Case Information
*1 FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No. 22-30213 Plaintiff-Appellee , D.C. No.3:21-cr- v. 00031-SI-1 ADAM LLOYD LIVAR,
OPINION Defendant-Appellant .
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Oregon Michael H. Simon, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted April 18, 2023 San Francisco, California Filed July 15, 2024 Before: Lawrence VanDyke and Gabriel P. Sanchez, Circuit Judges, and Kathryn H. Vratil, [*] District Judge. Per Curiam Opinion; Concurrence by Judge Vratil; Concurrence and Dissent by Judge VanDyke; Concurrence and Dissent by Judge Sanchez *2
The panel vacated Adam Lloyd Livar’s sentence and remanded for resentencing in a case in which Livar pled guilty to failing to register as a sex offender in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2250(a).
In Livar's plea agreement, the government reserved the right to change its middle-of-the-guidelines-range sentencing recommendation if Livar committed any new criminal offense, obstructed or attempted to obstruct justice, or acted inconsistently with acceptance of responsibility between entering the plea and sentencing.
In a per curiam opinion, the panel addressed whether the appeal became moot based on Livar's release from the Federal Bureau of Prisons on June 6, 2023, to begin serving his five-year term of supervised release. The government contended that the case is moot because the district court sentenced Livar to the minimum supervised release term allowed under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(k). The panel held that because the district court has authority to modify or terminate Livar's current supervised release obligations under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e) following a successful appeal, the appeal is not moot.
The per curiam opinion summarized the holdings that resulted from the judges' separate opinions.
*3 the agreement. The government thus does not breach its obligations under an agreement simply by submitting a different sentencing recommendation without a prior judicial determination of whether the defendant failed to comply with the plea agreement, nor is it required to first seek a preliminary determination as to whether its recommendation complies with the agreement. There must be a judicial determination, but it need not necessarily come first.
Finally, a different majority of the panel (Judges Sanchez and Vratil) concluded the proper remedy in this case is remand with instructions that judgment be entered with a term of imprisonment of time served and all other terms and conditions including Liv ar’s five -year term of supervised release to remain the same as the original judgment. District Judge Vratil concurred. She wrote that the record does not support the district court's conclusion that the government had not breached the plea agreement, that the district court erred in so holding, and that the appropriate remedy is remand with entry of judgment of time served followed by a five-year term of supervised release. She agreed that under Ninth Circuit precedent Livar's appeal is not moot, but wrote that in cases where a defendant appeals only the custody portion of his sentence and the Bureau of Prisons releases him while the appeal is pending, Ninth Circuit precedent appears to be inconsistent with established principles of mootness.
Judge VanDyke concurred in part and dissented in part. He departed from his colleagues in two ways. First, disagreeing with Judge Sanchez, he does not understand due process to require the government to obtain a judicial determination before it responds to a defendant's breach of his plea agreement. Second, he disagrees with both of his colleagues as to the appropriate remedy. Because the district court never made a finding in response to the government's claims that Livar breached, the panel is not yet in any position to decide whether the government was entitled to ignore its end of the bargain. He would vacate Livar's sentence and remand for further proceedings before the same judge to adjudicate the government's claims in first instance. If, on remand, the court determined that Livar indeed breached, that same judge could resentence him with the benefit of the government's enhanced sentencing recommendation. And if the court determines that Livar did not breach, this court’s precedent demands resent encing *4 before a different judge, where the government can provide Livar the benefit of his bargain.
Judge Sanchez concurred in part and dissented in part.
He wrote that the government’s failure to abide by the strict terms of the plea agreement constitutes a breach of the agreement and requires that this court vacate the sentence and remand; that his colleagues’ conclusion that the government may breach first and ask for forgiveness later is antithetical to the due process principles underlying Supreme Court and circuit precedent; that there is little downside to requiring that the government file a motion seeking a judicial determination that a defendant has breached the plea agreement before it acts in a manner inconsistent with the agreement’s terms; and that substantial disruption and inefficiency awaits the path blessed by the decision here.
COUNSEL
Suzanne Miles (argued), Assistant United States Attorney, Criminal Appeals Section Chief; Thomas S. Ratcliffe, Assistant United States Attorney; Natalie K. Wight, United States Attorney, District of Oregon; United States Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorney, Portland, Oregon; for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Stephen R. Sady (argued), Chief Deputy Federal Public Defender, Federal Public Defender’s Office, Portland, Oregon, for Defendant-Appellant. USA V . L IVAR
OPINION
PER CURIAM:
Adam Lloyd Livar appeals his thirty-month sentence imposed after he pled guilty to a one-count indictment for failing to register as a sex offender in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2250(a). Because each panel member has issued their own opinion and the composition of the majority changes for different conclusions, this per curiam opinion provides (1) the necessary factual background to understand the individual decisions that follow, (2) the panel’s unanimous mootness analysis, and (3) a summary of the panel’s other holdings derived from the separate writings.
I.
On March 24, 2003, Adam Livar was convicted of indecency with a child in Texas. As a result of this conviction, he must register as a sex offender pursuant to the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act, 18 U.S.C. § 2250(a). In 2019, Livar registered as a sex offender in the states of Idaho and Oregon, listing his residence in Payette, Idaho. When he moved to Oregon in early 2020, he did not update his address within the sex offender registry. He was consequently charged with a single count of failing to register as a sex offender, in violation of § 2250(a). He entered a guilty plea.
Under the plea agreement, the government agreed to “jointly recommend a sentence at the middle of the advisory guideline range followed by a 5-year term of supervised release, as long as [Livar] demonstrates acceptance of responsibility.” (emphasis in original). The government reserved the right to change the recommendation if Livar committed any new criminal offense, obstructed or attempted to obstruct justice, or acted inconsistently with acceptance of responsibility between entering the plea and sentencing. The agreement also contained the following breach provision:
If defendant breaches the terms of this agreement, or commits any new criminal offenses between signing this agreement and *6 sentencing, the USAO is relieved of its obligations under this agreement, but defendant may not withdraw any guilty plea. If defendant believes that the government has breached the plea agreement, defendant must raise any such claim before the district court, either prior to or at sentencing. If defendant fails to raise a breach claim in district court, defendant has waived any such claim and is precluded from raising a breach claim for the first time on appeal.
On October 25, 2022, after the entry of his guilty plea but before sentencing, Livar placed a call to an Oregon Department of Human Services child protective services caseworker on a recorded line from prison. The caseworker informed Livar that his four young children had been placed in foster care. Upset by this news, Livar responded with a barrage of profanity-laced threatening statements. Shortly after the call, Livar apologized to the caseworker for his behavior.
Based on Livar’s statements in this recorded prison call, the Malheur County District Attorney charged him with misdemeanor offenses under Oregon state law for menacing and harassment. When the government learned of the new charges, the government emailed Livar’s counsel and the probation office outlining its position that Livar’s call was inconsistent with acceptance of responsibility as set forth in the plea agreement. The government informed Livar’s counsel that it was no longer bound by the joint sentencing recommendation and was free to recommend a more severe punishment. Livar’s counsel responded that Livar had accepted responsibility for the charged offense and cautioned that it would be premature for the government to change its recommendation prior to the court’s determination of acceptance of responsibility.
