The defendant, Jeff Boyd, was convicted of a variety of drug-related crimes and sentenced to 50 years in prison. We affirmed,
Boyd renewed his
Apprendi
challenge (and added other contentions) in a motion that he filed in the district court under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, the federal-prisoner substitute for habeas corpus. The judge denied the motion. Regarding
Apprendi
he said that the failure to submit issues of drug type and quantity to the jury had been harmless, given the overwhelming evidence of the scope of the drug conspiracy.
United States v. Boyd,
No. 01 C 2086,
Had he captioned his motion a motion under section 2255, it would have had to be denied as a successive motion not permitted by the statute because it had not been certified by us, in advance of the filing, as falling within an exception to the statutory ban on successive section 2255 motions. 28 U.S.C. § 2255(h);
United States v. Prevatte,
Most of the cases involve captions other than Rule 35(a). But
United States v. Canino,
Yet Rule 35(a) recaptionings present complexities that other recaptionings do not, as illustrated by an earlier case in our court that might seem (though it is not) inconsistent with
Canino
and
Rivera: United States v. Mazak,
Not that it is always easy to distinguish a bona fide Rule 35(a) motion from a section 2255 motion. Section 2255 can after all be used to challenge a sentence and not just the conviction that underlies it. E.g.,
Bifulco v. United States,
banc). But there is a helpful distinction in the rule’s text: “the court may correct an illegal sentence at any time and may correct a sentence imposed in an illegal manner within the time provided herein for the reduction of sentence.” The “time provided” is 120 days from the time the sentence becomes final. Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(b) (1983). For later (“at any time”) motions, like Boyd’s, the court’s authority is limited to correcting sentences that are illegal even if there was no irregularity in the sentencing proceeding; the court may not “re-examine errors occurring at the trial or other proceedings prior to the imposition of sentence.”
Hill v. United States,
A potential problem is that section 2255 and Rule 35(a) overlap. It is unclear whether
any
challenge to a sentence under the rule couldn’t also be based on the statute, which allows a federal prisoner to challenge his sentence on the ground that it “was imposed in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States, or that the [sentencing] court was without jurisdiction to impose such sentence, or that the sentence was in excess of the maximum authorized by law, or that the sen
But that can be of no help to Boyd. His motion was based on Apprendi and thus on an alleged error that occurred in the proceedings prior to the imposition of sentence and so was beyond the reach of a Rule 35(a) motion made after 120 days. The district judge was therefore right to reject the so-called Rule 35(a) motion — it was really a successive section 2255 motion.
But as we explained in the
Canino
case, he should have dismissed the motion rather than denied it.
The denial of the motion is modified accordingly, and as modified is
Affirmed.
