Defendant Paul J. Foont appeals from a memorandum decision and order, reported at
BACKGROUND
On October 10, 1989, the government filed a fifteen-count indictment charging Foont, an employee and principal of Cralin Partnerships (“Cralin”), and his co-defendant, Jeffrey L. Feldman, with participation in a scheme to defraud the IRS. Specifically, the indictment charged Foont and Feldman with conspiracy to defraud the United States by impeding and impairing the IRS; tax evasion; and aiding the filing of false tax returns, all of which arose out of certain financial transactions entered into by Cralin. On April 6, 1990, Foont pleaded guilty to Count One of the indictment, which charged him with conspiracy to create a fraudulent scheme to evade taxes; the remaining counts against Foont were dismissed. On June 26, 1990, he was sentenced principally to a term of incarceration of one year and one day. Foont did not appeal his conviction and completed his term of imprisonment on April 12, 1991.
On February 10, 1995, nearly five years after entering his guilty plea, Foont filed the instant petition for a writ of error coram nobis. In the petition, Foont asserted that 1) his guilty plea was involuntary and had been taken in violation of Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(f), and 2) he had a possible advice-of-counsel defense based on newly discovered exculpatory evidence, consisting of an article, a speech, and a letter, each authored by Peter Rothenberg, the attorney who had advised Cralin Partnerships, as well as various depositions in a civil proceeding. The Rothenberg materials set forth legal justifications for the Cralin transactions underlying Foont’s conviction. Foont also claimed that the Rothenberg article, in particular, was improperly withheld Brady material. In his affidavit accompanying the petition, Foont asserted: “It was a mistake [to plead guilty] because I am not guilty, and that is why I now seek to vacate my plea.” The district court dismissed his petition. Foont now appeals.
DISCUSSION
Coram nobis is not a substitute for appeal, and relief under the writ is strictly limited to those cases in which “ ‘errors ... of the most fundamental character’” have rendered ‘“the proceeding itself irregular and invalid.’ ”
United States v. Carter,
In rejecting Foont’s petition, the district court determined that Foont did not demonstrate “sound reasons” for the delay in seeking relief. With respect to Foont’s contention that the district court did not conduct a proper allocution at the time of his guilty plea, the district court found:
Foont has not, and cannot, establish sound reasons why he did not earlier apply to this Court to withdraw his guilty plea because of an inadequate allocution in violation of Rule 11.
The record of the plea proceedings, upon which Foont’s present counsel relies and energetically parses, has been in existence since the day the plea was accepted. No reason appears why Foont could not have applied to withdraw his guilty plea on that basis prior to sentence or immediately after sentence and the entry of judgment of conviction, thereafter taking an appeal if unsatisfied by the result. There is no showing of mental incompetence ... or any other factor to justify the delay. Accordingly the propriety of this Court’s accepting Foont’s guilty plea cannot be raised on a writ of error coram nobis.
Foont,
Initially, it must be decided whether Foont’s delay in seeking coram nobis renders the relief sought unavailable. In
United States v. Morgan,
the Supreme Court did not specify what might constitute “sound reasons” for delay. It is undisputed that “[because a petition for writ of error eoram nobis is a collateral attack on a criminal conviction, the time for filing a petition is not subject to a specific statute of limitations.”
Telink, Inc. v. United States,
We review de novo the legal issue of whether the district court applied the proper standard in evaluating the delay in Foont’s petition. The district court’s ultimate decision to deny the petition on the ground that Foont has failed to demonstrate “sound reasons” for the delay is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Darnell,
At the outset, Foont argues that the district court erroneously applied a “cause and prejudice” test — which governs habeas corpus petitions — rather than a laches standard in examining Foont’s delay. Foont’s suggestion that the district court applied the “cause and prejudice” standard is unsupported by the record. The district court carefully set *80 forth, without further embellishment, the “sound reasons” requirement articulated in Morgan and emphasized by this court in Nicks.
To the extent that Foont argues that the proper standard by which the existence of “sound reasons” should be measured is that of laches, we disagree. The Seventh and Ninth Circuits have compared Morgan’s “sound reasons” for delay requirement with the doctrine of laches to require that the government establish that its interests were prejudiced by the defendant’s lack of diligence in pursuing his claim.
See, e.g., Darnell,
We agree with the district court that Foont knew or should have known since the time of his conviction in 1990 of the facts underlying his current claim that he did not appreciate the legal insufficiency of his guilty plea. Foont’s contention that his “short ‘delay’ is at least as excusable as” the fifteen-year delay that was forgiven in
Nicks
is unavailing. As the district court correctly noted, the facts in this case differ markedly from those in
Nicks,
where the district court concluded that the petitioner’s “mental state” constituted sound reasons for the fifteen-year delay.
Nicks v. United States,
Foont further asserts that his delay is attributable to the accumulation of newly discovered evidence to support an advice-of-counsel defense. Claims of new evidence, however, without constitutional or jurisdictional error in the underlying proceeding, cannot support a coram nobis claim.
See United States v. Keogh,
In sum, Foont’s contention on appeal that the district court overlooked “the wealth of justifiable reasons” proffered by the petitioner for the delay is wholly without merit. Quite to the contrary, to entertain Foont’s petition notwithstanding his unjustifiable delay would be an unwarranted infringement upon the government’s interest in the finality of convictions. As we explained in a different context, “[w]hile it is important that one convicted of crime in violation of constitutional principles should be accorded relief, it is also important that reasonable diligence be required in order that litigation may one day be at an end.”
Honeycutt v. Ward,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
