Lead Opinion
The defendant has executed a plea agreement in which he and the government undertook to take no appeal from a sentence that falls within a range of 120 to 135 months imprisonment. The sentence imposed was 135 months, and defendant filed an appeal on the ground that the district court failed in its duty under 18 U.S.C. § 3558(c)(1) to adduce reasons for imposing that specific sentence, thereby rendering the sentence illegal and the plea agreement unenforceable. The Government moves to dismiss the appeal, citing the plea agreement. We grant the Government’s motion and dismiss the appeal.
BACKGROUND
On June 21, 1994, defendant Carlton Le-gall was arrested with several others for conspiracy to import heroin into the United States. On March 6, 1995, Legall pleaded guilty pursuant to a written plea agreement to one count of conspiracy to import a controlled substance, an offense which carries a minimum sentence of ten years imprisonment. 21 U.S.C. §§ 963, 960(b)(1)(A).
In Section II of the plea agreement, the parties agreed that the base offense level for the Guidelines applicable to the offense of
The parties further agreed that:
[Njeither party will appeal a sentence imposed by the Court which falls within the sentencing range set forth in Section II, paragraph 10 above, notwithstanding the fact that the Court may reach that range by a Guidelines analysis different from that set forth in this agreement.
On June 2,1995, the district court accepted the plea and sentenced the defendant to 135 months of imprisonment, 5 years supervised release, and $50 special assessment. Judgment was entered June 7, 1995. Defendant filed a timely notice of appeal on June 12, 1995. On July 28, 1995, the Government filed this motion to dismiss the appeal.
DISCUSSION
Plea agreements are construed according to contract law principles. United States v. Salcido-Contreras,
In no circumstances ... may a defendant, who has secured the benefits of a plea agreement and knowingly and voluntarily waived the right to appeal a certain sentence, then appeal the merits of a sentence conforming to the agreement. Such a remedy would render the plea bargaining process and the resulting agreement meaningless.
Salcido-Contreras,
It is undisputed that Legall entered into his plea agreement knowingly and voluntarily. The agreement explicitly provided that neither party would appeal a sentence which falls within the range of 108 to 135 months imprisonment (subject to the statutory minimum and maximum), and the district court in fact imposed a sentence within this range. Under the rule in Salcido-Contreras, defendant is bound by his undertaking in the plea agreement.
Defendant contends that the plea is unenforceable because the district court’s sentence was illegal under 18 U.S.C. § 3553(c)(1). That provision, which applies to the offense of conviction, requires a sentencing court to state the reasons for imposing the particular sentence if the applicable range is wider than 24 months.
Our dismissal of this appeal is entirely consistent with 18 U.S.C. § 3742. Section 3742(a) enumerates grounds on which “[a] defendant may file a notice of appeal in the district court for review of an otherwise final sentence____” One of these grounds, specified in subsection 3742(a)(1), is that the sentence “was imposed in violation of law.” Subsection 3742(c)(1) specifically addresses the appellate rights of a defendant who has executed a plea agreement that includes a specific sentence, and it forecloses appeals under subsections § 3742(a)(3) and (4), “unless the sentence imposed is greater than the sentence set forth in such agreement.” Thus read together, these provisions do permit a defendant to appeal a sentence “imposed in violation of law” under § 3742(a)(1), even if that sentence was imposed pursuant to a plea agreement that includes a specific sentence.
We conclude, however, that this right to appeal is not unwaivable under subsection 3742(c)(1), and that this defendant has waived it. If this waiver does not preclude a challenge to the sentence as unlawful, then the covenant not to appeal becomes meaningless and would cease to have value as a bargaining chip in the hands of defendants. Nothing in the language of section 3742 compels such a result. Other courts of appeal have so held, and we agree. United States v. Marin,
We do not hold that the waiver of appellate rights forecloses appeal in every circumstance. “[A] defendant who waives his right to appeal does not subject himself to being sentenced entirely at the whim of the district court.” Marin,
Notes
. In the “Statement of Reasons” part of the form for the judgment, dated June 6, 1995, the district court indicated that the offense level is 31 (as agreed to in the plea agreement) and that the
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent because I do not agree that the defendant’s plea agreement waived the claim that the sentencing judge violated a statutory requirement.
I. The Government’s plea agreement with defendant Carlton Legall specifies that neither party will appeal a sentence that “falls within the sentencing range set forth in Section II, paragraph 10 above, notwithstanding the fact that the Court may reach that range by a Guidelines analysis different from that set forth in this agreement.” The applicable guideline range was 108 to 135 months, and Legall’s sentence was 135 months, within the applicable range. Thus, there is obviously a surface plausibility to the Court’s view that the waiver of appeal has been triggered. We have long held, however, that plea agreements are to be strictly construed, see Innes v. Dalsheim,
There are at least three ways to interpret the waiver provision in Legall’s plea agreement when the sentence imposed falls within the applicable range. One way is that no appeal is available, no matter what constitutional, statutory, or Sentencing Guidelines provision the sentencing judge might have violated in selecting a sentence within the applicable range. A second way is that an appeal is waived except under extraordinary circumstances. A third way is that an appeal is waived only for Guidelines challenges that concern the merits of the sentence.
