Nowaczyk v. Warden ( 2002 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 98-1921, 99-1379
    STEVEN J. NOWACZYK,
    Petitioner, Appellant,
    v.
    WARDEN, NEW HAMPSHIRE STATE PRISON,
    Respondent, Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    [Hon. Joseph A. DiClerico, Jr., U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Torruella and Lipez, Circuit Judges,
    and Schwarzer,* Senior District Judge.
    William A. Hahn, with whom Hahn & Matkov was on brief, for
    appellant.
    Nicholas Cort, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Philip T.
    McLaughlin, Attorney General, was on brief, for appellee.
    August 14, 2002
    * Of the Northern District of California, sitting by designation.
    LIPEZ, Circuit Judge.          This is the latest in a steady
    stream of cases involving the complex procedural requirements that
    govern habeas corpus petitions filed under the Antiterrorism and
    Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    .
    This case differs from the norm, however, because the petition
    before us does not suffer from any procedural flaw.                     It was filed
    within   AEDPA's        one-year       statute        of        limitations,       see
    
    id.
     § 2244(d)(1), and it contains only fully-exhausted claims, see
    id. § 2254(b) and (c). Nevertheless, the district court refused to
    address the merits of those claims and dismissed the petition
    without prejudice because the petitioner, Steven Nowaczyk, was in
    the process of adjudicating an additional claim -- one he had not
    presented in his habeas petition -- in state court.                           AEDPA's
    statute of     limitations     has   now     run    its    course,      meaning   that
    Nowaczyk will be barred from filing a new petition if he cannot
    proceed on the petition dismissed by the district court.                    Although
    we conclude that the district court was not required to adjudicate
    Nowaczyk's     claims    immediately,       we     hold    that    it    abused   its
    discretion    in    dismissing   his    petition          rather   than     retaining
    jurisdiction and entering a stay pending the outcome of the state
    proceedings.
    I.
    In       December,   1994,    Nowaczyk          was   convicted    in   New
    Hampshire state court on charges of arson, conspiracy to commit
    arson, and witness tampering.           The New Hampshire Supreme Court
    affirmed his conviction on direct appeal, entering its final
    -2-
    judgment on January 24, 1997. Nowaczyk did not seek further review
    from the United States Supreme Court.
    Under AEDPA, Nowaczyk had one year "from the date on
    which [his conviction] became final by the conclusion of direct
    review or the expiration of the time for seeking such review" in
    which to pursue federal habeas relief under § 2254.       
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (d)(1)(A).   The parties agree that the one-year limitations
    period began on April 24, 1997,1 which marks the end of the 90-day
    period for filing a petition for writ of certiorari from the United
    States Supreme Court.     See Donovan v. Maine, 
    276 F.3d 87
    , 91 (1st
    Cir. 2002) ("[S]ection 2244(d)(1) provides for tolling during the
    ninety-day period in which the petitioner would have been allowed
    to ask the United States Supreme Court to grant certiorari to
    review the [state court's] denial of his direct appeal (the fact
    that the petitioner did not seek certiorari is immaterial).").
    The statute of limitations is tolled whenever "a properly
    filed application for State post-conviction or other collateral
    review with respect to the pertinent judgment or claim is pending."
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (d)(2).   We have held that an application for state
    post-conviction relief is "pending" -- and, thus, the statute of
    limitations is tolled -- not only when the application "actually is
    being considered by the trial or appellate court, but also during
    the 'gap' between the trial court's initial disposition and the
    petitioner's timely filing of a petition for review at the next
    1
    A chronology of the important dates in this case is set forth
    in the appendix.
    -3-
    level."     Currie v. Matesanz, 
    281 F.3d 261
    , 266 (1st Cir. 2002)
    (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Carey v. Saffold, 
    122 S. Ct. 2134
    , 2136 (2002) (confirming the prevailing view that an
    application remains pending between "a lower state court's decision
    and the filing of a notice of appeal to a higher state court").
    Such   tolling     enables   state    prisoners   to   comply    with    AEDPA's
    exhaustion provisions, 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (b) and (c), which require
    them   to   give    state    courts   a   "full   opportunity"    to    address
    constitutional claims before presenting those claims to a federal
    court, O'Sullivan v. Boerckel, 
    526 U.S. 838
    , 845 (1999).
    Here, Nowaczyk filed his § 2254 petition in federal
    district court on June 20, 1997, roughly two months after the
    statute of limitations began to run.              The petition stated four
    claims:     (1) that there was insufficient evidence to support his
    conviction; (2) that the jury was permitted to consider prejudicial
    evidence; (3) that he received ineffective assistance of counsel at
    trial; and (4) that he was denied the right to a neutral judge both
    at trial and on appeal.         Unlike the first three claims, Nowaczyk
    had not raised the issue of judicial bias on direct appeal from his
    state conviction.       In AEDPA parlance, therefore, that claim was
    "unexhausted."      Perhaps anticipating that problem, Nowaczyk filed
    an application for state post-conviction review on October 28,
    1997, in which he presented his claim of judicial bias.                 He filed
    a second such application on May 10, 1998, raising a claim of
    double jeopardy that was not included in his § 2254 petition.
    -4-
    On July 22, 1998, the district court dismissed Nowaczyk's
    § 2254 petition without prejudice. The court noted that Nowaczyk's
    first application for state post-conviction review was then pending
    before the New Hampshire Supreme Court.              It concluded, therefore,
    that Nowaczyk had failed to exhaust all available state remedies as
    to his claim of judicial bias, and dismissed the § 2254 petition on
    that ground.
    Nowaczyk filed a notice of appeal from the district
    court's decision on July 24. Approximately one week later, on July
    31, 1998,    the    New    Hampshire      Supreme   Court    entered      its   final
    decision rejecting Nowaczyk's judicial bias claim.                     Citing that
    decision, Nowaczyk asked the federal district court to reconsider
    its judgment.      He argued that dismissal no longer was appropriate
    now that all of the claims presented in his § 2254 petition were
    fully exhausted.      The district court denied the motion by margin
    order, reasoning that Nowaczyk's pending appeal before us rendered
    his motion for reconsideration "moot."
    Nowaczyk then filed a motion in this court for summary
    reversal.    We granted the motion, explaining that, "[e]ven though
    [Nowaczyk's]    appeal      had    been    noticed    when       the   motion    [for
    reconsideration] was filed, the motion was not entirely moot.                     The
    district court still had authority to review the motion and to
    notify   this      court    if    it   was    inclined      to    grant    relief."
    Accordingly, we remanded to the district court so that it could
    address the merits of Nowaczyk's motion for reconsideration.                       We
    emphasized that the court should consider whether, given the time
    -5-
    limitations imposed by AEDPA, dismissal still was appropriate in
    Nowaczyk's case.
    On remand, the matter was referred to a magistrate judge,
    see 
    28 U.S.C. § 636
    (b)(1)(B), who recommended that Nowaczyk's
    motion for reconsideration be granted.2      The magistrate judge
    reasoned that, since Nowaczyk's § 2254 petition was no longer
    "mixed," but presented only exhausted claims, it was not subject to
    dismissal.   He rejected the state's argument that dismissal was
    warranted because Nowaczyk's second application for state post-
    conviction review (raising the double jeopardy claim) still was
    pending before the state courts. Although principles of comity and
    judicial economy mandate dismissal of any unexhausted claims, see
    Rose v. Lundy, 
    455 U.S. 509
    , 518-20 (1982), the magistrate judge
    found those principles inapplicable in Nowaczyk's case, "since the
    State courts have already had an opportunity to consider each of
    the issues raised in the federal petition."     Because the claims
    presented in Nowaczyk's § 2254 petition were fully exhausted and
    properly before the district court, the magistrate judge concluded
    that dismissal would be "inconsistent with the imperative that
    underscores all habeas corpus proceedings:   ensuring that federal
    constitutional claims may be reviewed promptly in a federal forum
    if State remedies have been exhausted."       See Braden v. 30th
    Judicial Cir. Ct., 
    410 U.S. 484
    , 490 (1973) (explaining that the
    exhaustion doctrine reflects "a careful balance between important
    2
    The magistrate judge construed the motion as a motion to
    alter or amend the judgment, filed under Rule 59(e) of the Federal
    Rules of Civil Procedure.
    -6-
    interests of federalism and the need to preserve the writ of habeas
    corpus as a swift and imperative remedy in all cases of illegal
    restraint or confinement" (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    The    district      court    rejected   the   magistrate   judge's
