The government’s motion to dismiss this appeal with respect to two counts of an indictment raises potentially recurrent questions not previously decided in a reported opinion.
Count 1 charged Bina Patel with conspiracy to commit arson (18 U.S.C. § 371), Count 2 with arson (18 U.S.C. § 844(i)), and Count 7 with making a false statement to a federal agent (18 U.S.C. § 1001). A jury found Patel guilty on these three counts only. On October 24, 1986, the judge sentenced her on Counts 1 and 2 (to 30 days in prison, and to five years of probation plus 250 hours of community service, respectively), but deferred sentencing her on Count 7 and also entered a stay of execution of the sentences on Counts 1 and 2, saying that he would decide whether to grant bail *709 pending appeal after he disposed of Count 7. Five days later the clerk of the district court docketed the judge’s order of October 24 reciting the judgment of conviction and the sentences on Counts 1 and 2. On December 1 the judge sentenced Patel to a term of probation on Count 7 to run concurrently with the sentences on Counts 1 and 2. Later he granted bail pending appeal. On November 21 he had entered a decree against Patel and her husband forfeiting a $200,000 bond, the husband (a defendant with his wife in the criminal case) having become a fugitive from justice.
On December 10, Patel’s counsel filed the following notice of appeal:
PLEASE TAKE NOTICE that the defendant Bina Patel appeals to the Circuit [sic] Court of Appeals of [sic] the Seventh Circuit from the bond forfeiture liability judgment of $200,000.00 and her conviction and sentence imposed by the Hon. James Moran in the United States District Court for the Northern District [of Illinois] on December 1, 1986.
Despite the wording of the notice, the brief filed by Patel’s counsel challenges Patel’s convictions on Counts 1 and 2 as well as on Count 7. When the government received the brief, it asked us to dismiss the appeal with regard to those two counts.
The government makes two arguments. The first is that the sentences meted out on Counts 1 and 2 on October 24 were a final judgment (the sentence in a criminal case is the final judgment,
Parr v. United States,
In
Corey v. United States,
The government’s second argument for the dismissal of Patel’s appeal is that the wording of her notice of appeal confines the appeal to the December 1 sentence (plus the bond forfeiture, but that is not mentioned in the appeal brief). Rule 3(c) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure provides that the notice of appeal “shall designate the judgment, order or part thereof appealed from.” We have held, following the Supreme Court’s decision in
Foman v. Davis,
It is possible that by referring to the “sentence imposed ... on December 1,” rather than to the judgment of December 1, Patel’s lawyer really did mean to appeal from just the last of the three sentences, though he vigorously denies this and it seems unlikely, if only because the last sentence was the lightest. But in any event ambiguities are resolved against forfeiture of the right to appeal from a criminal judgment.
The motion to dismiss the appeal is
Denied.
