GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:
Appellant Paul H. (“Bud”) Holmes challenges the legality of a one-year sentence of imprisonment that, together with a fine [484]*484of $10,000, was imposed pursuant to his plea of guilty to and consequent conviction of contempt under 18 U.S.C. § 401(1). Holmes contends that the contempt statute does not authorize both imprisonment and a fine for a single offense, but instead only permits a court to impose as alternative sentences either a fine or imprisonment, and not both. Appellant’s position is that he fully satisfied his sentence by paying the fine, and that he cannot now be required to undergo imprisonment.
The government contends that the sentence was proper because appellant was convicted of two or more contempt offenses. However, we determine that appellant was charged with, pleaded guilty to, and was convicted of only a single offense of contempt, and that hence under section 401 he could not be sentenced to both a fine and imprisonment, although he could have been sentenced to either. We also reject the government’s alternative contention that 18 U.S.C. § 3623, taken together with section 401, authorized imposition of both a fine and imprisonment for a single offense under section 401. Therefore, we hold, pursuant to In re Bradley, 318 U.S. 50, 63 S.Ct. 470, 87 L.Ed. 608 (1943), that appellant, since he has fully paid his fine, must be discharged from his sentence of imprisonment.
I.
Appellant was originally charged in a five-count indictment returned March 29, 1985 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, Hattiesburg Division. Count I of the indictment charged appellant with attempting to interfere with or impede the investigation of the federal grand jury in the Hattiesburg Division by various actions in 1984 and 1985, contrary to 18 U.S.C. § 1503, and Counts II through V charged him with perjury in his testimony before the same grand jury on various dates in 1984 and 1985, contrary to 18 U.S.C. § 1623. The indictment alleged that the grand jury was investigating allegations of official corruption in the Southern District of Mississippi, and as a part of that investigation was examining, among other things, the circumstances of the transfer of mineral royalty interests from Wiley Fairchild, a Hattiesburg businessman, to United States District Judge Walter Nixon, and the handling by appellant, in his then capacity as state district attorney in that area, an office he held from January 1980 to January 1984, of a drug smuggling case involving Wiley Fairchild’s son, Drew Fairchild, which arose out of an August 1980 arrest at the Hattiesburg airport. The subject matter of Count I was the allegation that appellant sought to keep the grand jury from learning about a 1982 telephone call from appellant’s farm to Wiley Fairchild in which appellant and Judge Nixon assured Wiley Fairchild that the drug smuggling case against his son, Drew Fairchild, would be resolved by appellant to Wiley Fairchild’s satisfaction. The other counts in the indictment did not relate to this telephone conversation with Wiley Fairchild, or indeed to any other contact with him.1
The same day the indictment was returned, appellant was arraigned, entered a plea of not guilty, and was released on bond.
On June 18, 1985, just as appellant’s trial on this indictment was beginning (though apparently the jury had not yet been impaneled), appellant entered into a plea agreement with the government, pursuant to which he pleaded guilty to an informa[485]*485tion charging him with contempt under section 401(1), and the government agreed to dismiss the indictment against him. The agreement also called for appellant to give complete and truthful testimony to the United States at interviews, before the grand jury, and at trial, and the United States agreed to make known to the court at sentencing any cooperation provided by appellant. On the same day, appellant filed a waiver of indictment, the court allowed the information to be filed and, after the appropriate hearing under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11, accepted appellant’s plea of guilty to the information and entered a judgment of guilty on appellant’s plea. Appellant was continued on bond.2
On December 11, 1985, Holmes appeared before the district court for sentencing. The court imposed a sentence of a $10,000 fine and one year in prison. The court granted appellant’s motion that he be allowed to self-surrender, and directed that appellant report to his designated place of confinement on February 18, 1986, to commence the service of his sentence to imprisonment. The court also imposed a $50 special assessment pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3013. Then, on the government’s motion, the court ordered the indictment dismissed.
Later in the day on December 11, 1985, after he was sentenced, appellant promptly tendered the $10,000 fine in full to the deputy clerk of the United States District Court in Hattiesburg, which the clerk thereupon accepted and receipted for. Appellant paid the $50 special assessment the following day. On December 17, appellant filed a Rule 35(a)3 motion to vacate as illegal that part of his sentence ordering imprisonment. The district court denied that motion on January 2, 1986, holding that imposing both a fine and imprisonment was proper because appellant had pleaded guilty to more than one act of contempt and that, even if the information were to be construed as charging only one contempt, the prison sentence was lawful in any event because only the prison term was based on the contempt statute and the imposition of a fine was a proper additional sentence under 18 U.S.C.A. § 3623, an “alternative fines” provision. Holmes appeals the denial of his Rule 35 motion to vacate the prison sentence.4
II.
We emphasize at the outset that the only issue before this Court is the district court’s denial of appellant’s Rule 35 motion to correct his sentence by vacating what he contends is the illegal imprisonment portion thereof. Appellant does not challenge his guilty plea or conviction or any of the procedures leading thereto. The question presented is whether the punishment ordered by the court comports with the governing statutes.5
The issues presented by appellant, stated in the order this opinion addresses them, are: (1) whether both a fine and imprisonment can be imposed under the authority of section 401 for a single contempt of[486]*486fense; (2) whether he was convicted of, charged with, and pleaded guilty to only one contempt offense; (3) whether section 3623 provided independent authority for the district court’s imposition of the fine in addition to the prison term; and (4) whether, if the foregoing issues are resolved in appellant’s favor, his payment of the fine precludes his hereafter being resentenced to imprisonment without a fine.
