This сase involves nothing more than a simple, albeit novel, question of contract law: Did the defendants repudiate or breach their plea agreements in collaterally attacking their convictions when, because of a change in the law, the conduct to which they pled guilty was no longer a crime? We conclude that they did not, and therefore reverse.
I. Background
Defendants Jose Maria Sandoval-Lopez and Joaquin Sandoval-Lopez were indicted on federal drug trafficking charges. They were also charged with two counts each of using or carrying a firearm in the commission of a drug trafficking offense, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1) (the “gun counts”).
Subsequently, however, the district court determined that the defendants’ sentences had been calculated incorrectly, and that the proper sentence for two gun counts was twenty-five years (five for the first count and twenty for the second). It then issued an order to show cause why the defendants should not be permitted to withdraw their pleas. In response, the parties submitted a “Sentencing Stipulation/Resolution,” in which they agreed that if the district court imposed the agreed-upon ten-year sentences, the government would waive its right to appeal the calculation error, and the defendants wоuld stipulate “that they, each, are not aggrieved for purposes of appeal by virtue of the Court’s not imposing terms of incarceration greater than ten years as the Court was otherwise obligated.” The district court approved the stipulation and entered judgment, sentencing each defendant to ten years in prison, and the dеfendants commenced serving their sentences.
Nine months later, the Supreme Court issued its decision in Bailey v. United States,-U.S.-,
On appeal, the defendants contend that they may not be tried on the drug charges, arguing (1) that the district court erred in concluding that thеy breached their plea agreements, (2) that both parties are still bound by those agreements, and (3) that the government is therefore precluded from reinstating the dismissed counts and subjecting the defendants to a further trial on them. As a separate ground, the defendants contend that, even if the plea agreements are no longer binding, reinstatement of the charges violates the Double Jeopardy Clause. The government seeks to uphold the reinstatement of the charges solely on the ground that the defendants repudiated or breached their plea agreements. We conclude, to the contrary, that no breach or repudiation occurred, and we therefоre reverse.
II. Jurisdiction
The parties appear to be in agreement that we have appellate jurisdiction over the claim that the government is barred by the plea agreements from reinstating the dismissed charges, as well as over the related double jeopardy claim. We have an obligation, however, to consider the question of our jurisdiction sua sponte. See WMX Technologies, Inc. v. Miller,
III. Analysis: The Contract Claim
Plea bargains are contractual in nature and subject to contract-law standards. See United States v. Read,
In accordance with standard contract-law principles, if the government is correct that the defendants breaсhed or repudiated their plea agreements in this case, it is no longer bound by its promise to dismiss the drug trafficking charges and is free to reinstate the dismissed counts insofar as they are not barred by double jeopardy. If no breach or repudiation occurred, the government’s argument fails and the defendants are entitled to hold it to its promise with rеspect to the dismissed drug counts.
Although there was no written plea agreement in this case, the Assistant United States Attorney explained to the district court the substance of the plea bargains:
The offers were that the defendants, Jose Maria Sandoval Lopez would enter a guilty plea to Counts 8 and 9 of the Indictment; [and] Joaquin Sandoval Loрez would enter a guilty plea to Counts 11 and 12 of the Indictment4 ... with the stipulations by Jose and Joaquin Sandoval Lopez with the requisite predicate offenses exist, narcotics offenses existed under the current Ninth Circuit law for this Court to impose two consecutive five-year sentences; and, further, that there will be no opposition on the seizures, fоrfeitures of cars, currency, weapons or cellular telephones in this case that might arise and give rise to a double jeopardy argument.
The defendants ... are willing to enter pleas to those counts of the Indictment with the stipulations.
The government argues that under the plea agreements the defendants promised (1) to plead guilty tо the gun counts, (2) to serve ten years imprisonment, and (3) not to challenge their convictions or their sentences; therefore, it argues, the defendants breached or repudiated their plea agreements when they filed their § 2255 motions, and the government is no longer bound by its promise to dismiss the drug counts. The only basis on which the government contests the defendants’ claim that the charges may not be reinstated is the alleged breach or repudiation.
