United States v. Pierre Watson

843 F.3d 335, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 21818, 2016 WL 7156786
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 8, 2016
Docket16-1357
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 843 F.3d 335 (United States v. Pierre Watson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Pierre Watson, 843 F.3d 335, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 21818, 2016 WL 7156786 (8th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

RILEY, Chief Judge.

When Pierre Watson was sentenced for running away from a halfway house where he was serving federal time, see 18 U.S.C. § 751(a), he was also facing federal charges in a separate case based on allegations of fraud and identity theft. The district court 1 sentenced Watson to a year and a half in prison for the escape — the middle of the uncontested advisory range under the United States Sentencing Guidelines — and specified that the sentence “shall run consecutively to any sentence that may be imposed if [Watson] should be convicted in the pending [fraud] case.” Watson did not object at the time, yet on appeal he argues the district court did not have authority to make, his sentence con *336 secutive to another federal sentence that had not yet been imposed. 2

As Watson acknowledges, he forfeited his challenge by not raising it before the district court, so he can obtain relief only if the consecutive sentence was a plain error — meaning an error that is “clear or obvious under current law” — that affected his substantial rights. United States v. Poitra, 648 F.3d 884, 887 (8th Cir. 2011); see also Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b). Watson concedes neither the Supreme Court nor this court has previously resolved the issue presented in this case. He argues the answer is nonetheless clear based on dictum from the Supreme Court and decisions from other Courts of Appeals. We are not convinced.

The Supreme Court dictum comes from a footnote in Setser v. United States, concerning the similar, but distinct issue of whether a district court could make a federal sentence run consecutively to an anticipated state sentence. See Setser v. United States, 566 U.S. 231, 132 S.Ct. 1463, 1466, 182 L.Ed.2d 455 (2012). The Supreme Court held that because the statute governing concurrent and consecutive sentences, 18 U.S.C. § 3584(a), does not address cases where the other sentence has not yet been imposed, 3 district courts retain their common-law “discretion to select whether the sentences they impose will run concurrently or consecutively with respect to [such] sentences.” Id. at 236, 132 S.Ct. at 1468-69 (“Section 3584 ... is framed not as a conferral of authority” — in which case the failure to mention this situation would mean no authority was conferred — “but as a limitation of authority that already exists.”). The footnote in question was prompted by the defendant raising the prospect that such reasoning would also seem to extend to cases like this one, where the anticipated sentence was federal (which he apparently assumed the Court would consider problematic), because “the text of § 3584(a) does not distinguish between state and federal sentences.” Id. at 241 n.4, 132 S.Ct. at 1471 n.4. As a counterpoint, the Court offered a plausible interpretation of the statute that would in fact support such a distinction:

It could be argued that § 3584(a) impliedly prohibits [a federal court making a sentence consecutive to an anticipated federal sentence] because it gives that decision to the federal court that sentences the defendant when the other sentence is “already” imposed — and does not speak (of course) to what a state court must do when a sentence has already been imposed.

Id.

That is the reading Watson now invokes to justify reaching the opposite outcome here than in Setser. But the Supreme Court’s suggestion- that drawing such a line could be textually defensible, by itself, is not nearly enough to satisfy us it is clear and obviously right. To the contrary, the footnote was the Court’s demonstration *337 why it understood its decision in Setser was not dictating a clear answer to the question presented in Watson’s situation. See id. (“It suffices to -say, however, that this question [of an anticipated federal sentence] is not before us.”). Nor can we say, regardless of what the Court meant to leave open, the proposed interpretation is so compelling that, now when the issue has been articulated, reading § 3584(a) any other way would be clearly wrong. Watson’s theory is premised on the idea that § 3584(a) “gives” the concurrent-or-consecutive decision to the' second court to sentence a defendant, see Setser, 566 U.S. at 241 n.4, 132 S.Ct. at 1471 n.4, however, that is not the only way to read the relevant clause. Rather, it reasonably could be understood as simply clarifying both concurrent and consecutive sentences are permissible, without speaking to which court gets to choose between them. See 18 U.S.C. § 3584(a) (“if a term of imprisonment is imposed on a defendant who is already subject to an undischarged .term of imprisonment, the terms may run concurrently or consecutively”).

The other appellate decisions Watson cites are United States v. Almonte-Reyes, 814 F.3d 24 (1st Cir. 2016), United States v. Obey, 790 F.3d 545 (4th Cir. 2015), and United States v. Montes-Ruiz, 745 F.3d 1286 (9th Cir. 2014). All three ultimately adopted the position proposed in the Setser footnote. 4 See Almonte-Reyes, 814 F.3d at 28-29; Obey, 790 F.3d at 549; Montes-Ruiz, 745 F.3d at 1292-93. None, however, treated it as obvious. Instead, they all saw fit to offer substantive analy-ses of the issue before reaching their conclusions. See Almonte-Reyes, 814 F.3d at 27-29; Obey, 790 F.3d at 548-50; Montes-Ruiz, 745 F.3d at 1290-93; see also Obey, 790 F.3d at 549-50 (deciding the issue but then denying relief on plain-error review); cf. Almonte-Reyes, 814 F.3d at 27 n.4 (declining- to apply the plain-error standard because the government did not ask for it). Two decisions based their holdings in large part on circuit precedent that had prohibited making a sentence concurrent or consecutive to any sentence that had not yet been imposed, state or federal. See Obey, 790 F.3d at 549 (citing United States v. Smith, 472 F.3d 222, 224, 226 (4th Cir. 2006)); Montes-Ruiz, 745 F.3d at 1290, 1292-93 (citing Taylor v. Sawyer, 284 F.3d 1143, 1148 (9th Cir. 2002)). Those prior decisions, the courts ruled, were only partly overruled by Setser and remained good law with respect to anticipated federal sentences. See Obey, 790 F.3d at 549; Montes-Ruiz, 745 F.3d at 1292-93.

We have no comparable precedent. Our closest case, although not controlling, at first glance points the opposite direction. See United States v.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Guziak
968 N.W.2d 196 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2021)
United States v. John Wright
Sixth Circuit, 2021
State v. Wilson
947 N.W.2d 131 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2020)
United States v. Michael Snow
949 F.3d 1094 (Eighth Circuit, 2020)
State v. McMillen
2019 S.D. 40 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 2019)
United States v. Dale White
701 F. App'x 517 (Eighth Circuit, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
843 F.3d 335, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 21818, 2016 WL 7156786, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-pierre-watson-ca8-2016.