Lead Opinion
Dеfendant-Appellant Brian Melancon seeks review of his sentence to 108 months’ imprisonment for conspiring to distribute methylenedioxymethamphetamine. Because Melancon waived his right to appeal as part of his plea agreement, we dismiss.
Appellant was indicted for conspiring to distribute methylenedioxymethampheta-mine (MDMA or “ecstasy”) in September 1990. Appellant reached a plea agreement with the Government by July 1991. Pursuant to that agreement, Appellant pleaded guilty to conspiracy to distribute MDMA and the parties stipulated that he had possessed 36,000 tablets of the drug. Also as part of the plea agreement, Appellant waived his right to appeal his sentence. The Government contends that in light of this waiver, we should dismiss Appellant’s appeal. We agree.
The right to appeal is a statutory right, not a constitutional right. Abney v. United States,
Appellant does not assert that his waiver was anything less than voluntary and, after de novo review of the record, we are satisfied that it was informed. As directed by Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, the district court held a hearing at which it reviewed the charges and plea agreement with Appellant and his counsel. The review, of the plea agreement included the following colloquy concerning Appellant’s waiver of the right to appeal:
The Court: [You understand] that paragraph six of this and this is very important that you knowingly, that means you know what you are doing, and by reasoning, have exercised the choice to intelligently and voluntarily would waive the right to appeal the sentence imposed in this case on any ground, including the right of appeal conferred by Title 18, United States Code, section 3742, in exchange for the concessions made by the United States of America in this agreement, do you understand that?
Defendant Melancon: Yes, sir.
The district court informed Appellant of the statutory maximum penalty of twenty years, the imposition of supervised release, and the use of the sentencing guidelines. The court also stated that it was not bound by any agreement between the parties regarding sentencing and explained its authority to depart from the guideline sentencing range.
Although Appellant’s plea agreеment differs from the one enforced in Sierra in that Appellant was not promised a specific sentence, the uncertainty of Appel
Appellant notes that at his sentencing hearing, the district court advised him that he had the right to appeal his conviction and sentence. He contends that this misstatement negates the knowingness of his waiver and proves that the district court did not believe the waiver was valid. The court’s statements, however, were made four months after Appellant entered into the plea agreement with the Government; they could not have influenced Appellant’s decision to plead guilty. Furthermore, any alleged uncertainty on behalf of the district court as to the legality of the agreement does not affect our determination that Appellant’s waiver was voluntary, knowing, and permissible. See Rutan,
Finally, Appellant argues that the Government relinquished its right to enforce the agreement because it failed to correct the court’s mistake at sentencing. The Government’s inaction, though not commendable, did not constitute a breach of the agreement. The Government has timely notified this Court of Appellant’s waiver, and thus has preserved its right to enforce the agreement. But see United States v. Vogt,
We hold that a defendant may, as part of a valid plea agreement, waive his statutory right to appeal his sentence. Appellant voluntarily and knowingly entered such an agreement, waiving his right to appeal. His appeal is, therefore, DISMISSED.
Nothing in this opinion, however, should be interpreted as indicating that a district court is not free to determine whether plea waivers of the right to appeal are unacceptable. We recognize that there may be sound policy reasons for refusing to accept such waivers, and that district courts might disagree with the policy choice made by the court in this case to accept a plea agreement appeal waiver. Today, we simply decide that this district court operated within its discrеtion in accepting the plea agreement appeal waiver; and we note that a district court’s refusal to accept such a waiver likewise would be within its discretion. SO ORDERED.
ATTACHMENT
IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT
No. 91-4342
(Summary Calendar)
United States of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, versus Consuleo (sic) Sierra, Defendant-Appellant.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas (B-90-14-CR, B-91-18-CR)
(December 6, 1991)
Before JONES, DUHÉ and WIENER, Circuit Judges.
After being sentenced pursuant to conviction on a plea of guilty for possession with intent to distribute marijuana, Defendant-Appellant, Consuelo Sierra, appeals her sentence despite a provision in her plea agreement waiving her right to appeal in exchange for a limitation on her maximum prison sentence. Finding that her waiver was fully informed and voluntary and that her sentence did not exceed the maximum agreed to in the plea agreement, we dismiss Sierra’s appeal.
