On this appeal from the denial of a motion for new trial in a criminal case on the ground of newly discovered evidence, we write primarily to clarify the pertinent date from which to measure the two-year period for filing such a motion. Defendant-appellant Domingo Reyes appeals from the June 27, .1994, order of the District Court for the
Background
Reyes was arrested for his role in a 1989 narcotics transaction in the Bronx, principally involving Oswaldo Arango, José Munoz, a person identified only as “Juan,” and one unidentified person. The investigation was conducted by a unit of the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) known as Group 33. The Government’s evidence, elicited primarily from José Freddy Diaz, a DEA informant, permitted the jury to find that Diaz, posing as a buyer of cocaine, came in contact with a Colombian drug seller, whose name he did not learn. With DEA agents observing, Diaz met on a sidewalk with the Colombian, “Juan,” Arango, Munoz, and the appellant Reyes. Surveillance agents later observed Arango, Munoz, and Reyes checking the street and peering into parked cars, apparently to determine if law enforcement officers were in the neighborhood.
.Diaz spoke with Reyes, who offered to deliver the cocaine Diaz was trying to purchase. Diaz also recounted a conversation in a restaurant with the Colombian concerning a cocaine sale. During the conversation, Reyes and others kept going outside to see if law enforcement officers were in the area. Ultimately Munoz took Diaz to á nearby garage, where a quantity of cocaine was displayed. The Colombian and others from the restaurant, including Reyes, waited outside the garage. Upon a signal from Diaz, DEA agents arrested the suspects and seized the cocaine.
A jury convicted Reyes of conspiring to distribute cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846, and acquitted him of aiding and abetting the distribution. We affirmed his conviction by summary order.
United States v. Reyes,
Discussion
1. Timeliness
Criminal Rule 33 provides that, “a motion for a new trial based on the ground of newly discovered evidence may be made only before or within two years after final judgment.” Reyes filed his motion on April 28, 1993. The District Court concluded that the motion was untimely because it was filed more than two years after the April 26, 1991, summary order affirming the conviction. However, this Court’s mandate issued on May 31, 1991. The narrow issue presented is whether, in the event of an appeal in a criminal case, the two-year period for a Rule 33 motion on the ground of newly discovered evidence runs from the date of the appellate court’s judgment or the date of its mandate. Those dates are generally not the same, as occurred in this case. The judgment is the document that states the dispositive action taken by the court of appeals,
1
and it becomes effective upon its entry on the docket of the, court of appeals.
See
Fed.R.App.P. 36;
of.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 58 (district court judgment effective when entered on docket).
2
Appellate- courts considering the computation of Rule 33’s two-year period with respect to appealed convictions have generally faced the issue whether the time runs from the entry of- the judgment
in the district court
or from a later date reflecting action by the court of appeals. These courts have uniformly looked to the date of action in the court of appeals.
See Romero v. United States,
The Government makes a substantial argument in favor of starting the two-year period, in the case of affirmed judgments, from the date of the court of appeals judgment. First, the Government cites two district court decisions stating that the time period runs from the date of the appellate court’s judgment.
See United States v. DeCarlo,
More significantly, the Government argues from the provisions of Rule 36 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. Rule 36 states that “notation of a judgment in the docket constitutes entry of the judgment.” This provision clarified prior practice, which had created uncertainty as to whether the effective date of an appellate court’s decision was the date it was rendered or the date the mandate was issued.
See Commissioner v. Estate of Bedford,
Finally, the Government urges us to select the appellate judgment date in order to avoid the longer time periods that might become available in those cases where the court of appeals exercises its discretion to stay issuance of the mandate pending Supreme Court review. See Fed.R.App.P. 41(b).
Though the issue is not free from doubt, we are persuaded to stay with the language of the earlier decisions that starts the two-year period from the date the mandate of the court of appeals issues. As the Eleventh Circuit has pointed out: ■
[A]t this point in time, we are confronted with a principle which has been accepted as the law and relied upon as such to provide continuity in judicial application. ...
Contrary to the government’s position, we place greater significance on the fact that neither Congress nor the SupremeCourt has intervened to “correct” this presumably “misguided” analysis applied in the cases which have reached the same conclusion as Harrison and Granza.
Dayton,
For all of these reasons, we hold that the time period for appellant’s Rule 33 motion began to run on May 31, 1991, the date our mandate issued on the prior appeal. The motion. filed April 28, 1993, was therefore timely.
II. The Merits
The District Court helpfully proceeded past its ruling on timeliness and considered the merits of appellant’s Rule 33 motion. The Court’s decision to deny the motion was well within its discretion.
See United States v. Mayo,
Appellant’s new evidence concerns allegations, arising in cases tried after his trial, that DEA Agent Hunt had lied with respect to aspects of his observations in these later cases.
See Delarosa v. United States,
93 Cr. 2724 (S.D.N.Y.1994);
Alvarez v. United States,
Despite the seriousness of the allegations about Agent Hunt’s testimony in other eases, Judge Duffy did not err in concluding that new evidence impeaching Hunt’s credibility did not warrant a new trial for Reyes. The new evidence did not refute any of Hunt’s testimony against Reyes,
see United States v. Sposato,
The order of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes
. In the Second Circuit, when a case is decided by a published opinion, a separate piece of paper is normally prepared containing the judgment of the Court of Appeals; when a case is decided by summary order, see 2d Cir.R. § 0.23, the order itself contains decretal language (“It is hereby Ordered, Adjudged, and Decreed”) and serves as the judgment.
. Date of entry of an appellate court’s judgment is especially relevant to the time for petitioning the Supreme Court for a writ of certiorari, which
. In the Second Circuit, when a case is decided by published opinion, the mandate is prepared , by making a certified copy of the judgment, affixing to the copy a legend reading "ISSUED AS MANDATE” and displaying the date of issuance, and attaching to the copy a copy of the Court's opinion. When a case is decided by summary order, the mandate is a certified copy of the order to which has been affixed a legend reading "ISSUED AS MANDATE” and displaying the date of issuance. All mandates are physically transmitted to the district court.
. The only contrary statement we have located is dictum in
United States v. Cross,
. In addition, several district courts in the Southern District of New York have said that the date - of the appellate court’s mandate governs, also in cases where nothing turned on whether the two-year period ran from that date or the date of the appellate court’s judgment.
See United States v. Biaggi,
. One court has stated, in a perplexing dictum, that, the time period runs from "the date when the appellate process is terminated,” suggesting that the date of the mandate governs, and then added that the Rule 33 motion must be made
. The Government also relies on
Susana,
