Hadfield v. United States ( 1992 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    November 20, 1992
    [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]


    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT


    ____________________


    No. 92-1508

    ROYAL W. HADFIELD, JR.,

    Petitioner, Appellant,

    v.

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Respondent, Appellee.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Frank H. Freedman, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Cyr and Stahl,
    Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    ____________________

    Royal W. Hadfield, Jr. on Memorandum.
    ______________________
    A. John Pappalardo, United States Attorney, and Dina Michael
    ___________________ _____________
    Chaitowitz, Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.
    __________


    ____________________


    ____________________















    Per Curiam. Royal W. Hadfield, Jr. was convicted
    __________

    of possessing with intent to distribute 100 or more marijuana

    plants, using his property to facilitate a drug trafficking

    crime, using and carrying firearms in relation to a drug

    trafficking crime and being a prohibited person in possession

    of firearms. He was sentenced to fifteen years in prison on

    the controlled substance charge, and to a consecutive five-

    year prison term for each of the firearms-related charges.

    We affirmed his conviction in United States v. Hadfield, 918
    _____________ ________

    F.2d 987 (1st Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 111 S. Ct. 2062
    _____________

    (1991). Hadfield then brought a motion to vacate his

    sentence under 28 U.S.C. 2255, which the district court

    denied. Hadfield now appeals the denial of his motion.

    Finding no error in the district court's decision, we affirm.

    DISCUSSION
    __________

    On appeal Hadfield raises a host of issues.1 He

    claims that he did not receive effective assistance of




    ____________________

    1. Because Hadfield does not reargue certain points on
    appeal, the government asserts that Hadfield has waived those
    points, although it also notes that Hadfield requested the
    court to review his motion and briefs below "for a precise
    statement of his claims and arguments." In his Notice of
    Appeal, Hadfield stated that he is appealing the "whole of
    the [district court's] memo and order." His statement of the
    issues on appeal also essentially restates the arguments
    raised in his original motion and brief (with the exception
    of his arguments relating to exclusive possession of
    controlled substances, downward departure, and plea
    bargaining). Because Hadfield has clearly stated his intent
    to appeal all issues and because we often permit pro se
    petitioners to rely on their underlying section 2255 motion
    and briefs on appeal, we find that Hadfield has not waived
    any arguments originally presented to the district court by
    not rearguing them before this court.

















    counsel before and during the trial. He alleges various

    constitutional infirmities in the controlled substance

    statute under which he was convicted and in the Sentencing

    Guidelines. He also claims that the district court should

    have given him a downward departure based on the weight of

    the marijuana he was found to have possessed, and that the

    court should have held an evidentiary hearing to determine

    certain issues. We consider these claims of error in turn.2


    ____________________

    2. The government suggests that several claims of error now
    made by Hadfield were not raised below. We find that the
    argument that 21 U.S.C. 841(b)(1)(C) is arbitrary because
    it contemplates using an everyday definition of the word
    "plant" is not a new issue on appeal. In his original brief
    Hadfield stated that the "scientific" definition of "plant"
    should be used "as opposed to the dictionary definition." In
    addition, much of Hadfield's appellate argument on this point
    responds to the government's argument below. Nevertheless,
    we do not further consider Hadfield's argument here. As the
    government states, using the common understanding of the word
    "plant" as reflected in its dictionary definitions is
    appropriate. See Chapman v. United States, 111 S. Ct. 1919,
    ___ _______ _____________
    1925 (1991) (because the terms "mixture" and "substance" as
    used in 21 U.S.C. 841 were not defined by Congress or the
    Sentencing Guidelines, the terms were to be given their
    "ordinary meaning"; to determine that meaning, the Court
    consulted dictionaries).
    We also find that Hadfield raised the argument below
    that section 841(b)(1)(C) permits prosecutors at whim to seek
    radically different sentences for the same offense. But we
    do not find the argument to have any merit, for the reasons
    given in the government's appellate brief. See, e.g., United
    ___ ____ ______
    States v. Corley, 909 F.2d 359, 361 (9th Cir. 1990) (when an
    ______ ______
    offender possesses live marijuana plants, the number of
    plants will be used to determine the base offense level, but
    when the marijuana has been dried, its weight is used).
    Moreover, Hadfield's argument seems to be based on the
    erroneous premise that a prosecutor can use the drug
    equivalency tables in the Sentencing Guidelines to convert an
    offender's possession of dried marijuana into possession of
    marijuana plants and vice versa in charging an offender under
    21 U.S.C. 841.