I.
Sierra pleaded guilty to a one-count information charging her with possession of marijuana with intent to distribute. As part of the plea agreement the government limited Sierra’s exposure to 36 months’ imprisonment and Sierra waived her right to appeal her conviction and sentence.
The probation officer preparing Sierra’s Presentence Investigation Report (PSR) recommended a base offense level of 26 because he found that the evidence supported the government’s position that Sierra negotiated the sale of 375 pounds of marijuana to an undercover agent. The probation officer also recommended denying the two-level decrease for acceptance of responsibility. Sierra filed written objections to the PSR, challenging the amount of marijuana attributed to her and the denial of the reduction for acceptance of responsibility. The probation officer did not make any adjustments to his recommendations.
At sentencing, Sierra again objected to the amount of marijuana attributed to her and to the denial of the two-level reduction for acceptance of responsibility. The district court found that Sierra could have reasonably produced the negotiated amount of marijuana and denied the first objection, but granted the two-level decrease for acceptance of responsibility. Sierra’s resulting base offense level of 24 and criminal history category of I yielded a guideline range of 51 to 63 months. In accordance with the plea agreement, however, the district court departed from the guideline range to sentence Sierra to 24 months’ imprisonment, 5 years’ supervised release, and a $50 special assessment. Sierra filed a timely notice of appeal.
II.
On appeal the government argues that Sierra’s appeal should be dismissed because she waived the right to appeal her conviction and sentence as part of her plea agreement. The right to appeal is a statutory right not a constitutional right. Abney v. United States,
Sierra’s waiver of her right to appeal her conviction and sentence was informed. The record establishes that Sierra was examined and found to be competent to stand trial; that she was represented by counsel and was satisfied with that representation; that she negotiated a plea agreement limiting her exposure to 36 months’ imprisonment although the statutory maximum was 5 years’ imprisonment; that she was entitled to withdraw her guilty plea if she was sentenced to more than 36 months’ imprisonment; that her counsel stated on the record that Sierra understood the terms of the plea agreement; that the district court went through the plea agreement with Sier
III.
Sierra’s decision to waive her right to appeal was fully informed and voluntary, and the consideration she received for her waiver — limitation of her prison term to 36 months — was honored. Her appeal is DISMISSED.
Notes
. The seventh circuit has also upheld waivers of the right to aрpeal. The waiver in question was not part of a plea agreement, but was made in a motion to dismiss a previous appeal. Johnson v. United States,
. The district court ultimately imposed a sentence within the range described. We do not address, therefore, the question whether Appellant knowingly waived the right to appeal a sentence contrary to the district court’s assurances.
Local Rule 47.5 provides: "The publication of opinions that have no precedential value and merely decide particular cases on the basis of well-settled principles of law imposes needless expense on the public and burdens on the legal profession.” Pursuant to that Rule, the court has determined that this opinion should not be published.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially:
I concur specially because I cannot dissent. This panel is bound by the unpublished, per curiam opinion, United States v. Sierra, No. 91-4342 (5th Cir. Dec. 6, 1991) [
In Sierra, this Circuit adopted the rule previously promulgated in other circuits— that guilty plea provisions calling upon the defendant to waive his or her right to appeal are valid as long as this waiver is “informed and voluntary.” The following syllogism, as reiterated in today’s opinion, underlies this rule: “The right to appeal is a statutory right, not a constitutional right.[ ] The Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized that a defendant may waive constitutional rights as part of a plea bargaining agreement^ ] It follows that a defendant may also waive statutory rights, including the right to appeal.” (citations omitted) (emphasis added)
In addition to Sierra, today’s majority opinion relies on the decisions in three other circuits to support the conclusion that the waiver at issue in this case is acceptable. But only the Eighth Circuit opinion in United States v. Rutan,
It matters not that this is a drug case. It matters not that this (attempted) appeal may well be without merit on its substantive points. It matters that we take care to see that the so called “war on drugs” not count among its casualties constitutional integrity.
