Petitioner-Appellant Sean Earley was sentenced to six years’ incarceration pursuant to a plea agreement. Unbeknownst to Earley, his counsel, the prosecutor, and the sentencing judge, New York had recently passed a law mandating a term of post-release supervision (“PRS”) for convictions such as Earley’s. Subsequently, the New York Department of Correctional Services (“DOCS”), without informing Earley, administratively added a five-year PRS term to Earley’s sentence. More than a year later, upon learning of this addition to his sentence, Earley moved in state court to have the sentence amended to reflect the plea agreement by removing any term of supervision. After the state courts denied his motion and his appeal, Earley filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Eastern District of New York. The district court (Edward R. Kor-man, Chief Judge) denied Earley’s petition. This court granted a certificate of appealability, and we now vacate the district court’s decision and remand the case.
*73 BACKGROUND
In February 2000, Sean Earley pleaded guilty to attempted burglary in the second degree. Pursuant to the plea agreement between Earley and the State of New York, he was sentenced to six years in prison. No term of post-release supervision following the six years of incarceration was included in the sentence announced in court by the judge, the written judgment, or the written order of commitment signed by the clerk of the Kings County Supreme Court. New York had recently passed a statute imposing a mandatory term of PRS that should have applied to Earley. See N.Y. Penal Law § 70.45 (“Each determinate sentence also includes, as a part thereof, an additional period of post-release supervision.”). But as Earley, his counsel, the prosecutor, and the judge were not aware of the new law, Earley was not informed of this mandatory provision during plea negotiations, the plea allocution, or at the time his six-year sentence was imposed. Sometime between his sentencing in February 2000 and February 2002, DOCS administratively added a five-year term of PRS to Earley’s sentence without informing Earley.
After hearing rumors from fellow inmates in October 2001 that DOCS had added periods of PRS to the sentences of certain inmates, Earley became concerned. He requested a statement of his sentence and transcripts of his plea and sentencing proceedings. Sometime in early February 2002, Earley says he received confirmation that a five-year PRS period had, in fact, been added to his sentence. The transcripts he received around the same time confirmed that no PRS period had been mentioned at either his plea or sentencing.
After exhausting his administrative remedies in an unsuccessful attempt to have the PRS term removed from his sentence, Earley moved in state court pursuant to section 440.20 of the New York Criminal Procedure Law to be resentenced according to the terms imposed by the sentencing judge. See N.Y.Crim. Proc. Law § 440.20. He argued that the modification to his sentence violated his due process rights and that he had received ineffective assistance of counsel.
The state court denied Earley’s motion. While acknowledging that Earley should have been told about the PRS term, the court found that, because the PRS term is mandatory under New York law, Earley’s request to eliminate it from his sentence could not be granted. The state court also denied Earley’s ineffective-assistance-of-counsel claim, finding that Earley had failed to demonstrate that he had suffered any prejudice as a result of his counsel’s alleged errors. The Appellate Division denied leave to appeal.
Earley then filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal district court, again raising both due process and ineffective-assistance claims and again asking for the PRS term to be removed from his sentence. The district court initially dismissed the petition as untimely because Earley had not filed his petition within one year of his conviction. After Earley moved for a rehearing on the basis that he had not been permitted to reply to the state’s submissions that raised the question of timeliness, the district court granted rehearing. It reconsidered its earlier ruling and again denied Earley’s petition. The district court acknowledged that the timeliness issue would require a hearing to inquire into the date Earley first became aware of the addition to his sentence and went on to deny the petition on the merits. This court granted Earley’s motion for a certificate of appealability with respect to his claims that (1) his due process rights were violated and (2) he received ineffec *74 tive assistance of counsel. This appeal followed.
DISCUSSION
This court reviews a district court’s denial of a habeas corpus petition de novo.
Loliscio v. Goord,
The “contrary to” clause of section 2254(d)(1) is violated if the state court reaches a result opposite to the one reached by the Supreme Court on the same question of law or arrives at a result opposite to the one reached by the Supreme Court on a “materially indistinguishable” set of facts.