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    I. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    _________________________________

    Hadfield, who was tried jointly with his wife,

    claims that his counsel should have moved to sever his wife's

    trial from his because his wife's defense was "wholly

    inconsistent" with his claim of innocence. As the court

    found, however, the evidence at trial that Hadfield possessed

    marijuana with intent to distribute was compelling.

    (Hadfield also admitted to possessing marijuana in an

    affidavit submitted to the district court in connection with

    his section 2255 motion.) In light of the evidence, any

    suggestion in his wife's presentation of her defense which

    could have incriminated him would have been merely

    cumulative. Furthermore, Hadfield has pointed to no record

    evidence demonstrating that his wife was willing to exculpate

    him, nor has he stated what precisely she would have

    testified to had their trials been severed. Therefore,

    trying Hadfield and his wife jointly does not appear to have

    prejudiced Hadfield, and the district court would have had no

    basis for granting any motion to sever that Hadfield's

    counsel might have brought. See United States v. Perkins,
    __________________ _______

    926 F.2d 1271, 1280, 1281 (1st Cir. 1991) (there is a strong

    public policy favoring joint trials where the same drug


    ____________________

    Finally, we agree with the government that, by not
    presenting it to the district court, Hadfield waived his
    claim that his attorney rendered ineffective assistance of
    counsel by conceding in the presentence investigation report
    that Hadfield possessed more than 100 marijuana plants.

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    violation is alleged; the court did not abuse its discretion

    in denying a motion to sever where a husband did not state he

    was willing to exculpate his wife or describe with

    particularity what his testimony would be); Fed. R. Crim. P.

    Rule 14 (the court may grant a severance if the defendant

    would be prejudiced by a joinder of defendants). Since

    severance was not warranted, the failure of Hadfield's

    counsel to bring a motion to sever the Hadfields' trial did

    not amount to ineffective assistance of counsel.

    Hadfield also claims that his counsel's failure to

    renew a motion for acquittal at the end of his presentation

    of the defense evidence was ineffective assistance of

    counsel. Hadfield claims that this failure prejudiced him

    because it caused this court to use a more stringent standard

    of review in determining, on direct appeal, whether the

    evidence was sufficient to convict him under 18 U.S.C.

    924(c)(1) of using firearms "during and in relation to" his

    drug trafficking offenses. It is true that we applied a

    standard of review more generous to the government because

    Hadfield's counsel failed to renew his motion for acquittal.

    But we also stated that the evidence amply supported

    Hadfield's conviction. See United States v. Hadfield, supra,
    _________________ ________ _____

    918 F.2d at 998 ("Based on [the] evidence, the jurors were

    well within the pale in [convicting Hadfield of the firearms

    charge]. It was no injustice at all -- much less a clear and



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    gross injustice -- for Hadfield to be convicted of violating

    18 U.S.C. 924(c)(1)"). Thus, we would have affirmed

    Hadfield's conviction, even under the more lenient standard

    of review. Moreover, since the evidence was more than

    sufficient to convict Hadfield of the firearms charge, the

    court would have denied any motion for acquittal. Cf. Fed.
    ___

    R. Crim. P. Rule 29(a) (acquittal should be ordered "if the

    evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction").

    Consequently, the failure to bring that motion could not have

    prejudiced Hadfield, and does not support a claim that he

    received ineffective assistance of counsel.

    Next, Hadfield asserts that his counsel's failure

    to request a jury instruction defining "marijuana plant" and

    an instruction that only exclusive possession of a controlled

    substance would support his conviction constituted

    ineffective assistance of counsel. Clearly, the district

    court did not err in concluding that no ineffective

    assistance of counsel resulted from failing to give the

    latter instruction. Case law makes clear that an offender

    may be convicted for joint possession of a controlled
    ___

    substance. See, e.g., United States v. Vargas, 945 F.2d 426,
    ___ ____ _____________ ______

    428 (1st Cir. 1991) (citing cases). A defendant is not

    entitled to a jury instruction on an invalid defense theory.

    United States v. McGill, 953 F.2d 10, 12 (1st Cir. 1992).
    _____________ ______

    Thus, counsel's failure to seek an instruction that Hadfield



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    could be convicted only if his possession of the marijuana

    had been exclusive did not prejudice Hadfield.

