Pedro Aponte (Aponte), a California state prisoner, appeals pro se thе district court’s denial of his habeas petition. The district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241, 2254. We have jurisdiction over this timely appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291, 2253 and affirm.
I.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Apontе was arrested on November 1,1987, for various drug offenses. He pled guilty to *707 transportation of cocaine in violation of California Health & Safety Code (HSC) § 11352 (Count 1) and possession of cocaine for sale in violation оf HSC § 11351.5 (Count 2). Aponte also conceded that the substance containing cocaine exceeded twenty-five pounds within the meaning of HSC § 11370.4(a).
Aponte was sentenced to a mid-term level of four years as to Count 1 and to a consecutive ten-year term pursuant to HSC § 11370.4(a)(3), for a total of fourteen years in prison. Aponte sought habeas relief contending that because his sentence exceeds twice the number of years imposed as а base level, he was sentenced in violation of California Penal Code § 1170.1(g) which, in 1987, did not permit a sentence in excess of twice the base term (i.е., eight years).
The district court denied Aponte’s habeas petition, concluding that because the California appellate courts have intеrpreted the sentencing statutes as excluding the ten-year enhancement from the double-base-term limitation in pre-1988 eases, we are bound by that intеrpretation. Aponte raises both due process and ex post facto claims. We reject both claims and affirm the district court.
II.
DISCUSSION
The district court’s denial of a habeas petition is reviewed
de novo. McSherry v. Block,
Because the resolution of issues presented in this case depends upon an understanding of several California statutеs, we set forth in some detail that statutory scheme. Quantity enhancements pursuant to HSC § 11370.4(a) were enacted by the California Legislature in 1985. Section 11370.4 impоses a sentencing enhancement when the following three conditions are met: (1) a defendant is convicted of violating HSC §§ 11351, 11351.5, or 11352; (2) such a violation involved a substance containing heroin or cocaine; and (3) the substance exceeded three, ten, or twenty-five pounds. If these prerequisites are satisfied, a defendant is subject to a three-, five-, or ten-year enhancement.
At the time Aponte committed the offenses in 1987, § 1170.1(g) provided in pertinent рart that the “term of imprisonment shall not exceed twice the number of years imposed by the trial court as the base term,” with certain exceptiоns not relevant here. Because the double-base-term limitation in § 1170.1(g) became operative in 1977, the later-enacted enhancements under § 11370.4 wеre not specifically excepted from operation of the double-base-term limitation. Nor did § 11370.4 make reference to the double-basе-term limitation provision. In 1988, § 1170.1(g) was amended to exempt the ten-year enhancement from the double-base-term limitation.
The California Supreme Court recently interpreted the sentencing statutes and concluded that the ten-year enhancement was excluded from the double-base-term limitation.
People v. Pieters,
We are bound by a state court’s construction of its own penal statutes.
McSherry,
In fact, far from being untenable, the result reached is entirely logical. If the sentencing statutes were construed so as to impose the double-term limitation, as Aponte suggests, it would render the enhancement pursuant to § 11370.4 nugatory with regard to pre-1988 offenses, a result Pieters found was contrary to legislative intent:
it would have been absurd for the Legislature to have created a provision that could never be given effect, especially when such an interpretation would frustrate the Legislature’s express purpose of punishing *708 drug dealers in propоrtion to the amount of drugs possessed.
Pieters,
It is a settled principle of statutory construction that a statute need not be given its literal meaning if doing so renders an absurd result which the legislature did not intend.
See id.
at 919,
Having established that we must give deference to the
Pieters
construction, the next step is to determine whеther Aponte’s federal constitutional rights have been violated by application of that construction. “While the interpretive gloss on the statute may bind this court as a matter of statutory construction, we are not, however, similarly bound as to
the constitutional effect
of that construction.”
McSherry,
We conclude that application of the
Pieters
construction in this case is consistent with due process and the Ex Post Facto Clause. It was foreseeable that court would impose the fourteen-year sentence mandated by § 11370.4 rather than the eight-year maximum required by § 1170.1(g). The
Pieters
statutory construction would not be foreseeable if it were clearly contrary to the unambiguous statutory language or case lаw.
See Bouie v. City of Columbia,
Moreover, in holding thе double-base-term limitation inapplicable to § 11370.4,
Pieters
noted that it had previously employed similar reasoning in
People v. Jackson,
Therefore, the Pieters construction was not “unexpected and indefensible by reference to the law which had been expressed prior to the conduct at issue,” Oxborrow, 817 F.2d at 1399 (internal quotations omitted), and the “рlain language [of § 11370.4] clearly envisioned the possibility of a [fourteen-year term].” Id. at 1400. As discussed above, the result reached in Pieters is logical and reasonable. It construed the sentencing scheme in accordance with the principles of statutory construction and its conclusion is certainly not “unexpected” or “indefensible.” On the other hand, the interpretation Aponte posits would be unreasonable and contrary to the statutory scheme set up by § 11370.4.
Due process is satisfied as long аs the law gives fair notice and warning of the punishment to be imposed.
See McSherry,
The Ex Post Facto Clause forbids both the punishment for acts not punishable at the time the offense was committеd and the imposition of an additional punishment beyond that permitted at the time of the offense.
Weaver v. Graham,
AFFIRMED.
