McCloud v. United States ( 2021 )


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  •      19-4184-pr
    McCloud v. United States of America
    1                                    In the
    2              United States Court of Appeals
    3                         for the Second Circuit
    4
    5
    6                              August Term, 2020
    7                               No. 19-4184-pr
    8
    9                               WILEY MCCLOUD,
    10                              Petitioner-Appellant,
    11
    12                                         v.
    13
    14                         UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    15                            Respondent-Appellee.
    16
    17
    18               Appeal from the United States District Court
    19                   for the Western District of New York.
    20               No. 6:19-cv-06544 — David G. Larimer, Judge.
    21
    22
    23                         SUBMITTED: FEBRUARY 1, 2021
    24                          DECIDED: FEBRUARY 9, 2021
    25
    Before: WALKER, RAGGI, and NARDINI, Circuit Judges.
    Petitioner-Appellant Wiley McCloud appeals from a final order
    entered on November 22, 2019, in the United States District Court for the
    Western District of New York (David G. Larimer, J.), denying as untimely
    his motion for relief pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    . McCloud argues that this
    Court’s recent decision in United States v. Townsend, 
    897 F.3d 66
     (2d Cir.
    2018), created a newly discovered fact that extended his filing deadline
    under § 2255(f)(4). We conclude that an intervening development in case
    law does not constitute a newly discovered “fact” within the meaning of
    § 2255(f)(4). We therefore AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
    DANIELLE C. WILD, Rochester, New York, for
    Defendant-Appellant.
    TIFFANY H. LEE, Assistant United States Attorney,
    for James P. Kennedy Jr., United States Attorney
    for the Western District of New York, Buffalo,
    New York, for Appellee.
    WILLIAM J. NARDINI, Circuit Judge:
    Petitioner-Appellant Wiley McCloud appeals from a final order
    entered on November 22, 2019, in the United States District Court for the
    Western District of New York (David G. Larimer, J.), denying as untimely
    his motion pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
     for relief from a judgment of
    conviction for various drug and firearms crimes. McCloud’s conviction
    became final about ten years ago, making his § 2255 motion filed in 2019
    well outside the one-year limitations period stated in 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (f).
    McCloud now argues that this Court’s 2018 decision in United States v.
    2
    Townsend 1 creates a newly discovered fact that extended his filing deadline
    under § 2255(f)(4).
    We write to explain that an intervening development in case law—
    here, a decision issued after a conviction but before the filing of a motion
    under § 2255—is not a newly discovered “fact” within the meaning of
    § 2255(f)(4). We therefore AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
    I.        Background
    A.      McCloud’s conviction
    On July 2, 2008, McCloud pled guilty, without a plea agreement, to
    possession with intent to distribute cocaine base, see 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (a);
    possession of a firearm in furtherance of that drug crime, see 
    18 U.S.C. § 924
    (c); and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, see 
    id.
     § 922(g)(1).
    McCloud’s criminal history then included two New York State convictions
    for drug offenses: a 1998 conviction for attempted criminal sale of a
    1   
    897 F.3d 66
     (2d Cir. 2018).
    3
    controlled substance in the third degree, and a 2000 conviction for criminal
    possession of a controlled substance in the fifth degree, with intent to sell
    (the “2000 New York Drug Conviction”). 2 Based on these convictions, the
    United States Probation Office recommended McCloud’s designation as a
    career offender under § 4B1.1 of the United States Sentencing Guidelines
    (“Guidelines”) and calculated an advisory range of 292-365 months in
    prison.
    On February 13, 2009, the parties appeared for sentencing and agreed
    that McCloud was a career offender. The district court so designated him
    but agreed with the defense that a below-Guidelines sentence was
    appropriate. The court sentenced McCloud to a total of 202 months in
    prison—substantially below the career offender range, though not quite as
    low as the defendant had sought. Judgment entered on February 20, 2009.
    2 Although the statutory citations for these convictions do not appear in the record,
    attempted sale of a controlled substance in the third degree is punishable under New York
    Penal Law (“NYPL”) § 220.39, and criminal possession of a controlled substance in the
    fifth degree, with intent to sell, is punishable under NYPL § 220.06.
    4
    McCloud initially appealed the judgment but stipulated to withdraw the
    appeal six months later.
    B.      Townsend and McCloud’s motion under § 2255
    On July 23, 2018, this Court decided Townsend, holding that the
    defendant’s conviction for criminal sale of a controlled substance in the fifth
    degree, under NYPL § 220.31, was not for a “controlled substance offense”
    under the career offender Guideline in U.S.S.G. § 4B1.1. 3 Applying the
    categorical approach, Townsend explained that, “[a]t the time of [the
    defendant’s] conviction,” § 220.31 used a broader definition of “controlled
    substance” than the federal Controlled Substances Act and, therefore, could
    not serve as a predicate offense to enhance a defendant’s base level under
    the career offender Guideline. 4
    3   897 F.3d at 75.
