United States v. Phillip Loyd ( 2018 )


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  •                  United States Court of Appeals
    For the Eighth Circuit
    ___________________________
    No. 16-4150
    ___________________________
    United States of America,
    lllllllllllllllllllllPlaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    Phillip Dwayne Loyd,
    lllllllllllllllllllllDefendant - Appellant.
    ____________
    Appeal from United States District Court
    for the District of Minnesota - St. Paul
    ____________
    Submitted: October 19, 2017
    Filed: March 29, 2018
    ____________
    Before LOKEN, BEAM, and COLLOTON, Circuit Judges.
    ____________
    COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.
    Phillip Loyd pleaded guilty to sex trafficking of a minor, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 1591
    (a), and production of child pornography, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2251
    (a). Section 2251(e) provides that an offender who violates § 2251(a) is
    subject to a minimum 25-year term of imprisonment if he has sustained a prior
    conviction for a crime specified in § 2251(e).
    The district court1 concluded that Loyd had one qualifying prior conviction
    under § 2251(e), so the court adjusted the advisory sentencing guideline range from
    292-365 months to 300-365 months to account for the statutory minimum penalty.
    See USSG § 5G1.1(c)(2). The court then decided that a sentence “that is within the
    guideline range but not at the bottom is appropriate,” and sentenced Loyd to 324
    months’ imprisonment on each count to run concurrently. Loyd appeals the court’s
    decision to apply the 25-year minimum term under § 2251(e), suggesting implicitly
    that the court would have imposed a shorter sentence if the bottom of the advisory
    guideline range had been 292 months rather than 300 months. We conclude that the
    court correctly applied § 2251(e), and we therefore affirm.
    Section 2251(e) provides that a defendant like Loyd who violates § 2251(a)
    “shall be fined . . . and imprisoned for not less than 25 years” if he
    has a prior conviction under [chapter 110], section 1591, chapter 71,
    chapter 109A, or chapter 117, or under section 920 of title 10 (article
    120 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), or under the laws of any
    State relating to aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, abusive sexual
    contact involving a minor or ward, or sex trafficking of children, or the
    production, possession, receipt, mailing, sale, distribution, shipment, or
    transportation of child pornography.
    Loyd had a prior conviction under chapter 117 for knowingly inducing a person
    to travel in interstate commerce to engage in prostitution, in violation of 
    18 U.S.C. § 2422
    (a). The district court relied on this conviction to conclude that the 25-year
    minimum sentence applied.
    1
    The Honorable John R. Tunheim, Chief Judge, United States District Court for
    the District of Minnesota.
    -2-
    Loyd’s disagreement with the district court’s application of § 2251(e) turns on
    the participle phrase that begins with “relating to aggravated sexual abuse.” He
    contends that the “relating to” phrase modifies not only the last antecedent
    phrase—“laws of any State”—but also each of the chapters and sections of federal
    law listed in § 2251(e). On that view, a prior conviction under chapter 117 triggers
    the mandatory minimum sentence only if the federal law “relat[es] to” one of the
    enumerated types of misconduct. Loyd then asserts that his offense under chapter
    117 does not fit within any of the enumerated categories, so the enhanced punishment
    should not apply.
    We reject Loyd’s position and conclude that the “relating to” phrase modifies
    only the phrase “the laws of any State.” Under the rule of the last antecedent, a
    limiting phrase that follows a list of terms or phrases ordinarily is “read as modifying
    only the noun or phrase that it immediately follows.” Barnhart v. Thomas, 
    540 U.S. 20
    , 26 (2003). This canon operates as a rebuttable presumption in statutory
    interpretation. “The rule reflects the basic intuition that when a modifier appears at
    the end of a list, it is easier to apply that modifier only to the item directly before it.”
    Lockhart v. United States, 
    136 S. Ct. 958
    , 963 (2016). Applied here, the rule of the
    last antecedent means that the “relating to” phrase modifies only the phrase that
    immediately precedes it: “the laws of any State.” The enumerated chapters and
    sections of federal law are not similarly limited.
    Loyd urges us to apply a different canon of construction—the series-qualifier
    canon. The series-qualifier canon “requires a modifier to apply to all items in a series
    when such an application would represent a natural construction.” 
