Last May 3 the court issued an order, which we reproduce as an appendix, remanding for an evidentiary hearing to determine whether Walter Kusay’s lawyer had refused his direction to appeal from his conviction for mail fraud. The mandate was to issue on June 26. Apparently impatient with this delay, a result of the extra time to seek rehearing when the United States is a party to civil litigation, see Fed.R.App.P. 40(a), 41(a), which a petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 initiates, the district court acted without waiting for the mandate. The court appointed counsel for Kusay and on May 18 held an eviden-tiary hearing. On June 5 the judge released a short opinion and entered an order denying Kusay’s petition for collateral relief. The judge credited the lawyer’s account of matters and disbelieved Kusay’s. The district court sent the opinion and order to us as a “supplement to the record on appeal,” and we deferred issuance of the mandate so that we could decide what significance this “supplement” possesses. We asked the parties for memoranda, alerting them to the possibility that the district judge lacked jurisdiction.
Kusay’s appointed lawyer responded that, because Kusay has been released from prison, he is no longer “in custody” for purposes of § 2255. This is incorrect. Ku-say is serving a term of supervised release, a form of custody that may be abbreviated if he prevails in this action. The case therefore is not moot.
United States v. Chavez-Palacios,
“[A] federal district court and a federal court of appeals should not attempt to assert jurisdiction over a case simultaneously. The filing of a notice of appeal is an event of jurisdictional significance — it confers jurisdiction on the court of appeals and divests the district court of its control over those aspects of the case involved in the appeal.”
Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount Co.,
Griggs
notes an important limitation on the rule that just one court at a time possesses jurisdiction: the doctrine applies only to “those aspects of the case involved in the appeal.” A district court therefore may award attorneys’ fees while the merits are on appeal,
Terket v. Lund,
Citing
United States v. Stafford,
Neither of Stafford’s rationales persuades us. The “practical” consideration not only sleights the idea of jurisdiction as a limitation on power but also is most impractical. How is a district judge to know, when acting in advance of the mandate, whether the court of appeals will modify its judgment on rehearing? What sense would it make to say that a district court has jurisdiction to act, but only if at some later time the court of appeals does not revise its judgment? Jurisdiction is unlike quantum mechanics. Elementary particles can both exist and not exist at the same time, with uncertainty resolved only by the act of observation (this is the point of Schrodinger’s cat, which is both dead and alive until the experimenter opens the box). Judicial power needs a more predictable basis. Litigants and judges should be able to know, from facts observable at the time they act, which shell covers the pea. Otherwise time, energy, and money will be wasted because later events will require hearings to be held anew and opinions rewritten. If the losing *195 party does not seek rehearing and wants the case to proceed with dispatch on remand, it may ask the court of appeals to issue the mandate before its scheduled date. Fed. R.App.P. 41(a). The prosecutor did not take any such step in our case, and the district court issued its decision while the United States still had time to seek rehearing. It would be unfortunate if losing parties could decide whether to seek appellate rehearing on the basis of the district court’s proceedings applying the court of appeals’ decision, yet that is an invitation Stafford and Ortega issue.
As for precedent:
Ortega
is plainly incorrect. Many cases, including
United States v. Cronic,
It is evident from decisions such as
Kerley, Jason’s Foods,
and
O’Connor
that this circuit is committed to a position different from the fifth circuit’s. Although one panel of the ninth circuit is on the side of
Ortega
and
Stafford,
another seems more congruent with our understanding. See
United States v. Coleman,
It would be possible, we suppose, to characterize the district court’s proceedings in Kusay’s case as an order denying relief from judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b), a step the district court can take while an appeal is pending. Possible, but not plausible. Kusay did not ask the district court to reconsider the judgment from which an appeal had been taken — a judgment, as our order of May 3 recites, denying the petition on the ground that Kusay had forfeited the arguments he presented. The district judge did not revisit the forfeiture question. Instead he conducted the proceedings our order contemplated, addressing a completely different subject. The district judge must have assumed that he had the power to rule in Kusay’s favor. Otherwise what was the point? It would be a hoax on prisoners to conduct proceedings that only prosecutors can win — for if the district judge had believed Kusay and disbelieved his former lawyer, the United States doubtless would be asking us to direct the district judge to start over.
“Haste makes waste” is an old adage. It has survived because it is right so often. See
*196
In re Continental Casualty Co.,
Appendix
Order
Walter Kusay, Jr., pleaded guilty to mail fraud. Kusay says that he asked his lawyer to appeal the sentence, only to be told: “Wally, you don’t have the money to appeal.” No appeal was filed. When Kusay sought relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, the district court dismissed the petition, holding that all claims had been waived by failure to appeal.
Castellanos v. United States,
If the lawyer indeed refused to file a notice of appeal, more than a new appeal lies in store. A criminal lawyer may not abandon a client whose funds have run out. Until relieved by a court, a lawyer must continue the representation — if need be, under the terms of the Criminal Justice Act. Circuit Rule 4. The United States submits that, when the lawyer balked, Kusay had to file his own notice of appeal. Not so. Kusay was entitled to the services of an advocate. A lawyer who deserts his client does not foist the burdens of self-representation on the defendant; instead the lawyer brings shame (and professional discipline) on himself, and the defendant is entitled to a new proceeding with the aid of a competent, ethical lawyer.
The judgment is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion and with Castellanos.