    4Id. at 74. Because the district court dismissed McCloud’s § 2255 motion as untimely, the
    court did not consider whether, at the time of his 2000 New York Drug Conviction, the
    applicable state drug schedule was more expansive than the corresponding federal
    schedule, as was the case in Townsend. Because we agree that the § 2255 motion was filed
    too late, we likewise need not address this merits question.
    5
    On July 23, 2019, precisely one year after Townsend, McCloud filed a
    motion to vacate, set aside, or correct his sentence pursuant to § 2255. He
    argued that, under Townsend, his 2000 New York Drug Conviction did not
    qualify as a predicate “controlled substance offense” to justify his career
    offender designation. 5
    C.      The district court’s decision
    On November 22, 2019, the district court denied McCloud’s motion
    as untimely. Under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (f), a petitioner has one year to bring a
    § 2255 motion, with the limitations period running from the latest of:
    (1) the date on which the judgment of conviction
    becomes final;
    (2) the date on which the impediment to making a
    motion created by governmental action in violation of the
    Constitution or laws of the United States is removed, if the
    5McCloud’s § 2255 motion appears to misdescribe his 2000 New York Drug Conviction
    as a conviction for “sale” under NYPL § 220.31 rather than a conviction for “possession . . .
    with intent to sell” under NYPL § 220.06. Both statutes rely on the same definition of
    “controlled substance” under New York law, and so this misdescription does not appear
    to affect his reliance on Townsend. In any event, the only question we resolve here is the
    threshold one of whether McCloud’s § 2255 motion is timely.
    6
    movant was prevented from making a motion by such
    governmental action;
    (3) the date on which the right asserted was initially
    recognized by the Supreme Court, if that right has been newly
    recognized by the Supreme Court and made retroactively
    applicable to cases on collateral review; or
    (4) the date on which the facts supporting the claim or
    claims presented could have been discovered through the
    exercise of due diligence. 6
    McCloud argued that his § 2255 filing was timely because Townsend created
    a newly discovered “fact” supporting his claim within the meaning of
    § 2255(f)(4) and, therefore, he had up to one year after Townsend’s issuance
    to file for § 2255 relief. In rejecting the argument, the district court explained
    that Townsend constituted “a change of law, not fact.” App’x at 111.
    The district court declined to issue a certificate of appealability. On
    April 28, 2020, however, this Court granted McCloud’s motion for a
    certificate of appealability, noting that, although McCloud’s argument had
    6   
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (f)(1)-(4).
    7
    been rejected by a number of other courts of appeals, our Court had not yet
    had occasion to rule on the issue.
    II.    Discussion
    Overall, we review de novo a district court’s denial of a § 2255 motion,
    though we review its subsidiary factual findings only for clear error. 7
    In this appeal, as before the district court, McCloud argues that our
    decision in Townsend created a newly discovered fact, starting a new one-
    year limitations period under § 2255(f)(4). We reject this argument and hold
    that a development in case law, which is what Townsend represents, does
    not give rise to a “fact[] supporting the claim” brought by a petitioner within
    the meaning of § 2255(f)(4). McCloud’s argument elides a critical distinction
    between facts and law: A fact is “[a]n actual or alleged event or
    circumstance, as distinguished from its legal effect, consequence, or
    interpretation.” 8 Here, Townsend left unaltered the fact of McCloud’s 2000
    7Yick Man Mui v. United States, 
    614 F.3d 50
    , 53 (2d Cir. 2010); see Gonzalez v. United States,
    
    792 F.3d 232
    , 234 (2d Cir. 2015).
    8
    New York Drug Conviction.                 Our decision in Townsend could have
    implications only for the legal effect of that fact—that is, whether the
    conviction supported application of the career offender Guideline.
    If a case interpreting the law were to be considered a newly
    discovered “fact,” it would have been superfluous for Congress to create a
    separate subsection of § 2255 to allow certain intervening Supreme Court
    decisions to trigger a new limitations period; any claim that could be
    brought under § 2255(f)(3) could also be brought under § 2255(f)(4) without
    the conditions specified in that former section. 9 Thus, accepting McCloud’s
    premise would undo the careful parameters that Congress drew in
    § 2255(f)(3): namely, that a development in case law will extend a deadline
    8   Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (emphasis added).
