This сase is before us on direct appeal of a felony criminal conviction and sentence. It arises from a poorly drafted indictment and a botched plea agreement. Pursuant to that agreement, Douglas Frownfelter pled guilty to a single misdemeanor count of theft of government funds in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641. Unfortunately, the United States mischaracterized this misdemeanor count as a felony аnd Frownfelter initially accepted this mischaracterization. Frownfelter recognized the error prior to sentencing and urged the district court to impose a sentence for the misdemeanor to which he pled rather than the spurious felony count. The district court relied upon the government’s mischaracterization of the misdemeanor offense, convicted Frownfelter of a felony, and sentenced him to one year and one day in prison.
After Frownfelter paid restitution and began serving his sentence, 1 the United States conceded that Frownfelter had in fact pled guilty to a misdemeanor. Following this admission, the government argues that the plea agreement should be voided in its entirety and the original indictment should be reinstated under the contract principles of mutual mistake and frustration of purpose.
We decline the invitation to rescue the government from its own blunder. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we instead vacate the erroneous felony conviction and remand to the district court with instructions to enter a misdemeanor conviction and sentence Frownfelter accordingly.
I
The charges in this case stem from Frownfelter’s improper receipt of adoption subsidy pаyments from the Utah Division of Child and Family Services (“DCFS”). In 1995, Frownfelter and his wife adopted a special needs child. Three years later, the couple divorced, but retained joint custody of the child. Frownfelter was granted adoption subsidy assistance through DCFS, and began receiving monthly payments of $559 in October 2002. In January 2003, the child began living primarily with Frownfelter’s ex-wife, but Frownfel
The United States indicted Frownfelter on eleven counts of theft of government funds in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641. Section 641 provides:
Whoever embezzles, steals, purloins, or knowingly converts to his use or the use of another, or without authority, sells, conveys or disposes of any record, voucher, money, or thing of value of the United States or of any department or agency thereof, or any property made or being made under contract for the United States or any department or agency thereof; or
Whoever receives, conceals, or retains the same with intent to convert it to his use or gain, knowing it to have been embezzled, stolen, purloined or converted—
Shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both; but if the value of such property in the aggregate, combining amounts from all the counts for which the defendant is convicted in a single case, does not exceed the sum of $1,000, he shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or both.
The indictment contains three sections. The first ten paragrаphs detail the scheme, including a paragraph stating that Frownfelter received a total of $24,596 in improper assistance payments. The second section, comprising paragraphs eleven and twelve, expressly incorporates the first ten paragraphs and alleges:
DOUGLAS LEE FROWNFELTER, defendant herein, did willfully and knowingly embezzle, steal, purloin, and convert to his own use money of the United States, аnd a department and agency thereof (to wit: the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services), with the value of such money, in the aggregate, exceeding $1,000.00, in that defendant FROWNFELTER failed to notify the DCFS during the above period that R.F. no longer lived with him and he no longer provided financial support for R.F., resulting in the following adoption subsidy payments, among others, from the DCFS to defendant FROWNFELTER to which he was not entitled[.]
The finаl section of the indictment consists of a chart enumerating the eleven separate counts. Each of the eleven counts corresponds to the date of a specific adoption assistance payment and amount of the specific payment, $559 in each instance.
On July 30, 2008, Frownfelter and the United States entered into an agreement titled “Statement by Defendant in Advance of Guilty Plea.” One section of that agreement lists “[t]he only terms and conditions pertaining to this plea agreement.” In that section, Frownfelter agrees to plead guilty to count eleven of the indictment, to provide truthful financial information, and to pay restitution. The United States agrees to dismiss counts one through ten of the indictment, and not to seek further criminal charges for the conduct described in the indictment.
Count eleven charged Frownfelter with the receipt of $559 on October 2, 2006. Although § 641 defines the theft of less than $1,000 as a misdemeanor, the introductory sections of the Statement by Defendant in Advance of Guilty Plea characterize Frownfelter’s offense as a felony. At a change of plea hearing, the district court similarly asked Frownfelter whether he understood he was pleading to a felony, and Frownfelter responded in the affirmative.
