Lead Opinion
In this case we decline to enforce a defendant’s waiver of rights contained in a plea agreement.
It has become common for the prosecution to require that plea agreements which
This court, following suit, will enforce knowing and voluntary waivers by defendants in plea agreements of their rights to appeal, except when it would work a miscarriage of justice. United States v. Teeter,
This case concerns a type of waiver our court has not addressed before. This waiver has several distinct components. It occurs only when the defendant is, by terms of the agreement, in breach of the plea agreement. The alleged breach involved is the defendant’s motion to withdraw his plea, which has been granted by the district court. The waiver affects the defendant’s later rights in the trial court after withdrawal of the plea, and not in the court of appeals. What are waived are that defendant’s rights under Federal Rule of Evidence 410 and Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 11(f) not to have his plea agreement or associated statements admitted into evidence in later proceedings.
The prosecution took this interlocutory appeal from the pre-trial ruling excluding this evidence. See 18 U.S.C. § 3731. We affirm, finding no error in the court’s construction of the agreement and in its exclusion order.
I.
During a February 2002 search of New-bert’s home, the police discovered, among other things, 18.3 grams of cocaine. Based on this evidence, Newbert pleaded guilty in June 2006 to a single violation of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance. His plea agreement with the government included waivers of his rights to appeal and to a speedy trial; it also included the following provision, at issue in the present case:
If defendant fails to enter a guilty plea or seeks and is allowed to withdraw his plea of guilty entered pursuant to this Agreement, under circumstances constituting a breach of this Agreement, or if Defendant’s guilty plea is rejected due to Defendant’s conduct constituting a breach of this Agreement, he hereby waives any rights that he has under Rule 110 of the Federal Rules of Evidence and Rule 11(f) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. Defendant understands that by waiving such right, the following would be admissible against him in any subsequent prosecution for the conduct underlying the charges in the case: (a) the fact that he pleaded guilty in this case; (b) all statements made in the course of the guilty plea; and (c) all statements made during the course of plea discussions.
Newbert II, 477 F.Supp.2d at 290 (quoting clause 5 of the plea agreement).
Less than two months later, Newbert moved to withdraw his guilty plea. He argued that his plea had been based on a desire to protect his wife and his friend James Michael Smith, but he had since learned that his wife had moved in with Smith and that Smith was preparing to testily against him. Further, one of his daughters had informed Newbert that she had seen Smith place a pill bottle in New-bert’s house near where the cocaine was found shortly before the February 2002 police search; his other daughter told him that Smith had confessed to her that it was his cocaine the police had discovered.
The court ruled that Newbert’s guilty plea had been knowing, intelligent and voluntary, but that there was nevertheless a “fair and just” reason to allow Newbert to withdraw his plea. Newbert I,
The government was not pleased with this result and quickly filed a motion to reconsider the order granting the withdrawal; when that motion was denied, the government filed a motion to reopen the hearing on withdrawal to present further evidence. That motion was also denied. Trying a different tack, the government moved in limine for a ruling that New-bert’s guilty plea and all related statements could be introduced against him at his trial, based on the waiver language in Newbert’s plea agreement. Newbert filed a competing motion in limine to exclude this evidence.
The district court ruled that Newbert was not in breach of his plea agreement when he withdrew his plea and thus that Federal Rule of Evidence 410 still applied in full. NewbeH II, 477 F.Supp.2d. at 288. The court referred to contract law principles and noted that the clause assumed that some withdrawals of guilty pleas would not constitute a breach. Id. at 290-91. Rejecting the government’s argument, repeated before this court, that only guilty plea withdrawals based on government error or agreed to by the government would not breach the agreement, the judge concluded that if “the defendant’s post-plea evidence is sufficient to substantially affect the basis upon which the defendant entered the plea agreement, a motion to withdraw cannot constitute a breach of this agreement.” Id. at 293. This, the judge noted, was the logical corollary of the government’s argument that withdrawal would not be in breach if the government “agrees that new evidence establishes the defendant’s innocence,” for “the phrase must be interpreted evenly to allow for withdrawal without breach when the defendant presents post-plea evidence of innocence and the Court concurs, even if the government does not.” Id. at 294.
II.
