The United States appeals from a memorandum and order,
United States v. May-field,
The conviction in question occurred in July, 1978, when Mayfield pleaded guilty to the felony theft charge in state district court in Kansas. When he entered his plea, the court asked Mayfield if he was eighteen years of age. Mayfield answered affirmatively and was then convicted and sentenced. Had the court inquired further, however, it would have discovered that Mayfield was only seventeen years of age when he committed the offense.
Kansas law requires that whenever a person eighteen years of age or older is charged with committing an act before turning eighteen, the matter shall be handled pursuant to the juvenile code. Kan. StatAnn. § 38 — 815(d) (1981). The district court found that since the proper juvenile procedures were not followed in Mayfield’s case, the state court lacked jurisdiction to convict him.
Mayfield,
The government does not defend the propriety of the state court conviction but argues, instead, that this appeal is controlled by two Supreme Court cases,
Lewis v. United States,
In
Lewis,
the Supreme Court held that even though George Calvin Lewis, Jr.’s pri- or felony conviction was subject to collateral attack because the petitioner had been denied his right to counsel, that conviction could still serve as a predicate for his subsequent conviction for possession of a firearm under § 1202(a)(1).
Lewis,
The district court considered the Supreme Court’s holding in
Lewis
but concluded that it only applies to situations in which a defendant seeks to attack a firearms conviction on the ground that the predicate conviction is “invalid” for constitutional or other reasons.
Mayfield,
Yet, the district court’s distinction between a conviction that is “invalid” and one that is “void from its inception” depends too much on semantics. Far from being terms of art, such phrases as “invalid,” “void” and “null” are so often used interchangeably in legal discourse that it is risky, without more, to attach great significance to mere word choice. Nothing in the Lewis decision suggests that the Court intended to recognize a distinction between “invalid” and “void” convictions. 1 On the contrary, the Court’s analysis in Lems regarding the sweeping language and legislative history of the act and the Court’s conclusion that Congress did not intend to allow a defendant to question the validity of his prior conviction as a defense to a firearms charge are just as compelling when applied to Mayfield’s procedurally defective conviction as when applied to Lewis's constitutionally improper conviction. Likewise, the Court’s analysis of the other provisions of the act, which it held reinforce the act’s broad sweep, applies equally to both Mayfield’s and Lewis’ convictions.
For example, in
Lewis
the Court noted that “a convicted felon is not without relief” since the federal firearms statutes provide that a firearms disability may be removed by a qualifying pardon or by the consent of the Secretary of the Treasury.
Id.
The Court in
Lewis
further observed that §§ 922(g)(1) and (h)(1) impose a firearms disability not only on convicted felons, but also on persons under a felony indictment, even if the person is subsequently acquitted of the felony charge.
Lems,
*946
The greatest problem with the district court’s reasoning, however, is its conclusion that, because the state court lacked jurisdiction, Mayfield’s conviction is and always has been void. This conclusion ignores the fact that the issue of whether a court has proper jurisdiction is a legal one and, hence, no conviction is “void from its inception” for lack of jurisdiction until a court with review authority has so declared. While Mayfield’s prior conviction became void when the federal district court granted his
in limine
motion, it was not void when Mayfield allegedly purchased the weapons. Mayfield was, at that time, a convicted felon. As such, he allegedly violated the law by purchasing a firearm, and the government should have been allowed to proceed with its case against him.
Accord, Bonfiglio v. Hodden,
In
Dickerson,
as in
Lewis,
the Supreme Court considered §§ 922(g)(1) and (h)(1) of the firearms statute and concluded that it must give full effect to the provisions “attaching gun control disabilities to any person ‘who has been convicted’ of a qualifying offense.”
Dickerson,
The district court distinguished
Dickerson
from the situation in
Mayfield
by noting that in
Mayfield
“the state court had no jurisdiction to convict the defendant of a criminal offense, and therefore, the judgment was not legally binding.”
Mayfield,
This argument is largely the same as the one the district court relied upon to distinguish Lewis and what we said there applies here. It bears repeating that no conviction is void (or “null”) until the judicial process has declared it so. There is no question that Mayfield was “convicted in the first place” and while it is true that his conviction was finally “rendered a nullity”, it was not rendered so until after he allegedly obtained firearms.
Moreover, the principle that a void judgment is not legally binding simply means that it may not be enforced. Yet we are not concerned here with enforcing May-field’s felony theft conviction. We are concerned, instead, with the role of that conviction as a disqualifying condition for the purpose of obtaining firearms. While for most purposes the law ignores a void conviction, the federal firearms statutes represent a considered and deliberate exception to this inasmuch as they require that the conviction be declared void before a firearm is purchased.
It is not for us to question the wisdom of Congress’s decision to make a felony conviction, even an invalid felony conviction, a disability for the purpose of obtaining firearms. Nor is it for us to question the propriety of this law. The Supreme Court has already indicated that it passes constitutional muster.
Lewis,
REVERSED.
Notes
. Indeed, it is worth noting that the definition of "invalid” in Black’s Law Dictionary 739 (5th ed. 1979) incorporates, by reference, both "void" and "voidable.”