    Nor did counsel's failure to seek an instruction

    defining "plant" prejudice Hadfield. As the district court

    pointed out, Hadfield might have been entitled to that

    instruction had he requested it. But the failure to request

    it did not prejudice him because the evidence that Hadfield

    possessed well over 100 plants was "overwhelming" and

    included a videotape showing rooms full of living, growing

    plants. In addition, permitting the jury to use its common

    understanding of what a plant is to determine whether

    Hadfield possessed more than 100 marijuana plants was not

    erroneous. Cf. United States v. Eves, 932 F.2d 856, 860
    ___ _____________ ____

    (10th Cir.) (there was no evidence that Congress intended the

    term marijuana "plant" to be construed "other than by its

    plain and ordinary dictionary meaning"), cert. denied, 112 S.
    ____________

    Ct. 236 (1991).3





    ____________________

    3. Although Hadfield alleges that the "scientific"
    definition of "plant" should control, at trial his own
    botanical expert defined a plant to include seeds. Evidence
    submitted at trial showed that law enforcement officials
    found a number of bottles or vials of marijuana seeds on
    Hadfield's property. Although the seeds were not counted,
    applying the definition used by Hadfield's own expert
    obviously would have increased, and not reduced, the number
    of marijuana plants that the jury counted. Thus, it seems to
    us that Hadfield's attorney rendered effective assistance of
    _________
    counsel by not seeking an instruction defining the term
    "plant" as a botanist would.

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    Finally, Hadfield claims that his counsel's failure

    to advise him before trial that he might receive a sentence

    enhancement for being a career offender prejudiced him. He

    states that he believed that his maximum sentence would be

    five years and that he might have sought to plea bargain with

    the government if had he known that he might receive a

    sentence of twenty years. Regardless whether Hadfield was

    entitled to pre-trial notice that the career offender

    provisions were applicable, or whether a plea bargain was

    even possible, Hadfield's argument founders on factual

    inaccuracy. During his pre-arraignment detention hearing,

    the government's attorney first reviewed Hadfield's criminal

    record and the potential sentences he would receive if

    convicted as charged. She then stated that the first count

    of the indictment "charges him with, specifically with an

    enhanced penalty provision, one hundred or more marijuana

    plants. And on that count, statutorily he is facing at least

    a maximum of twenty years imprisonment." Thus, before trial

    Hadfield knew that the issue of his prior convictions was

    important, even if no specific reference to the career

    offender guidelines was made. He also knew that he might

    receive up to twenty years in prison if convicted of the

    marijuana offense. His failure to seek a plea bargain,

    therefore, cannot be attributed to ignorance respecting the

    lengthy prison sentence awaiting him. Therefore, his



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    counsel's failure to inform him of the correct potential

    sentence could not have prejudiced him as he alleges.4

    II. Constitutional Challenges to 21 U.S.C. 841
    ____________________________________________

    Hadfield claims that his conviction under 21 U.S.C.

    841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(C) violated his due process and equal

    protection rights. He alleges that the statute is arbitrary

    as applied to him because the marijuana he possessed could

    have been weighed, but was not, and because he was convicted

    for possessing a certain number of plants even though not all

    of those plants would survive to maturity or produce

    marketable marijuana. He also claims that the statute

    provides for disparate sentences for controlled substance

    offenders. If he had possessed less than 50 kilograms of

    marijuana, he would have been sentenced to a maximum sentence

    of five years under section 841(b)(1)(D). But, because he

    possessed plants, he was subject to a twenty-year maximum

    sentence under section 841(b)(1)(C), even though the number

    of plants he possessed would amount to less than 50 kilograms



    ____________________

    4. In any event, as both the court and the government have
    emphasized, the evidence that Hadfield had possessed
    marijuana was overwhelming, and, given his criminal record
    (which he did not contest), the guidelines provided for
    mandatory enhancement of his sentence. Thus, no plea bargain
    was possible that would have relieved Hadfield of the
    sentencing consequences of his criminal record. For that
    reason, and because criminal offenders have no "right" to
    plea bargain with the government, see Weatherford v. Bursey,
    ___ ___________ ______
    429 U.S. 545, 561 (1977), we reject Hadfield's general claim
    that the failure to plea bargain with him denied him equal
    protection of the law.