The government did not first seek a judicial determination of Livar’s alleged breach of the plea agreement. Instead, the government filed a sentencing memorandum in which it asserted that Livar breached the plea agreement by committing a new crime, the recorded prison call. The government argued it was no longer bound by its obligation to recommend a mid-level sentence or to recommend a downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility. The government also argued that the *7 recorded prison call reflected that Livar did not accept responsibility for the offense of conviction. The government accordingly recommended a sentence of thirty-seven months, the high end of the sentencing guidelines range, with no downward adjustment for acceptance of responsibility. The government also recommended ten years of supervised release.
USA V . L IVAR We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Where, as here, the defendant objected to the government’s
alleged breach of the plea agreement during district court
proceedings, we review such claim
de novo
.
See United
States v. Mondragon
,
II.
We first address whether this appeal has become moot based on Livar’s release from the Federal Bureau of Prisons on June 6, 2023, to begin serving his five-year term of supervised release. After considering the parties’ supplemental briefing, we agree with Livar that this appeal is not moot.
“A case becomes moot when it no longer satisfies the
case-or- controversy requirement” of the Constitution, which
demands that “the parties ‘continue to have a personal stake
in the outcome of the lawsuit.’”
United States v. Verdin
, 243
F.3d 1174, 1177 (9th Cir. 2001) (quoting
Spencer v. Kemna
,
523 U.S. 1, 7 (1998)). “This means that, throughout the
litigation, the plaintiff must have suffered, or be threatened
with, an actual injury traceable to the defendant and likely to
be redressed by a favorable judi cial decision.”
Spencer
, 523
U.S. at 7 (quotation marks and citation omitted)
.
Thus, “[a]
defendant challenging the length of his prison sentence has
a personal stake in the outcome . . . when the defendant has
completed his term of incarceration but is still serving a term
of supervised release” and the possibility exists that a c ourt
may reduce or modify the defendant’s supervised release
term as a form of relief.
United States v. D.M.
, 869 F.3d
1133, 1137 (9th Cir. 2017). “The party asserting mootnes s
bears a ‘heavy burden of establishing that there is no
effective relief remaining for a court to provide.’”
United
States v. Strong
, 489 F.3d 1055, 1059 (9th Cir. 2007)
*9
(quoting
GATX/Airlog Co. v. U.S. Dist. Ct.
,
The government contends that the case is moot because
the district court sentenced Livar to the minimum supervised
release term allowed under the statute.
See
18 U.S.C.
§ 3583(k) (requiring a supervised release term of “any term
of years not less than 5” for conviction under 18 U.S.C.
§ 2250). To be sure, unless a defendant qualifies for safety
valve relief under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(e), the district court
generally lacks authority at sentencing to impose a term of
supervised release below the statutory minimum. After
sentencing, however, the district court has discretion to
“modify, reduce, or enlarge the conditions of supervised
release, at any time prior to the expiration or termination of
the term of supervised release.” 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)(2).
The court may also terminate an individual’s term of
supervised release “at any time after the expiration of one
year . . . if it is satisfied that such action is warranted by the
conduct of the defendant released and the interest of justice.”
18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)(1). Under our precedent, the
“possibility” that the district court may exercise its discretion
at a future proceeding to reduce a term or modify the
conditions of supervised release under 18 U.S.C. § 3583(e)
is sufficient to prevent the case from being moot.
Mujahid
v. Daniels
,
United States v. Johnson
,
The government has not carried its heavy burden of
demonstrating that “there is no effective relief remaining for
a court to provide.”
D.M.
,
III.
We conclude by summarizing the holdings that result from our separate opinions.
First, all three panel members agree that when the government seeks to be relieved of its obligations under the plea agreement because, in its view, the defendant breached the plea agreement or failed to satisfy a condition precedent, the district court must hold an evidentiary hearing to resolve any such factual disputes. Because the district court declined to adjudicate whether Livar committed a new crime and therefore never made the required determination in this case, the panel unanimously concludes that Livar’s sentence should be vacated.
Second, a majority of the panel (Judges VANDYKE and VRATIL) concludes due process does not require the government to seek or receive a judicial determination of a defendant’s failure to comply with the plea agreement before it submits a sentencing recommendation that differs from the terms of the agreement. The government thus does not breach its obligations under an agreement simply by submitting a different sentencing recommendation without a prior judicial determination of whether the defendant failed to comply with the plea agreement, nor is it required to first seek a preliminary determination as to whether its recommendation complies with the agreement. There must be a judicial determination, but it need not necessarily come first.
Finally, a different majority of the panel (Judges *11 SANCHEZ and VRATIL) concludes the proper remedy in this case is remand with instructions that judgment be entered with a term of imprisonment of time served and all other terms and conditions—including Livar’s five-year term of supervised release—to remain the same as the original judgment.
14
IV.
We therefore VACATE Livar’s sentence and the judgment and REMAND for resentencing as described above.
VRATIL, District Judge, concurring:
I agree with Judge VanDyke: if the government wants to submit a sentencing recommendation which differs from one agreed in a plea agreement, due process does not require that it first obtain a judicial determination that defendant has breached the agreement. Here, a condition precedent to the government’s obligation to recommend a certain sentence was that Livar commit no new crime. If Livar refrained from additional criminal conduct, the government had a duty to recommend the agreed sentence and its failure to do so breached the plea agreement. On the other hand, if Livar committed a new crime, the government was excused from performing. Whether Livar had committed a new crime was disputed, and the district court declined to address that issue. Therefore, the record does not support the district court’s conclusion that the government had not breached the plea agreement, and it erred in so holding.
Ordinarily, this error would result in remand for resolution of the issue whether the government was in breach, and for resentencing. Here, because Livar has already served the custody component of his sentence, he received the statutory minimum term of supervised release *12 USA V . L IVAR and the government did not appeal either aspect of the sentence, I also agree with Judge Sanchez: the appropriate remedy is remand with entry of judgment of time served, followed by a five-year term of supervised release. I. The Record Is Insufficient To Conclude Whether The
Government Breached The Plea Agreement
We interpret plea agreements using contract law
standards.
United States v. Goodall
,
Paragraph 9 of the plea agreement states that “[t]he
parties jointly recommend a sentence at the middle of the
advisory guideline range, followed by a 5-year term of
supervised release, as long as defendant demonstrates
acceptance of responsibility.” Paragraph 14 of the plea
agreement states that “[i]f defendant breaches the terms of
this agreement, or commits any new criminal offenses
*13
between signing this agreement and sentencing, the
[government] is relieved of its obligations under this
agreement.” The plain language of these provisions created
a duty for the government to recommend the agreed sentence
if
Livar satisfied three conditions precedent: (1) he
demonstrated acceptance of responsibility, (2) he did not
breach the plea agreement and (3) before the government’s
sentencing recommendation, he did not commit a new
criminal offense.
See
8 Corbin on Contracts § 30.12 at 22
(“a condition is a fact or an event and is not an expression of
intention or an assurance”). If Livar fulfilled the conditions
precedent, the government’s fulfillment of its own
obligation to recommend a certain sentence under the plea
agreement was “paramount.”