    recommendation and dismissed Nowaczyk's § 2254 petition without
    prejudice.     The court agreed that Nowaczyk's petition presented
    only exhausted claims.        However, it concluded that dismissal was
    appropriate       because   of     the    pendency    of   Nowaczyk's    second
    application for state post-conviction review.                That application
    contained a challenge to the same conviction Nowaczyk sought to
    overturn through the federal habeas proceedings, and "Nowaczyk did
    not raise any unusual circumstances about the state court actions,
    such   as    extraordinary       delay,    that   would    justify   concurrent
    actions."     In the district court's view, the principles of comity
    discussed in Rose counseled in favor of "defer[ring] to the state
    court action" in such a case.
    The court then turned to the question of AEDPA's statute
    of limitations.      It assumed, without deciding, that since Nowaczyk
    had not attempted to appeal his conviction to the United States
    Supreme Court, he was not entitled to the benefit of the 90-day
    period for seeking a writ of certiorari.              Accordingly, the court
    concluded that the statute of limitations began to run on January
    24, 1997 -- the date of the New Hampshire Supreme Court's final
    decision in Nowaczyk's direct appeal.
    The next question was the extent to which the statute of
    limitations was tolled by Nowaczyk's various filings. The district
    -7-
    court determined that Nowaczyk's § 2254 petition -- if dismissed
    without prejudice on the ground of comity -- would not itself toll
    the   limitations    period    for   any   subsequently-filed      petition.
    However, under AEDPA, the statute of limitations would be tolled
    whenever a state-court challenge to "the pertinent judgment or
    claim" was pending.      
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (d)(2).          The parties agreed
    that the statute was tolled during the pendency of Nowaczyk's first
    application for state post-conviction review, which raised the
    judicial bias claim presented in his § 2254 petition.                  The more
    difficult question was whether his second application had a tolling
    effect even though it concerned a claim that was not included in
    the § 2254 petition.     The district court answered that question in
    the affirmative, reasoning that the second application challenged
    Nowaczyk's conviction -- "the pertinent judgment" for purposes of
    his § 2254 petition -- and therefore satisfied AEDPA's tolling
    provision.
    Thus, the court found that the statute of limitations had
    run between January 24, 1997, and October 28, 1997 (when Nowaczyk
    filed his first application for state post-conviction review), and
    then was tolled by the (still pending) state proceedings.               Because
    Nowaczyk would have "some time, but not the full year," to refile
    his § 2254 petition at the conclusion of the state proceedings, the
    district court concluded that dismissal still was appropriate.
    Nevertheless,   it     ended   its   opinion   with   a    warning:       "Once
    [Nowaczyk's] pertinent state court proceedings are concluded, the
    limitations   period    will   again   begin   to   run   until   it    quickly
    -8-
    expires.    Therefore, if issues remain at the conclusion of the
    state court proceedings that are appropriate for habeas relief,
    Nowaczyk should be mindful of the diminished limitation period that
    remains."
    The district court entered judgment dismissing Nowaczyk's
    petition without prejudice on March 9, 1999.        Nowaczyk promptly
    appealed to this court.      On March 26, 1999, the New Hampshire
    Supreme Court rejected Nowaczyk's double jeopardy claim.         That
    decision marked the end of Nowaczyk's second application for state
    post-conviction review, and therefore started AEDPA's statute of
    limitations running once again.        The same day, Nowaczyk filed a
    motion asking permission to supplement the record on appeal to
    reflect the fact that he no longer had any claims pending before
    the state courts.    We granted that motion by order dated April 28,
    1999.
    After an initial round of briefing by the parties -- with
    Nowaczyk still proceeding pro se -- it was apparent that one of the
    issues on appeal was whether the district court erred in concluding
    that Nowaczyk's § 2254 petition did not operate to toll AEDPA's
    statute of limitations.    The Supreme Court had granted certiorari
    to address that question in Duncan v. Walker, and we decided to
    stay consideration of Nowaczyk's appeal until the Court issued its
    opinion.
    The Supreme Court decided Duncan in June of 2001, holding
    that the statute of limitations is tolled only by applications for
    state post-conviction review, and that later-dismissed federal
    -9-
    habeas petitions do not have any tolling effect.               
    533 U.S. 167
    ,
    181-82 (2001). The upshot of that decision for Nowaczyk was clear:
    if we affirmed the dismissal of his § 2254 petition by the district
    court in March of 1999, the fact that it had been pending before
    the federal courts for roughly four years would have no impact on
    the statute of limitations.          Absent equitable tolling, the AEDPA
    one-year limitations period would have expired for Nowaczyk in
    September of 2000, and any subsequent petition would be time
    barred.
    Following the Supreme Court's decision in Duncan, we
    appointed counsel for Nowaczyk, ordered supplemental briefing, and
    scheduled oral argument.       We instructed counsel to focus on three
    questions:      whether the district court erred in holding that
    Nowaczyk's second application for state post-conviction review
    tolled AEDPA's statute of limitations; whether the district court
    abused    its   discretion     in    dismissing,    rather     than    staying,
    Nowaczyk's § 2254 petition, given the statute of limitations
    concerns;     and   whether,   if    we   concluded   that     dismissal     was
    appropriate, Nowaczyk would be entitled to equitable tolling when
    he attempted to refile his habeas petition.
    In its supplemental brief and again at oral argument, the
    state conceded that Nowaczyk's second application for state post-
    conviction review tolled the limitations period.               See Tillema v.
    Long, 
    253 F.3d 494
    , 502 (9th Cir. 2001) (holding that "AEDPA's
    period of limitation is tolled during the pendency of a state
    application     challenging    the    pertinent    judgment,    even    if   the
    -10-
    particular application does not include a claim later asserted in
    the federal habeas petition"); accord Carter v. Litscher, 
    275 F.3d 663
     (7th Cir. 2001) (same).      But see Austin v. Mitchell, 
    200 F.3d 391
     (6th Cir. 1999) (adopting contrary view).            Accordingly, we
    focus on the question whether the district court should have stayed
    the federal proceedings rather than dismissing Nowaczyk's petition
    outright.    We conclude that, under the circumstances of this case,
    the district court abused its discretion in dismissing Nowaczyk's
    § 2254 petition.       Accordingly, we need not decide whether the
    doctrine of equitable tolling is available under AEDPA generally,
    see, e.g., Donovan, 
    276 F.3d at 92-93
     (reserving the question),
    and, if so, whether it would apply in this case.
    II.
    Before we can reach the issue of stay versus dismissal,
    we first must address a threshold question: did the district court
    err   in    delaying   its   decision     through   either   means?   Put
    differently, was the court obligated to adjudicate Nowaczyk's
    claims immediately?3     We turn to that question.
    A.          Delay vs. Immediate Adjudication
    In Rose v. Lundy, 
    455 U.S. 509
     (1982), the Supreme Court
    held that "mixed" § 2254 petitions -- that is, those containing
    both exhausted and unexhausted claims -- must be dismissed for
    3
    We use the term "immediately" simply as shorthand for
    proceeding in the normal course of federal adjudication, without
    regard to the pending state proceedings. Similarly, we use the
    term "delay" to refer to deferring federal proceedings until state
    court proceedings are resolved.
    -11-
    failure to exhaust state remedies.                The Court reasoned that such a
    rule   would    "further[]         the     policy    of   comity    underlying      the
    exhaustion doctrine."          Id. at 514.          Requiring "total exhaustion"
    would "encourage state prisoners to seek full relief first from the
    state courts, thus giving those courts the first opportunity to
    review all     claims    of    constitutional         error."      Id.   at    518-19.
    Moreover, "federal claims that have been fully exhausted in state
    courts will more often be accompanied by a complete factual record
    to aid the federal courts in their review."                    Id. at 519.
    The district court relied on that same policy of comity
    as a basis for dismissing Nowaczyk's § 2254 petition.                    It reasoned
    that, although the claims presented in the petition had been fully
    exhausted,     the   fact     that       Nowaczyk    still   was   challenging       his
    conviction in state court brought his case within Rose's purview.
    The court observed that the comity doctrine not only "protect[s]
    the state court's concurrent jurisdiction to enforce federal law";
    it also "'prevent[s] disruption of state judicial proceedings' by
    teaching that '"one court should defer action on causes properly
    within its jurisdiction until the courts of another sovereignty
    with concurrent powers, and already cognizant of the litigation,
    have had an opportunity to pass on the matter."'"                    (Quoting Rose,
    
