United States v. Jim Clay

37 F.3d 338, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 27843, 1994 WL 543231
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 6, 1994
Docket93-3699, 93-3840
StatusPublished
Cited by86 cases

This text of 37 F.3d 338 (United States v. Jim Clay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Jim Clay, 37 F.3d 338, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 27843, 1994 WL 543231 (7th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

FLAUM, Circuit Judge.

For over a year, Jim Clay regularly purchased distribution-size quantities of cocaine from Hamdi Ayyash, a local drug supplier for several Chicago-area dealers. Clay financed his transactions with Ayyash on credit, with Ayyash maintaining a current ledger and Clay making payments on his account from the proceeds of the cocaine resales. After a bench trial Clay was convicted -of both a substantive drug charge and conspiracy. He challenges (1) the sufficiency of the evidence supporting the latter conviction, contending that only a simple buyer-seller relationship was established, (2) the district court’s relevant conduct findings at sentencing, arguing that its estimate of drugs attributable to Clay was inflated (and also mounting general constitutional and statutory challenges to the Sentencing Guidelines) and (3) the district court’s refusal to adjust his offense level downward for acceptance of responsibility, asserting that he went to trial only to mount a conceptual challenge to the use of a conspiracy theory in his ease, not to deny responsibility for what he had done. We affirm.

*340 I.

We have one housekeeping matter to dispose of before turning to address these contentions. Two notices of appeal were filed in this ease, one on November 2, 1993, and the other on November 12, 1993, generating two appeals by Clay, Nos. 93-3699 and 93-3840. Why? The district court sentenced. Clay on October 28 and the judgment order was entered on the docket on November 5. The November 2 notice was timely and proper under Fed.R.App.P. 4(b) (even though, because it was filed before the date of entry of judgment, it is treated as being filed on that date — November 5) and would have sufficed to secure our jurisdiction. A little confusion set in, however, after the district court, acting on its own motion, entered an order the next day, November 3, purporting to stay the October 28 sentence in order to reconsider the question of acceptance of responsibility in light of a recent decision of this court. On November 9, after a status hearing, the district court decided not to alter the sentence and issued an order (entered on November 10) vacating its October 28 order. Concerned about the impact these developments might have on his previous attempt to appeal, Clay filed a second notice of appeal on November 12. This he need not have done. The district court’s November 3 order can only be understood (and is so understood by both parties) as notice that it was contemplating an exercise of its authority under Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(c) to correct a sentence within seven days after imposition; the court did not literally have the authority to stay execution of the sentence under the circumstances of this case, compare Fed.R.Crim.P. 38(b), but could within the bounds of Rule 35(c) fix a clear error (even one that only became clear in light of recent legal developments). The date of “imposition of the sentence” from which the seven days runs signifies the date judgment enters rather than the date sentence is orally pronounced, see United States v. Morillo, 8 F.3d 864, 869 n. 8; United States v. Turner, 998 F.2d 534, 536 (7th Cir.1993); cf. Fed.R.App.P. 4, 1993 advisory committee note to subdivision (b) (“[A] post-trial motion may be disposed of more than 10 days before sentence is imposed, i.e. before the entry of judgment”), and thus when the district court in effect denied its own 35(c) motion on November 9, it acted within the time constraints of the Rule.

Appellate Rule 4(b) makes clear that the “filing of a motion under Fed.R.Crim.P. 35(c) [does not] affect the validity of a notice of appeal filed before entry of the order disposing of the motion” and we read this statement to refer to all such “motions,” whether made by the parties or the court itself. ,The 1993 advisory committee note confirms that as a general matter actions taken pursuant to Rule 35(c) will not vitiate a prior, properly filed notice of appeal. 'This is entirely consistent with the expectation of the drafters of Rule 35(e) that the seven-day window for correction of sentences would not prevent “the appellate process (if a timely appeal is taken) [from] proceeding] without delay and without jurisdictional confusion.” Fed.R.Crim.P. 35, 1991 advisory committee note. * Although this version of Rule 4(b), which added the explication of the interaction with Rule 35(c), did not become effective until December 1, 1993 — after the relevant dates in this case — the earlier Rule merely took a silent, not an opposing, stance. And in light of the clear design that Rule 35(e), enacted in 1991, not disrupt the usual process by which appellate jurisdiction is attained, we conclude that action under it has the same noneffeet on a properly filed notice of appeal under the previous version of Rule 4(b) as it does under the current one. It would make little sense to complicate matters with a special rule for the two years it took to iron out the ambiguities that Rule 35(c) potentially portended for Rule 4(b) (but that Congress eventually insured it did not). Therefore, Clay’s first notice of appeal adequately secured review of his conviction and sentence by this court; his second notice of appeal was *341 superfluous and the docketed appeal that it spawned, No. 93-3840, is dismissed.

II.

On to the merits. Clay’s challenge to his conspiracy conviction is a familiar one. He insists that his relationship with his supplier, Ayyash, while continuous and ongoing, was clearly an arms-length and disinterested buyer-seller arrangement. Although the nub of a conspiracy is an agreement, a simple agreement between a buyer and seller to exchange something of value for cocaine cannot alone constitute a conspiracy because such an agreement is itself the substantive crime. See United States v. Lechuga, 994 F.2d 346, 349 (7th Cir.1993) (en banc); see also United States v. Kozinski, 16 F.3d 795, 808 (7th Cir.1994). The “something more” that is necessary for the existence of a true drug distribution conspiracy is a farther understanding between the buyer and seller, often implicit, that usually relates to the subsequent distribution of the narcotics (though conceivably could, in an ongoing relationship, pertain to the prior procurement of the supply). Just how implicit that understanding can be to sustain a conspiracy, and how circumstantial the proof of it will typically be, was demonstrated in Direct Sales Co. v. United States,

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Bluebook (online)
37 F.3d 338, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 27843, 1994 WL 543231, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jim-clay-ca7-1994.