United States v. Johnson
, 241
F.3d 1049, 1054 (8th Cir. 2001) (citing
Santobello v. New
York
,
If Livar committed a new crime, he failed to satisfy the
third condition precedent.
See
Plea Agreement ¶ 14.
[2]
My
colleagues focus on whether Livar’s alleged breach relieved
*14
severe sentence than the agreed recommendation in the plea
agreement. Relying on paragraphs 8 and 14, the government
responded that Livar had breached the plea agreement and
*15
Livar’s supervised release. In this case, nothing is gained by
remanding with instructions that the district court further
develop the factual record and make further findings whether
the government breached the plea agreement. Furthermore,
a remand for plenary resentencing would be unjust. On
appeal, Livar sought remand to reduce his custodial sentence
from 30 months to 27 months, based on the plea agreement.
At a plenary resentencing, the district court could rule that
Livar had over-served his custodial sentence and take that
into account in deciding whether to grant early termination
or modify the terms of Livar’s supervised release under
Section 3583(e).
See United States v. Ponce
,
On the other hand, at a plenary resentencing, the district court could give Livar a sentence with longer terms of both custody and supervised release. Resentencing with the possibility of a more severe sentence would be unjust because the government did not appeal the sentence imposed.
We have “broad authority to ‘modify, vacate, set aside
or reverse’ an order of a district court,” and “direct such
further action on remand ‘as may be just under the
circumstances.’”
Will v. Calvert Fire Ins. Co.
,
III. Mootness Of Livar’s Appeal
I agree with Part II of the per curiam opinion that under
Ninth Circuit precedent, Livar’s appeal is not moot. In cases
where a defendant appeals only the custody portion of his
sentence and the Bureau of Prisons releases him while the
*16
20 USA V . L IVAR appeal is pending, however, Ninth Circuit precedent appears
to be inconsistent with established principles of mootness.
Initially, I question whether Ninth Circuit precedent
correctly identifies which party bears the burden on the issue
of mootness, and in what context.
[4]
Furthermore, Ninth
Circuit precedent is difficult to square with well-established
case law and Supreme Court authority.
Compare Juvenile
Male
,
*17
there must be a judicial determination of any claimed breach
by the trial court, with, if necessary, “an evidentiary hearing
to resolve disputed factual issues and a burden of proof that
rests squarely on the government.”
United States v.
Plascencia–Orozco
,
I depart from my colleagues, however, in two ways. First, in contrast with the rule that only Judge Sanchez urges us to adopt today, I do not understand due process to require the government to obtain a judicial determination before it responds to a defendant’s breach of his plea agreement. Such a rule is inconsistent with the caselaw of both this *18 that Livar breached. And because the district court never made a finding in response to the government’s claims that Livar breached, we are not yet in any position to decide whether the government was entitled to ignore its end of the bargain.
Judge Vratil’s approach to the remand is even harder to square. She shares my view that the district court need not decide whether Livar breached before the government may act contrary to the plea agreement. But she would still remand for an entry of judgment of time served and a five- year term of supervised release rather than for further factfinding. She asserts that to do otherwise would be “unjust because the government did not appeal the sentence imposed” and therefore this “is the one fitting conclusion.”
Her position ignores that it was Livar , not the government, that asked this court to vacate his sentence and remand for resentencing. Where a defendant himself makes such a request, I am aware of no legal principle that would require this court to limit a district court from exercising the same sentencing discretion on remand that it did in the first instance. Defendants must be aware that the district court’s exercise of such discretion might very well result in a higher sentence, not a lower one. That is especially true where, as explained below, there is ample reason to believe the government was 100% correct to argue that Livar failed to fulfill his obligations under the plea agreement by committing a new crime. Ultimately, there is nothing unjust about giving Livar what he asked for—vacatur and remand—and only that.
To remedy the district court’s error, I would instead
vacate Livar’s sentence and remand for further proceedings
before the same judge to adjudicate the government’s breach
claims in the first instance. If, on remand, the court
determined that Livar indeed breached, that same judge
could resentence him with the benefit of the government’s
enhanced sentencing recommendation. And if the court
determines that Livar did not breach, I agree that our
precedent demands resentencing before a different judge,
where the government can provide Livar the benefit of his
bargain: “the presentation of a ‘united front’ to the court.”
United States v. Alcala-Sanchez
,
I. Due Process Does Not Require the Government to
Receive a Judicial Determination of a Defendant’s Breach of a Plea Agreement Before It Acts on that Perceived Breach.
Judge Sanchez would hold that due process demands that the government must “seek a judicial determination of a defendant’s alleged breach before it may be relieved of its obligations under a plea agreement.” This requirement is (1) inconsistent with our own caselaw and prior practice; (2) unwieldly, creating no additional benefit to defendants while imposing unnecessary procedural burdens on the prosecution; and (3) decidedly not the rule that most of our sister circuits have adopted, despite Judge Sanchez’s assertions to the contrary.
In the past, we have affirmed convictions in circumstances where the government acted first and the court only later ratified its assertion of breach. In United States v. Roberts , for example, the defendant entered a plea agreement in which the government promised to “recommend that the court reduce Roberts’s sentence by half if he cooperated with the government against” his co- conspirators. 5 F.3d 365, 367 (9th Cir. 1993). The agreement stipulated that it would be void “if Roberts disobeyed the law—to be determined by a ‘probable cause’ standard of proof.” Id. After the agreement was signed, the government received reports from informants that Roberts continued to participate in the conspiracy, from which the government “decided Roberts had broken the law and breached the agreement.” Id.
After receiving that information— and without first seeking a judicial determination regarding Roberts’s breach —the prosecution “did not move the court for a *20 reduced sentence” as promised. Id. On appeal, this court gave no indication that the government violated Roberts’s due process rights in doing so without first litigating Roberts’s alleged breach. To the contrary, this court affirmed the conviction, concluding that “the government did not breach the plea agreement by not asking for a reduced sentence because the defendant breached it first by breaking the law.” Id. at 370.
Even cases that reverse convictions because of a breach by the government demonstrate the novelty of the rule suggested by Judge Sanchez. In United States v. Packwood , for example, the government indicted Packwood for murder notwithstanding a prior plea agreement not to do so. 848 F.2d 1009, 1010 (9th Cir. 1988). Packwood, citing the agreement, moved to dismiss the charges. In support of its decision to prosecute Packwood, the government contended that Packwood had breached first, freeing it from its own obligations under the agreement. Id.
The trial court’s reasons for granting Packwood’s motion
and dismissing the charges are revealing.
Id.
It did not
simply rely on the fact that the government indicted
Packwood without first seeking an adjudication of its breach
claim.
Id.
Indeed, that fact did not merit so much as a
mention in this court’s discussion of the district court’s
decision to dismiss the indictment, even though that fact
alone would be dispositive under Judge Sanchez’s rationale
in this case.
See id.
(
Packwood
’s description of the district
court’s four bases for dismissal). Instead of relying on such
ancillary procedural concerns, the trial court considered the
merits
of the government’s argument, dismissing because
“the breach alleged by the government was not material” and
therefore did not free the government from its end of the
bargain.