A. The disjunctive language of section m
The contempt statute is one of only a very few provisions in Title 18 that allow a court to impose either a fine or imprisonment but not both.6
The government does not ask that we read section 401 in any way contrary to its plain language and concedes that only a fine or imprisonment may be imposed for a single contempt offense under section 401 alone, without reference to section 3623. This reading of the statute is consistent with that of the Supreme Court7 and the Circuit Courts,8 and we follow and apply that long-standing disjunctive interpretation. Therefore, by the terms of section 401, for each offense thereunder the court may impose a fine or imprisonment, but the imposition of both is forbidden as to any one offense.
B. A single offense of contempt
We turn now to the government’s argument that appellant was convicted of multiple offenses under section 401. We reject this contention, as our review of the proceedings below compels the conclusion that appellant was charged with and pleaded to only a single contempt offense, and was convicted and sentenced accordingly.
As above-indicated, the indictment against appellant plainly charged him with five distinct offenses, each in a separately numbered count. Pursuant to the plea agreement, however, Holmes pleaded guilty to an information, and the government dismissed the indictment. The information reads as follows:
“INFORMATION
“The United States of America, acting through its undersigned attorney, charges that:
“1. From on or about July 18, 1984, and continuing through March, 1985, in the Southern District of Mississippi, the Defendant, PAUL H. ‘BUD’ HOLMES, acting unlawfully, willfully and knowing[487]*487ly, did commit acts of misbehavior in the presence of the Grand Jury empaneled in the Hattiesburg Division of the Southern District of Mississippi, convened upon the Order of and acting under the supervision of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, and did commit acts of misconduct so near to said Grand Jury and said Court as to obstruct the administration of justice. In this regard, the Defendant, PAUL H. ‘BUD’ HOLMES,
“(a) inquired of others whether they had discussed a telephone call with federal authorities so as to be able to tailor his own grand jury testimony;
“(b) testified falsely in the grand jury on February 21, 1985, that the reason he did not advise the grand jury about the aforementioned telephone call previously was ‘it did not come across my mind ...’ and he ‘didn’t put any significance to it;’ and
“(c) refused to disclose the substance of the aforementioned telephone call when on February 21, 1985, he falsely testified before the grand jury that he could not renjember what was said during the call;
“with all said acts done by the Defendant, PAUL H. ‘BUD’ HOLMES, to manipulate and interfere with the grand jury investigation by preventing the grand jury from receiving relevant evidence.
“In violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 401(1).”
In all significant respects, the substantive content and most of the actual language of the information are derived entirely from Count I of the indictment, quoted in pertinent part in the margin.9 All these acts [488]*488alleged in the information, it is clear, are almost verbatim the same as three of the five acts identified by the indictment as constituting the single offense charged by Count I. If Count I of the indictment alleged but a single offense, as it obviously did, then it is likewise clear that the information also charged but one offense. In the information, moreover, a “1” appears at the beginning, but there is no “2” or “3.” Further, the three acts constituting contempt are all alleged in a single sentence, each of the three being subject to a single concluding clause of that sentence which characterizes them as having been done to manipulate the grand jury investigation. And, there is a single, concluding “in violation of” allegation.
On its face, the information appears to charge only a single offense and to specify three acts done by appellant as the means whereby the offense was accomplished. Several additional factors tend to support this conclusion. First, it is not clear that appellant could have been convicted of section 401(1) contempt merely for “inquirpng] of others whether they had discussed a telephone call with federal authorities so as to be able to tailor his own grand jury testimony,” as the information alleges in clause (a), because these acts may not have occurred in the presence of the court “or so near thereto as to obstruct the administration of justice.”10 Second, the form of the information suggests only a single charge, especially when pertinent provisions of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure are considered. Unlike the last four counts of the indictment, each of which charges a separate single violation of the same statute and each of which specifically alleges that same statute, the information mentions the statute violated only once and does not plainly and definitely identify separate and multiple counts.11
Third, although clauses (b) and (c) allege acts that might support separate contempt charges,12 the issue is not whether the acts alleged might have been charged as separate offenses, but whether they were in fact so charged. On this point, our decision in Carter v. United [489]*489States, 135 F.2d 858, 864 (5th Cir.1943), is plainly controlling and requires us to reject the government’s multiple offenses argument. To the same effect is United States v. Berardi, 675 F.2d 894, 897-88 (7th Cir.1982). Cf United States v. Hilburn, 625 F.2d 1177 (5th Cir.1980) (involving multiple acts that resulted in only a single contempt charge and conviction); United States v. Barnette, 546 F.2d 187 (5th Cir.) (same), cert. denied, 434 U.S. 822, 98 S.Ct. 65, 54 L.Ed.2d 79 (1977). If the information had charged these acts as separate contempt offenses, and if appellant had pleaded guilty to an information so framed, different and cumulative penalties for each offense could have been imposed. E.g., Rapp v. United States, 146 F.2d 548 (9th Cir.1944) (six different violations of an injunction); Hoffman v. United States, 13 F.2d 278 (7th Cir.1926) (distinct violations of two different commitment orders). But that is not the case here, and we are governed by Carter.