We conclude that, in this most unusual case, the government attempts to claim benefits under the plea agreements that it never contracted for and therefore is not now entitled to receive. In United States v. Pruitt,
A plea agreement does not waive the right to bring a § 2255 motion unless it does so expressly. The government gets what it bargains for but nothing more.
In short, whatever the prosecution could have bargained for, it chose to require оf the defendants only that they not challenge the forfeiture of their property on double jeopardy grounds and that they not appeal their sentences as violative of the mandatory minimum sentencing requirement. The agreement left the defendants free to file § 2255 motions if at any time they perceived there to be a problem with their pleas, or if for any other reason they concluded that their convictions or sentences were improper; see Pruitt,
At the time of the pleas, there was reason to believe that a change in the law regarding the gun counts might occur in the near future. Petitions for certiorari in the consolidated cases that comprise Bailey were filed on December 28-29, 1994, more than two months prior to the date on whiсh the defendants were sentenced in accordance with the plea agreements. There was a circuit split as to the statutory meaning of “use,” and, even within the circuits, there were widely divergent and contradictory results.
It is important that in the present case the defendants challenged only the validity of their convictions on the gun counts and did not attack the plea agreements themselves. Defendants sometimes bring collateral attacks on the plea agreements qua pleа agreements, by claiming that their pleas were not “knowing” or “voluntary,” or were otherwise defective. Such attacks are directed at the entire agreement, and, if successful, may render the entire agreement void or voidable. Had the defendants brought that type of challenge, and had the district court determined that their claims were valid, the proper remedy might have been to vacate or allow withdrawal of the guilty pleas and reinstate the dismissed charges. See, e.g., Taylor v. Kincheloe,
The defendants did not attack their plea agreements, however. Instead, they claimed in their § 2255 motions that, while their plea bargains were knowing, voluntary, and in all other respects proper when made and ac-. eepted by the district court, the conduct to which they pled guilty — the only conduct for which they were convicted and sentenced — is now insufficient as a matter of law to support their convictions. They did not recant their admissions to having committed the acts that formed the basis for the counts of conviction; they simply claimed, correctly, that after Bailey those acts were no longer crimes.
As we said at the outset, this is a simple contract case. The government contends that because the defendants breached or repudiated their plea agreements it may now subject them to trial on drug charges that were previously dismissed. Unfortunately for the government, the defendants neither breached nor repudiated the agreements. They merely did what the agreements permitted them to do. The government is therefore not free to reinstate the dismissed counts. Given our holding, we need not decide the double jeopardy question.
IV. Conclusion
We reject the government’s argument and the district court’s order that the defendants may now be tried on the dismissed drug charges. Accordingly, we reverse and remand with instructions to dismiss the drug charges with prejudice.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Section 924(c)(1) provides, in part:
Whoever, during and in relation to any crime of violence or drug trafficking crime ... for which he may be prosecuted in a court of the United States, uses or сarries a firearm, shall, in addition to the punishment provided for such crime of violence or drug trafficking crime, be sentenced to imprisonment for five years.... In the case of his second or subsequent conviction under this subsection, such person shall be sentenced to imprisonment for twenty years....
18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1).
. Compare United States v. Torres-Rodriguez,
. The government conceded both in the district court and on appeal that it could not establish violations of § 924(c)(1) under either prong. It argued, however, that the defendants should not be permitted to bring the § 2255 challenges, or that, in the alternative, the dismissed counts from the original indictment should be reinstated.
. Counts 8, 9, 11, and 12 are the gun counts.
. While it is hard to imagine why a defendant would ever be "aggrieved” by receiving a sentence shorter than the statutory minimum, the language the government chose when it drafted the sentencing stipulation makes cleаr that the only requirement it imposed on the defendants was that they not appeal their sentence as being too short. The unusual promise the government requested resulted from the fact that the government was providing the defendants with unusually favorable treatment. As a result, the government decided to be cautious in its sentencing agreement — but not cautious enough.
. See generally Bailey,-U.S. at---,
. To set forth just one example, in McNally v. United States,
. We do not indicate any view as to whether under the circumstances of this case an agreement permitting reinstatement of the drug charges would be lawful.
. We avoid constitutional questions when an alternative basis for disposing of the case presents itself. See, e.g., Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Auth.,