Id.
This court affirmed, again deciding the
underlying merits of the government’s claim that Packwood
breached without relying on any due process defect in the
timing of the government’s indictment.
Id.
at 1011–12.
Other cases follow the same path.
See, e.g.
,
United States v.
Gonzales
,
Whether decided in the district court or on appeal—and whether decided in favor of the government or not—each of these cases operates on an assumption that is squarely inconsistent with Judge Sanchez’s proposed rule. The past practice of courts in this circuit has been to allow the government to move first and to judicially consider the merits of the government’s decisions later. Nowhere do any *21 of these cases indicate that such a practice might on its own constitute a due process violation. That, if nothing else, speaks to the novelty of the rule Judge Sanchez proposes.
Judge Sanchez concedes that his approach would create
a new rule and therefore alter the status quo. But he suggests
that his is “the only outcome consistent with our precedents.”
That’s not quite right either. In
United States v. Plascencia–
Orozco
, this court was presented with an argument that “the
government must secure a judicial finding of breach
before
indicting a defendant on charges that would otherwise be
barred by his plea agreement.”
In Plascencia , the defendant had previously entered into a plea agreement resolving an earlier prosecution against him in which the government dismissed and promised not to bring charges of illegal reentry, identity theft, and drug possession unless he breached the plea agreement or unlawfully returned to the United States. Id. at 915. After the defendant again attempted to unlawfully enter the United States, the government brought the previously dropped charges against him. Id . The government contended that Plascencia’s own breaches of the plea agreement absolved it of any responsibility to abide by its prior promise not to prosecute. Id. at 918. It did not seek a judicial determination of that theory before reindicting. Id. On appeal, the defendant asked the court to recognize a new due process requirement that a judicial determination of breach by the defendant is required before the government may reindict. Id. at 920.
Our court “decline[d] Plascencia’s invitation,” reasoning that:
We have also never expressly addressed whether the government must seek a judicial finding of breach before indicting a defendant on charges barred by a plea agreement. But again, we think that the procedures outlined above—a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b), with an evidentiary hearing to resolve disputed factual issues and a burden of proof that rests squarely on the government—are sufficient to protect a defendant’s due-process right to enforce the terms of his plea agreement. Plascencia has *22 pointed us to no statute or case law requiring the government to seek a preindictment finding of breach, and we decline to recognize such a requirement here.
Id. at 921–22 (footnotes omitted).
While it is true that in Plascencia , “the government went out of its way to request a judicial finding that [the] charges were not barred by Plascencia’s 2008 plea agreement because Plascencia had breached the agreement,” id. at 922, it only did so after disregarding the agreement’s terms by indicting him, id. at 918. Our court did not consider the government’s preemptive indictment a problem because “the government was under no obligation to seek th[e] finding in the first place,” so “its decision to seek the finding after reinstating the 2008 charges … could not have been reversible error.” Id. at 922. Plascencia ’s bottom line was clear enough: though the government “must proffer sufficient evidence to establish [defendant’s] breach by a preponderance of the evidence,” “[t]he matter need not be … decided before” the government acts. Id. at 922–23.
Though
Plascencia
involved an
indictment, not
sentencing, its reasoning applies with full force here. Judge
Sanchez dismisses
Plascencia
and
Packwood
because they
involved the government’s indictment decisions, not its
sentencing recommendations. First off, it is not true, as
Judge Sanchez charges, that all the cases I cite involve
indictments.
Roberts
, for example, is a sentencing case.
See
Even more damaging to Judge Sanchez’s cause is that he provides no convincing basis for treating indictment cases any differently than sentencing cases. After all, as Judge Sanchez recognizes, the interests sought to be protected in both sentencing and indictment cases stem from the same place: due process. He suggests that the process afforded
USA V . L IVAR defendants by Plascencia was sufficient for indictments but not for sentencing because in sentencing cases, “the defense has virtually no opportunity to prevent the government from filing a sentencing memorandum or advancing arguments at a sentencing hearing that materially deviate from the terms of a plea agreement.” But that attempt to distinguish Plascencia and Packwood ignores that, in the indictment context, the government has already, to use Judge Sanchez’s word, unilaterally breached the plea agreement by bringing the indictment. And it’s simply not true that, in the sentencing context, “once the government has acted unilaterally, … the harm to the defendant cannot be undone.” Of course it can. Under Judge Vratil’s and my view, if the government is wrong about whether the defendant breached, its actions will be undone by the district court who must determine whether the government or defendant breached the terms of the plea agreement.
Ordinary contract law principles do not require a party to seek a judicial determination that one party has materially breached before the other party is relieved of its duty to comply. As every first-year law student learns in contracts class, a contracting party’s material breach excuses another party’s duty to perform their own obligations under a contract, whether or not a court has recognized the breaching party’s non-performance. E.g. , 15 Williston on Contracts § 44:46 (4th ed.) (“[A] material breach allows the other party to treat the contract as discharged.”); Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 237 (1981) (“[I]t is a condition of each party’s remaining duties to render performances to be exchanged under an exchange of promises that there be no uncured material failure by the other party to render any such performance due at an earlier time.”). While the existence or materiality of such a breach may create a litigable issue that a court will be asked to consider after the parties have come to loggerheads, it is the breach itself—not the court’s say-so—that excuses the other party’s performance, and a party who suffers a material breach is perfectly justified in *24 its non-performance before hearing from the court.
For example, a contractor need not go to court before refusing to build the deck that a homeowner promised to pay him in advance to build. His obligation to build the deck is discharged by the homeowner’s lack of prepayment, and should he find himself in court about the matter afterward, I hazard to guess that the court will not find him at fault for recognizing and acting upon the homeowner’s plain breach of contract without first running to court to seek a judicial ratification of that obvious fact.
So too here. When faced with what the government
believes to be a defendant’s breach of the plea bargain,
ordinary contract principles counsel that the government
ought to be free to treat its own obligations under the
agreement as discharged. Those actions are, of course,
subject to later scrutiny by the court, which may or may not
agree with the government’s view. That is the risk the
government runs by acting first—but not, as Judge Sanchez
repeatedly suggests, unilaterally, because the question of the
defendant’s breach will ultimately be decided by the court.
It should thus come as no surprise that
Packwood
, the case
cited by Judge Sanchez, counsels only that breach must be
determined by a court, not that it must be determined
first
by
a court.
Alcala-Sanchez
is even less helpful. There, unlike in this
case (and unlike even
Santobello
), “the government admitted
its mistake” at the sentencing hearing “and recommended the
agreed-upon sentence before the district court sentenced
Alcala.”
United States v. Mondragon , 228 F.3d 978 (9th Cir. 2000), is similarly off-point. In Mondragon , the government promised in a plea agreement not to make any recommendation regarding sentencing. Id . at 979. Without any suggestion of breach by the defendant, the government failed to abide by that agreement. So rather than involving an initial breach by the defendant, Mondragon is a case presenting an initial breach by the government, and it is therefore unlike this case.
