Defendant, aged 18 in 1970, pleaded guilty to violation of the Dyer Act, 18 U.S.C. § 23.12 (1976), and was sentenced by the late District Judge Swinford to a year and a day in federal prison. The Government concedes that the District Judge did not specifically find that “the youth offender will not derive benefit” from the procedures set out in the Youth Corrections Act, 18 U.S.C. § 5010(d). The defendant served his term, and has moved to vacate his sentence on the grounds that the youth offender option was not specifically considered by the District Judge as required by
Dorszynski v. United States,
In our view, the issue presented in this case is not truly a question of retroactivity. The clear wording of the Youth Corrections Act states that “If the court
shall find
that the youth offender will not derive benefit from treatment” as a youth “then the court may sentence the youth offender” as an adult. 18 U.S.C. § 5010(d) (1976) (emphasis added). The Act read thus in 1970 when the defendant was sentenced, and the Supreme Court’s opinion in
Dorszynski
and ours in
Brooks
merely applied the clear wording of the statute. Neither case overruled any existing precedent which had allowed sentencing judges not to make the specific findings required by the Youth Corrections Act. Therefore, the requirement that a sentencing judge can only sentence a youth offender as an adult after first specifically finding that he would receive no benefit from treatment in a youth facility was as much the law in 1970 as it is today.
Accord, Walls v. United States,
Accordingly, the adult sentence imposed on defendant was illegal and must be vacated. The case will be remanded to the District Court to consider whether the defendant would have benefited from treatment as a youth and not as an adult. If it is determined that the defendant would have benefited from treatment under the Youth Corrections Act, then the District Court shall consider any further relief justice requires.
ORDER DENYING PETITION FOR REHEARING
The United States petitions this Court pursuant to Rule 35(b), Fed.R.App.P., for a rehearing of our earlier order in which we vacated as illegal petitioner’s adult sentence imposed under the Dyer Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2312 (1976), because the District Court did not first make the record finding required by 18 U.S.C. § 5010(d) and
Dorszynski v. United States,
We agree with the government that petitioner was precluded from seeking relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (1976). Petitioner had already served the year and a day prison term originally imposed by the District Court, and § 2255 may be used “only to attack a sentence under which a prisoner
is
in custody.”
Heflin v. United States,
The government’s argument to the contrary begins with the fundamental proposition that a sentencing court has unreviewable discretion to impose a sentence which falls within the limits prescribed by statute.
See, e. g., Gore v. United States,
We think the government misreads
Dorszynski.
The argument goes wrong on its very first step when it asserts that petitioner’s sentence was “legal” because within the limits prescribed by the Dyer Act. The Youth Corrections Act, not the Dyer Act, is the relevant statute. The defendant in
Dorszynski
had also received a sentence within the range permitted under the statute he had violated, 21 U.S.C. § 8414(a). But the question for decision in
Dorszynski,
as framed by the Court, was “whether the sentence imposed . . . was permitted under § 5010(d) of the [Youth Corrections] Act.”
The government’s further suggestion that the Dorszynski error here was “procedural” and not “substantive,” because the sentencing court had at least been apprised of the applicability of the Act, is similarly misconceived. The same argument was made to the Court in Dorszynski, and we are bound to give the same reply: We cannot assume that the error was not substantive since, without a “no benefit” finding on the record, there is no assurance that such a finding was ever made.
The government relies heavily upon language in the
Dorszynski
opinion to the effect that “[t]he ‘no benefit’ finding required by the Act is not to be read as a substantive standard which must be satisfied to support a sentence outside the Act . . ..”
Rehearing denied.