An additional indication that only a single offense of contempt was charged is that the district court imposed only a single sentence, and did not purport to, for example, impose a fine respecting the allegations of clause (a) and imprisonment respecting the allegations of clauses (b) and (c). If the court’s sentence was not imposed as a sentence for a single contempt offense, there is absolutely no way to tell what sentence was imposed on which assertedly separate contempt.13 The experienced district judge was, we must presume, well aware that it had long been the law of this Circuit that distinct and separate sentences must be expressly imposed on each separate offense of which the accused is convicted, and that it is wholly improper to impose a single, general sentence covering two or more separate offenses. Benson v. United States, 332 F.2d 288, 291-92 (5th Cir.1964).
Other aspects of the proceedings below likewise reflect that only a single contempt offense was charged.
The plea agreement described appellant’s offense as “the crime of contempt,” did not address the imposition of both a fine and prison, and appears to have contemplated only one possible prison term, all of which support the inference that both the government and appellant viewed the information as charging a single offense. The agreement provided (emphasis added):
“The Defendant, PAUL H. ‘BUD’ HOLMES, will plead guilty to the crime of contempt____
“... [T]he United States and the Defendant ... agree that should the Court decide to impose a term of imprisonment, a sentence of no more than one year’s imprisonment would be an appropriate disposition of the case.”
We further note from the transcripts of both the plea and sentencing hearings that appellant, the government, and the district judge appeared to contemplate only one conviction for one offense.
The following exchange occurred when appellant entered his plea on June 18, 1985 (emphasis added):
“MR. FANNING [appellant’s attorney]: ... Mr. Holmes will enter a plea to something other than a felony and the Government will in exchange dismiss the five felony counts of the indictment.
[490]*490“MR. WEINGARTEN [attorney for the United States]: To be specific, Your Honor, we have an information that names Mr. Holmes as the Defendant, and this is an information under 18 USC 401....
“THE COURT [addressing appellant]: Have you discussed with your attorneys the charge in the Bill of Information to which you are seeking to plead guilty?
“[Appellant]: I have, your honor.
“THE COURT: [Reading the information] ... and [appellant] did commit acts____ In this regard, the Defendant ... inquired of others ... [testified falsely ... [and] refused to disclose____
“Did you, in fact, do the acts charged in the Bill of Information?
“[Appellant]: I did, Your Honor.
“THE COURT: Do you understand the charge in the Bill of Information?
“[Appellant]: I do, Your Honor.
“THE COURT: The statute under which you are charged ... does not provide for a specified penalty, but leaves it within the discretion of the Court to impose a sentence of a fine or imprisonment with no specified limitation in that statute____
“THE COURT: Do you understand the charge as I read it to you?
“THE COURT: Are you pleading guilty because you are, in fact, guilty of the crime charged?
“THE COURT: What is the Government’s evidence[ ] to this charge ?
“MR. WEINGARTEN: If this charge went to trial, the Government would prove____
“These efforts to obscure and mischaracterize this phone call form the basis of the contempt charge found in this information.
“THE COURT [addressing appellant]: Because I find that your plea is knowledgeable, voluntary, and has a basis in fact and contains all the elements of the crime, I will accept your guilty plea____”
At the time of sentencing, on December 11, 1985, the following exchange occurred (emphasis added):
“[MR. WEINGARTEN]: Before I get to [the sentencing issue] I will like to just briefly set the scene as the crime was committed in this case____
“The crime, of course, took place in the Grand Jury. Mr. Holmes had been in the Grand Jury a couple of times____
“Mr. Holmes learned that we had come upon the evidence and he knew when he went back into the Grand Jury a third time that he was going to be asked about the phone call. He did three things that he pled to____ [Describing the three acts listed in the information.] He plead to the crime of contempt. Of course it’s a unique crime, it’s not a felony, it’s not a misdemeanor, it’s an obstruction offense. Basically what he pled to was preventing the Grand Jury from getting evidence that it was entitled to receive.
“[THE COURT]: In accordance with and pursuant to the plea agreement entered into, Mr. Holmes, I sentence you to serve one year in the custody of the Attorney General, impose a fine of $10,-000 and a special assessment____”
At the hearing on the motion to vacate the prison sentence on January 2, 1986, after appellant had paid the fine, however, the government urged that “the Court should find a legal, intellectually honest way to preserve the prison sentence.” The government advanced three alternative means to that end: first, that the court could view the fine as arising from one contemptuous act and the prison sentence from another, on the theory that the information charged three contempt offenses because it “delineated three specific acts” occurring both “outside and inside the Grand Jury”; second, even if appellant had been found guilty of only one offense, that the court had authority to impose a fine as an additional sentence under section 3623; [491]*491and third, that the court could rescind the fine and order the prison sentence served.
The district court denied appellant’s motion and adopted the first and second grounds urged by the government and, in addition, stated that the sentence could be corrected at any time before February 18, 1986, but did not rescind the fine.14
Taken as a whole, the record makes it totally clear that appellant was charged with, pleaded guilty to, and was convicted and sentenced for only a single offense of contempt. Accordingly, we now address the remaining alternatives advanced by the government and relied upon by the district court.