In all three of Judge Sanchez’s cases, holdings against the government were premised on an acknowledgement that the government , and not the defendant, had breached the agreement. Whether that breach was determined by a court or admitted to by the government is ultimately unimportant. What matters is a conclusion that the government breached. From the existence of such a breach, the court found a due process violation. But here, if the defendant breached first, *26 the government was under no obligation to hold up its end of the bargain. The government only breached if Livar didn’t breach first.
To summarize, our court has long blessed the government’s “act first, justify later” approach, so long as its determination that the defendant has breached is subsequently ratified by a court. When squarely faced with a due-process challenge to that approach in Plascencia , we squarely rejected it. Judge Sanchez would abandon that longstanding approach without so much as a case in support or a word in retrospect.
Given Judge Sanchez’s sharp break with practice and
precedent, one might expect a fulsome explanation of the
important procedural protections offered by the new rule he
proposes. None is forthcoming. While he extols the benefits
of “[r]equiring a judicial determination” in a general sense,
Judge Sanchez does nothing to explain why due process
requires that that judicial determination must occur
first
, and
it is unclear what the reason might be. Of course, due
process with respect to plea agreements requires preventing
the government from baiting a defendant into a plea
agreement and then unilaterally changing the terms of that
agreement.
Santobello
,
The defendant gains no obvious benefit from Judge Sanchez’s proposed rule that would require the government to ask for permission instead of ratification. District courts are equally capable of evaluating the government’s breach claims no matter whether this court requires a hearing before *27 34 USA V . L IVAR the government acts on the breach or whether the issue is considered at a hearing after the government takes actions inconsistent with the agreement. While the latter is certainly riskier for the government, the court in either circumstance retains the final authority to say (1) whether the defendant breached his obligations under the plea agreement and (2) what that means for the prosecution’s case. The upshot for Livar’s case here is that, even now, if this case were properly remanded, the district court is readily capable of making a finding as to whether Livar breached and factoring that finding into a new sentencing determination.
Notwithstanding
Judge
Sanchez’s
frequent
characterization of the government’s actions here as
“unilateral,” it is ultimately the court’s final determination
on the breach question, not the government’s, that matters.
[3]
And because that is true, the government is no more able to
sneak a wrongful breach by the court—even assuming it had
the intent to do so—just because the court collapses the
required hearing into the sentencing hearing instead of
holding an earlier hearing devoted solely to determining
whether the defendant breached the plea agreement. Judge
Sanchez provides no practical reason why this court’s
longstanding interpretation of what due process requires is
not satisfied by allowing the district court to make the
*28
challenges the government’s determination that the breach
occurred, not that the court must act first.
See, e.g.
,
Gonzalez-Sanchez
, 825 F.2d at 578 (holding in the First
Circuit that “[t]he factual determination whether the plea
agreement has been breached lies with the trial judge,” but
apparently accepting as adequate a hearing on a defendant’s
motion to dismiss charges that the government brought
notwithstanding its promise not to in the agreement);
United
States v. Simmons
,
36 motion filed after the government signaled its intent to
breach);
[5]
United States v. Cox
,
Looking beyond the circuits referenced by Judge
Sanchez only reaffirms the underlying support for our
circuit’s rule. In addition to four of the five circuits cited by
Judge Sanchez, at least two others—the Second and Fifth
Circuits—also permit the government to move first.
See
United States v. Brumer
,
The rule applied today by our court and the
overwhelming majority of our sister circuits makes sense.
Plea agreements are desirable because they benefit both the
government, which
conserves
investigative
and
prosecutorial resources, and the offender, who can start
sooner on the road to rehabilitation than if he went to trial.
Santobello
,
II. The Appropriate Remedy is to Remand to the District
Court to Determine whether Livar Breached the Plea Agreement, and to Resentence Accordingly. For the reasons explained above, I would require only a judicial determination of the government’s claimed breach and would not condition the government’s ability to act upon its first obtaining such a determination from the trial court. Even under this less demanding standard, however, Livar’s current sentence does not pass muster.
Under
Santobello
, “a criminal defendant has a due
process right to enforce the terms of his plea agreement.”
Buckley
,
That is unfortunately what happened here. In Livar’s August 2022 plea agreement, the parties agreed to “jointly *31 recommend a sentence at the middle of the advisory guideline range, followed by a 5-year term of supervised release ….” Two months later, Livar placed a phone call to a social worker involved in his children’s ongoing custody case, threatening him with violence upon Livar’s release from prison. In the government’s view, those threats constituted a crime and “relieved [it] of its obligations under th[e] agreement,” which were conditioned on the defendant not “breach[ing] the terms of th[e] agreement or commit[ing] any new criminal offenses between signing th[e] agreement and sentencing.” At the sentencing hearing, the government contended that Livar had “commit[ed] a new crime, … and therefore the [g]overnment [wa]s not in breach.”
Despite the government’s argument, the district court’s findings on Livar’s breach were inconclusive. When first asked to determine whether Livar had breached the agreement, the district court signaled its intent to sentence at the high end of the sentencing range notwithstanding the plea agreement:
Why don’t you argue for a sentence in the mid-level range. This is just advisory. I go below guidelines not infrequently; I go above guidelines every now and then. You stick with arguing at the mid-level range so that there is no question that you are abiding by your agreement. From everything that I have read, I’m either going to go at the high end of the range … or maybe even above it, because I’m very disturbed by that phone call.
When pressed further, the district court explicitly declared that it was “not making a finding one way or the other whether the defendant breached his plea agreement.” It finally noted that it “d[id] not believe that the Government ha[d] in any way breached the plea agreement,” after which the government confirmed its intent “to abide by [its] recommendation in the plea agreement, even though [it] believe[d] the defendant … breached the plea.” As promised, the court then sentenced Livar to thirty months imprisonment—the high end of the sentencing range. But the district court never resolved whether Livar breached the plea agreement; indeed, it expressly declined to do so.
Though I disagree with Judge Sanchez’s conclusion that the government per se breaches the agreement by moving *32 first, I nevertheless conclude that the district court here erred by never making a finding as to whether Livar breached first. I would therefore vacate Livar’s sentence and remand to give the district court an opportunity to make that required finding. [7]
*33 telephonic harassment in section 166.065(c). Our court is certainly not required to make any finding as to Livar’s breach, however, and given that this case must be remanded for resentencing anyway, I would also remand the question of Livar’s breach to the district court for consideration in the first instance. But the fact that there is ample support for the conclusion that Livar breached first further underscores the wastefulness and unnecessity of the novel rule proposed by Judge Sanchez in this case.
bargain requires specific performance of the plea agreement, and the court would need to reassign the case “for resentencing before a different judge” to which the parties could “present a united front.” Id. at 575.
But if, as is much more likely in this case, the district court on remand concluded that Livar did breach his end of the bargain, then the government would be entirely justified if it decided to disregard its obligations under the plea agreement and seek a higher sentence. Indeed, under such circumstances, the express terms of the plea agreement make it clear that the government “is relieved of its obligations under th[e] agreement.” In that case, Livar would not deserve “the benefit of his bargain,” id. at 576, and the original district court could, without violating any of Livar’s due process rights, proceed to resentence Livar with the benefit of the government’s longer sentencing recommendation. Indeed, the district court could properly resentence Livar to a higher sentence than he received the first time around, which again only highlights the improper and perverse incentives created by Judge Sanchez’s proposed rule.
