Michael Bynoe v. Isidro Baca ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                     FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    MICHAEL B. BYNOE,                              No. 17-17012
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    D.C. No.
    v.                         3:07-cv-00009-
    LRH-VPC
    ISIDRO BACA, Warden; ATTORNEY
    GENERAL FOR THE STATE OF
    NEVADA,                                          OPINION
    Respondents-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Nevada
    Larry R. Hicks, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted July 17, 2019
    San Francisco, California
    Filed July 24, 2020
    Before: Michael R. Murphy, * Richard A. Paez, and
    Johnnie B. Rawlinson, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Paez;
    Dissent by Judge Rawlinson
    *
    The Honorable Michael R. Murphy, United States Circuit Judge
    for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, sitting by
    designation.
    2                         BYNOE V. BACA
    SUMMARY **
    Habeas Corpus / Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)
    The panel reversed the district court’s denial of Michael
    Bynoe’s motion pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(6) to
    reopen proceedings on his habeas corpus petition seeking to
    invalidate his plea of guilty but mentally ill to lewdness with
    a child under the age of fourteen, and remanded for further
    proceedings.
    Bynoe entered the “guilty but mentally ill” plea, which
    subjected defendants to the same panoply of punishment as
    defendants who pleaded guilty or were found guilty after
    trial, during the short-lived period in which the Nevada state
    legislature replaced the insanity defense with the “guilty but
    mentally ill” plea. After the insanity plea was reinstated,
    Bynoe—without having exhausted any of his claims in state
    court—sought to invalidate his guilty plea by filing a habeas
    petition in federal district court. The district court denied
    Bynoe’s request for a stay and dismissed the petition,
    interpreting this court’s case law at the time to require the
    dismissal of habeas petitions consisting only of unexhausted
    claims. In Mena v. Long, 
    813 F.3d 907
    (9th Cir. 2016), this
    court later clarified that district courts can indeed stay and
    abey entirely unexhausted habeas petitions. Following this
    change in law, Bynoe moved to reopen his habeas
    proceeding under Rule 60(b)(6) so the district court could
    reconsider his request for a stay while he presented his
    claims in state court. The district court denied the motion to
    **
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It
    has been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    BYNOE V. BACA                           3
    reopen, concluding that Bynoe’s claim was not timely and
    that he failed to present extraordinary circumstances
    justifying relief.
    The panel held:
    •   Bynoe’s motion was properly filed under Rule
    60(b)(6) rather than any of Rule 60(b)’s other
    grounds for relief.
    •   The motion, which was filed less than seven months
    after this court decided Mena and only two months
    after Bynoe was appointed counsel, was timely.
    •   The motion presented extraordinary circumstances
    warranting re-opening the final judgment, as the six
    factors set forth in Phelps v. Alameida, 
    569 F.3d 1120
    (9th Cir. 2009)—the nature of the legal change,
    diligence in pursuing reconsideration, the parties’
    reliance interest in finality, the delay between finality
    of the judgment and the Rule 60(b)(6) motion, the
    relationship between the change in law and the
    challenged judgment, and concerns of comity—
    support reconsidering the final judgment.
    The panel wrote that on remand Bynoe may request the
    district court to stay his petition while he returns to state
    court to exhaust his federal constitutional claims.
    Judge Rawlinson dissented because, in her view, the
    majority does not adhere to the applicable standard of
    review, abuse of discretion.
    4                      BYNOE V. BACA
    COUNSEL
    Jeremy C. Baron (argued), Assistant Federal Public
    Defender; Rene L. Valladares, Federal Public Defender;
    Office of the Federal Public Defender, Las Vegas, Nevada;
    for Petitioner-Appellant.
    Natasha Mary Gebrael (argued); Erin L. Bittick, Deputy
    Attorney General; Aaron D. Ford, Attorney General; Office
    of the Attorney General, Las Vegas, Nevada; for
    Respondents-Appellees.
    OPINION
    PAEZ, Circuit Judge:
    In 1995, the Nevada State Legislature replaced the
    insanity defense with a “guilty but mentally ill” plea. See
    1995 Nev. Stat. 2248–49. Pleading not guilty by reason of
    insanity instead of guilty but mentally ill had important
    practical consequences. Defendants who were found not
    guilty by reason of insanity were entirely acquitted of the
    crimes with which they were charged, while defendants who
    pleaded guilty but mentally ill were subject to the same
    panoply of punishment as defendants who pleaded guilty or
    were found guilty after trial.
    Six years later, the Nevada Supreme Court reinstated the
    insanity defense. See Finger v. State of Nevada, 
    27 P.3d 66
    ,
    68 (Nev. 2001) (en banc). The court concluded that the
    principle of legal insanity is so “well-established” and
    “fundamental” that its abolishment violated the due process
    BYNOE V. BACA                                5
    clauses of the Nevada and United States constitutions. 1
    Id. at 84.