    455 U.S. at 518
     (quoting Darr v. Burford, 
    339 U.S. 200
    , 204
    (1950)).       Because   the       state    courts    had    not   yet   had   a    full
    opportunity     to   pass     on    one    of     Nowaczyk's    challenges     to    his
    conviction -- the double jeopardy claim -- the district court felt
    -12-
    itself bound to "defer action" on the related challenges contained
    in the § 2254 petition.
    Nowaczyk argues that Rose does not support the district
    court's decision to dismiss his petition.     He maintains that the
    rule of total exhaustion is not based on avoiding parallel state-
    federal proceedings.   Rather, Nowaczyk argues, Rose's core holding
    was that federal courts should not grant relief on claims that have
    not yet been presented to the state courts.    Consistent with that
    view, Rose directed district courts to offer a choice to state
    prisoners with mixed petitions: they could either accept dismissal
    without prejudice and return to state court to exhaust the claims
    presented in their § 2254 petitions, or they could amend those
    petitions to remove any unexhausted claims.   See Rose, 
    455 U.S. at 510
    .   If the prisoner chose the latter option, the district court
    would adjudicate the remaining (exhausted) claims immediately,
    notwithstanding the fact that the other unexhausted claims might be
    pending before the state courts at the same time.
    We agree that Rose does not require the district court to
    withhold decision in cases such as Nowaczyk's.         See Hurd v.
    Mondragon, 
    851 F.2d 324
    , 327-28 (10th Cir. 1988) (concluding that
    Rose is not controlling where the state prisoner has exhausted his
    state remedies on the claims presented in his § 2254 petition, but
    he has other claims that have not been exhausted); Jones v. Parke,
    