* * *
I therefore concur in the judgment insofar as it vacates Livar’s sentence, but I respectfully dissent from that portion of the judgment which remands Livar’s case for resentencing while specifically requiring the district court to sentence Livar to an imprisonment term of time-served and five years’ supervised release.
USA V . L IVAR 43 SANCHEZ, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
This matter should have been straightforward. In exchange for Adam Livar’s guilty plea and promise to refrain from committing any new criminal offense before sentencing, the government agreed to join in recommending a sentence at the mid-range of the sentencing guidelines. The parties then disagreed whether Livar’s recorded jail phone conversation constituted a breach of the plea agreement. Rather than let the district court resolve this factual dispute, the government decided that question for itself and filed a sentencing recommendation which advocated for a sentence at the high end of the guidelines range and proposed to double the length of the agreed-upon term of supervised release. Under clear Supreme Court and circuit precedent, the government’s failure to abide by the strict terms of the plea agreement constitutes a breach of the agreement and requires that we vacate the sentence and remand. [1] See Santobello v. New York , 404 U.S. 257, 262 (1971).
My colleagues and I agree that the government may not unilaterally declare a breach and withdraw from its obligations under the plea agreement without a judicial determination that the defendant did, in fact, breach the agreement. But in my view, the government acted unilaterally the moment it advocated for more severe punishment and destroyed the benefit of Livar’s bargain— presenting a “united front” with the government in jointly *35 and ask for forgiveness later is antithetical to the due process principles underlying Santobello and the decisions of our court as well as several of our sister circuits. It is also unnecessary. There is little downside to requiring that the government file a motion seeking a judicial determination that a defendant has breached the plea agreement before it acts in a manner inconsistent with the agreement’s terms, but substantial disruption and inefficiency awaits the path blessed by the decision here. I fear that the muddled outcome today will not provide the guidance that is sorely needed in our circuit.
I.
The Supreme Court has instructed that “when a plea rests
in any significant degree on a promise or agreement of the
prosecutor, so that it can be said to be part of the inducement
or consideration, such promise must be fulfilled.”
Santobello,
The Supreme Court elucidated these principles in Santobello . There, the defendant “bargained and negotiated for a particular plea in order to secure dismissal of more serious charges” as well as the government’s promise “that no sentence recommendation would be made by the prosecutor.” 404 U.S. at 262 (internal quotation marks omitted). At the sentencing hearing, a different prosecutor, “apparently ignorant of his colleague’s commitment,” recommended a maximum one-year sentence. Id. at 259. Even though the breach was inadvertent and the sentencing judge expressly stated he was not influenced by the prosecutor’s arguments, the Supreme Court reversed, observing that even an inadvertent breach “does not lessen its impact.” Id . at 262. And although the Santobello court had no cause to doubt the sentencing judge’s statement that he was not influenced by the prosecutor’s initial *36 recommendation, “the interests of justice and appropriate recognition of the duties of the prosecution in relation to promises made” required reversal and remand to allow the defendant to withdraw from his plea or be resentenced before a different judge. Id. at 262–63. In other words, once the breach by the government occurs, the trial court cannot ratify or absolve the government of its actions by indicating it was not influenced by the government’s conduct or concluding that the government acted in good faith. Id . Two cases from our circuit reaffirm the seriousness with which we construe a government’s obligations under a plea agreement. In United States v. Mondragon , the government agreed it would “make no recommendation regarding sentence” in exchange for the defendant’s guilty plea. 228 F.3d 978, 979 (9th Cir. 2000). At sentencing, however, the prosecution was asked to respond to defense counsel’s argument that the defendant’s criminal history was “petty in . nature.” Id. The prosecution “point[ed] out to the Court the serious nature of some of the listed offenses” in his criminal history and later argued it was justified in doing so under its ethical obligation to correct factual misstatements by defendant’s counsel. Id. at 979–80. Although the district court found that the prosecution’s comments were not related to sentencing, we vacated the sentence, observing:
It is of no consequence that the district judge did not construe the prosecutor’s statements as a “comment on the sentence” or a “recommendation with respect to sentencing,” or that the statements may have had no effect upon the sentence. The harmless error rule does not apply when the government breaches a plea agreement. The integrity of our judicial system requires that the government strictly comply with its obligations under a plea agreement.
Id. at 981 (internal citations omitted).
Similarly in
Alcala-Sanchez,
the government filed a
sentencing summary chart that recommended a total offense
level and sentencing range far higher than the one
established by the plea agreement.
Strict compliance with the terms of a plea agreement is
grounded in due process. Unlike traditional contracts, plea
agreements implicate unique constitutional rights and “must
be attended by adequate safeguards to insure the defendant
what is reasonably due in the circumstances.”
Santobello
,
Given the importance of ensuring that the government’s promises in a plea agreement be strictly observed, it makes little sense that an inadvertent breach by the government would require reversal under Santobello , but an intentional breach by the government could be excused so long as the government feels justified by the defendant’s conduct. As I explain next, due process considerations do not allow the government to breach first and ask for absolution later.
II.
A.
When a dispute arises about the terms of the plea
agreement or whether it has been breached, “[a] court must
determine breach, with an evidentiary hearing if there are
disputed issues of fact, and as a matter of law if the pleadings
show no factual disputes.”
United States v. Packwood
, 848
F.2d 1009, 1011 (9th Cir. 1988) (citing
United States v.
Calabrese,
645 F.2d 1379, 1390 (10th Cir. 1981));
see
United States v. Arnett
,
Five of our sister circuits have concluded that the
government cannot unilaterally determine whether the
defendant has performed under the plea agreement. As the
Tenth Circuit explains: “Under the law of this Circuit, ‘[i]f
the pleadings reveal a factual dispute on the issue of breach
[of a plea agreement], the district court must hold a hearing
to resolve the factual issues.’”
United States v. Guzman
, 318
F.3d 1191, 1196 (10th Cir. 2003) (quoting
Calabrese,
645
F.2d at 1390) (alterations in original). “In other words, the
government may not unilaterally declare a breach of a plea
agreement; a court must hold a hearing and make a finding
that the defendant breached the agreement before the
*39
government is released from its obligations under the
agreement.”
Id.
(citations omitted);
see Simmons
, 537 F.2d
at 1261–62 (“There would be manifest impropriety in
permitting the government, without satisfying a judge that
the evidence proves that a defendant broke his promise, to
escape from the obligation the government undertook in the
plea bargain.”);
United States v. Lezine
,
Requiring a judicial determination also facilitates appellate review of such claims where factual development by the district court is often vital. See United States v. Henry , 758 F.3d 427, 432 (D.C. Cir. 2014). Conversely, if the government is allowed to declare unilaterally that the defendant breached and acts contrary to its own obligations under the plea agreement, that curtails our ability to meaningfully review the government’s breach determination. Id.
