Martin Dayton was convicted of conspiracy and mail fraud. His conviction was affirmed by this court in an unpublished
per curiam
opinion.
United States v. Dayton and Sayegh,
The government has raised as a separate issue, that if we find the motion was timely filed, we should determine that Dayton’s motion lacks merit becаuse it fails to meet any of the criteria for newly discovered evidence pursuant to Rule 33. We decline to rule on the merits of the motion which the distriсt court has not yet considered. Therefore, we REMAND this case for an evidentiary hearing on the motion for a new trial.
Background
A jury found Dayton guilty for his role in a conspiracy to defraud an insurance company. The scheme was set up by the parents of a burn victim to collect on a fraudulent claim. In Daytоn’s capacity as a medical doctor, he prepared a medical report in 1984 regarding the girl’s injury. Dayton’s participation facilitatеd the scam by the patient’s parents to collect on an insurance claim for a 1982 injury even though the girl’s burn was later found to be the result of a 1978 acсident. A settlement amount of $100,000 had already been collected by the Sayeghs for the 1978 burn accident. Dayton now relies on allegedly newly discoverеd evidence to support his defense that there were two different girls with burn injuries, rather than one girl and a fraudulent claim for a second burn injury-
The date of Dаyton’s conviction and sentencing was November 14, 1986. Dayton moved for a new trial on March 19, 1991, less than two years from the date the appeal mandate was returned on March 21, 1989, but more than two years from the original judgment of conviction.
Discussion
Rule 33, Fed.R.Crim.P., sets the time limit for filing a motion for a new trial on the ground of newly discоvered evidence. “[A motion] ... may be made only before or within two years after final judgment, but if an appeal is pending, the court may *1202 grant the motion only on remand of the case.”
The language of Rule 33 to which the parties attach divergent interpretations is the meaning of “final judgment.” Dayton argues that the two-year period begins to run upon the issuance of the mandate by the court of appeals, which is the final judgment in a criminal case in the context of Rule 33. The government argues that a mоtion must be filed within two years of the original judgment of conviction. We agree with Dayton and reject the government’s interpretation of Rule 33.
The district court’s ruling that the motion for a new trial was untimely was based on its reliance on
United States v. Cross,
The government concedes that the comments made in
Cross
concerning the time within which Crоss would have had to file a motion for a new trial are dicta. Thus, the gratuitous comments are not determinative of the meaning of “final judgment” as relatеd to the time limit in Rule 33, which is the issue presented in this case, but was not presented in
Cross. See Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Co. v. Tanker Robert Watt Miller,
The issue presented here has been resolved in a firmly-established body of case-law, which originated in our circuit in
Harrison v. United States,
In
Harrison,
a Rule 33 motion was filed by the appellant аnd was considered by the district court after the appellate court had affirmed Harrison’s conviction. The
Harrison
court stated that the distinction in Rule 33 in the lаnguage “after final judgment” and “after verdict or finding of guilty” is significant and that “final judgment” includes the mandate of affirmance.
Harrison,
*1203 However, the government argues that the cases which have considered Rule 33 time limits shоuld be analyzed, criticized and rejected as wrongly decided. The government submits that the Harrison court’s statement that “final judgment includes the mandate of affirmanсe” is dicta, and that the Granza court blindly misapplied the statement as a settled matter of law. The government seeks to persuade this court to abandon this established understanding of the time limit because that interpretation is contrary to the intended policy of Rule 33. We are urged by the government to look at Harrison anew, and then to correct the mistake of Granza based on the court’s misinterpretation of its own decision in Harrison.
The government’s arguments are based, in part, on the history of the rule changes leading to the adoption of the present version of Rule 33, and also on policy concerns of staleness of evidence in long-delayed, post-appeal proceedings. This position suggests that the proper interpretation is to limit the defendant to two years from the date of conviction to bring a Rule 33 motion. The government argues that is what the drafters of Rule 33 originally intended.
However, at this point in time, we are confronted with a princiрle which has been accepted as the law and relied upon as such to provide continuity in judicial application. The interpretatiоn of the term “final judgment” in Rule 33 when an appeal is filed is that the time runs from the return of the mandate after a criminal conviction has been affirmed. In well-dеveloped, creative arguments, the government urges us to change the firmly settled law because the other courts failed to correctly aрply legislative history and logical analysis in considering Rule 33, and, according to the government’s view, reached the wrong conclusion.
Contrary to the government’s position, we place greater significance on the fact that neither Congress nor the Supreme Court has intervened to “correct” this presumably “misguided” analysis applied in the cases which have reached the same conclusion as
Harrison
and
Granza. See Johnson v. Transportation Agеncy, Santa Clara, Calif.,
Conclusion
The motion for a new trial pursuant to Rule 33, Fed.R. Crim.P. which was filed by Dayton within two years of the return of the mandate of the appellate court was timely filed. Based on the foregoing discussion, we REVERSE the district court’s decision which denied Dayton’s motion for a new trial for lack of jurisdiction. We REMAND this case for an evidentiary hearing on the motion for a new trial pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 33.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The Eleventh Circuit, in the en banc decision
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