C. Section 3623: The “alternative fines’’ provision
The government contends that a provision of the Criminal Fine Enforcement Act, Pub.L. No. 98-596, 98 Stat. 3137, codified at 18 U.S.C.A. § 3623, offers independent authority for the imposition of a fine in addition to a prison sentence ordered under the contempt statute. Section 3623, entitled “alternative fines,” applies to offense^ committed after December 81, 1984, and in pertinent part provides as follows (footnote added):
“(a) An individual convicted of an offense may be fined not more than the greatest of—
“(1) the amount specified in the law setting forth the offense;
“(2) the applicable amount under subsection (c) of this section
“(3) in the case of a felony, $250,000;
“(4) in the case of a misdemeanor resulting in death, $250,000; or
“(5) in the case of a misdemeanor punishable by imprisonment for more than six months, $100,000.”
The interpretation of section 3623 advocated by the government is that, for a single contempt offense, a court can order prison under the contempt statute and a fine — as an additional punishment — under section 3623. That section speaks in the disjunctive, allowing a court to impose a fine “not more than the greatest of” alternatives (a)(1), (a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(4), “or” (a)(5). The government does not clearly claim but we view its argument as suggesting that this power to impose a fine as an additional sentence exists either (1) because [492]*492subsection (a)(1) permits the imposition of a fine as high as that allowed by section 401 or (2) that the court derives the power to impose a fine from the fact that the punishments possible for contempt are such that the offense is a felony or misdemeanor and thus falls within subsection (a)(3) or (a)(5).16
Before examining these alternatives in turn, we set forth principles of statutory construction which the Supreme Court has identified as pertinent to the interpretation of sentencing provisions:
“The first is the oft-cited rule that ‘ “ambiguity concerning the ambit of criminal statutes should be resolved in favor of lenity.” ’ ... And the second is the principle that a more specific statute will be given precedence over a more general one, regardless of their temporal sequence ____ [These principles] serve[ ] as ‘an outgrowth of our reluctance to increase or multiply punishments absent a clear and definite legislative directive.’ ” Busic v. United States, 446 U.S. 398, 100 S.Ct. 1747, 1753, 64 L.Ed.2d 381 (1980) (citations omitted).17
Another settled principle is that “repeals by implication are not favored ... and will not be found unless an intent to repeal is ‘ “clear and manifest.” ’ ” Rodriguez v. United States, — U.S. -, 107 S.Ct. 1391, 1392, 94 L.Ed.2d 533 (1987) (per curiam) (citations omitted). A repeal by implication may be inferred if a newly enacted provision presents an irreconcilable conflict with an earlier statute. Id.
With these principles of statutory construction in mind, we turn to the language of section 3623, and its relationship to section 401.
(i) The scope of section 3623
Our review of various statutory provisions of Title 18 indicates that the amount of fines authorized by various offense statutes for some offenses varies significantly despite a similarity of offenses and prison terms authorized by the respective offense statutes,18 and that, in most cases, section 3623 authorizes fine amounts higher than those provided in the offense statutes. These facts suggest that Congress intended to allow courts to fix on a more consistent basis the amount of fines to be imposed and to permit higher fines to be imposed in the great majority of cases by enacting a broadly applicable statute (instead of amending the offense statutes one at a time). As stated in the House Judiciary Committee Report on the portion of the Criminal Fine Enforcement Act of 1984 which became section 3623, “The maximum fines of present law — except for some of the recently enacted ones and some of the regulatory offenses — are too low to constitute significant punishments for the offense involved____ To the extent that maximum fine levels are increased, the fine becomes a more severe punishment and more attractive as an alternative to prison.” H.R.Rep. No. 98-906, 98th Cong. 2nd Sess., 16, reprinted in 1984 U.S.Code Cong. & Ad.News 5433 at 5448-49. These purposes are not furthered by holding section 3623 applicable to section 401.
(ii) Section 401 does not specify an amount of fine within subsection (a)(D
Although section 3623 reflects a congressional purpose of increasing the [493]*493amount of fines that can be imposed for most offenses, subsection (a)(1) makes it clear that fine amounts specified in offense statutes higher than those permitted under subsections 3623(a)(2) through (a)(5) are preserved.19 Subsection (a)(1) does not mesh so smoothly, however, with the contempt statute, which contains no “amount specified in the law setting forth the offense.” Section 401 makes no mention of any amount. Hence subsection (a)(1) would appear to be inapplicable to section 401. We cannot construe subsection (a)(1) as the government urges.
