UNITED STATES v. BENCHIMOL
No. 84-1165
Supreme Court of the United States
May 13, 1985
471 U.S. 453
In Aрril 1976, respondent pleaded guilty in the United States District Court for the Northern District of California to an information charging him with one count of mail fraud in violation of
The District Court that had received the guilty plea also heard respondent‘s application for collateral relief, and deniеd it. The Court of Appeals by a divided vote reversed that judgment, holding that “when the government undertakes to recommend a sentence pursuant to a plea bargain, it has the duty to state its recommendation clearly to the sentencing judge and to express the justification for it.” 738 F. 2d 1001, 1002 (CA9 1984). There is some slight disagreement about thе facts surrounding the terms of the plea bargain and its presentation to the District Court, a situation entirely understandable by reason of the lapse of more thаn five years between the entry of the guilty plea and the hearing on the request for collateral relief. The Court of Appeals had this view of the facts:
“Bеnchimol agreed to plead guilty. The government concedes that in exchange for the guilty plea it promised to recommend probation with restitution. However, at the sentencing hearing, the presentence report incorrectly stated that the government would stand silent. Benchimol‘s counsel informed the court that the govern
ment instead recommended probation with restitution. The Assistant United States Attorney then stated: ‘That is an accurate representation.‘” Ibid.
Thе Court of Appeals concluded that the Government had breached its plea bargain because, although the Assistant United States Attorney concurred with defense counsel‘s statement that the Government recommended probation with restitution, it “made no effort to explain its reasons for agreeing to recommend a lenient sentence but rather left an impression with the court of less-than-enthusiastic support for leniency.” Ibid.
We think this holding misconceives the effeсt of the relevant rules and of the applicable case law.
It may well be that the Government in a particular case might commit itself to “enthusiastically” make a particular recommendatiоn to the court, and it may be that the Government in a particular case might agree to explain to the court the reasons for the Government‘s making a рarticular recommendation. But respondent does not contend, nor did the Court of Appeals find, that the Government had in fact undertaken to do either of these things here. The Court of Appeals simply held that as a matter of law such an undertaking was to be implied from the Government‘s agreement to recommеnd a particular sentence. But our view of
For these reasons, we conclude that there was simply no default on the part of the Government in this case, to say nothing of a default remediable on collateral attack under
Reversed.*
JUSTICE STEVENS, concurring in the judgment.
Whether or not the Government complied with
Accordingly, I concur in the judgment.
JUSTICE BRENNAN, with whom JUSTICE MARSHALL joins, dissenting.
The Court today continues its unsettling practice of summаrily reversing decisions rendered in favor of criminal defendants, based not on broad principle but on idiosyncratic