    734 F.2d 1142
    , 1145 (6th Cir. 1984) (same).   If anything, it points
    in the opposite direction.   Rose held that a state prisoner who has
    both exhausted and unexhausted claims can obtain prompt federal
    -13-
    review of the exhausted claims if he files a mixed petition and
    then amends it to remove the unexhausted claims.    See 
    455 U.S. at 510
    ; Lacy v. Gabriel, 
    732 F.2d 7
    , 12 (1st Cir. 1984) (emphasizing
    that, under Rose, the petitioner "was entitled all along to present
    only a part of the claims available to him").   We see no reason why
    a prisoner with a mixed petition should be better off than one
    whose petition contains only exhausted claims.     But that is the
    oddity implicit in the district court's reasoning. Under Rose, the
    state prisoner with a mixed petition is entitled to proceed with
    his exhausted claims if he agrees to amend his petition.   Under the
    district court's approach, however, the state prisoner with a
    petition containing only exhausted claims is forbidden to proceed
    with those claims until he adjudicates any unexhausted claims in
    state court.   That distinction makes little sense, and we do not
    believe Rose compels it.
    In addition to Rose, the district court also relied on
    cases such as Sherwood v. Tomkins, 
    716 F.2d 632
     (9th Cir. 1983).
    There, the petitioner had been convicted of manslaughter in state
    court and, in the course of appealing that conviction, lodged
    several requests for appointed counsel and a free transcript.   The
    state courts denied his requests and, while his state appeal still
    was pending, Sherwood filed a § 2254 petition challenging those
    denials.    The Ninth Circuit held that Sherwood had failed to
    exhaust his state remedies with respect to his claim of indigency,
    and affirmed the dismissal of the § 2254 petition on that ground.
    See id. at 633-34.    The court went on to note, in dicta, that
    -14-
    "[w]hen, as in the present case, an appeal of a state criminal
    conviction is pending, a would-be habeas corpus petitioner must
    await the outcome of his appeal before his state remedies are
    exhausted, even where the issue to be challenged in the writ of
    habeas corpus has been finally settled in the state courts."           Id.
    at 634.
    The Ninth Circuit reached a similar conclusion -- this
    time not in dicta -- in Edelbacher v. Calderon, 
    160 F.3d 582
     (9th
    Cir. 1998), another case cited by the district court. Edelbacher's
    state conviction was affirmed on direct appeal, but his death
    sentence was vacated.     Before the penalty-phase retrial had begun,
    Edelbacher filed a § 2254 petition challenging his conviction. The
    Ninth Circuit concluded that the petition was premature, holding
    that the district court should not entertain a federal habeas
    proceeding in the absence of a penalty phase judgment "or until the
    existence     of   extremely   unusual   circumstances    warrant[s]    an
    exception."    Id. at 585.
    We are not persuaded that Sherwood and Edelbacher support
    the district court's conclusion that dismissal was required in
    Nowaczyk's case.      The dicta in Sherwood suggests that a state
    prisoner has not exhausted state remedies until he completes his
    direct appeal from his conviction and sentence.          It therefore has
    little relevance here: Nowaczyk completed his direct appeal before
    he filed his § 2254 petition, and the district court did not
    suggest that dismissal was warranted because of any failure to
    exhaust state remedies.
    -15-
    Nor do we believe that Edelbacher stands for the broad
    rule that federal courts must dismiss § 2254 petitions whenever the
    petitioner is in the process of adjudicating other, related claims
    in the state courts.     As we explained above, such a rule would be
    inconsistent with Rose, and we doubt the Ninth Circuit intended to
    adopt it sub silentio.4     The better view is that Edelbacher held
    precisely   what   it   said:     that,   in   the   absence   of   unusual
    circumstances, a state prisoner cannot proceed with his § 2254
    petition when the state trial court has not yet rendered a decision
    as to the proper penalty.5      Obviously, that rule is not implicated
    here.
    In any event -- as the district court recognized -- other
    circuits have rejected the broad rule that a state prisoner cannot
    adjudicate his fully-exhausted claims under § 2254 when other
    4
    Indeed, in the wake of AEDPA, the Ninth Circuit has taken
    pains to protect a state prisoner's right to adjudicate any
    exhausted claims promptly. See Tillema, 
    253 F.3d at 503
     (holding
    that "the district court committed prejudicial legal error when it
    dismissed Tillema's first federal habeas petition without affording
    him the opportunity to abandon his sole unexhausted claim as an
    alternative to suffering dismissal"); Anthony v. Cambra, 
    236 F.3d 568
    , 574 (9th Cir. 2000) (holding that "outright dismissal" of a
    mixed petition without leave to amend was "improper," and
    emphasizing that "district courts must provide habeas litigants
    with the opportunity to amend their mixed petitions by striking
    unexhausted claims").
    5
    There are sound reasons for such a rule, at least in cases
    like Edelbacher, where the state prisoner was eligible for (and
    initially received) a death sentence.       As the Ninth Circuit
    explained, the federal habeas court needs to know whether the
    prisoner's case is "capital" or "non-capital" before it can
    proceed, because that designation determines which procedures will
    govern the habeas proceedings. See Edelbacher, 
    160 F.3d at 585
    ; 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 2261-2266
     (setting out special procedures for prisoners
    who are subject to a capital sentence).
    -16-
    claims have not yet been decided by the state courts.               See, e.g.,
    Pringle v. Court of Common Pleas, 
    744 F.2d 297
    , 300 (3d Cir. 1984)
    (holding that the district court erred in concluding that the state
    prisoner could     not   proceed   under   §   2254     on   exhausted     claims
    regarding her conviction until she exhausted other claims regarding
    her sentence); cf. Lacy, 
    732 F.2d at 12
     (holding that the district
    court cannot transform a fully exhausted petition into a mixed one
    by raising an unexhausted claim sua sponte); Williams v. Maggio,
    