(in) Contempt is not a felony or misdemeanor within subsections (a)(3) and (a)(5)
Nor does the language of subsections (a)(3) and (a)(5) clearly apply to section 401. Subsection (a)(3) is applicable only to a “felony,” and subsection (a)(5) is applicable only to a “misdemeanor.” Yet, the Supreme Court has never characterized contempt as either a felony or a misdemeanor, but rather has described it as “an offense sui generis.” Cheff v. Schnackenberg, 384 U.S. 373, 86 S.Ct. 1523, 1526, 16 L.Ed.2d 629 (1966). See also Frank v. United States, 395 U.S. 147, 89 S.Ct. 1503, 1506 n. 5, 23 L.Ed.2d 162 (1969) (quoting with approval portion of Cheff containing this language). This is how the government characterized contempt to the district court at the sentencing hearing here (“Of course, it’s a unique crime, it’s not a felony, it’s not a misdemeanor.”). And, at the Rule 11 hearing below, the government had made clear that appellant was pleading guilty “to something other than a felony.” Although 18 U.S.C. § 1 purports to classify all offenses as either felonies, misdemeanors, or petty offense misdemeanors, based on the maximum potential punishment authorized,20 the Supreme Court has never applied this statute to categorize contempt as a felony, as the terms of section 1 would require. In determining the right to trial by jury for contempt, the Court has rather “decided by analogy to 18 U.S.C. § 1 that penalties not exceeding those authorized for petty offenses could be imposed in criminal contempt cases without affording the right to a jury trial.” Frank, 89 S.Ct. at 1506 (emphasis added). Yet at the same time, the Court recognized that “Congress ... has not categorized contempts as ‘serious’ or ‘petty.’ ” Id. at 1505 (emphasis added). Similarly, the Court has rejected reliance on 18 U.S.C. § 4083, providing that those convicted of offenses punishable by more than a year’s imprisonment may be confined in a penitentiary, as basis for concluding that contempts, since they may be so punished, are therefore “infamous crimes” for which the Fifth Amendment requires a grand jury indictment, notwith[494]*494standing that potential penitentiary imprisonment was recognized as the standard in this respect for offenses generally. Green v. United States, 356 U.S. 165, 78 S.Ct. 632, 642, 2 L.Ed.2d 672 (1958). The Green Court likewise implicitly rejected the argument of Justice Black’s dissent there that contempt was a felony — for which a grand jury was required — by virtue of the definition in 18 U.S.C. § 1. Id. at 652 & n. 11. See also United States v. Nunn, 622 F.2d 802, 803-04 (5th Cir.1980) (grand jury not required in federal contempt).21
(iv) Section 3623 does not authorize fines additional to those authorized by the offense statute or repeal the disjunctive provision of section jOl
Even if section 401 specified an amount of fine — say, not to exceed $50,000 — and even if contempt could properly be regarded as a misdemeanor (or a felony), nevertheless we would not read section 3623 as authorizing both a fine and imprisonment for contempt under section 401.
The title of section 3623 — “alternative fines,” not “additional fines” — indicates that the section was intended to address the amount of the fine that might be imposed rather than to authorize multiple fines for a single offense. See House v. Commissioner, 453 F.2d 982 (5th Cir.1972).22 The statute speaks only to the amount of a fine that may be imposed, and not to whether a fine may be imposed. Nowhere in section 3623 did Congress write that fines imposed under that provision were to be in addition to fines authorized by the offense statutes. To the extent that any ambiguity exists about the relationship of section 3623 to other criminal statutes, we view our interpretation of the section as dictated by the principle that we cannot “ ‘increase or multiply punishments absent a clear and definite legislative directive.’ ” Busic, 100 S.Ct. at 1753 (citation omitted). Moreover, we must regard section 401 as the more specific statute dealing with the offense of contempt and the imposition of fines in contempt cases, and section 3623 as a more general [495]*495statute dealing with fines in offense convictions generally. Construing the two together, “a more specific statute will be given precedence over a more general one, regardless of their temporal sequence.” Busic, 100 S.Ct. at 1753.
The foregoing principles are particularly applicable where the underlying offense statute provides for a fine. The government’s argument would lead to the conclusion that in those instances the section 3623 fine can be imposed in addition to the fine authorized by the underlying offense statute. Thus, for example, under the government’s theory, for a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 114, a $25,000 fine could be imposed under section 114 and, in addition, a fine of $250,000 could also be imposed under section 3623(a)(3). We reject that construction. We think it unlikely such a result was intended by Congress. And, since that construction is not clearly mandated by the language of section 3623, to adopt it is to run counter to the above-noted principles of Busic.
Accordingly, with respect at least to underlying offense statutes which authorize a fine, we construe section 3623 as substituting a different amount of fine authorized from that allowed by the offense statute, as opposed to authorizing a separate fine in addition to the fine authorized by the underlying statute.23 Even if section 401 specified a $50,000 fine maximum and was classified as, say, a misdemeanor, and was hence clearly within the ambit of section 3623, nevertheless section 3623 would not authorize both a fine and imprisonment for violation of section 401. Section 401, in our hypothetical, would read “punish by fine not to exceed $50,000 or imprisonment”; and section 3623 would substitute its $100,000 fine amount for the $50,000 of section 401. Thus, one convicted of violating section 401 could, by virtue of its terms and those of section 3623, be punished by fine not to exceed $100,000 or imprisonment. Section 3623 would not be read to authorize a second $100,000 fine ' which could be imposed in addition to the $50,000 fine or imprisonment allowed by section 401.
Section 401 authorizes either a fine or imprisonment; section 3623 neither provides specific language allowing both punishments under such a statute nor repeals the limitations of section 401. Nothing in the legislative history of section 3623 suggests that it had such a purpose. We will not find a repeal by implication of the disjunctive language of section 401. See Rodriguez, supra, at 1392.