I. Sierra’s Futuristic “Knowing and Intelligent” Waiver
As an initial matter, I do not think that a defendant can ever knowingly and intelligently waive, as part of a plea agreement, the right tо appeal a sentence that has yet to be imposed at the time he or she enters into the plea agreement; such a “waiver” is inherently uninformed and unintelligent. The Sierra Court followed -the Fourth and Ninth Circuits in holding that a waiver of the right to appeal one’s sentence is “knowing” and “informed” as long as the accused realizes that the effect of this waiver is that he or she will not be able to appeal. Accordingly, today’s majority opinion states (quoting United, States v. Rutan,
In the typical waiver cases, the act of waiving the right occurs at the moment the waiver is executed. Fоr example: one waives the right to silence, and then speaks; one waives the right to have a jury determine one’s guilt, and then admits his or her guilt to the judge. In these cases, the defendant knows what he or she is about to say, or knows the nature of the crime to which he or she pleads guilty. See Marshall v. Lonberger,
Like the Court in Sierra, today my colleagues cite a typical waiver case — Newton v. Rumery,
The situation is completely different when one waives the right to appeal a Guidelines-circumscribed sentence before the sentence has been imposed. What is really being waived is not some abstract right to appeal, but the right to correct an erroneous application of the Guidelines or an otherwise illegal sentence.
In categorically citing cases concerning the waiver of the right to appeal known quantities, to support the proposition that
II. The Sierra Rule Moves Sentencing Out of (Over)Sight
The “Sierra rule” reiterated today has roots in still another fallacy of Accident— one embraced without question by a majority of the Fourth Circuit in United States v. Clark,
28 U.S.C. § 1291 and the provisions of 18 U.S.C. § 3742 cannot be understood as mere conferrals of individual rights to appeal a sentence under the Sentencing Guidelines. Rather, these statutory provisions, along with the Sentencing Guidelines themselves, speak directly to the power of the federal courts' and should be read as imposing limitations upon individual and judicial authority. Such limitations cannot be “waived” by parties. Compare United States v. Willis,
It is a curious rule that says one cannot waive a statutory right to a speedy trial, on the one hand, and at the same time says that one can waive a statutory and fundamentally important right to an appeal, on the other. True, an unconditional guilty plea — made knowingly, voluntarily, and with the benefit of competent counsel— functionally waives all nonjurisdictional defects that have occurred during pre-plea proceedings against the defendant. United States v. Jackson,
It is especially important to realize that the systemic value protected by the non-waivability of Speedy Trial Act provisions (absent a guilty plea) is identical to that secured by plea bargains — i.e., “speedy justice.” Compare United States v. Willis,
Despite the majority’s assertion that “[Appellant Melancon] knew that the court would [set his sentence] in accordance with the sentencing guidelines....”, Appellant Melancon had no such assurance — as the large and expanding universe of law concerning district court applications of the Sentencing Guidelines and appellate court review of the same makes clear.
A sentencing court may depart upward or downward from the applicable guidelines, to impose a sentence outside the “guideline range,” if the court finds that an aggravating or mitigating circumstance exists that was not adequately taken into consideration by thе Sentencing Commission in formulating the Guidelines. 18 U.S.C. § 3553(b). But this Circuit has been
In brief: every erroneous application of the Guidelines frustrates the complex policy goals that Congress and the United States Sentencing Commission intended for the Guidelines to further.
III. The Sierra Rule Neuters Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11
While today’s majority opinion addresses to some extent the district court’s performance pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11 (Rule 11), such an analysis is not commanded by the majority opinion. And the Sierra rule actually appears to sanction district court disavowal of Rule 11.
District court satisfaction of the “core concerns” of Rule 11 is supposed to help guarantee that “[a] plea of guilty and the ensuing conviction comprehend all of the factual and legal elements necessary to sustain a binding, final judgment of guilt and a lawful sentence.” United States v. Broce,
Appellant Melancon’s plea agreement says that he waived his “right to appeal the sentence imposed in []his case on any ground, including any appeal right conferred by Title 18, United States Code, Section 3742.”