    727 F.2d 1387
    , 1389 (5th Cir. 1984) (similar); Butler v. Rose, 
    686 F.2d 1163
    , 1167 (6th Cir. 1982) (similar).             Thus, we adhere to our
    initial view that the district court was not required to delay its
    decision on Nowaczyk's fully-exhausted claims until the conclusion
    of the state proceedings.      See Jones v. Wainwright, 
    608 F.2d 180
    ,
    181 (5th Cir. 1979) (holding that petition need not be dismissed
    "when the petitioner does not urge unexhausted grounds for relief
    but the state claims that such grounds may be asserted in the
    future"); United States ex rel. Boyance v. Myers, 
    372 F.2d 111
    , 112
    (3d Cir. 1967) ("It is no bar to federal adjudication of the merits
    of the present claim that a separate claim for relief on a
    different ground is pending in a state court.").
    The question remains, however, whether such a delay was
    permitted.     We hold that it was.        See Calderon v. United States
    Dist. Ct., 
    134 F.3d 981
     (9th Cir. 1998) ("[T]he fact that the
    district   court   was   not   required    .   .   .    to   hold   [the    state
    prisoner's] exhausted petition in abeyance does not necessarily
    imply that the district court was without discretion to do so.").
    -17-
    As the district court pointed out, if Nowaczyk had prevailed on his
    double jeopardy claim, there likely would have been no need to
    continue with the federal habeas proceedings.     Considerations of
    judicial economy support the district court's decision to withhold
    decision on claims that could have been mooted by the pending state
    proceedings.   Moreover, although Rose's policy of comity did not
    require the district court to "defer action" until the conclusion
    of the state proceedings, 
    455 U.S. at 518
    , such a delay certainly
    is consistent with that policy.6
    Not surprisingly, therefore, other courts to consider the
    question have held that Rose does not foreclose the option of
    delaying consideration of exhausted claims pending resolution of
    other, unexhausted claims.     In Thompson v. Wainwright, 
    714 F.2d 1495
     (11th Cir. 1983), for example, the Eleventh Circuit held that
    the district court acted within its discretion in staying decision
    on the state prisoner's § 2254 petition -- which contained only
    exhausted claims -- while the petitioner presented an additional,
    unexhausted claim to the state courts.       The court rejected as
    "patently without merit" the state's argument that the district
    court was obligated by Rose to decide the unexhausted claims
    immediately.   Id. at 1499.   "The [district] court has the power to
    control its docket.     So long as it abides by the limits of
    6
    We note that, at the time of the district court's decision
    on remand, Nowaczyk's second application for post-conviction review
    already had worked its way to the New Hampshire Supreme Court.
    Thus, any delay was likely to be short -- and, in fact, the New
    Hampshire Supreme Court issued its decision within weeks of the
    district court's judgment.
    -18-
    discretion, it can leave a habeas petition dormant on its docket
    while the petitioner presents to the state court unexhausted
    claims."   Id.
    Similarly, in Calderon, the Ninth Circuit reasoned that
    "'[a] district court has discretion to stay a petition which it may
    validly consider on the merits.'"            
    134 F.3d at 987
     (quoting
    Greenawalt v. Stewart, 
    105 F.3d 1268
    , 1274 (9th Cir. 1997)).             It
    rejected the view that Rose stood in the way of such a stay,
    explaining that the Court in Rose "did not . . . intimate that
    those petitioners who opted for amendment were required to proceed
    posthaste on their remaining claims."        
    Id.
     at 988 n.10; see also
    Burris v. Farley, 
    51 F.3d 655
    , 659 (7th Cir. 1995) (indicating that
    district court can stay decision on exhausted claims until state
    prisoner exhausts any remaining issues);       Fetterly v. Paskett, 
    997 F.2d 1295
     (9th Cir. 1993) (holding that district court abused its
    discretion in denying the state prisoner's request that it stay
    decision on his § 2254 petition so that he could exhaust a newly-
    discovered claim in the state courts).
    These cases support the district court's decision to
    delay adjudication of Nowaczyk's fully-exhausted claims until the
    resolution of the related state proceedings. We conclude that such
    delay was permissible here. We turn, therefore, to the question of
    what form the delay should have taken.
    B.         Stay vs. Dismissal
    It appears that the question of stay versus dismissal in
    cases   involving   only   fully-exhausted    claims   is   one   of   first
    -19-
    impression.   However, several courts have addressed a related
    question: the propriety of dismissal in post-AEDPA cases involving
    mixed petitions.   Those cases are instructive here.
    When   Rose was    decided,     there   was   no   time   limit   on
    petitions filed under § 2254.      Thus, there was little cost to a
    dismissal without prejudice -- the state prisoner could refile the
    petition at any time following exhaustion of his federal claims.
    AEDPA changed matters.      Its one-year statute of limitations "has
    rendered outright dismissal perilous to some litigants, because
    petitioners . . . may find themselves time-barred when they attempt
    to resubmit their exhausted claims to the district court." Anthony
    v. Cambra, 
    236 F.3d 568
    , 573 (9th Cir. 2000).                Recognizing the
    risks attendant to dismissal in the post-AEDPA world, several
    courts have concluded that a stay is "the right step to take" in
    cases involving mixed petitions.         Newell v. Hanks, 
    283 F.3d 827
    ,
    834 (7th Cir. 2002); Zarvela v. Artuz, 
    254 F.3d 374
    , 379-80 (2d
    Cir. 2001) (concluding that "the enactment of AEDPA warrants some
    adjustment in the pre-AEDPA requirement of Rose v. Lundy that mixed
    petitions be dismissed in their entirety," and that, "[i]n many
    cases, a stay will be preferable"); see also Duncan, 533 U.S. at
    182-83 (Stevens, J., concurring) ("[I]n our post-AEDPA world there
    is no reason why a district court should not retain jurisdiction
    over a meritorious claim and stay further proceedings pending the
    complete exhaustion of state remedies.").               But see Graham v.
    Johnson, 
    168 F.3d 762
    , 779-80 (5th Cir. 1999) (disapproving of
    open-ended stays of mixed petitions).        Indeed, there is a growing
    -20-
    consensus that a stay is required when dismissal could jeopardize
    the petitioner's ability to obtain federal review.                  See, e.g.,
    Zarvela, 
    254 F.3d at 380
     (holding that a stay "will be the only
    appropriate course" where outright dismissal could jeopardize the
    timeliness of any subsequent petition); Freeman v. Page, 
    208 F.3d 572
    , 577 (7th Cir. 2000) ("[D]ismissal is not appropriate when that
    step could jeopardize the timeliness of a collateral attack."); see
    also Palmer v. Carlton, 
    276 F.3d 777
    , 781 (6th Cir. 2002) (noting
    that    the   Second    Circuit's   approach   in   Zarvela   "is    eminently
    reasonable").
    Although none of our cases has turned on the question of
    stay versus dismissal, we have indicated that district courts
    presented with mixed petitions should take seriously any request
    for a stay.     In Neverson v. Bissonnette, 
    261 F.3d 120
    , 126 n.3 (1st
    Cir. 2001), we noted that "the petitioner could have improved his
    position by requesting that the district court stay, rather than
    dismiss, Petition No. 1.         Post-AEDPA, this will be the preferable
    course in many cases involving 'mixed' petitions -- and it may be
    the only appropriate course in cases in which an outright dismissal
    threatens to imperil the timeliness of a collateral attack."                We
    reiterated that view in Delaney v. Matesanz, 
    264 F.3d 7
    , 13 n.5
    (1st Cir. 2001), where we "especially commend[ed]" the use of stays
    "in    instances   in    which   the   original   habeas   petition,    though
    unexhausted, is timely filed, but there is a realistic danger that
    a second petition, filed after exhaustion has occurred, will be
    untimely."
    -21-
    The state points out that neither Neverson nor Delaney
    compels a stay in the circumstances of this case.                 When the
    district court entered judgment in March of 1999, the statute of
    limitations was still being tolled by Nowaczyk's second application
    for state post-conviction review, and several months would remain
    in the limitations period when the clock started running again.7
    Moreover, the district court warned Nowaczyk that he would need to
    return promptly to federal court as soon as the state courts
    decided   the   double   jeopardy    claims    presented   in   his   second
    application for post-conviction review. Accordingly, if Nowaczyk's
    petition still had been "mixed," Neverson and Delaney probably
    would not have prevented the district court from dismissing it.
    But therein lies the problem.           In both Neverson and
    Delaney, the district court was presented with a § 2254 petition