At sentencing, the district court agreed with the government that the indictment alleged a felony under § 641 and concluded that Frownfelter was therefore guilty of a felony. The court sentenced Frownfelter to prison for one year and one day, just over the high end of his advisory Guidelinеs range, which was six to twelve months. On the government’s motion, the district court dismissed the other ten counts of the indictment. However, the government requested that the dismissal of these counts be conditioned “on the plea agreement being enforced in all its particulars,” arguing that “if [Frownfelter] successfully appeals his misdemeanor distinction, the United States would reserve the right, under those circumstances, to reinstate those counts because he would void the plea agreement.” The district court agreed to the condition.
Frownfelter now appeals, reasserting his contention that he pled guilty to only a misdemeanor.
II
A
Because the government has wisely conceded error, we need not linger on the merits of Frownfelter’s challenge. The issue of remedy, however, requires some attention. Frownfelter asks us to vacate his felony conviction and remand so that he can be convicted of, and sentenced for, a misdemeanor. Following its concession of error, the government now argues that the proper remedy is to void the plea agreement and reinstate all the counts from the original indictment, which it asserts would be consistent with the district court’s order at sentencing.
Frownfelter correctly points out that the government did not squarely raise this alternative remedy argument below. Although the government obliquely suggested at the sentencing hearing that a successful appeal by Frownfelter would somehow “void the plea agreement,” it did not specifically advance the frustration of purpose or mutual mistake theories.
See Lyons v. Jefferson Bank & Trust,
Given the difficulty of the forfeiture issue, and the relative ease with which we can decide the merits of the government’s position under any standard of review, we exercise our discretion to proceed directly
B
Plea agreements are interpreted according to general principles of contract law.
United States v. VanDam,
1
Under the contract doctrine of frustration of purpose, charges dismissed pursuant tо a plea agreement may be reinstated if a “reasonably unforeseeable event intervenes” such that a contracting party is deprived of the benefit that induced the agreement.
United States v. Bunner,
First, the frustrated purpose must have been “so completely the basis of the contract that, as both parties understand, without it the transaction would make little sense.” Second, the frustration must be such that the intervening event cannot fairly be regarded as within the risks the frustrated party assumed under the contract. Finally, “the non-occurrence of the frustrating event must have been a basic assumption on which the contract was made.”
Id. (quoting Restatement 2d Contracts § 265 cmt. a).
The government’s argument for frustration of purpose fails the Bunner test. As a threshold matter, the intervening event the government points to is Frownfelter’s citation to the plain language of the then four-year-old statute under which he was charged. 3 In contrast to the subsequent Supreme Court decision at issue in Bunner, the plain language of an extant statute is not a “reasonably unforeseeable event.”
Even if we were to ignore the foreseeability of the government’s proffered intervening event, the government has failed to satisfy at least two prongs of the
Bunner
test. First, the record does not support the United States’ contention that the felony/misdemeanor distinction was “so completely the basis of the contract that,
We further hold that the United States’ argument fails under the second element of the
Bunner
test. The intervening event advanced by the government— that Frownfelter would rely on the plain text of the statute of conviction — is a risk assumed by the government. Ambiguities in plea agreements are construed against the government.
VanDam,
2
The government also argues that the plea agreement is voidable on the basis of mutual mistakе. We recognized the applicability of this doctrine to plea agreements in
United States v. Lewis,
First, the mistake must relate to a basic assumption on which the contract was made. Second, the party seeking avoidance must show that the mistake has a material effect on the agreed exchange of performances. Third, the mistake must not be one as to which the party seeking relief bears the risk.
Restatement 2d Contracts § 152 cmt. a (internal quotation marks omitted).
The United States fails to satisfy all three elements of this test. First, and as described in Section II.B.l,
supra,
there was no mistake regarding the basic assumption on which the plea agrеement was made.