    -9-















    of marijuana under the drug equivalency tables in the

    Sentencing Guidelines.

    Case law makes clear that Hadfield's equal

    protection and due process claims are without merit. The

    provision of the statute under which Hadfield was convicted

    stated essentially that the maximum sentence for knowingly

    possessing with intent to distribute, "100 or more marihuana

    plants, regardless of weight," would be twenty years. See 21
    ___

    U.S.C. 841(a)(1), (b)(1)(C) & (D). That language has been

    found to have been intended to punish marijuana growers more

    harshly than mere possessors of marijuana, and the greater

    punishment of marijuana growers has been sustained as a

    rational, hence constitutionally permissible, legislative

    goal. See, e.g., United States v. Osburn, 955 F.2d 1500,
    __________________________ ______

    1507-09 (11th Cir.) (rejecting the same arguments as those

    presented here, the court found that section 841 did not

    violate due process because Congress had rationally based its

    sentencing scheme on the number of plants rather than on

    their weight in an attempt to "halt the problem earlier in

    the cycle, making it less likely that the drug would ever be

    distributed to the public"), cert. denied, 61 U.S.L.W. 3261 &
    ____________

    3264 (1992); United States v. Lee, 957 F.2d 778, 784 (10th
    _____________ ___

    Cir. 1992) (rejecting the same arguments as those presented

    here, the court upheld section 841 on equal protection

    grounds because the statute reflects Congress's rational



    -10-















    intent to punish marijuana growers "by the scale or potential

    of their operation and not just the weight of the plants

    seized at a given moment"; "the cultivation of marijuana

    plants creates a greater potential for abuse than possession

    of harvested marijuana" since there "would be no dried

    marijuana unless there were marijuana plants").5

    Moreover, Hadfield's use of the drug equivalency

    tables in the Sentencing Guidelines to illustrate the

    disparity in treatment of offenders under section 841 is a

    red herring. First, he assumes that the equivalency tables

    may be used to convert numbers of plants into weights for

    purposes of conviction for controlled substance offenses

    under section 841. However, the equivalency tables were

    devised for a completely different purpose. See U.S.S.G.
    ___

    Manual (1988), 2D1.1, commentary, note 10 (the drug

    equivalency tables provide help in applying the Drug Quantity

    Table, which sets the base offense level for certain

    offenses, by equating substances not specifically named in

    the statute to those named in the statute, and in determining

    a single offense level for offenders convicted of possessing



    ____________________

    5. The only cases Hadfield cited to support his specific
    claim that section 841(b)(1)(C) violated his due process and
    equal protection rights were the district court decisions in
    the Osburn and Lee cases. See United States v. Osburn, 756
    ______ ___ ___ _____________ ______
    F. Supp. 571 (N.D. Ga. 1991); United States v. Lee, 762 F.
    _____________ ___
    Supp. 306 (D. Kan. 1991). Both of those cases were vacated
    on appeal in the decisions cited above in this opinion.
    Thus, Hadfield's claim is without support in precedent.

    -11-















    differing controlled substances by converting the different

    drugs to quantities of only one type of drug). Second, in

    actuality Hadfield is attempting to argue that marijuana

    growers and possessors of marijuana are, or should be

    regarded as, similarly situated offenders. But, as the

    Osburn and Lee cases make clear, marijuana growers and mere
    ______ ___

    possessors of marijuana are not similarly situated offenders
    ___

    under the statute. Consequently, their disparate treatment

    under the statute does not amount to a violation of equal

    protection.

    Hadfield further argues that the statute is void for

    vagueness as applied to him because the term "plant" is not

    defined. The district court found that the alleged ambiguity

    did not have "constitutional dimensions" because the term

    "plant" is used only in the penalty provisions of section 841

    and because there was "no doubt that the statute explicitly
    __________

    forbids possession of marijuana with intent to distribute."