    that contained unexhausted claims.            Thus, it did not have the
    option of adjudicating the petition immediately.                Unless the
    petitioner agreed to amend the petition to drop the unexhausted
    claims, the district court had no choice but to delay decision
    until the prisoner completed the process of exhaustion.
    7
    Under the district court's computation (which excluded the
    90-day period for seeking certiorari from the United States Supreme
    Court), the statute of limitations had run for approximately nine
    months when Nowaczyk filed his first application for state post-
    conviction review in October of 1997, leaving roughly three months
    to go.    Nowaczyk and the state maintain -- and we agree, see
    Donovan, 
    276 F.3d at
    91 -- that the statute of limitations did not
    begin to run until after the 90-day certiorari period. On that
    view, approximately six months remained in the limitations period
    when the New Hampshire Supreme Court rejected Nowaczyk's second
    application for state-post conviction review.
    -22-
    The situation here is critically different.               Nowaczyk's
    petition contained only exhausted claims.               Nothing prevented the
    district court from adjudicating those claims immediately; indeed,
    Nowaczyk urged it to do so.        Although we have determined that the
    district court did not abuse its discretion in withholding decision
    while Nowaczyk's      second     application     for   state    post-conviction
    relief    was   pending,   it    bears    emphasis     that    --   unlike   cases
    involving mixed petitions -- such delay was not required here.                 It
    is one thing to say that a district court may choose between a stay
    and dismissal when a flaw in the § 2254 petition makes it necessary
    to delay decision through some means.             It is quite another to say
    that the court may dismiss a petition that is properly before it
    and ready for decision.
    The    state   has    not    even    attempted     to   defend    that
    proposition.      Instead, relying on cases such as Sherwood, it seeks
    to show that Nowaczyk's petition was not, in fact, ready for
    decision.       We rejected that view above.           We explained that the
    district court's decision to delay action on Nowaczyk's petition
    was not compelled by Rose or by the principles of comity on which
    the total exhaustion rule is based. That decision was permissible,
    however, as an exercise of the district court's "power to control
    its docket," Thompson, 
    714 F.2d at 1499
    , and in the interest of
    comity.    The question here is whether that power to delay embraces
    the discretion to dismiss an action properly before the court and
    within its statutory jurisdiction.             We think not.
    -23-
    We conclude that "[w]hen unusual circumstances" -- rather
    than a flaw in the petition itself -- "make it imprudent to address
    the § 2254 petition immediately, the collateral attack should be
    stayed rather than dismissed."                  Post v. Gilmore, 
    111 F.3d 556
    , 557
    (7th Cir. 1997).           This case is unusual because Nowaczyk was in the
    process of adjudicating his double jeopardy claim in the state
    courts, yet made no effort to include that claim in his § 2254
    petition.       He    expressed         no    interest       in    delaying    the     federal
    proceedings until the resolution of his second application for
    state post-conviction review; nor did he seek to amend his § 2254
    petition to include the claim of double jeopardy.                            Rather, he was
    ready   and     willing          to    adjudicate      the        fully-exhausted       claims
    presented in that petition immediately.
    Thus, Nowaczyk's case differs from those discussed in the
    previous section, which affirm the district court's discretion to
    delay   resolution          of    a    fully-exhausted            petition    so     that    the
    petitioner     can        exhaust      other    claims       in    state     court    and,   if
    necessary, amend his federal petition to include them.                                  It is
    notable   that       none    of       those    cases    so   much     as    suggested       that
    dismissal     was     a    viable       option.        Rather,       the   courts      clearly
    understood the choice to be between immediate adjudication or a
    stay.     See,      e.g.,        Anthony,      
    236 F.3d at 575
        ("Our     precedent
    unequivocally authorizes district courts to stay fully exhausted
    federal petitions . . . .") (emphasis added); Thompson, 
    714 F.2d at 1500
     (affirming district court's decision to stay decision on
    exhausted claims although the district court also "could have
    -24-
    denied a delay [and] decided the issues that were alleged in the
    petition"). If outright dismissal of a fully-exhausted petition is
    disfavored even when the petitioner asked the court to withhold
    decision on his claims, it is even more inappropriate where, as
    here, the petitioner resisted any such delay.      See Jones, 
    608 F.2d at 183
     (holding that district court erred in dismissing a fully-
    exhausted petition on the ground that other, unexhausted, claims
    might be asserted in the future); Myers, 
    372 F.2d at 112
     (holding
    that district court erred in dismissing, rather than adjudicating,
    a fully-exhausted claim where another claim was still pending
    before the state courts).
    The reason for such a rule is fairly simple.        Although
    habeas relief is an equitable remedy, "a district judge may not
    remit [§ 2254] petitioners to their other remedies, the way a judge
    may decline to issue declaratory relief."       Post, 
    111 F.3d at 557
    .
    Rather, like other civil actions, § 2254 petitions are "governed by
    the norm that a district court must exercise its full statutory
    jurisdiction."     Id.; see also Colorado River Water Conservation
    Dist. v. United States, 
    424 U.S. 800
    , 817 (1976) (noting "the
    virtually unflagging obligation of the federal courts to exercise
    the jurisdiction given them").        That norm is violated when the
    district court dismisses a petition that is properly before it and
    within its jurisdiction under AEDPA.      A stay does not suffer from
    the   same    infirmity.    Because     the   district   court   retains
    jurisdiction over the petition during the course of a stay, that
    procedure does not "involve the abdication of federal jurisdiction,
    -25-
    but only the postponement of its exercise." Harrison v. NAACP, 
    360 U.S. 167
    , 177 (1959) (discussing a form of abstention under which
    the district court retains jurisdiction over the federal action
    pending proceedings in state court).8
    Of course, the "norm" that a district court must exercise
    its full jurisdiction is just that -- a norm -- and can give way in
    the face of countervailing demands. See, e.g., Colorado River, 
    424 U.S. at 813
     (explaining that "exceptional circumstances" may permit
    abstention from "the duty of a District Court to adjudicate a
    controversy properly before it").     Thus, we do not adopt a bright-
    line rule that a district court may never dismiss a fully-exhausted
    petition. However, in order to justify a departure from the "heavy
    8
    We recognize that, in certain circumstances, "a stay is as
    much a refusal to exercise federal jurisdiction as a dismissal."
    Moses H. Cone Mem. Hosp. v. Mercury Constr. Corp., 
    460 U.S. 1
    , 28
    (1983). That is so, for example, when the district court enters a
    stay under the Colorado River doctrine on the ground that "parallel
    state-court litigation will be an adequate vehicle for the complete
    and prompt resolution of the issues between the parties." 
    Id.
     In
    such a case, the expectation "is that the controversy will be
    resolved in the state court proceeding, and that if the party
    returns to federal court after the state action is over, the most
    that will be needed is to dispose of the federal suit on principles
    of res judicata or collateral estoppel." Charles A. Wright, Arthur
    R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, 17A Federal Practice and Procedure
    § 4247, at 136 (2d ed. 1994). It therefore makes no difference
    whether the district court enters a stay or dismisses the case
    outright: either way, the parties will be forced to adjudicate
    their claims in state, rather than federal, court.
    That is not the situation here. The state courts' resolution
    of Nowaczyk's double jeopardy claim against him would not prevent
    Nowaczyk from asserting that claim or any of his other claims in
    the federal habeas proceedings. At most, a ruling in Nowaczyk's
    favor on the double jeopardy claim would have rendered the federal
    proceedings unnecessary, because Nowaczyk already would have
    obtained the relief he desired. Thus, in staying its hand until
    the resolution of the state court proceedings, the district court
    would postpone, rather than abdicate, its exercise of jurisdiction
    over those claims.
    -26-
    obligation to exercise jurisdiction," id. at 820, there must be
    some compelling reason to prefer dismissal over a stay.          Such a