    The Legislature responded by restoring the insanity
    defense and abolishing the guilty-but-mentally-ill plea. See
    Nev. Rev. Stat. § 174.035(4) (2003).
    Michael Bynoe was one of the defendants who pleaded
    guilty but mentally ill during the short-lived period in which
    the plea was available in Nevada. After the insanity plea was
    reinstated, he sought to invalidate his guilty plea by filing a
    habeas petition in federal district court. At the time he filed
    his petition, he had failed to first exhaust any of his claims
    in state court. The court denied Bynoe’s request for a stay
    and dismissed the petition, interpreting our caselaw at the
    time to require the dismissal of habeas petitions consisting
    only of unexhausted claims. See Bynoe v. Helling (Bynoe I),
    No. 3:07-cv-0009, 
    2009 WL 3060372
    , at *2 (D. Nev. Sept.
    23, 2009). In an unrelated case, we later clarified that district
    courts can indeed stay and abey entirely unexhausted habeas
    petitions. See Mena v. Long, 
    813 F.3d 907
    (9th Cir. 2016).
    Following this change in law, Bynoe moved to reopen
    his habeas proceeding under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
    60(b)(6) so the district court could reconsider his request for
    a stay while he presented his claims in state court. The court
    denied his motion to reopen, concluding that Bynoe’s claim
    was not timely and he had failed to present extraordinary
    circumstances justifying relief. See Bynoe v. Helling (Bynoe
    II), No. 3:07-cv-0009, 
    2017 WL 4079263
    , at *5 (D. Nev.
    1
    The Supreme Court recently held that the due process clause of the
    U.S. Constitution does not require states to maintain an insanity defense
    that “acquits a defendant who could not ‘distinguish right from wrong’
    when committing his crime[.]” Kahler v. Kansas, 
    140 S. Ct. 1021
    , 1027
    (2020). We express no views on whether Kahler affects Bynoe’s claims.
    6                     BYNOE V. BACA
    Sept. 6, 2017); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(6), (c)(1). We
    reverse and remand for further proceedings.
    I.
    A.
    Three years after Nevada eliminated the insanity
    defense, Bynoe was charged with one count of sexual assault
    on a child and one count of lewdness with a child under the
    age of fourteen. The court initially determined Bynoe was
    not competent to stand trial and ordered him transferred to a
    psychiatric facility for evaluation and treatment. After his
    competency was restored, he pleaded guilty but mentally ill
    to a lesser offense of lewdness with a child under the age of
    fourteen in exchange for the state’s agreement not to pursue
    the original sexual assault charge.
    At his sentencing hearing, the court found Bynoe was
    mentally ill at the time of the offense and at the time of
    sentencing, accepted his plea, and sentenced him to life
    imprisonment with eligibility for parole after he served a
    minimum of ten years.
    B.
    Bynoe’s lengthy procedural journey through the Nevada
    and federal courts began a few months after he was
    sentenced. He began filing motions in state and federal
    court, challenging the propriety of his sentence and
    conviction. While his initial objections were pending, the
    Nevada Supreme Court held that the legislature’s abolition
    of the insanity defense violated defendants’ due process
    rights under the United States and Nevada Constitutions.
    See 
    Finger, 27 P.3d at 86
    .
    BYNOE V. BACA                         7
    In 2007, Bynoe filed a pro se habeas petition in federal
    district court. He alleged that his federal due process rights
    were violated when he was barred from pleading not guilty
    by reason of insanity. The court appointed him counsel, and
    he filed an amended petition. Three out of the four grounds
    for relief in the amended petition turned on Nevada’s
    unconstitutional decision to abolish the insanity defense.
    After reviewing the petition, the court ordered Bynoe to
    show cause why the petition should not be dismissed for lack
    of exhaustion.
    In order to proceed with a federal habeas petition,
    petitioners must first exhaust their state-court remedies. See
    Anthony v. Cambra, 
    236 F.3d 568
    , 573–74 (9th Cir. 2000).
    In Rose v. Lundy, 
    455 U.S. 509
    (1982), the Supreme Court
    held that district courts were required to dismiss “mixed”
    habeas petitions—petitions that contain both unexhausted
    and exhausted claims—in their entirety.
    Id. at 510.
    Although dismissals of mixed petitions are technically
    without prejudice, the enactment of Antiterrorism and
    Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AEDPA”) made it
    difficult for petitioners to return to federal court with a
    timely petition. AEDPA imposes a one-year statute of
    limitations on the filing of a federal petition, see 28 U.S.C.
