The defendant, Frank Becker, appeals the district court’s denial of his motion to correct a claimed clerical error in his prison sentence. Becker complains that the court’s written commitment order is inconsistent with its original sentence, which he argues is significantly shorter in duration. We affirm.
I. Background
Becker is serving seventy-two months in prison after being convicted of attempting to evade income taxes and failing to file his tax returns. 26 U.S.C. §§ 7201 & 7203. In his earlier direct appeal Becker argued that his conviction for failing to file a tax return is a lesser included offense subsumed by the convictions for tax evasion, and thus his serving consecutive sentences on both convictions violated double jeopardy. In 1992 we rejected this argument and affirmed Becker’s conviction and sentence.
See United States v. Becker,
II. Analysis
Although not entirely explicit, we understand Becker’s motion to have sought a clerical-type correction, in the wording of the district court’s commitment order, as allowed pursuant to Rule 36 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The government argues that Becker waived his opportunity to make this correction. Generally, a defendant challenging a ruling by the district court must raise his claim at the “earliest feasible opportunity,” or risk waiving any later occasion to protest.
Dugan v. United States,
Clerical mistakes in judgments, orders or other parts of the record and errors in the record arising from oversight or omission may be corrected by the court at any time and after such notice, if any, as the court orders.
Since Rule 36 allows a defendant to raise clerical mistakes “at any time,” Becker argued to the district court (and here again on appeal) that review of his sentence remains open, notwithstanding the lateness of his protest., To the extent that Becker is attempting to argue that the court’s written commit
Becker believes that his commitment order must be rewritten to reflect, as he believes, the original term of his sentence as pronounced from the bench. The alleged clerical discrepancy between the sentence and the later-written commitment order concerns which terms of incarceration are to be served concurrently and which consecutively. Specifically, Becker argues that the following excerpt from the transcript of the sentencing hearing shows that the court pronounced one year concurrent sentences with respect to Counts 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10: “It is the judgment of this Court that he receive on Counts 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 a sentence of one year.” We note, however, that the following text of the commitment order required one consecutive year for each of Counts 2 and 4, concurrent to one consecutive year for each of Counts 6, 8, and 10: “TWELVE (12) MONTHS on each counts 2, 4, 6, 8, 10; custody on counts 6, 8, 10 to be served concurrently with each other but consecutive to counts 2 and 4....” In response to Becker’s claim of an alleged inconsistency, (created by, as he argues, a clerical error of adding of the word consecutive in the commitment order), the court issued the following explanation:
It was the intent of the Court to impose six years in custody and it was also the statement imposing the sentence. The written order of judgment and commitment is in error, ... it will be corrected to show that Counts 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 are to run consecutive to Count 11 and to show that the sentences on Counts 6, 8, and 10 are to run consecutively to each other and concurrently to the sentences on Counts 2 and 4.
See Minute Order of January 11, 1994. Becker still contends that the commitment order is inconsistent with the court’s pronounced sentence.
If an inconsistency exists between an oral and the later written sentence, the sentence pronounced from the bench controls.
United States v. Daddino,
We understand how on the surface there might appear to be a difference between the pronounced and written sentencing orders— if we are to read the excerpts cited by the defendant in isolation. We believe, however, that when the sentencing transcript is read in the whole, its meaning becomes clear and consistent with the court’s later-written commitment order:
THE COURT: It is the judgment of this Court that [Becker] receive on Counts 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 a sentence of one year. The sentences on Count 6, 8, and 10 are to run concurrent with the counts on 2 and 4. All of those counts are:
DEFENSE COUNSEL: You mean 11 and 12, Your Honor?
THE COURT: No, 2 and 4. All of those counts are to run consecutive to Count 11.
The above dialogue demonstrates that the court ordered the defendant to serve one-year sentences on counts 6, 8, and 10, and ordered that sentence to run concurrent with the sentences on counts 2 and 4. Becker disputes, however, that the court imposed consecutive one-year sentences on each of the counts 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10. While the sentencing order given from the bench stated that Becker was to “receive on Counts 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 a sentence of one year,” Becker wishes to interpret this to mean that the court imposed no more than 12 months collectively. Then by adding this 12 months to the 36 months on the other counts not here disputed, Becker concludes that the sentence the court imposed was forty-eight months (rather than the seventy-two months recorded in the court’s confinement order). Becker’s sole support of his clerical-error position is the appearance of the word
consecutive
in the commitment order, (notably absent in that portion of the bench order as recorded in the transcript), and that generally, in the absence of clear language to the contrary, sentences imposed on more than one offense at the same time are presumed to run concurrently.
See e.g., United States v. Chasmer,
When interpreting a sentencing order, if the hearing transcript is unambiguous we need not resort to extrinsic evidence such as the written sentencing order, the defendant’s understanding of the sentence or the judge’s intent.
See United States v. Villano,
While the trial court may have stated the original prison sentence more directly, we conclude that the trial court imposed a consecutive three-year sentence on Counts 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 by running the one-year sentences imposed on the first two counts concurrent with the one-year sentences imposed on the last three. Adding all this to the thirty-six months imposed on the other counts not in dispute, the total is seventy-two months of imprisonment, the same as is recorded on the written commitment order. No clerical error exists; the word “consecutive ”, as used in the commitment order, was not inadvertently inserted by a clerical oversight. Finally, Becker raises a number of constitutional challenges to the district court’s decision to revise its commitment order; however, as the sentence pronounced from the bench is consistent with the court’s later written commitment order, we need not address Becker’s other complaints.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Relying on our 1992 holding the government may have been able to assert the "law of the case" as a definitive answer to Becker’s motion here. We may not consider, however, a matter which could have been raised at the trial court but was not.
McKnight v. General Motors Corp.,
. Criminal Rule 36 allows a court to correct "clerical errors.” If a defendant is in fact arguing that his problem lies in the translation from the district court’s original sentence to the formal written commitment order, then Rule 36 applies; but if the defendant is raising a problem that is substantive in nature, even if it is mechanical or computational — then Rule 35 governs.
United States v. Griffin,