See
Restatement 2d Contracts § 152 cmt. b (“The term ‘basic assumption’ has the same meaning here as it does ... in connection with impracticability and frustration.” (citations omitted)). The basis of the agreement was that Frownfelter would plead guilty to count eleven and the government would move to dismiss the remaining counts. It is true that both Frownfelter and the United States originally believed that count elevеn was a felony. But nothing in the language of the plea agreement indicates that the distinction between misdemeanor and felony was a basic assumption of the plea agreement; to the contrary, the section that includes “[t]he only terms and conditions pertaining to this plea agreement” is entirely silent on the issue. The government has not provided any basis to conclude that the
Second, the government does not show the mistake had a material effect on the agreed exchange.
A party cannot avoid a contract merely because both parties were mistaken as to a basic assumption on which it was made. He must, in addition, show that the mistake has a material effect on the agreed exchange of performances. It is not enough for him to prove that he would not have made the contract had it not been for the mistake. He must show that the resulting imbalance in the agreed exchange is so severe that he can not fairly be required to carry it out.
Restatement 2d Contracts § 152 cmt. c. The United States falls short of meeting this element for the same reason it loses on the first: the government wholly fails to explain how the felony/misdemeanor distinction is a сrucial component of the bargain, much less how the distinction renders the “resulting imbalance in the agreed exchange is so severe that [the government] can not fairly be required to carry it out.” Id.
Finally, the United States has not met the third element of the test. In contrast to
Lewis,
our sole case addressing mutual mistake in this context, the mistake at issue here did not concern a subsequent Supreme Court decisiоn. The mistake in this case — that the language of the statute meant what it said — -is a risk the United States assumed when it drafted both the original indictment and the plea agreement. Under contract principles, the United States assumes the risk that an ambiguous plea agreement will be construed against it.
VanDam,
The United States relies upon three decisions by the Seventh Circuit in support of its arguments for rescission,
Williams,
Williams
does not directly address whether there was a mutual mistake. Although it notes that the district court’s conclusion as to the parties’ intent was not clearly erroneous,
In
Bradley,
the defendant successfully argued thаt his plea was not knowingly and voluntarily entered as to one count included in a plea agreement.
Finally,
Cook
is not analogous because Frownfelter is not seeking to rewrite his plea agreement in order to receive a one-sided benefit. In
Cook,
the defendant claimed that he was mistakenly granted a two-level sentencing reduction under the plаin terms of the plea agreement, rather than a three-level reduction which the law authorized.
Frownfelter, unlike the defendant in Cook, is not seeking to rewrite the plea agreement. Rather, Frownfelter correctly contends that the plea agreement required him to plead guilty to a misdemeanor, that he did so, and that the district court improperly convicted him of a felony and sentenced him accordingly. He does not ask us to grant him additional benefits above and beyond those granted to him in the plea agreement. Further, as the Cook court stated, “[w]hen a contract is rescinded, the parties are put back where they were before there was a contract.” Id. But Frownfelter has already served time in prison and paid restitution; we cannot undo those acts.
Frownfelter satisfiеd his obligations under the plea agreement, and the government has not provided a basis to void that agreement. The government must uphold its end of the bargain.
Ill
Because Frownfelter’s plea to a misdemeanor count cannot support a felony conviction, we VACATE the felony conviction and REMAND for entry of a misdemeanor conviction and a misdemeanor sentence.
Notes
. We reversеd the district court’s denial of Frownfelter's motion for release pending appeal.
United States v. Frownfelter,
. The government has conceded that Frownfelter pled guilty only to a misdemeanor, not a felony, thus we do not pursue this issue any further.
. 18 U.S.C. § 641 provides that "if the value of such property in the aggregate, combining amounts from all the counts for which the defendant is convicted in a single case, does not exceed the sum of $1,000, he shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than one year, or both.” (emphasis added).