Turning to this appeal, the parties disagreed whether
Livar’s recorded jail phone conversation constituted a
breach of his obligation to accept responsibility for his
offense or avoid committing any new crimes. Rather than
present this factual dispute to the district court for judicial
determination, the government decided that question for
itself and filed a sentencing memorandum that departed
substantially from the plea agreement. The government’s
sentencing memorandum advocated for a thirty-seven-
month term and ten years of supervised release—adding ten
months of incarceration and doubling the length of the
proposed term of supervised release. At sentencing, the
district court found that Livar had accepted responsibility but
declined to make a finding as to Livar’s alleged breach of the
agreement. As the per curiam opinion concludes, the district
court erred in sidestepping the question of Livar’s alleged
breach of the plea agreement.
See supra
13. But the
*40
government’s advocacy for more severe punishment in its
sentencing memorandum also destroyed the benefit of
Livar’s bargain—presenting a “united front” with the
government in recommending a mid-range sentence.
See
Alcala-Sanchez
,
B.
This case presents a paradigmatic example of the
government acting unilaterally to declare a breach and
withdrawing from the plea agreement before a judicial
determination can be made on that question. My colleagues
agree that the government cannot unilaterally withdraw from
its obligations under the plea agreement, but they conclude
that the government can make a sentencing recommendation
that departs from the plea agreement so long as the district
court later ratifies the government’s conduct. This approach
cannot be squared with our precedents applying
Santobello
. Once the government fails to abide by the strict terms of
the plea agreement, the interests of justice require that the
sentence be vacated and remanded.
Santobello,
404 U.S. at
262–63;
see Alcala-Sanchez,
666 F.3d at 575–77. Even
inadvertent or implicit departures by the government are
sufficient to require vacatur of the sentence.
Alcala-
Sanchez,
Judge VanDyke contends that it is an accepted practice
for the government to breach first and seek judicial
ratification later, but the cases he cites for this proposition
involved
reindictments of a defendant—not
the
government’s breach of a plea agreement during sentencing
proceedings. Indictments involve their own due process
protections that are not present at sentencing. In the context
USA V . L IVAR of an indictment, “[a] criminal defendant has a due process
right to enforce the terms of his plea agreement.”
Buckley v.
Terhune
,
Judge Vratil emphasizes that the plea agreement here did not require that the government seek a preliminary judicial determination of Livar’s asserted breach, but our cases applying Santobello do not turn on that factor. We enforce *42 the terms of the plea agreement strictly against the government, not because the contract tells us to do so, but because the defendant has surrendered constitutionally- guaranteed rights in exchange for the benefits promised by the government. See Franco-Lopez , 312 F.3d at 989. Whether Livar was indeed subject to a condition precedent under the terms of the agreement is a matter the district court must determine in the first instance, not after the government has decided that question for itself and vitiated the plea agreement by its conduct.
Finally, my colleagues’ approach of allowing the
government to breach first and seek judicial permission later
will cause unnecessary disruption in the courts below. Play
out the scenario that began here. Once the government filed
its sentencing memorandum advocating more severe
punishment for Livar, the die was cast. If the district court
then held an evidentiary hearing to determine whether Livar
breached the agreement, and found that he had not, then we
all agree that the government would be in breach of the plea
agreement.
See supra
14;
supra
23. Because a defendant
cannot be sentenced before the same district court in which
the government is in breach of the plea agreement, the case
must then be reassigned to a different judge for sentencing,
starting the process over again.
See Santobello
, 404 U.S. at
263;
Alcala-Sanchez
,
On the other hand, there is no downside to requiring that
the government file a motion seeking a
judicial
determination of the defendant’s breach
before
it acts
contrary to the plea agreement. The district court must
adjudicate the factual dispute by evidentiary hearing if
necessary.
See Plascencia–Orozco
,
The contention that a government breach may be judicially ratified after-the-fact is contradicted by our precedents, due process, and practical considerations. In my view, the only outcome consistent with our precedents is for the government to seek a judicial determination of a defendant’s alleged breach before it may be relieved of its obligations under a plea agreement.
III.
A majority of our Court concludes that the proper remedy in this matter is to remand with instructions to vacate the prior judgment and to enter a new judgment of time served with all other terms and conditions, including the five-year term of supervised release, to remain the same as the original judgment. I write separately to explain why that result is warranted under these circumstances.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 2106, we have “broad authority to
‘modify, vacate, set aside or reverse’ an order of a district
court,” and “direct such further action on remand ‘as may be
just under the circumstances.’”
Will v. Calvert Fire Ins.
Co.
,
Here, however, remanding for resentencing would not provide Livar the benefit of his bargain because he has already served beyond the term of incarceration recommended by the plea agreement and he has been sentenced to the statutory minimum term of five years of supervised release. See 18 U.S.C. § 3583(k). Resentencing would not provide Livar an effective remedy for the government’s breach, and could expose him to a more severe sentence. For these reasons, Livar’s counsel requested that we vacate the judgment and modify Livar’s sentence to time served with all other terms and conditions to remain the same as the original judgment. Under these circumstances, the interests of justice are best served by adopting this approach.
Notes
[*] The Honorable Kathryn H. Vratil, United States District Judge for the District of Kansas, sitting by designation. SUMMARY
[**] Criminal Law
[**] This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader. First, all three panel members agreed that when the government seeks to be relieved of its obligations under the plea agreement because, in its view, the defendant breached the plea agreement or failed to satisfy a condition precedent, the district court must hold an evidentiary hearing to resolve any such factual disputes. Because the district court declined to adjudicate whether Livar committed a new crime when he made profanity-laced threatening statements during a phone call he placed from prison to a child protective services case worker, and therefore never made the required determination in this case, the panel unanimously concluded that Livar's sentence should be vacated. Second, a majority of the panel (Judges VanDyke and Vratil) concluded due process does not require the government to seek a judicial determination of a defendant’s failure to comply with the plea agreement before it submits a sentencing recommendation that differs from the terms of
[1] On June 8, 2023, after Livar’s release from federal custody, the state court arraigned him on these charges. See State v. Livar , No. 22-cr- 54882 (Or. Cir. Ct. Nov. 15, 2022). Livar’s sentencing memorandum asserted that he had accepted responsibility for the offense of conviction—his failure to register as a sex offender—and he argued for a sentence consistent with the terms of the plea agreement: a mid-range sentence of twenty-seven months and five years of supervised release. On December 14, 2022, the parties appeared for Livar’s sentencing hearing. After the government and defense counsel presented oral argument, the district court determined that Livar had accepted responsibility for the offense of conviction, with an applicable guideline range of twenty-four to thirty months. At this point in the hearing, the government asked the court whether it could advocate for a sentence at the high end of the sentencing range or whether it was “stuck” with its obligation in the plea agreement to recommend a mid-range sentence. The court responded that the government should “stick with arguing at the mid-level range so that there is no question that you are abiding by your agreement.” Defense counsel argued that the government had already violated the terms of the plea agreement by not waiting for the court’s decision whether Livar had accepted responsibility before advocating for a high-end sentence in its sentencing memorandum. After argument from the government that Livar was himself in breach of the plea agreement, the district court declined to make such a finding. The court found, however, that the government acted in good faith and had not breached the plea agreement. The district court sentenced Livar to a thirty-month prison term followed by a five-year term of supervised release. On December 28, 2022, the court entered its second amended judgment. This appeal timely followed.