    justification is wholly lacking here.        As the state conceded at
    oral argument, the comity concerns on which the district court
    relied are adequately served by a stay. Indeed, staying Nowaczyk's
    fully-exhausted petition would seem to be the most obvious way to
    "defer action . . . until" the state courts had a full opportunity
    to pass on the double jeopardy claim, Rose, 
    455 U.S. at 518
    .           See
    Zarvela, 
    254 F.3d at 380
     (noting that "[s]taying the exhausted
    claims would be a traditional way" to satisfy Rose's policy of
    comity).     Most importantly, a stay would serve the interest of
    comity while, at the same time, protecting Nowaczyk's interest in
    adjudicating his federal constitutional claims in federal court.
    The state argues vaguely that dismissal would relieve the
    district court of the burden of keeping track of the case.            It is
    not clear that leaving the case on the court's docket would be
    particularly taxing, and the state has made no effort to explain
    the point.    But even if we assume that a stay would cause some
    additional administrative burden, such a minor inconvenience hardly
    outweighs    the   district   court's    obligation   to   exercise     its
    jurisdiction under AEDPA.
    Finally, the state emphasizes that the district court did
    not ask much of Nowaczyk:      all he had to do was refile the same
    petition he filed in June of 1997.       That is beside the point.       As
    we have explained, the district court has an affirmative obligation
    to adjudicate claims, such as Nowaczyk's, that are properly before
    -27-
    it. Thus, it is irrelevant that Nowaczyk easily could have refiled
    his petition.    The same could be said of any civil complaint, but
    that clearly would not justify dismissing it.       Rather, whatever
    administrative inconvenience resulted from the district court's
    decision to delay resolution of Nowaczyk's claims -- the burden of
    keeping track of the case, as the state puts it -- should have been
    borne by the court, not Nowaczyk.
    Under AEDPA, pro se prisoners seeking to adjudicate their
    constitutional claims in federal court must satisfy several complex
    procedural requirements that often are difficult even for courts to
    decipher.    See, e.g., Carey v. Saffold, 
    122 S. Ct. 2134
     (2002)
    (resolving a circuit split on the question when an application for
    state post-conviction review is "pending" under AEDPA's tolling
    provision); Duncan v. Walker, 
    533 U.S. 167
     (2001) (same, on the
    question whether later-dismissed § 2254 petitions toll AEDPA's
    statute of limitations); Artuz v. Bennett, 
    531 U.S. 4
     (2000) (same,
    on the question when an application for state post-conviction
    review is "properly filed" under AEDPA's tolling provision); Slack
    v. McDaniel, 
    529 U.S. 473
     (2000) (same, on the question whether
    petitions filed after an earlier petition is dismissed for failure
    to exhaust state remedies are subject to the prohibition on "second
    or successive" petitions). When a prisoner manages to make his way
    through the procedural thicket and places his timely, fully-
    exhausted claims before the district court, we do not think he
    should be turned away with dismissal of his action on the basis of
    an insubstantial claim of administrative convenience.
    -28-
    III.
    In summary, we hold that the district court abused its
    discretion in denying Nowaczyk's motion for reconsideration and
    dismissing his fully-exhausted § 2254 petition.              AEDPA's one-year
    statute of limitations expired while this appeal was pending.
    Thus, if we had affirmed the dismissal of Nowaczyk's first § 2254
    petition, a serious question would have arisen as to whether he
    would be permitted to file a second petition at this time.
    That Nowaczyk's claims were properly before the district
    court,    ready   for   adjudication,    is    critical     to   our   decision.
    Nowaczyk urged prompt action. The district court has an obligation
    to   adjudicate    claims,   like   Nowaczyk's,      that    are      within    its
    statutory    jurisdiction.      Although      the   question     is    close,   we
    conclude that the court is entitled to delay decision on such
    claims when considerations of comity and judicial economy would be
    served.     However, something more than related claims pending in
    state court is needed before the court may dismiss a fully-
    exhausted petition outright.            Such dismissal has always been
    difficult to square with the court's obligation to exercise the
    jurisdiction given it by Congress.            AEDPA raises the stakes:          its
    complex procedural requirements heighten the risk that a dismissal
    without prejudice will, in practice, result in a dismissal with
    prejudice, as happened here.
    In the face of those concerns, the district court cited
    the general interest in federal-state comity as a reason for
    dismissing Nowaczyk's petition.            But that interest is served
    -29-
    equally well by a stay; it cannot justify the court's choice of the
    more extreme measure of dismissal.          The state points to the
    administrative burden, identified as keeping track of the case,
    associated with retaining jurisdiction over Nowaczyk's case.         That
    is not enough. If the court's obligation to exercise its statutory
    jurisdiction means anything, it cannot possibly be trumped by such
    a trivial inconvenience.     Indeed, an obligation that dissolves at
    the first pinch of inconvenience is no obligation at all.
    We have said that an "[a]buse [of discretion] occurs when
    a material factor deserving significant weight is ignored, when an
    improper factor is relied upon, or when all proper and no improper
    factors are assessed, but the court makes a serious mistake in
    weighing them."    Fashion House, Inc. v. K Mart Corp., 
    892 F.2d 1076
    , 1081 (1st Cir. 1989) (internal quotations omitted).           Here,
    the factors on which the district court relied do not support its
    decision   to   dismiss   Nowaczyk's    petition   rather   than   retain
    jurisdiction and enter a stay.    Given the difficulties associated
    with dismissal in general of a claim properly before the court --
    and under AEDPA in particular -- that decision constituted an abuse
    of discretion.
    It appears that Nowaczyk no longer has any claims pending
    before the state courts.        Accordingly, we remand his § 2254
    petition to the district court for decision on the merits of the
    claims presented therein.9
    9
    Nowaczyk also argued that the statute of limitations should
    be equitably tolled to permit him to file another petition. Given
    our conclusion that the district court erred in dismissing
    -30-
    Reversed and remanded.
    Nowaczyk's first petition, we express no view as to the
    availability of equitable tolling, either under AEDPA generally, or
    in the specific circumstances of this case.
    -31-
    APPENDIX
    To    assist   the   reader,   we   set   forth   the   following
    chronology of important dates:
    January 24, 1997:        End of Nowaczyk's direct appeal.
    April 24, 1997:          End of 90-day certiorari period. Parties
    agree that AEDPA statute of limitations
    began running on this date.
    June 20, 1997:           Nowaczyk files his § 2254 petition.
    October 28, 1997:        Nowaczyk files his first application for
    state post-conviction relief, raising the
    claim of judicial bias. Tolling begins.
    May 10, 1998:            Nowaczyk files his second application for
    state post-conviction relief, raising the
    claim of double jeopardy.
    July 22, 1998:           District court dismisses Nowaczyk's § 2254
    petition for failure to exhaust state
    remedies.
    July 24, 1998:           Nowaczyk files a notice of appeal from the
    district court's judgment.
    July 31, 1998:           New Hampshire Supreme Court rejects the
    judicial bias claim presented in Nowaczyk's
    first application for state post-conviction
    relief. (Tolling continues because second
    application is still pending.)
    August 1, 1998:          Nowaczyk files a motion for reconsideration
    in the district court.
    August 28, 1998:         District court denies Nowaczyk's motion for
    reconsideration as "moot."
    November 9, 1998:        We remand the case to the district court for
    consideration of the merits of Nowaczyk's
    motion for reconsideration.
    March 9, 1999:           District court denies Nowaczyk's motion for
    reconsideration and dismisses his § 2254
    petition without prejudice.
    March 9, 1999:           Nowaczyk files a notice of appeal from the
    district court's judgment.
    -32-
    March 26, 1999:       New Hampshire Supreme Court rejects the
    double   jeopardy   claim    presented   in
    Nowaczyk's second application for state
    post-conviction relief. Tolling ends; the
    statute of limitations begins running again
    with approximately six months remaining.
    September 19, 2000:   Statute    of   limitations expires while
    Nowaczyk's appeal from the dismissal of his
    petition by the district court is pending
    before us.
    -33-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 98-1921