Aside from the facts that the Sierra rule (1) misapprehends the present-time nature of a knowing and intelligent waiver, (2) offends judicial integrity by foreclosing from this Court the ability to directly review errors surrounding a defendant’s “conviction and sentence,” and (3) contravenes the congressional intent underlying the Sentencing Guidelines {i.e., to limit the рower of the federal district courts with respect to sentencing), this rule reflects the imposition of an unconstitutional condition upon a defendant’s decision to plead guilty. Unconstitutional conditions occur
when the government offers a benefit on condition that the recipient perform or forego an activity that a preferred constitutional right normally protects from governmental interference. The “exchange” thus has two components: the conditioned government benefit on the one hand and the affected constitutional right on the other.16
It is true that in pleading guilty to a charge knowingly, voluntarily, and with the benefit of competent counsel, one waives all but a few grounds on which to appeal. This is because a guilty plea admits all the elements of a formal criminal charge and works to waive nonjurisdictional defects occurring prior to the guilty plea’s execution. See Barrientos v. United States,
With a “Sierra Waiver,” the government grants to the criminal defendant the benefit of a plea agreement only on the condition that the defendant accept the bootstrapped abdication of his or her right to appeal. This is at least unacceptable, even if the government may withhold the benefit (i.e., the plea agreement) altogether. See United States v. Rodriguez,
As this Circuit recognized recently:
Prosecutorial vindictiveness exists “if the prosecution acts arguably to punish the exercise of [the right to appeal], by increasing the measure of jeopardy by bringing additional or more severe charges, or where the judge assesses a larger penalty upon subsequent conviction for the same offense following an earlier reversal.”19
Given that waivers of the Sierra sort are systemically flawed (not to mention that they are inherently uninformed and unintelligent), they do indeed “pose a realistic likelihood of ‘vindictiveness.’ ”
Bordenkircher v. Hayes,
In short: the Supreme Court has found certain actions to be so likely to result from prosecutorial misconduct that the Court has “presume[d]” them to be motivated by improper vindictive impulses. United States v. Goodwin,
V. What “Good” are These Waivers?
Even if I did not consider the sort of futuristic waiver at issue in this case to be inherently uninformed, unintelligent and involuntary, I would think it unacceptable because any benefits it might confer are too minuscule to overcome its dеleterious consequences.
Most fundamentally: there is no reason to believe the waiver of appellate rights is an indispensable part of plea bargaining. Plenty of plea agreements were made prior to the reign of these appellate right waiver clauses.
Second: if the Sierra rule represents the collective opinion of the members of this Court that these waivers will stem the tide of appeals in this type case, the Court is engaging in wishful thinking at best and self-delusion at least. Such appeals will simply come equipped with additional arguments about whether one’s right to appeal has been waived “intelligently, knowingly and voluntarily.” And because the Sierra rule serves to force Rule 11 complaints into habeas corpus pleadings — see United States v. Rutan,
Yet, assuming that Efficiency can be heard to advocate our adherence to the Sierra rule, her argument is, at best, weak. Any small “gain” in “speed,” “economy”, or “finality” derived from Sierra’s continued sovereignty is overwhelmеd by the rule’s exorbitant, unacceptable cost to judicial and congressional integrity, and individual constitutional rights. Cf. Newton v. Rumery,
VI. Conclusion
For the reasons I have addressed, I concur merely in the panel’s judgment, and only because stare decisis says I must. I strongly urge the Circuit, en banc, to examine the Sierra rule — and to disclaim it. The Sierra rule is a legal woods colt whose questionable ancestry will surely result in offspring of which this Circuit will not be proud.
Chief Judge, Eastern District of Texas, sitting by designation.
. See Wilson v. Taylor,
. Aside from the question of Sierra's wisdom, or lack thereof, I note too the problems inherent in giving precedential effect to unpublished opinions. See 5th Cir.R. 47.5.3. Since, by definition, a decision is unpublished only if it "has no precedential value" (5th Cir.R. 47.5.1), making such a decision binding runs the risk of having it unintentionally make new law. Sierra does not, in fact, merely reiterate settled principles of law, but rather presumes to settle — through stare decisis — the unsettled. This (attempted) appeal "is a prime example of the complications caused by this Court’s adherence to the rule that unpublished opinions are binding precedent." Pruitt v. Levi Strauss & Co.,
Because the Sierra opinion is unpublished and unavailable, Appellant Melancon may have been completely unaware that this Court had embraced the rule articulated therein. (While the government managed to cite Sierra in its brief, the opinion cannot be found in the Federal Reporter and cannot be obtained through the two public computerized legal networks.) Yet Sierra does not simply reaffirm the law of the Circuit. The Fifth Circuit case Sierra cites for the proposition that ”[t]o be valid, the waiver of the right to appeal must be an informed waiver" — Arrastia v. United States,
. "... arguments, like men, are often pretenders.” Plato, quoted in Irving M. Copi & Carl Cohen, Introduction to Logic 91 (8th ed. 1990).