    9 See Whiteside v. United States, 
    775 F.3d 180
    , 184 (4th Cir. 2014) (en banc) (“[Petitioner’s]
    (f)(4) argument fails for the additional reason that it would effectively nullify (f)(3), which
    provides for tolling in instances where the defendant’s claim is founded on a right ‘newly
    recognized by the Supreme Court and made retroactively applicable to cases on collateral
    review.’ . . . If changes in law are cognizable under (f)(4), then (f)(3) becomes superfluous
    because any claim brought under (f)(3) could also be brought under (f)(4).” (quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 2255
    (f)(3)).
    9
    only if the newly recognized right is made retroactively applicable by the
    Supreme Court to cases on collateral review. Section 2255(f)(3) signals that
    Congress “impliedly rejected the notion” that developments in case law
    derived from lower court decisions (or non-retroactive Supreme Court
    decisions) “could trigger any of the limitations periods enumerated under
    § 2255.” 10 This Court cannot interpret § 2255(f) in a way that would defeat
    that clear Congressional intention and render a quarter of its statutory
    language superfluous.
    Anticipating this concern, McCloud protests that he does not ask this
    Court to deem any intervening court decision a “fact” under § 2255(f)(4), just
    Townsend—because, in his words, it “alters the legal status of a petitioner’s
    predicate conviction.” Appellant’s Br. 11-12. McCloud’s argument does not
    actually offer a narrower ruling, however, because he uses the term “legal
    status” to refer not to facts but to legal consequences. As a matter of fact, the
    10   E.J.R.E. v. United States, 
    453 F.3d 1094
    , 1098 (8th Cir. 2006).
    10
    legal status of McCloud’s 2000 New York Drug Conviction is the same
    before and after Townsend: It is a conviction that is still on the books. That
    such a conviction might today prompt a different Guidelines analysis (in
    our Circuit, for some defendants, at least) is a new legal consequence of this
    unchanged fact. To interpret an intervening decision as a new fact simply
    because it has new legal implications would create a boundless, and
    unwarranted, expansion of § 2255(f)(4).
    In rejecting McCloud’s argument, our reasoning aligns with that of
    five Courts of Appeals to consider the issue. 11 Emblematic is the Fourth
    11Our sister Circuits have held that intervening developments in case law do not create
    new facts within the meaning of § 2255(f)(4)—or within the meaning of a similar provision
    in 
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (d)(1)(D), which permits a statute of limitations to run from “the date
    on which the factual predicate of the claim or claims presented could have been
    discovered through the exercise of due diligence.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (d)(1)(D); see Whiteside,
    775 F.3d at 184 [4th Cir.] (“Decisions that change the legal significance of certain facts
    without modifying them do not qualify under (f)(4).”); Phillips v. United States, 
    734 F.3d 573
    , 580 (6th Cir. 2013) (Ҥ 2255(f)(4) is directed at the discovery of new facts, not newly-
    discovered law.”); Sun Bear v. United States, 
    644 F.3d 700
    , 702 n.5 (8th Cir. 2011)
    (“[Petitioner] further alleged that [a Supreme Court decision] uncovered a ‘fact’
    supporting his claim, making the motion timely under § 2255(f)(4). We agree with the
    district court that subsequent interpretations of the law can be the basis of delay in filing
    a § 2255 motion only in accordance with § 2255(f)(3).” (internal quotation marks omitted));
    Lo v. Endicott, 
    506 F.3d 572
    , 575 (7th Cir. 2007) (rejecting argument “that a court decision
    11
    Circuit’s decision in Whiteside v. United States. 12 The Whiteside petitioner
    filed a § 2255 motion to vacate his sentence in light of an intervening circuit
    decision, United States v. Simmons, 13 under which the petitioner’s prior
    convictions would no longer qualify as career offender predicates.                        14
    Defending the timeliness of his motion, the petitioner argued that Simmons
    created a new fact within the meaning of § 2255(f)(4). 15 Rejecting the
    argument, the Fourth Circuit explained that “Simmons represented a change
    of law, not fact” because the decision “did not directly alter [the petitioner’s]
    can be a ‘factual predicate’ within the meaning of § 2244(d)(1)(D)”); E.J.R.E., 
    453 F.3d at 1098
     [8th Cir.] (“[A] decision taken from a federal court of appeals does not provide an
    independent basis to trigger the one-year statute of limitations provided under § 2255.”);
    Shannon v. Newland, 
    410 F.3d 1083
    , 1088 (9th Cir. 2005) (an intervening state court decision
    does not constitute a “factual predicate” within the meaning of § 2244(d)(1)(D) where it
    “clarified the law, not the facts”).
    12   
    775 F.3d 180
    .
    13   
    649 F.3d 237
     (4th Cir.2011) (en banc).