    Without doubt, Hadfield knew that growing marijuana was

    illegal. As the government pointed out, the covert nature of

    Hadfield's marijuana cultivation showed that he was well

    aware that his activity was illegal. Moreover, without

    deciding whether vagueness in the sentencing provisions of a

    statute has constitutional implications, we note that in his

    response to the presentence investigation report Hadfield's

    counsel conceded that Hadfield possessed between 100-199



    -12-















    marijuana plants. Thus, there was also no ambiguity as to

    whether Hadfield's conduct came within the penalty provisions

    of section 841(b) for purposes of sentencing him. Therefore,

    Hadfield's allegation that the statute was void for vagueness

    as applied to him is meritless. See United States v. Speltz,
    _________________ ______

    733 F. Supp. 1311, 1312 (D. Minn. 1990) (the court denied

    that the term 'marijuana plants' could be "susceptible to so

    many interpretations that a person of ordinary intelligence

    could not know what conduct is prohibited," and also found

    that the defendant "clearly knew that growing the marijuana

    plants in his basement was prohibited conduct." ), aff'd, 938
    _____

    F.2d 188 (8th Cir. 1991).

    Finally, Hadfield contends that there is "extreme

    disproportionality between the sentence imposed under the

    Sentencing Guidelines and the statutory maximum for a case

    involving fifty kilos or less of marihuana." This statement

    does not explain precisely which sentences Hadfield is

    contrasting. The government interprets Hadfield's argument

    to challenge the career offender provisions of the Sentencing

    Guidelines since it was the application of those provisions

    that actually increased Hadfield's potential sentence to the

    statutory maximum. The court appears to have interpreted the

    contention as a challenge to sentencing under section 841

    alone. Under either analysis, Hadfield's argument fails.

    The circuit courts of appeals have sustained the career



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    offender guidelines against challenges under the Eighth

    Amendment. See, e.g., United States v. John, 936 F.2d 764,
    ___ ____ _____________ ____

    766 n.2 (3d Cir. 1991); United States v. Foote, 920 F.2d
    _____________ _____

    1395, 1401-02 (8th Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 111 S. Ct. 2246
    ____________

    (1991); United States v. Newsome, 898 F.2d 119, 122 (10th
    ______________ _______

    Cir.), cert. denied, 111 S. Ct. 207 (1990). And Supreme
    ____________

    Court precedent shows that Hadfield's fifteen-year sentence

    under section 841, which is five years lower than the

    statutory maximum, is valid under the Eighth Amendment. In

    Hutto v. Davis, 454 U.S. 370 (1982) (per curiam), the Supreme
    _____ _____

    Court reaffirmed the principle that federal courts should

    only reluctantly review statutorily prescribed sentences

    under the Eighth Amendment and that overturning such

    sentences should be "exceedingly rare" occurrences. Id. at
    ___

    370 (citation omitted). Given the Court's determination in

    Hutto that a sentence of forty years in prison for possessing
    _____

    with intent to distribute nine ounces of marijuana was

    constitutional, we are sure that Hadfield's sentence of

    fifteen years for possessing well over 100 marijuana plants

    with intent to distribute is constitutional as well.

    III. Constitutional Challenge to Sentencing Guidelines
    _________________________________________________

    Hadfield claims that the career offender provisions in

    section 4B1.1 of the Sentencing Guidelines are

    unconstitutional and violate 21 U.S.C. 851 because they do

    not require that an offender be notified before trial that



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    those provisions will be used in determining the offender's

    sentence.6 Section 851(a)(1) states that no person

    convicted of an offense under section 841 "shall be sentenced

    to increased punishment by reason of one or more prior

    convictions, unless before trial, . . . the United States

    attorney files an information . . . stating in writing the

    previous convictions to be relied upon." Hadfield

    erroneously reads this language to require the government to

    give pre-trial notice to repeat offenders in all cases in

    which the career offender guidelines are applied. However,

    the words "increased punishment" in section 851 do not refer

    to enhancements of base offense level under the Guidelines,

    but instead to the imposition of a sentence in excess of the
    ________________

    statutory maximum. See United States v. Sanchez, 917 F.2d
    _________________ _________________ _______

    607, 616 (1st Cir. 1990), cert. denied, 111 S. Ct. 1625
    _____________

    (1991). Because the government did not file the information


    ____________________

    6. Hadfield also alleges that the drug equivalency tables in
    section 2D1.1 of the Guidelines are unconstitutional because
    they arbitrarily equate one marijuana plant with 100 grams of
    dried marijuana. The district court correctly declined to
    consider his argument because the equivalency tables did not
    affect Hadfield's sentence. Although the drug quantity table
    in section 2D1.1 would have given Hadfield a base offense
    level of 18 for having possessed 20-39 kilograms of marijuana
    or 200-399 marijuana plants, ultimately that computation was
    not used because the offense level given in section 4B1.1 of
    the Guidelines was greater. See U.S.S.G. Manual (1988),
    ___
    4B1.1 ("If the offense level for a career criminal [subject
    to a maximum sentence of twenty years] is greater than the
    offense level otherwise applicable, [the higher] offense
    level shall apply."). The offense level and criminal history
    category given in section 4B1.1 determined Hadfield's
    sentence guideline range.