We are strengthened in this conclusion by the realization that Congress could have easily made its intention in this respect clear. In the Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, Congress included the provision now codified as 18 U.S.C.A. § 3551. Pub.L. No. 98-473, § 212(a). This section expressly provides, “A sentence to pay a fine may be imposed in addition to any other sentence.” § 3551(b). The Sentencing Reform Act of 1984, containing section 3551, was passed by Congress on October 11, 1984, the same day Congress passed the Criminal Fine Enforcement Act, containing section 3623. Pub.L. No. 98-596, § 6(a). Yet Congress, in enacting section 3551, provided that it would not go into effect until November 1986, see Pub.L. No. 98-473, § 235, and in December 1985 the effective date was further extended to November 1987. See Pub.L. No. 99-217, §§ 2, 4. Congress thus had in mind, when it enacted section 3623, the question of whether fines would be additional to all other penalties, as well as the language to provide an affirmative answer to that question. Nevertheless, it chose not to so provide in section 3623 or [496]*496elsewhere in the Criminal Fine Enforcement Act; it did so provide in section 3551, but chose to postpone the effective date of that section. The government is asking us, in effect, to disregard the effective date provisions of section 3551. We decline to do so.
For the reasons stated, we conclude that section 3623 does not provide authorization for a fine, in addition to a prison sentence, as punishment for violation of section 401.
D. Payment of the fine as satisfaction of the sentence
We have held that appellant was convicted of only one contempt under section 401, and that accordingly his sentence to both a fine and imprisonment is illegal as being contrary to section 401 and not authorized by section 3623. Consequently, the district court, in its determination of appellant’s Rule 35 motion, erred in holding that appellant’s sentence was legal. The final question, then, is the relief to which appellant is entitled. Appellant contends that, since he has paid his fine, he is entitled to have his prison sentence vacated under In re Bradley, 318 U.S. 50, 63 S.Ct. 470, 87 L.Ed. 608 (1943). The government asserts that if the sentence is illegal the district court should nevertheless be allowed to now resentence appellant to impose imprisonment only, as the court at the Rule 35 hearing indicated it would intend to do in the event the sentence to both fine and imprisonment were ultimately held illegal.24 In this connection, the government argues that Bradley has been undermined by later decisions and is not controlling because district courts now have broader resentencing power and because the fine here was prematurely paid and can be returned before appellant serves any imprisonment. We now turn to these contentions.
■ (i) The continuing vitality of Bradley
Construing the predecessor statute to section 401,25 the Supreme Court held that a defendant sentenced to a prison term and ordered to pay a fine could, upon payment of the fine, be relieved of the sentence of imprisonment. Bradley, supra. The facts of Bradley are directly on point for purposes of this appeal. Bradley was sentenced to serve six months in prison and ordered to pay a $500 fine. He was taken into custody and committed to prison on September 28. On October 1, his attorney paid the fine in full. Noting that the contempt statute authorized only imprisonment or a fine, the Supreme Court wrote:
“Later on [the same day the fine had been paid] the court, realizing that the sentence was erroneous, delivered to the clerk an order amending [the sentence] by omitting any fine and retaining only the six months’ imprisonment. The court instructed the clerk, who still held the money, to return it to the petitioner. The latter refused to receive it, and the clerk has it.
“... [W]e are of the opinion that the errors involved in the sentence require that [Bradley] shall be freed from further imprisonment.
“When ... the fine was paid to the clerk and receipted for by him, the petitioner had complied with a portion of the sentence which could lawfully have been imposed. As the judgment of the court was thus executed so as to be a full satisfaction of one of the alternative penalties of the law, the power of the court was at an end. It is unimportant that the fine had not been covered into the treasury; it had been paid to the clerk, the officer of the United States authorized to receive it, and petitioner’s rights did not depend on what that officer subsequently did with the money.
“It follows that the subsequent amendment of the sentence could not avoid the satisfaction of the judgment, and the attempt to accomplish that end was a nullity. Since one valid alternative provision [497]*497of the original sentence has been satisfied, the petitioner is entitled to be freed of further restraint.” Id., 63 S.Ct. at 470-71 (footnotes omitted).
Bradley appears to control this case and has been followed without deviation in both this and other Circuits.26 Although the government concedes that the decision has never been explicitly overruled, it contends that the Supreme Court has since undermined Bradley by limiting Ex parte Lange, 85 U.S. (18 Wall.) 163, 21 L.Ed. 872 (1873), upon which Bradley relied,27 in United States v. DiFrancesco, 449 U.S. 117, 101 S.Ct. 426, 66 L.Ed.2d 238 (1980).