. The fallacious syllogism embraced in Sierra— and readopted in today’s opinion — was created in the Fourth Cirсuit's ill-conceived case, United States v. Wiggins,
. And the Seventh Circuit habeas corpus case cited by the majority — Johnson v. United States,
Johnson, id. at 204 (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
. See 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a)(1) & (2); 18 U.S.C. § 3742(e).
. See generally Irving M. Copi & Carl Cohen, Introduction to Logic 100-101 (8th ed. 1990) ("when we apply a generalization to individual cases that it does not properly govern, we commit the fallacy of Accident”).
. See id. at 101 (regarding the fallacy of Accident: "there is no fallacy more insidious than that of treating a statement which in many connections is not misleading as if it were true always and without qualification.") (quoting H.W.B. Joseph, An Introduction to Logic (New York: Oxford University Press, 1906)).
. I note also that the majority's cited case, Johnson v. United States,
. Legal principles relative to district court application of the Guidelines and appellate court review of the same are in fact so unsettled (yet important) that a special reporter has been created to track and explain developments in this area. See generally Federal Sentencing Reporter (published for the Vera Institute of Justice by the University of California Press) (edited by Emory and Yale Law School Professors Marc Miller and Daniel J. Freed).
. While the United States Sentencing Commission is "housed" in the Judicial Branch, it is a body independent of that Branch. See generally Mistretta v. United States,
. Moreover, the majority’s failure to address the precise contours of acceptability relative to a "Sierra Waiver" {i.e., "We do not address ... the question whether Appellant knowingly waived the right to appeal a sentence contrary to the district court’s assurances”) is inconsistent with principles of judicial economy — in light of the faсt that Appellant Melancon’s plea agreement says unequivocally that he waived his "right to appeal the sentence imposed in [ ]his case on any ground, including any appeal right conferred by Title 18, United States Code, Section 3742.” Plea Agreement of March 13, 1991 in United States v. Brian Melancon, E.D.Tex. No. l:90-CR-65(4), at paragraph 6 (emphasis added).
.Non-compliance with the non-core requirements of Rule 11, or merely inadequate or “less than letter perfect” treatment of a core concern, may be excused under a harmless error analysis. United States v. Bachynsky,
. See generally McCarthy v. United States,
. Plea Agreement of March 13, 1991 in United States v. Brian Melancon, E.D.Tex.Crim. No. l:90-CR-65(4), at paragraph 6 (emphasis added).
.Kathleen M. Sullivan, Unconstitutional Conditions, 102 Harv.L.R. 1415, 1421-1422 (1989) (emphasis in original). See also id. at 1419:
[The doctrine of unconstitutional conditions] cannot define the content of constitutional liberties, rank their importance, or set the level of state justification demanded for their infringement. But assuming that some set of constitutionally preferred liberties has been agreed upon, and that burdens on those liberties require especially strong justification, unconstitutional conditions doctrine performs an important function.
Accordingly, commentators have overwhelmingly supported the doctrine's basic premises. Id. at 1415 (citing the works of several imminent scholars for this proposition)!
. See generally Griffin v. Illinois,
(1956) (recognizing the fundamental fairness role that the appellate review process plays in the criminal justice system); Douglas v. California,372 U.S. 353 ,83 S.Ct. 814 ,9 L.Ed.2d 811 (1963). Cf. Ross v. Moffitt,417 U.S. 600 ,94 S.Ct. 2437 ,41 L.Ed.2d 341 (1974). See abo Arrastia v. United States,455 F.2d 736 , 739 (5th Cir.1972) (“[The right to a direct appeal] is a right which is fundamental to the concept of due process of law.”) (citations omitted).
. See generally Griffin v. IllinoS,
. United States v. Chagra,
. Blackledge v. Perry,
.See e.g., Miller v. Fenton,