The Court rejects the first interpretation and instead chooses the second one, leaving open in future cases, under a similar waiver provision, the opportunity for an appeal where there are “extraordinary circumstances.”
Like the waiver provision in Jacobson, Le-gall’s plea agreement includes the phrase “notwithstanding the fact that the Court may reach that range by a Guidelines analysis different from that set forth in this agreement.” Thus, if the sentencing judge had
However, there is no reason to read the waiver more broadly to apply to all violations of statutory requirements, beyond those that might satisfy the Court’s definition of “extraordinary circumstances.” Congress wanted sentencing judges to specify their reasons for selecting a particular sentence within any range greater than 24 months. In the absence of a clear indication that the sentencing appeal waiver covers all statutory protections, we should read Legall’s plea agreement to waive only his right to appeal Guidelines issues that affect the merits of his sentence. The Court’s broader interpretation disregards the limiting language of Jacobson and needlessly closes the appellate courtroom door to substantial claims of statutory sentencing violations.
It is true, of course, that Legall wishes to challenge the judge’s failure to comply with the procedural requirement of section 3553(c) in the ultimate hope that compliance with this statute will result in a lower sentence. That expectation would apply, however, to every appeal alleging a constitutional or statutory violation, even those that would fall within the Court’s permitted category of “extraordinary circumstances.” Nevertheless, an appeal should be allowed so long as it does not raise Guidelines issues that affect the merits of the sentence, even though statutory compliance might lead to a lower sentence.
Our prior decisions enforcing appeal waivers have not gone so far as to encompass waivers of statutory compliance. In United States v. Salcido-Contreras,
In opting for a broad interpretation of the scope of the waiver, the Court expresses the concern that if the waiver does not encompass Legall’s statutory claim of procedural irregularity, “the covenant not to appeal becomes meaningless.”
Whatever the ultimate outcome of the controversy concerning the scope of a sentence appeal waiver, both in this Circuit and elsewhere, defense counsel should now be alerted to the risk that a waiver may be construed more broadly than they might have intended, and all those negotiating appeal waiver provisions in plea agreements should be careful to use language that carries out their precise intentions.
II. Though the appeal is being dismissed, I deem it appropriate to comment briefly on the merits — whether the sentencing judge was required to comply with section 3553(c)’s requirement to state reasons for selecting a specific sentence within the guideline range. In imposing sentence, the District Court checked a box on the judgment form indicating a view that the applicable guideline range did not exceed 24 months. Since the applicable guideline range was 27 months — 108 to 135 months, it is reasonable to infer that the District Judge was accepting the argument, advanced by the Government on this appeal, that the mandatory minimum sentence of 120 months, required by statute, narrowed the applicable guideline range to 15 months — 120 to 135 months. If this argument were correct, the statutory requirement that the sentencing judge must specify reasons for selecting a sentence at a point within a range
In my view, the Government’s argument is not correct and rests on a fundamental misconception of the relationship between Sentencing Guidelines and statutory sentencing mínimums. The Sentencing Guidelines are the primary source of guidance for imposing federal sentences. To whatever extent Congress sees fit to enact statutory sentencing mínimums, it is imposing an overriding requirement to be observed after the guideline sentencing process has been completed. The sentencing judge is obliged to determine the appropriate sentence, one that comports with the guideline system and that is fair and just. If the guideline sentence would be less than a statutory sentencing minimum, the judge is of course required to raise the guideline sentence to the statutory minimum. Only by observing this relationship between the Guidelines and the statutory mínimums will we understand the true effect of mandatory minimum sentencing provisions and thereby provide the Sentencing Commission, the Congress, and ultimately the public with a sound basis for evaluating mandatory sentencing mínimums.
The Government’s argument permits the 120-month statutory minimum to raise the 108-month minimum of the applicable guideline range. But the guideline range remains unamended, and any defendant to whom it applies is entitled to have the sentencing judge comply with the requirement of section 3553(c)(1) to specify the reasons for selecting a particular sentence within a range greater than 24 months. Once that sentence has been selected in conformity with applicable law, any higher statutory mandatory minimum overrides the selected sentence and obliges the sentencing judge to sentence at the mandatory minimum.
The Government’s approach denies everyone the needed opportunity to know the extent to which mandatory minimum sentences are enhancing guideline sentences in all cases in which the mandatory minimum falls within the applicable guideline range. Section 3553(c) requires the sentencing judge to state reasons for the sentence imposed, and I respectfully dissent from the Court’s refusal to allow the appellant to present this issue on appeal.
. The Court appears to reason, preliminarily, that the right to appeal, protected by 18 U.S.C. § 3742(a), combined with the appeal-foreclosing provisions of 18 U.S.C. § 3742(c)(1), leaves a defendant free to appeal a sentence higher than a specific sentence agreed to in a plea agreement, but that this appellate right is waivable. In my view, a defendant like Legall has appellate rights wholly unaffected by section 3742(c)(1); that provision precludes an appeal only where the plea agreement provides for "a specific sentence,” see also Fed.R.Crim.P. 11(e)(1)(C), whereas Legall's agreement provides for an unspecified sentence within an agreed range.