We need not recount in full the argument of the government on this point; it suffices for us to state that the government urges this Court to do what the Supreme Court has declined to do — that is, to read DiFrancesco as impliedly fully overruling Lange and, through Lange, Bradley. The government contends that the latter two decisions rested upon a double jeopardy theory repudiated by DiFrancesco. To the contrary, we find that the Supreme Court in DiFrancesco carefully distinguished Lange and explained why that decision was unaffected. First, DiFrancesco described as dictum language in United States v. Benz, 282 U.S. 304, 51 S.Ct. 113, 114, 75 L.Ed. 354 (1931), “to the effect that the federal practice of barring an increase in sentence by the trial court after service of the sentence has begun is constitutionally based.” DiFrancesco, 101 S.Ct. at 438. Then the Court specifically stated that this “dictum" remained applicable in cases like Lange where resentencing would impose punishment which, when added to that already satisfied, would exceed what could have been imposed initially:
“In Lange the trial court erroneously imposed both imprisonment and fine, even though it was authorized by statute to impose only one or the other of these two punishments. Lange had paid the fine and served five days [of a one-year sentence] in prison. The trial court then resentenced him to a year’s imprisonment. The fine having been paid and the defendant having suffered one of the alternative punishments, ‘the power of the court to punish further was gone.’ ... The holding in Lange, and thus the dictum in Benz, are not susceptible of general application. We confine the dictum in Benz to Lange’s specific context
“The guarantee against double punishments that has evolved in the holdings of this Court plainly is not involved in this case. As Ex parte Lange demonstrates, a defendant may not receive a greater sentence than the legislature has authorized. No double jeopardy problem would have been present in Ex parte Lange if Congress had provided that the offense there was punishable by both fine and imprisonment, even though that is multiple punishment.” DiFrancesco, 101 S.Ct at 438 (emphasis added).
Faced with this plain approval of the rule of Lange (and, impliedly, of Bradley) barring further punishment that, with the punishment already suffered, would exceed the limits legislatively authorized, we cannot view Bradley as having been undermined or overruled by DiFrancesco, as the [498]*498government urges. The Supreme Court may overrule its own earlier decisions, but this Court cannot.
The government also suggests that the resentencing powers of a district court have been significantly enlarged by Rule 35, which did not exist when Lange and Bradley were decided. We find this argument unpersuasive, in part because the Supreme Court gave no weight to this theory in its mentions of Lange in DiFrancesco and in part because this Court has indicated that the bar of Lange and Bradley against resentencing which, with the sentence already satisfied, will impose punishment beyond that authorized remains in effect even with Rule 35.28
Thus, we find no basis in DiFrancesco or Rule 35 to vary from the Supreme Court’s holdings that a contemnor cannot be punished by both a fine and imprisonment for a single contempt offense under section 401, and that if the contemnor has fully paid the fine imposed in a sentence then he has satisfied that lawful alternative sentence and cannot also be subjected to imprisonment for the same offense, as Congress has not authorized both punishments.
. The government nevertheless calls to our attention numerous cases involving a district court’s power to correct an illegal sentence. Indeed, we have stated as a general rule that “[fjederal courts have uniformly held that resentencing to correct an illegal sentence does not implicate double jeopardy rights.” United States v. Denson, 603 F.2d 1143, 1148 (5th Cir.1979) (en banc).29 Correction of a sentence can occur even if service of the sentence has begun, United States v. Allen, 588 F.2d 183, 185 (5th Cir.1979), even if the correct sentence may be more onerous to the defendant than the original, e.g., Llerena v. United States, 508 F.2d 78, 80-81 (5th Cir. 1975).
The Bradley cases stand apart from this general rule, however. The contempt statute authorizes only a fine or imprisonment, and the full payment of a fine satisfies one lawful alternative sentence. Sentences involving imprisonment not yet fully served or a term of imprisonment below the maximum authorized by an offense statute are not analogous, nor are cases in which a defendant appeals a dual sentence before satisfying either prong. What differentiates the Bradley-type case [499]*499from these other cases30 is that a Bradley defendant who has paid his fine has suffered the maximum sentence authorized by the statutes. Here the appellant challenged not the entirety of his sentence but only the portion calling for his imprisonment, which he contended and contends had become and remained illegal since he had paid the fine. In none of the cases relied on by the government did the resentencing, when combined with the sentence then already suffered and satisfied, impose greater punishment on the defendant than legislatively authorized. We think it clear that if a defendant, sentenced for contempt to a year in prison and a $100,000 fine, serves two days of his prison sentence but does not pay his fine, he cannot then be resentenced to the fine only and thus be forced to pay it. The resentencing cases provide no basis to depart from Bradley.
(ii) Whether the fine was prepaid and may be returned before service of the prison sentence
The government and the district court below relied to some degree on the theory that the court’s order for appellant’s prison term to begin on February 18, 1986 also deferred his obligation to pay the $10,-000 fine and rendered his payment of the fine on December 11, 1985 premature. We find in the district court’s pronouncement of sentence and commitment order no indication that the payment of the fine was subject to any special arrangement for the deferral of payment, and we therefore view the fine as subject to statutory provisions requiring that payment of a fine be immediate absent some specific provision to the contrary.31 We reject the government’s contention that this case can be distinguished from Bradley on the basis of the asserted prepayment of the fine.
The government also contends that the district court should be permitted to return the fine to appellant and to impose only the prison sentence, because returning the fine should have the same effect as though that punishment had never been imposed. As an original proposition, the government’s position might be arguable, but we find once again that Bradley has addressed the situation and compels us to reject this argument.32 As noted above, [500]*500the district court in Bradley did offer to return the fine to the contemnor, and the Supreme Court nonetheless held that Bradley’s entire prison sentence must be set aside and, impliedly, that he was not obligated to accept the money.