Williams v. Taylor,
Seventy years ago, the Supreme Court established that the sentence imposed by the sentencing judge is controlling; it is this sentence that constitutes the court’s judgment and authorizes the custody of a defendant.
Hill v. United States ex rel. Wampler,
We recognize differences between the facts of Wampler and those before us. In Wampler, the decision whether to keep the defendant in custody pursuant to payment of a fine was, by law, within the discretion of the sentencing judge. Here, by contrast, state law required that Earley be sentenced to a PRS term. Early in his
*75
analysis, Justice Cardozo noted this factor, writing that “[t]he choice of pains and penalties,
when choice is committed to the discretion of the court,
is part of the judicial function. This being so, it must have expression in the sentence, and the sentence is the judgment.”
Id.
at 464,
Had the Court stopped there, the holding of
Wampler
might extend only to those cases where punishment subsequently added to the defendant’s sentence by administrative personnel relates to a matter within the court’s discretion; it might have no application to a case such as ours, which involves a mandatory provision. But
Wampler
went on to articulate a broader holding: The judgment of the court establishes a defendant’s sentence, and that sentence may not be increased by an administrator’s amendment.
Wampler thus
provides clearly established Supreme Court precedent supporting Earley’s claim.
See also Greene v. United States,
The sentence imposed by the court on Earley was six years in prison. The judgment authorized the state to incarcerate him for six years and no more. Any addition to that sentence not imposed by the judge was unlawful. Yet Earley was subjected to further custody. Post-release supervision, admitting of the possibility of revocation and additional jail time, is considered to be “custody.”
See Jones v. Cunningham,
Earley’s imprisonment was authorized not by the sentence as calculated by DOCS but by the judgment of the court. See
Wampler,
The state contends that a five-year PRS was mandated by statute and therefore necessarily part of Earley’s sentence by operation of law. We disagree.
Bozza v. United States,
Thus, when DOCS discovered the oversight made by Earley’s sentencing judge, the proper course would have been to inform the state of the problem, not to modify the sentence unilaterally. The state then could have moved to correct the sentence through a judicial proceeding, in the defendant’s presence, before a court of competent jurisdiction.
See Wampler,
New York’s Department of Correctional Services has no more power to alter a sentence than did the clerk of the court in Wampler. Earley’s sentence was therefore never anything other than the six years of incarceration imposed on him by the judge at his sentencing hearing and recorded in his order of commitment. The additional provision for post-release supervision added by DOCS is a nullity. The imposition of a sentence is a judicial act; only a judge can do it. The penalty administratively added by the Department of Corrections was, quite simply, never a part of the sentence.
Because we find that clearly established Supreme Court precedent renders the five-year PRS term added to Earley’s sentence by DOCS invalid, we vacate the district court’s judgment and remand the case for that court to determine whether Ear-ley’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus was timely filed. Should the district court *77 determine that the petition was timely, it is instructed to issue a writ of habeas corpus excising the term of post-release supervision from Earley’s sentence and relieving him of any subsequent penalty or other consequence of its imposition. Our ruling is not intended to preclude the state from moving in the New York courts to modify Earley’s sentence to include the mandatory PRS term. 2 Because we have determined that New York’s modification of Earley’s sentence violates clearly established federal law and requires us to grant his habeas petition in the event the petition was timely, we need not consider Ear-ley’s claim that his counsel was ineffective.
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is vacated and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Although Wampler does not identify the source of the rule that it announces, we believe that it is based in the due process guarantees of the United States Constitution. Wampler does not hold that the defendant could not have been sentenced to the punishment that the state attempts to impose on him. It simply recognizes that he was not sentenced to that punishment. Any deficiency in the sentence could have been corrected through the proper procedures. The Supreme Court thus recognizes that procedural requirements in sentencing demand that a sentence must be imposed by a judge, on the record, in court.
. It is not clear whether such a motion could be made at this time under New York law, which appears to require such motions to be filed within one year of the entry of judgment. N.Y.Crim. Proc. Law § 440.40. Any such questions will be for the New York courts to decide in the event such an application is made.