    14   Whiteside, 775 F.3d at 182.
    15   Id. at 183.
    12
    legal status as a prior state offender.” 16 Instead, Simmons “announced a
    generally applicable legal rule” and “altered the legal significance of [the
    petitioner’s]       prior    convictions   without   amending   the   convictions
    themselves.” 17         We agree and, like the Fourth Circuit, conclude that
    “[d]ecisions that change the legal significance of certain facts without
    modifying them do not qualify under [§ 2255](f)(4).” 18
    Seeking to evade this conclusion that intervening developments in
    case law are not new facts under § 2255(f)(4), McCloud attempts to draw a
    comparison to two cases—the Tenth Circuit’s decision in Easterwood v.
    Champion 19 and the Supreme Court’s decision in Johnson v. United States 20—
    which involved intervening judicial opinions containing not only
    16   Id.
    17   Id. at 184.
    18   Id.
    19   
    213 F.3d 1321
     (10th Cir. 2000).
    20   
    544 U.S. 295
     (2005).
    13
    developments in case law but also newly available facts. We find neither
    analogy persuasive.
    In Easterwood v. Champion, an intervening decision revealed factual
    information that the petitioner, seeking relief under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    ,
    intended to use to support his claims that he was insane at the time he
    committed his underlying offense and incompetent at the time of his trial. 21
    Specifically, the intervening decision stated that the Government’s medical
    expert—the same expert who had testified at the petitioner’s trial that the
    petitioner was not insane or incompetent—“suffer[ed] ‘from severe
    untreated bipolar disorder’ which was possibly severe enough to ‘impair
    and distort his diagnostic judgment.’” 22 This information is plainly factual
    in nature because it addresses not legal effects but rather the circumstances
    of the witness’s medical history and judgment. Thus, Easterbrook is not
    21   
    213 F.3d at 1322
    .
    22   
    Id. at 1323
     (quoting Williamson v. Ward, 
    110 F.3d 1508
    , 1519 (10th Cir. 1997)).
    14
    helpful to McCloud because McCloud does not point to a single new piece
    of information contained in Townsend. He claims only that Townsend alters
    the legal effect of his prior conviction. 23
    Nor does Johnson v. United States help McCloud.                     There, an
    intervening decision vacated a prior conviction relied upon at the
    petitioner’s sentencing. 24 The Supreme Court held that the intervening
    decision created a new fact because the vacatur was “subject to proof or
    disproof like any other factual issue.” 25 The intervening decision “did not
    23 Moreover, the core issue in Easterwood was not whether the new information constituted
    a “factual predicate” under § 2244(d)(1)(D) but, rather, whether the petitioner’s motion,
    filed more than a year after the intervening decision, was nonetheless timely because it
    was filed less than a year after the decision became accessible in the prison library. The
    Tenth Circuit concluded that, where facts to support a petitioner’s claim are contained in
    a published opinion, the limitations period under § 2244(d)(1)(D) runs from “the date the
    opinion became accessible in the prison law library, not the date the opinion was issued,”
    because “[h]olding that a prisoner could with ‘due diligence’ discover information related
    in a case before the prison law library has access to a copy of the opinion simply ignores
    the reality of the prison system.” Easterwood, 
    213 F.3d at 1323
    . This case does not involve
    the diligence issue on which Easterwood primarily focused.
    24   
    544 U.S. 295
    .
    25   
    Id.
     at 306–07 (citation omitted).
    15
    merely establish an abstract proposition of law; rather, it directly eliminated
    [the petitioner’s] legal status as a convict.” 26 Here, in contrast, Townsend
    leaves intact McCloud’s legal status as a convict and, insofar as it might
    change the Guidelines implications of the conviction, that “is a ruling
    exclusively within the domain of the courts and is incapable of being proved
    or disproved.” 27
    We therefore hold that Townsend, in pronouncing a new rule of law,
    gave rise to no new facts and thus did not extend the limitations period for
    McCloud’s § 2255 motion.                Because McCloud filed his motion
    approximately ten years after his judgment became final, well outside the
    applicable limitations period under § 2255(f)(1), the district court correctly
    denied the motion as untimely.
    26   Shannon, 
    410 F.3d at
    1088–89.
    27E.J.R.E., 
    453 F.3d at 1098
    . Following Johnson, other courts of appeals have rejected
    interpretations of the case “as holding that any decision of any court acts as a factual
    predicate for purposes of extending the limitations period for habeas review.” Lo, 
    506 F.3d at 575
    .
    16
    III.   Conclusion
    In sum, we hold that an intervening development in case law does
    not constitute a newly discovered fact within the meaning of § 2255(f)(4).
    We therefore AFFIRM the final order of the district court dismissing
    McCloud’s § 2255 motion.
    17