authority of 18 U.S.C. § 3568. See J.A. at 50. So calculated, Thomas’ sentence would expire on September 23, 2011. See id.
Thomas sought to credit his time in state custody against his federal sentences. After exhausting administrative remedies, he petitioned the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia for a writ of habeas corpus pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241. The district court granted the writ on the reasoning of United States v. Croft,
The district court granted respondent Whalen’s motion to stay judgment nunc pro tunc pending consideration of his motion to alter or amend judgment, see J.A. at 107, but it later held that it lacked jurisdiction to rule on that motion. The court did, however, stay its order granting Thomas a writ of habeas corpus pending appeal. See id. at 108. This appeal followed.
II.
Title 18, section 3568 of the United States Code directs that the sentence of a person convicted of a federal offense “shall commence to run from the date on which such person is received at the penitentiary, reformatory, or jail for service of such sentence” and that “[n]o sentence shall prescribe any other method of computing the term.”
Nor does Thomas argue that he was in federal custody while in state prison as a result of the federal detainer, and therefore entitled to credit by virtue of the requirement in the second sentence of section 3568 that the Attorney General credit a federal prisoner for “days spent in custody in connection with the offense or acts for which [his] sentence was imposed.” A detainer neither effects a transfer of a prisoner from state to federal custody nor transforms state custody into federal custody by operation of law. “Unlike a writ of habeas corpus ad prosequendum issued by a federal district court.... a detainer
Thomas instead rests his argument that he is entitled to credit for time served in state prison exclusively on the decision in United States v. Croft,
The Sixth Circuit held that Croft was “entitled to credit on his federal sentence for the time he was held in the county jail after the federal court’s order of commitment.” Id. at 1099.
Neither the federal nor the state court in this case ordered its sentence to run concurrently with the other court’s sentence. Thomas, however, argues that his state sentence is deemed to run concurrently with his federal sentence under state law. See Pa.R.Crim.P. 1406(a) (“Whenever more than one sentence is imposed at the same time on a defendant, or whenever a sentence is imposed on a defendant who is incarcerated for another offense, such sentences shall be deemed to run concurrently unless the judge states otherwise.”). Even if we assume that this is true,
The court in Croft never quoted or described the commitment order on which that case turned. It interpreted the order, however, to require the United States Marshal to commit Croft to federal prison immediately. See
Even if we agreed with Thomas that the commitment order in this case is indistinguishable from that in Croft, we would not follow Croft. Croft may be understood as either an application of section 3568 or an equitable departure from the statute. Under either interpretation, it is indefensible. If the opinion is viewed as an application of section 3568, then the court erroneously permitted “constructive” receipt at the federal penitentiary to satisfy the statute’s plain requirement of actual receipt.
If Croft is instead considered an equitable departure from the statute, as Thomas’ counsel contended at oral argument, see also Causey,
Courts of equity can no more disregard statutory and constitutional requirements than can courts of law. They are bound by positive provisions of a statute equally with courts of law, and where [a claim] is ... void because not in compliance with express statutory ... provision, a court of equity cannot interpose to give validity to such [a claim], or any part thereof.
Hedges v. Dixon County,
CONCLUSION
Title 18, section 3568 dictates that federal sentences commence on the date the prisoner is received at the penitentiary for service of his sentence, and it provides unequivocally that “[n]o sentence shall prescribe any ... method of computing the term” other than that specified therein. Appellee Thomas was received at the penitentiary for service of his federal sentences on September 24, 1986. Under the plain language of section 3568, his federal sentences commenced on that date. Accordingly, the twenty-five year term to which he was sentenced ends on September 23, 2011. This court, as was the district court, is without authority to compute appellee’s term in any other manner.
The order of the district court granting Thomas’ petition for a writ of habeas corpus is therefore reversed. The case is remanded to the district court with instructions to enter an order denying Thomas’ petition for habeas corpus.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The court also relied on Shabazz v. Carroll,
. 18 U.S.C. § 3568 (1982) (emphasis added), repealed, Pub.L. No. 98-473, title II, §§ 212(a)(2), 235(a)(1), 98 Stat.1987, 2001, 2031 (Oct. 12, 1984), reenacted in part, 18 U.S.C. § 3585 (1988). Although section 3568 has been repealed, it applies to offenses committed before November 1, 1987. See Randall v. Whelan,
. A prisoner is not even in custody for purposes of section 3568 when he appears in federal court pursuant to a writ ad prosequendum; he is merely "on loan” to federal authorities. See Thomas v. Brewer,
It is presumably because the law is so well settled in this respect that Thomas also does not argue that he is entitled to credit for the days when he appeared in federal court for trial and sentencing. See Appellee’s Br. at 21.
. See also Smith v. Swope,
. See note 7 infra.
. It is doubtful that Rule 1406(a) was intended to apply where the two sentences in question have been imposed by different sovereigns. "[W]here different courts have sentenced [a person] for different offenses to be served at separate and distinct institutions,” Pennsylvania courts presume "that the sentences are to run consecutively," and Rule 1406(a) does not apply. Commonwealth v. Pfeiffer,
In any event, contrary to the suggestion of the concurrence, a federal sentencing court has no obligation to implement or otherwise to respect a state court’s order that state and federal sentences run concurrently. See, e.g., Meagher v. Clark,
.There is an additional factual difference between this case and Croft. Primary jurisdiction rested with the federal court in Croft, see
We do not rest our distinction of Croft, however, on the presence in that case of primary federal jurisdiction or of an order of concurrent service of sentences, because in our view neither fact was determinative of (if even relevant
. Such an interpretation of section 3568 would contradict this court’s holdings that a federal court has no power to order that a federal sentence run concurrently with an existing or subsequently, imposed state sentence. See Cobb v. United States,
. Thomas also presents a pro se argument, disclaimed by his counsel, "that his rights under the Full Faith and Credit clause," U.S. Const, art. IV, § 1, “would be violated by running his sentences consecutively." Appellee's Br. at 23. We reject this claim as meritless.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in the result reached by the majority, but I would decide the case on the basis of state law. I do not believe that 18 U.S.C. § 3568 demands the rigid interpretation set forth by the majority.
The fundamental issue is, of course, what was the total sentence imposed on Thomas. If the state sentence was made concurrent to the previously imposed federal sentence, either expressly or by operation of state law, then a low-level administrative decision about where to first incarcerate Thomas should not be permitted to override the state court’s decision. The federal statute upon which the majority bases its decision is not so unyielding as to not allow exceptions in similar situations. See, e.g., Gomori v. Arnold,
I concur in the judgment, however, because it is clear that at the time Thomas was sentenced in state court, Pennsylvania law presumed, in view of the state court’s silence, that the state sentence would be consecutive to a previously imposed sentence by a different sovereign. See Commonwealth ex rel. Pitts v. Myers,
. I seriously doubt that the state sentencing judge was made aware of the federal sentence earlier imposed upon Thomas. The record is silent concerning this point. Thomas’s lawyer at the state sentencing hearing pointed out to the court that he had "no communication” at all with his client (though he had spoken to Thomas’s parents), and, further, that Thomas’s mental state was "unbalanced.” An insanity defense was presented at his state trial, but it did not go to the jury. It is not unlikely that Thomas’s state court lawyer was unaware of the federal sentences.
. At oral argument, counsel for the government conceded that had Thomas been found not guilty of the state charges, the federal sentence would have been given a beginning date as of the date of the federal detainer first lodged against him.