    Id. at 965
    . This
    canon trumps the rule of the last antecedent when there is “‘no reason consistent with
    any discernible purpose of the statute to apply’ the limiting phrase to the last
    antecedent alone.” Wong v. Minn. Dep’t of Human Servs., 
    820 F.3d 922
    , 929 (8th
    Cir. 2016) (quoting United States v. Bass, 
    404 U.S. 336
    , 341 (1971)). Loyd views
    “the laws of any State” and the several listed chapters and sections of federal law as
    -3-
    one series, such that the “relating to” phrase modifies the enumerated provisions of
    federal law too.
    We are not convinced. For one thing, the statute does not present the federal
    provisions in a single, uninterrupted series together with the laws of any State.
    Section 2251(e) refers instead to three groups of laws, separated by commas and “or,”
    with each introduced by the word “under”—“under [chapter 110], section 1591,
    chapter 71, chapter 109A, or chapter 117, or under section 920 of title 10 (article 120
    of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), or under the laws of any State relating
    to . . . .” 
    18 U.S.C. § 2251
    (e) (emphasis added); cf. United States v. Pritchett, 
    470 F.2d 455
    , 459 (D.C. Cir. 1972). The last group—“the laws of any State”—begins
    with a determiner (“the”), thereby suggesting that the modification in the “relating to”
    phrase does not reach back to the previous groups. See Antonin Scalia & Bryan A.
    Garner, Reading Law: The Interpretation of Legal Texts 149 (2012). This syntax and
    division of the purported series strengthens the inference that “relating to” modifies
    only the last group of laws that immediately precedes the modifying phrase.
    Another problem with Loyd’s approach is that the restrictive “relating to”
    phrase has no meaning if it modifies each of the listed portions of federal law.
    “Relating to X” can modify “the laws of any State,” because some state laws will
    relate to X and others will not. But the modifier cannot restrict “chapter 117” as a
    whole, because the chapter either relates to X or it does not. To hold that chapter 117
    does not relate to any of the enumerated forms of misconduct would require us
    impermissibly to read “chapter 117” out of the statute.
    Loyd elsewhere seems to suggest that a court must inquire whether the
    elements of an individual offense of conviction categorically relate to the listed forms
    of misconduct. He appears to mean that § 2251(e) requires a court to assess whether
    a particular statute within the listed chapters and sections is categorically related to
    one of the listed forms of misconduct. But § 2251(e) lists chapters of the code, not
    -4-
    individual provisions within the listed chapters, and it would be unnatural to read the
    “relating to” phrase as modifying subsets that Congress did not choose to enumerate.
    The structure of § 2251(e) also shows that Loyd’s suggestion is incorrect. In
    a subsequent clause about penalties for an offender with multiple prior convictions,
    a sentencing enhancement applies when a person “has 2 or more convictions under
    [chapter 110], chapter 71, chapter 109A, or chapter 117, or under section 920 of title
    10 (article 120 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice), or under the laws of any
    State relating to the sexual exploitation of children.” One of those enumerated
    segments, section 920 of title 10, includes no provision relating categorically to
    sexual exploitation of children, so the suggested approach would impermissibly
    render one term on the list a nullity. We presume that Congress employed consistent
    usage in two successive clauses of the same subsection, so the clause concerning two
    or more convictions is further reason to conclude that “relating to” modifies only “the
    laws of any State” in the preceding clause about one prior conviction.
    Loyd argues finally that the rule of lenity counsels in favor of limiting the
    scope of § 2251(e), but that rule applies only when “ordinary canons of statutory
    construction have revealed no satisfactory construction.” Lockhart, 
    136 S. Ct. at 968
    .
    Here, the statute’s text and structure demonstrate that we should apply the rule of the
    last antecedent. So we conclude that Loyd’s prior conviction for an offense under
    chapter 117 of the United States Code is a predicate offense that required a 25-year
    minimum term of imprisonment for his conviction in this case. The district court thus
    applied the correct advisory guideline range when fashioning Loyd’s sentence.
    The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
    ______________________________
    -5-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 16-4150

Judges: Loken, Beam, Colloton

Filed Date: 3/29/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024