An opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL accompanies this order.
ORDER
CERTIFICATION OF QUESTION OF LAW
by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals pursuant to D.C.Code § 11-728
On March 26, 1996, we heard oral argument in United States Parole Commission v. Matthew Noble, No. 95-5229. Determinative of the appeal is a significant question of District of Columbia law as to which there is no controlling precedent in the decisions of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals. We therefore certify to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals the following question:
Under District of Columbia law, given the facts described below, did the United States Parole Commission properly interpret sections 24-206(a) and 24431(a) of the District of Columbia Code in deciding that, after revocation of a person’s parole, time that the person spent on parole before revocation cannot be credited against his sentence?
The facts relevant to the certified question are as follows. Appellee Matthew Noble, having been convicted under both federal and District of Columbia law, is serving a term of parole under the supervision of the U.S. Parole Commission. Noble seeks credit for 1,479 days he previously served on parole for his District of Columbia sentence before his parole was revoked.
Noble was convicted in federal district court on December 5,1978 of unlawful distribution of a controlled substance in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a) and was sentenced to three years of probation. On May 18, 1981, his probation was revoked, and he was sentenced to federal prison for a term of one year and a day and a parole term of two years. Noble was released from prison and began serving parole on December 18, 1981. After violating the terms of his parole, Noble was reincarcerated in a federal institution on March 19,1983. He was once again released on parole on September 21,1984.
While serving parole for his federal offense, Noble was convicted in District of Columbia Superior Court for unlawfully distributing a controlled substance, in violation of D.C.Code § 33-541, and was sentenced on September 13,1985 to a prison term of seven and one-half years. Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. §§ 4161 and 4205, the United States Bureau of Prisons aggregated Noble’s District of Columbia sentence and the remainder of his federal parole term to a sentence of 110 months and seven days, with ninety months deemed a local District of Columbia sentence.
Noble was released on parole in March 1988 with 2,197 days left to be served. He tested positive for drugs in May 1993. The U.S. Parole Commission revoked Noble’s parole on December 1, 1993, refusing to credit him for the 1,902 days that he had served on parole. Noble was resentenced to prison and was later reparoled on October 7, 1994 with 1,597 days left to be served. Although this final portion of Noble’s sentence pertained to his offense under District of Columbia law, not his federal conviction, Noble remained under the supervision of the U.S. Parole Commission in accordance with D.C.Code §§ 24-206(b) and 24-209.
Noble filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, seeking credit under D.C.Code § 24-431(a) for the 1,479 days he served on parole from March 11, 1988 until May 28, 1993, a portion of his sentence related to his D.C.Code violation. Granting his petition, the district court ruled that section 24431(a) of the D.C.Code authorizes credit for time served on parole even for a person whose parole has been revoked.
See Noble v. United States Parole Comm’n,
Section 24-206(a) of the D.C.Code, enacted by Congress in 1932, provides that when a person’s parole is revoked, the prisoner is not entitled to credit for time served on parole. The relevant portion of section 24-206(a) reads:
If the order of parole shall be revoked, the prisoner, unless subsequently reparoled, shall serve the remainder of the sentence originally imposed less any commutation for good conduct which may be earned by him after his return to custody.... The time a prisoner was on parole shall not be taken into account to dimmish the time for which he was sentenced.
In the District of Columbia Good Time Credits Act of 1986, D.C.Code Ann. §§ 24-428 to 24-434 (1989 Repl.), a measure designed in part to reduce prison overcrowding, the District of Columbia Council provided that good time credits were to be applied to prisoners’ minimum and maximum sentences, not simply to their maximum sentences, as was the case prior to the Act.
See Luck v. District of Columbia,
Every person shall be given credit on the maximum and the minimum term of imprisonment for time spent in custody or on parole as a result of the offense for which the sentence was imposed.
The District of Columbia Department of Corrections has consistently interpreted section 24 — 431(a) to mean that even a prisoner whose parole has been revoked is entitled to credit for time served on parole before revocation.
See
D.C.Mun.Regs. tit. 28, § 601.7 (1988);
Luck I,
Although the D.C. Court of Appeals has in dicta discussed the question whether section 24-431(a) authorizes credit for street time if parole is revoked,
see Franklin v. Ridley,
So ordered.
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
In the order accompanying this opinion, we certify to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals the question whether a District of Columbia offender under the supervision of the United States Parole Commission whose parole is revoked is entitled under section 2U431(a) of the District of Columbia Code to *1111 credit for time served on parole before revocation. As required by D.C.Code § 11-728(c), our certification order sets forth the question of law to be answered, as well as a statement of relevant facts and the nature of the controversy. In this opinion, we explain our reasons for certifying this question.
Although the D.C. Court of Appeals has indicated in dicta that section 24431(a) entitles District of Columbia offenders to credit for street time served even in the event of parole revocation, it has never issued a holding to that effect. In
Luck v. District of Columbia,
Following the D.C. Court of Appeals’ answer to our certified question in
Luck I,
we rejected the claims of the prisoner in that case.
See Luck v. District of Columbia Parole Bd.,
Soon thereafter, in
Franklin v. Ridley,
Because the D.C. Court of Appeals has no direct holding on the question this case presents, certification would be consistent with D.C.Code § 11-723, which provides that the D.C. Court of Appeals may accept questions of law certified to it from a federal court of appeals
if there are involved in any proceeding before any such certifying court questions of law of the District of Columbia which may be determinative of the cause pending in such certifying court and as to which it appears to the certifying court there is no controlling precedent in the decisions of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.
While recognizing that the D.C. Court of Appeals has indicated in dicta that it would likely decide this question in accordance with the views expressed here by the District of Columbia and appellee Noble, we think that circumstances in this case counsel in favor of certification. For one thing, the D.C. Court
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of Appeals has itself sent mixed signals. Although its opinions in
Luck I
and
Franklin
strongly suggest that it would read section 24-431(a) as authorizing credit for street time even after revocation of parole, its opinion in
Luck I
at the same time suggests that it would hesitate to treat section 24-431(a) as effectively repealing section 24-206(a).
See Luck I,
Given our uncertainty, a second factor counseling in favor of certification is that our sister circuit — the Ninth — has answered the question differently than
Luck
I’s dicta.
See Tyler,
A final consideration supporting certification is this: Because District of Columbia offenders and the D.C. Board of Parole have likely always agreed on the answer to the question this case poses,
see, e.g., Luck I,
The U.S. Parole Commission argues that certification is improper here because this ease raises a significant federal question that this court, not the D.C. Court of Appeals, should answer — namely, whether the D.C. Council should be permitted by implied repeals to circumvent the congressional review procedures established by the Home Rule Act.
See
D.C.Code Ann. § 1-233(c)(2) (1992 Repl.) (establishing sixty-day congressional review period for D.C. Council provisions respecting title 24 of the D.C.Code). In support of its argument that this case poses a federal question on which we owe no special deference to the D.C. Court of Appeals, the U.S. Parole Commission relies on
Bliley v. Kelly,
The Home Rule Act is a “hybrid statute” that contains elements of both federal and local law. It is self-evident, however, that questions regarding Congress’s reserved right to review District legislation before it becomes law concerns an exclusively federal aspect of the Act. We therefore owe this ruling of the D.C. Court of Appeals no more than the deference that is always due the decisions of a sister court.
Id. at 511 (citation omitted).
The question this case presents is quite different from the question before us in
Bli
*1113
ley.
In that case, we were called upon “ ‘to fill gaps within the interstices of ” the Home Rule Act,
id.
at 512 (quoting
Carter v. Derwinski,