Filed Date: 8/14/2002

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2014

Authorities (40)

Currie v. Matesanz , 281 F.3d 261 ( 2002 )

Donovan v. State of Maine , 276 F.3d 87 ( 2002 )

Leonard Lacy v. Harold F. Gabriel , 732 F.2d 7 ( 1984 )

Fashion House, Inc. v. K Mart Corporation, Fashion House, ... , 892 F.2d 1076 ( 1989 )

Charles C. Delaney III v. James Matesanz , 264 F.3d 7 ( 2001 )

Neverson v. Bissonnette , 261 F.3d 120 ( 2001 )

William Lee Thompson v. Louie L. Wainwright , 714 F.2d 1495 ( 1983 )

paula-pringle-v-court-of-common-pleas-cumberland-county-edgar-b-bayley , 744 F.2d 297 ( 1984 )

Jimmie Lee Jones v. Louie L. Wainwright, Secretary, ... , 608 F.2d 180 ( 1979 )

Thomas Willie Williams v. Ross Maggio, Jr., Warden , 727 F.2d 1387 ( 1984 )

Laurence Hurd v. Eloy Mondragon, Warden and Attorney ... , 851 F.2d 324 ( 1988 )

Victor Zarvela v. Christopher Artuz, Superintendent , 254 F.3d 374 ( 2001 )

Gary Graham, Now Known as Shaka Sankofa v. Gary L. Johnson, ... , 168 F.3d 762 ( 1999 )

United States of America Ex Rel. Rudolph E. Boyance v. ... , 372 F.2d 111 ( 1967 )

Robert C. Butler v. Jim Rose, Warden , 686 F.2d 1163 ( 1982 )

Gary Burris v. Robert A. Farley, Warden , 51 F.3d 655 ( 1995 )

Ivy J. Carter v. Jon E. Litscher , 275 F.3d 663 ( 2001 )

Willie Freeman v. James H. Page, Warden, Stateville ... , 208 F.3d 572 ( 2000 )

Doyle Dee Jones v. Al C. Parke, Warden , 734 F.2d 1142 ( 1984 )

David Palmer v. Howard Carlton, Warden , 276 F.3d 777 ( 2002 )

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