United States v. Wilmer Canelas-Amador

837 F.3d 668, 2016 FED App. 0232P, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 16781, 2016 WL 4791851
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 14, 2016
Docket15-6035
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 837 F.3d 668 (United States v. Wilmer Canelas-Amador) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Wilmer Canelas-Amador, 837 F.3d 668, 2016 FED App. 0232P, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 16781, 2016 WL 4791851 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge.

As anyone who watches detective shows on television can tell you, it is rarely good news when “the feds” take over on a case — they are generally portrayed as likely to bungle the whole thing, permitting the guilty party to get off scot-free. This trope is certainly a gross exaggeration. But at least in this case there may be a grain of truth to it, albeit in circumstances involving the less-than-thrilling minutiae of immigration law and the federal sentencing guidelines.

Six years ago Tennessee law enforcement officials arrested illegal immigrant Wilmer Canelas-Amador and charged him in Tennessee state court with felony aggravated assault and a few related misdemeanors. The record before us does not contain any findings of fact by the Tennessee court or any hearing transcripts, but it does include a document entitled “Waiver of Trial by Jury and Acceptance of Plea of Guilty,” which Canelas-Amador signed and the Tennessee trial court approved in a form order.

Before the trial court could enter judgment or pronounce a sentence, however, federal immigration authorities took Cane-las-Amador into custody, moving him out of Tennessee and eventually deporting him back to Honduras. When Canelas-Amador failed to appear for a presentence interview, the Tennessee trial court (which was, apparently,- unaware that Canelas-Amador had been taken out of state by immigration authorities) issued a capias (ie., a . bench warrant) ordering law enforcement to bring him into custody, presumably to sit for the interview. Not surprisingly, nothing came of the capias, and the matter appears to have lain dormant ever since.

Soon after being deported, Canelas-Amador reentered the U.S. illegally and was promptly arrested. He pled guilty to illegal reentry in federal court in Texas and was sentenced to one year of imprisonment. Then, in 2015, he was again arrested, this time in Tennessee, and was charged in federal court in Tennessee with illegal reentry, to which he pled guilty. This time, however, the district court gave him a much longer sentence: 57 months’ imprisonment, basing that sentence in large part on its 57-81 month guideline-range calculation. At the heart of that calculation was the district court’s determination, over Canelas-Amador’s objection, that the state court order accepting his “Waiver of Trial by Jury, and Acceptance of Plea of Guilty” constituted a “conviction for a felony that is ... a crime of violence,” mandating a sixteen-point enhancement under the guideline provision applicable to Illegal Reentry. U.S.S.G. § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A)(ii). 1

As the -district court noted, § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A)(ii) of the guidelines does not define “conviction,” nor have we supplied any controlling interpretation of that *671 term. The district court therefore looked to cases from outside of this circuit, concluding that the Immigration and Naturalization Act (INA), specifically 8 U.S.C. § 1101 (a)(48)(A), provided the proper definition of “conviction,” since the crime of illegal reentry is' codified in' the INA at 8 U.S.C. § 1326.

Under § 1101(a),
The term “conviction” means, with respect to an alien, a formal judgment of guilt of the alien entered by a court or, if adjudication of guilt has been withheld, where—
(i) a judge or jury has found the alien guilty or the alien has entered a plea of guilty or nolo contendere or has admitted sufficient facts to warrant a finding of guilt, and
(ii) the judge has ordered some form of punishment, penalty, or restraint'on the alien’s liberty to be imposed.

8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(48)(A).

The district court concluded that the state court order accepting the guilty plea was “a formal judgment of guilt and is therefore a conviction for purpose of Sentencing Guideline § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A).” This calculation, together with that court’s criminal-history determination, resulted in the aforementioned guideline range of 57-81 months’ imprisonment. Sans enhancements, Canelas-Amador would have been facing a guideline range of two to eight months’ imprisonment.

This appeal presents us with a single question: was the district court right that the state court order accepting the guilty plea was a conviction for the purposes of § 2L1.2(b)(l)(A)(ii)? On the district court’s own reasoning — which, tellingly, the government does not defend in this appeal — the answer is straightforward: no, a plea agreement approved in a form order falls well short of'“a formal judgment of guilt” under § 1101(a)(48)(A).

True, we give words “their ordinary, contemporary, common meaning” unless there’s a good reason not to, Perrin v. United States, 444 U.S. 37, 42, 100 S.Ct. 311, 62 L.Ed.2d 199 (1979), and the word “judgment” is often understood to mean any formal judicial decision, see, e.g., Random House Webster’s Unabridged Dictionary 1036 (1987) (defining “judgment” as “a judicial decision given by a judge or court”); Webster’s Third International Dictionary 1223 (1986) (defining “judgment” as “a formal decision or determination given in a cause by court of law or other tribunal”). Legal dictionaries define the term more narrowly, emphasizing the finality of the decision, see, e.g., Black’s Law Dictionary 970 (10th Ed. 2014) (defining “judgment” as a “court’s final determination of the rights and obligations of the parties in a case [including] any order from which an appeal lies” (emphasis added)), but this is not without exceptions, see Ballantine’s Law Dictionary 680 (3d ed. 1969) (emphasizing finality, but also noting that “judgment” is “[s]ometimes synonymous with decision”).

The initial plausibility of the district court’s construction does not bear up under close scrutiny, however. The sort of judgment spoken of in § 1101(a)(48) is a criminal judgment. When used in this setting, the term refers to something much more definite that simply ahy ruling by a court. As the Supreme Court has put it: “Final judgment in a criminal case means sentence. The sentence is the judgment.” Berman v. United States, 302 U.S. 211, 212, 58 S.Ct. 164, 82 L.Ed. 204 (1937). Indeed, the phrase “judgment of guilt” bears a striking resemblance to the technical legal phrase “judgment of conviction”— which, according to both Federal Rule of *672 Criminal Procedure 32(k) and Black’s Law Dictionary, is a written record setting “forth the plea, the jury verdict or the court’s findings, the adjudication, and sentence.” Fed. R. Crim. P. 32(k); accord Black’s Law Dictionary 972 (10th Ed; 2014),

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Bluebook (online)
837 F.3d 668, 2016 FED App. 0232P, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 16781, 2016 WL 4791851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-wilmer-canelas-amador-ca6-2016.