We review the district court’s order excluding evidence for abuse of discretion. White v. N.H. Dept. of Corrections,
Rule 410 of the Federal Rules of Evidence, and Rule 11(f) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure by incorporation, is the legacy of Kercheval v. United States,
Basic contract principles apply to the construction of plea agreements. Clark,
The government’s construction of the agreement is that the “under circumstances constituting a breach” of the agreement language was meant to exclude situations in which government conduct was the cause of the defendant’s successful
Thus with unintended irony, the prosecution argues on appeal that the district court read into the agreement language which is not there. It says the court construed the term “under circumstances constituting a breach” to mean “circumstances generated by the defendant, not necessarily agreed to by the government.” But the court did not make that construction at all. The court’s full statement is instructive: “The question here is what circumstances generated by the defendant, not necessarily agreed to by the government, should not be considered a breach.” Newbert II,
The government argues its construction is mandated by prior case law. Not so. In United States v. Swick,
The prosecution misreads the district court as having held that every time it is arguable that defendant would not otherwise have entered the plea had he known
[T]he defendant must first be successful in his motion to withdraw his guilty plea, a motion fraught with difficulty; the defendant must also demonstrate that the basis of the motion is evidence that he discovered only after he entered his guilty plea, that he could not, acting with due diligence, have discovered the evidence before entering into the guilty plea, that the evidence establishes a plausible basis for concluding that the defendant was not guilty of the crime to which he pleaded guilty, and that the evidence would have materially affected his decision as to whether to plead guilty.
Newbert II,
Moreover, the prosecution’s argument spins out from our statement in Clark that the government was in breach of a plea agreement even though the government “would not have made this agreement had it known then what it knows now.”
Indeed, adoption of the government’s argument could create undesirable incentives in the system. Cf. Mezzanatto,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. Rule 410 provides in relevant part: "[E]vi-dence of the following is not ... admissible against the defendant who made the plea ... :(1) a plea of guilty which was later withdrawn; ... (3) any statement made in the course of any proceedings under Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure ... ; or (4) any statement made in the course of plea discussions with an attorney for the prosecuting authority ... which result in a plea of guilty later withdrawn.” Fed.R.Evid. 410.
Rule 11(1) provides: "The admissibility or inadmissibility of a plea, a plea discussion, and any related statement is governed by Federal Rule of Evidence 410.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(f).
. This information was not entirely new, although its source was. Newbert’s wife had told him, prior to his plea, that the cocaine may have been Smith's.
. This is not only because ambiguities in contracts are traditionally interpreted against the drafter, Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 206 (1981), but also because plea agreements implicate broader societal interests, some of constitutional magnitude, Giorgi,
. The court in Molinaro did not discuss the grounds for Molinaro’s withdrawal of his guilty plea or explain why this withdrawal constituted a breach under the terms of his agreement. See
. Newbert's original plea is not dispositive of his guilt. Thore v. Howe,
. The prosecution has another attack, which again fundamentally misapprehends the ruling by the district court. The prosecution argues that the reasons the court gave for allowing the motion to withdraw are irrelevant to whether the defendant is in breach. As a matter of logic, this is nonsensical. The two questions are inherently interrelated. As a matter of basic contract law, it is incorrect. Contracts may fail for a variety of reasons, including mistake, impracticability of per
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
The plea agreement provided that the defendant “agrees to plead guilty to the indictment” charging him with possessing cocaine with intent to distribute; in exchange the government agreed to recommend a reduced sentence. So the government perhaps has a plausible argument that the agreement, which was to plead guilty on specific terms and understandings, was breached when the defendant chose — however legitimately — to withdraw his plea and go to trial.
Yet because of the vague qualifier on the waiver (“under circumstances constituting a breach of this Agreement”), the language is less airtight than it might have been; and ambiguity counts against the drafter who, in this case, has greater bargaining power and more expertise. Even if the qualifying language was inserted to help the defendant, as the government claims, it muddles the meaning. So, on a strict reading of the plea language, the interpretation issue can reasonably be resolved against the government.
Policy might at first also suggest that the waiver clause be narrowly construed, tipping the balance decisively against the government. That the government might use the admissions against the defendant would surely discourage an otherwise proper withdrawal of a guilty plea. Yet the government has some basis for asking for such a waiver (apart from discouraging withdrawals). Otherwise, a defendant might claim that information provided in the plea agreement tainted evidence that the government had independently derived. Cf. United States v. Poindexter,
Because the government may well redraft its language, a further point ought to be stressed. Even if the withdrawal motion were plainly a breach of the agreement, the district court would not be re
In the present circumstances, the district judge thought that the withdrawal of the plea was adequately justified. The defendant had previously conceded that he had possessed and sold cocaine, and admission of these statements would largely have undercut the utility of the new trial that the court was permitting. And, the waiver clause was less than pellucid. In these circumstances, a refusal to enforce the waiver would arguably have been justified even if “the contract” were read in the government’s favor.
Defendants often have second thoughts about guilty pleas, withdrawals impose costs and sometimes seriously prejudice government interests, and the government properly resists promiscuous efforts to disavow such agreements. But a claim of innocence supported by new evidence is not lightly ignored by judges. Where a trial judge has endorsed a plausible motion to withdraw a plea on such a ground, the government — in considering appeal— should consider that the principle established may turn out to be one not much to its liking.
. The claim would not necessarily succeed. Rule 410 does not in terms apply to fruits and one circuit has said the fruits doctrine would not apply. See United States v. Rutkowski,
. See Am. Honda Motor Co., Inc. v. Richard Lundgren, Inc.,