The government also contends that Bradley and Lange are distinguishable because in those cases the defendant did serve some prison time — not more than four days of a six-month sentence in Bradley, not more than five days of a one-year sentence in Lange — while here appellant has not yet commenced service of the imprisonment portion of his sentence. This, however, affords no basis for distinction. Bradley and Lange voided the entire prison sentence. If return of the fine allows the defendant to be treated as if the fine had never been imposed and paid, which is what the government argues, then the Bradley defendant would have been made to serve the balance of his prison sentence, or at least all but four days thereof. The contemnor in Bradley was entitled to be immediately released from prison on payment of the fine, notwithstanding its elimination from the sentence later the same day and the prompt tender of its return to the contemnor, only because return of the fine would be wholly ineffective to change the fact that the contemnor had already fully satisfied the fine portion of his sentence.
Moreover, the record here clearly reflects, and the government conceded at oral argument, that no offer to return the $10,-000 has been made. Although this Court has recognized that a defendant can recover a fine imposed under an unconstitutional statute,33 the government cites no authority for the proposition that the courts can compel a contemnor to take back a fine and to accept, instead, a term in prison. Nor does the government indicate whether appellant would be entitled to receive interest or other compensation for the lost use of his funds if he sought to recover them.34 Bradley alone, even without these additional problems, requires us to hold that attempts to return the fine to appellant will not justify the execution of appellant’s prison sentence.
III.
We respect the thrust of language cited by the government from Bozza v. United States, 330 U.S. 160, 67 S.Ct. 645, 649, 91 L.Ed. 818 (1947) (citations omitted):
“This Court has rejected the ‘doctrine that a prisoner, whose guilt is established by a regular verdict, is to escape punishment altogether because the court committed an error in passing the sentence.’ ... The Constitution does not require that sentencing should be a game in which a wrong move by the judge
[501]*501means immunity for the prisoner— In this case the court ‘only set aside what it had no authority to do, and substitute^] directions required by the law to be done upon the conviction of the offender.’ ”35
However, Bozza does not purport to depart from Lange or Bradley. See Bozza, 67 S.Ct. at 649 n. 2 (citing Lange and Bradley as examples of cases in which “the trial court could not correct the sentence without causing him to suffer double punishment”). Furthermore, although appellant will serve no time in prison for this offense, he has not “escape[d] punishment altogether.”
Bradley may be overly technical, as Chief Justice Stone contended in his dissent there, arguing that the less than one day the contemnor had been deprived of his money was de minimis. 63 S.Ct. at 471. But it is not for us to overrule or modify Bradley. We also note that Congress has had more than four decades since Bradley was handed down in which to amend the contempt statute’s provision limiting punishment to a “fine or imprisonment.” Recognizing that an amendment allowing á fine in addition to any other punishment on every offense conviction is scheduled to go into effect in November 1987, we are nonetheless bound to apply existing law.
“[T]o the extent that cases can be hypothesized in which this holding may support curious or seemingly unreasonable comparative sentences, it suffices to say that the asserted unreasonableness flows not from ... this decision, but from the statutes as Congress wrote them. If corrective action is needed, it is ... Congress that must provide it. ‘It is not for us to speculate, much less act, on whether Congress would have altered its stance had the specific events of this case been anticipated.’ ” Busic v. United States, 446 U.S. 398, 100 S.Ct. 1747, 1752, 64 L.Ed.2d 381 (1980) (citations omitted).
Congress has now acted, but in a manner that does not affect the disposition of this case.
[502]*502We are constrained to conclude that, pursuant to Bradley, the district court’s denial of appellant’s Rule 35 motion must be reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to vacate the imprisonment portion of appellant’s sentence.
We are, of course, aware that in many respects this case represents a miscarriage of justice. Undoubtedly Holmes deserves to serve some confinement, as the district court plainly intended. Because of the anomalous nature of section 401 and the decision in Bradley, a mistake was made by the district judge and the government which is now beyond recall. We imply no criticism of either; when the governing rules are somewhat unusual and technical, their application will inevitably involve some mistakes. That is part of the price. We should not pretend otherwise. The government has advanced several theories to support its position. Each has at least some superficial plausibility, but in our judgment each must be rejected. In cases of this sort, where the legal issues are arguable and the equities heavily on one side, the temptation is strong to bend the law itself. Such judicial bending of fixed legal rules, however, tends ultimately to be destructive of the rule of law. Of course, the judicial function requires us not only to conscientiously, even-handedly, and fairly interpret the law, but also to similarly apply it to the unique facts of each case. The latter duty, however, does not permit us to disregard the law in order to achieve a desired result in a particular instance.
The order of the district court denying appellant’s Rule 35 motion is REVERSED, and the cause is REMANDED for further proceedings consistent herewith.
15. Subsection (c) of section 3623 provides:
"(c)(1) If the defendant derives pecuniary gain from the offense, or if the offense results in pecuniary loss to another person, the defendant may be fined not more than the greater of twice the gross gain or twice the gross loss, unless imposition of a fine under this subsection would unduly complicate or prolong the sentencing process.
"(2) Except as otherwise expressly provided, the aggregate of fines that a court may impose on a defendant at the same time for different offenses that arise from a common scheme or plan, and that do not cause separable or distinguishable kinds of harm or damage, is twice the amount imposable for the most serious offense."