[1] It is important to note that the plea agreement in this case did not require that the government secure a preliminary determination that its sentencing recommendation complied with the agreement.
[2] Arguably, Livar’s alleged commission of a new crime also established that he had not fully accepted responsibility. See Plea Agreement ¶ 8 (government reserves right to change acceptance of responsibility “recommendation if defendant, between plea and sentencing, commits any criminal offense”). The district court found that Livar had accepted responsibility, however, and the government did not appeal this finding. For purposes of this appeal, we therefore only need to address whether Livar failed to satisfy the condition that he commit no new criminal offense. Neither party argues that Livar otherwise breached the plea agreement. the government of its obligations under the plea agreement. In doing so, they incorrectly assume that if Livar committed an additional crime, he breached the agreement.
[3] Livar did not promise to refrain from criminal conduct before sentencing, however, so his alleged failure to do so was not a breach of the agreement. This is not a hollow distinction. Under general contract principles, Livar—as the party asserting a breach—had the initial burden to prove that he fulfilled any conditions precedent, i.e. that he had committed no new criminal offense. Zurich Am. Ins. Co. v. Ironshore Specialty Ins. Co. , 964 F.3d 804, 811 (9th Cir. 2020) (Nevada law); see also Cal. Civ. Code § 3392 (2024) (specific performance cannot be enforced in favor of party who has not fully performed all conditions precedent to obligation of other party). Before sentencing, the government advocated for a more
[3] To be sure, paragraph 14 of the plea agreement set forth the same
consequences for breach of the agreement and for committing a new
crime. Even so, my colleagues do not explain how Livar’s commission
of a new crime constitutes a breach of contract rather than the non-
fulfillment of a condition precedent.
See
8 Corbin on Contracts § 30.13
at 28 (“If the condition consists of a personal action, it may properly be
said not to be performed; but non-performance is not a breach of contract
unless the person promised to render the performance—to perform the
condition.”). Moreover, paragraph 14 of the plea agreement is written in
the disjunctive, which suggests that Livar could commit a criminal
offense without necessarily breaching the agreement.
See
Plea
Agreement ¶ 14 (government is relieved of its obligations if Livar either
“breaches the terms of the agreement,
or
commits any new criminal
offenses between signing this agreement and sentencing”) (emphasis
added). thus relieved the government of its duty to perform. The
district court concluded
that Livar had accepted
responsibility and that the government had not in any way
breached the plea agreement. In concluding that the
government had not breached “in any way,” the district court
necessarily—although implicitly—held that Livar had
committed a new criminal offense. The district court did not
make findings of fact or conclusions of law which support
this implicit conclusion, and it erred in failing to do so.
See
generally Chavez-Meza v. United States
,
[4]
Compare United States v. Juvenile Male
, 564 U.S. 932, 936 (2011)
(when defendant challenges only expired sentence,
he
bears burden to
show ongoing collateral consequence traceable to challenged portion of
sentence and that favorable judicial decision will redress consequence)
with United States v. Strong
,
[1] Instead,
[1] Judge Vratil posits that Livar did not breach the agreement but instead failed to fulfill a condition precedent. As I see it, that’s a distinction without a difference in this case. Whether better characterized as breaching his own promise or simply failing to fulfill a condition precedent, what is ultimately important about Livar’s actions is whether they relieved the government of the performance it promised in exchange for Livar’s promises. Importantly, Judge Vratil and I do not disagree that while the district court must ultimately adjudicate that key issue, it may do so after the government submits a sentencing recommendation that differs from what it promised under the agreement. More on that below. circuit and most of our sister circuits, which requires only that the government seek judicial ratification of its actions, not permission . It also imposes a new procedural requirement on the government that provides no additional benefit to the defendant. Second, I disagree with both of my colleagues as to the appropriate remedy. Judge Sanchez contends that the government breached the moment it acted inconsistently with its own obligations under the plea agreement without first seeking permission from the district court. Under his view, that breach tainted all subsequent proceedings, including the sentencing hearing itself. To avoid that supposed taint, he would vacate Livar’s sentence and remand for resentencing, and he goes out of his way to ensure that Livar is not left worse off than before—even though Livar, not the government, is the one demanding resentencing. If Judge Sanchez’s theory of breach was correct, that might very well be the prudent approach. But Judge Sanchez has gotten ahead of himself. The district court erred by sentencing Livar without resolving the government’s claim
[2] Judge Sanchez also cites
United States v. Arnett
,
[3] Judge Sanchez accuses me of advocating for a rule by which “an intentional breach by the government could be excused so long as the government feels justified by the defendant’s conduct.” That is not my rule. The question is not whether the “government feels justified,” but whether a court determines that the government was justified in departing from the plea agreement. The majority’s disagreement with Judge Sanchez is simply whether the district court must make that determination before the government departs from the plea agreement or whether, as is the contractual norm, it may do so after. required judicial determination at a hearing occurring after the government acts. Judge Sanchez defends the rule he proposes by insisting it is the same rule applied by five other circuits that have addressed the issue. Wrong again. All but one of the circuits invoked by Judge Sanchez in fact require only a judicial determination of a defendant’s breach if the defendant
[5]
See also United States v. Ataya
,
[6] The Tenth Circuit, then, is the only circuit cited by Judge Sanchez that
[7] In cases like these, where the relevant facts are not disputed, this court
could, of course, make the factual finding itself.
See, e.g.
,
United States
v. Gonzales
, 16 F.3d 985, 990–91 (9th Cir. 1993) (recognizing “the
district court’s role as factfinder in cases of alleged plea agreement
breaches” but nevertheless affirming the defendant’s appeal on the
merits because “the [government’s] breach [wa]s clear”). And in Livar’s
case, I do not imagine it would be all that difficult to do so. Oregon law
makes it a crime to “subject[] another to alarm by conveying a telephonic
… threat to inflict serious physical injury on that person ….” Or. Rev.
Stat. § 166.065(c). In his sentencing memorandum, Livar did not dispute
that the phone call occurred, nor did he appear to dispute the substance
of the call, arguing only that “[w]hile the government can argue that
additional facts should be considered by the [c]ourt …, the decision …
is left to the [c]ourt as sentencing judge.” It is thus not particularly
difficult for me to conclude on appeal that Livar’s conduct—which,
again, is apparently undisputed—violates Oregon’s prohibition on
If, on remand, the district court concluded that Livar did
not
breach his obligation under the plea agreement not to
commit a new crime, I agree with my panel colleagues that
under circuit precedent, it is irrelevant that the court signaled
its intent to sentence the defendant at the high end of the
range notwithstanding the government’s recommendation.
See Alcala-Sanchez
, 666 F.3d at 575 (quoting
Gunn v.
Ignacio
,
[1] As explained below, I agree with Judge Vratil that the appropriate
remedy is to remand with entry of judgment of time served and all other
terms and conditions to remain the same as the original judgment. recommending a mid-range sentence.
See United States v.
Alcala-Sanchez
,