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    15















    in Hadfield's case, it sought only the maximum sentence under

    section 841 for Hadfield's offense, i.e. twenty years in

    prison, rather than the thirty years that otherwise would

    have been permissible for repeat offenders. Thus, even

    though Hadfield's base offense level under the Sentencing
    ___________________

    Guidelines increased (relative to what it would have been for

    the marijuana conviction by itself) by virtue of his prior

    convictions, the convictions were not used to justify a

    sentence of greater than twenty years, the statutory maximum.

    Furthermore, the sentence arrived at under the career

    offender guidelines was within the statutory maximum. Thus,

    neither section 851 nor the Constitution was violated by the

    government's failure to give Hadfield pre-trial notice of its

    intent to use those convictions for sentencing purposes. See
    ___

    id.
    ___

    Nor are the career offender provisions of the Guidelines

    constitutionally defective because they do not require pre-

    trial notice that the provisions will be used in sentencing.

    Cf. United States v. Craveiro, 907 F.2d 260, 264 (1st Cir.)
    _________________ ________

    (the failure of the Armed Career Criminal Act to require pre-

    trial notice that an offender's sentence could be enhanced

    because of prior convictions did not violate defendant's due

    process or equal protection rights), cert. denied, 111 S. Ct.
    ____________

    588 (1990). Hadfield's presentence investigation report

    advised him well before sentencing that his prior convictions



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    16















    would result in an increased base offense level under section

    4B1.1 of the Guidelines, and the report described those

    convictions. Accordingly, Hadfield was afforded ample

    opportunity to challenge the use of those convictions, which,

    as the district court observed, satisfied the requirements of

    due process.

    IV. Remaining Claims
    ________________

    Although the district court departed downward because

    of Hadfield's military service and the forfeiture of his

    property, Hadfield faults the district court for not

    departing further downward on the basis of the "true weight"

    of the marijuana he possessed. We have no jurisdiction to

    consider that claim, and thus decline to do so. See United
    __________

    States v. Pomerleau, 923 F.2d 5, 6 (1st Cir. 1991) ("The law
    ______ _________

    in this circuit is crystal clear . . . that a sentencing

    court's decision not to depart from the guidelines is
    ___

    unappealable. . . . By the same token, . . . we have no

    jurisdiction to review the extent of a downward departure
    ______

    merely because the affected defendant is dissatisfied with

    the quantification of the district court's generosity.")

    (citations omitted; emphases in original).7 Although the


    ____________________

    7. We note that it is not clear whether the court actually
    declined to depart downward for the reason now proffered by
    Hadfield in its original sentencing decision. In his
    response to the presentence investigation report, Hadfield's
    attorney adopted the probation officer's suggestion that a
    downward departure might be warranted on the basis of the
    alleged sentencing disparities for offenders possessing

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    question of our power to review downward departures generally

    arises on direct appeal, we see no reason why the answer to

    that question should be any different in response to a

    section 2255 motion.

    Finally, Hadfield contends that the court erred in not

    granting him an evidentiary hearing to determine the actual

    number of marijuana plants he possessed, the effectiveness of

    his counsel and the adequacy of the notice to him that the

    career offender provisions of the Guidelines would be used to

    sentence him. Those issues involved either legal questions

    or factual issues that could be resolved on the basis of the

    record. Accordingly, no material fact remained for the court

    to determine, and no evidentiary hearing was necessary. See
    ___

    28 U.S.C. 2255; United States v. DiCarlo, 575 F.2d 952, 954
    _____________ _______

    (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 439 U.S. 834 (1978).
    ____________

    CONCLUSION
    __________

    The decision of the district court is affirmed.
    ________









    ____________________

    equivalent weights of dried and plant marijuana. But he
    failed to argue that point at the sentencing hearing, and the
    court did not decide the issue, although the government
    suggests, without record citation, that it did. In any
    event, the court stated, in its decision on Hadfield's
    section 2255 motion, that Hadfield's claim for downward
    departure had no merit since it was not authorized by the
    Sentencing Guidelines.

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