    § 2244(d)(1), and filing a federal petition does not toll the
    statute of limitations, see Duncan v. Walker, 
    533 U.S. 167
    ,
    181–82 (2001). Thus, petitioners who filed mixed petitions
    late in the limitations period could fall outside the one-year
    window by the time they finished exhausting their state-
    court remedies and returned to federal court. Together, the
    one-year time limit and Lundy’s complete-dismissal
    requirement heightened the risk that petitioners who filed a
    mixed petition toward the end of the limitations period
    8                          BYNOE V. BACA
    would lose the chance for federal review of their claims.
    Dixon v. Baker, 
    847 F.3d 714
    , 719 (9th Cir. 2017).
    Recognizing “the gravity of this problem and the
    difficulty it [] posed for petitioners and federal district courts
    alike,” the Supreme Court introduced an exception to the
    complete-dismissal requirement in Rhines v. Weber,
    
    544 U.S. 269
    , 277 (2005). Under Rhines, a federal district
    court may stay the mixed petition and allow the petitioner to
    return to state court to litigate the unexhausted claims. See
    Jackson v. Roe, 
    425 F.3d 654
    , 660 (9th Cir. 2005). Stay-
    and-abeyance under Rhines is appropriate only where the
    court determines “there was good cause for the petitioner’s
    failure to exhaust his claims first in state court.” 2 
    Rhines, 544 U.S. at 277
    .
    In response to the district court’s exhaustion concerns,
    Bynoe moved for a stay of his federal habeas proceeding
    under Rhines. The court denied Bynoe’s stay motion
    because his petition contained only unexhausted claims.
    Bynoe requested a certificate of appealability, which the
    district court denied. He requested the same from this court,
    2
    Before Rhines, district courts in the Ninth Circuit could (1) dismiss
    a mixed petition without prejudice so the petitioner could refile after
    exhausting the unexhausted claims; (2) dismiss the unexhausted claims
    and proceed only with the exhausted claims; or (3) dismiss the
    unexhausted claims, stay the remaining claims until the unexhausted
    claims were fully exhausted, and allow the petitioner to amend the
    petition to add the newly exhausted claims that related back to the
    original petition. See King v. Ryan, 
    564 F.3d 1133
    , 1135, 1139 (9th Cir.
    2009); see also Pliler v. Ford, 
    542 U.S. 225
    , 230–31 (2004). As we
    noted in Mena, Rhines altered the total-exhaustion requirement. 
    See 813 F.3d at 910
    –11; see also 
    King, 564 F.3d at 1140
    (“When
    implemented, the Rhines exception eliminates entirely any limitations
    issue with regard to the originally exhausted claims, as the claims remain
    pending in federal court throughout.”).
    BYNOE V. BACA                          9
    which we also denied. Bynoe then petitioned for a writ of
    certiorari from the Supreme Court, which was denied in
    2011.
    C.
    Years after Bynoe’s stay request was denied, we settled
    the law governing the applicability of a Rhines stay to an
    entirely unexhausted petition. In Mena, we held that district
    courts may grant a Rhines stay of a petition containing only
    unexhausted 
    claims. 813 F.3d at 912
    . Reasoning that “the
    distinctions between mixed petitions and fully unexhausted
    petitions” are not “sufficiently meaningful to warrant
    different treatment,” we determined that “[d]enying stays to
    all petitioners with fully unexhausted petitions . . . creates a
    needlessly overbroad rule.”
    Id. at 911.
    About seven months after our decision in Mena, Bynoe
    filed a motion under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
    60(b)(6), seeking to reopen his federal habeas proceeding so
    he could renew his request for a stay under Rhines and Mena.
    The district court denied Bynoe’s motion to reopen,
    explaining that seven years had passed since the court had
    originally entered judgment and it was not “reasonable and
    warranted to reopen this case after so many years.” Bynoe
    II, 
    2017 WL 4079263
    , at *3.
    Bynoe timely appealed. We have jurisdiction to review
    Bynoe’s appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291 and 2253.
    We review for abuse of discretion a district court’s decision
    to deny a Rule 60(b)(6) motion, and review de novo any
    questions of law underlying that decision. See Lal v.
    California, 
    610 F.3d 518
    , 523 (9th Cir. 2010).
    10                     BYNOE V. BACA
    II.
    Bynoe seeks relief under Rule 60(b), which permits
    litigants to request reconsideration of a final judgment,
    order, or proceeding entered against them. The Rule lists
    five circumstances that may justify reopening a final
    judgment—including, for example, newly discovered
    evidence, fraud by the opposing party, or a mistake
    committed by the court—and a sixth, catch-all category.
    The sixth ground for relief allows a court to reconsider a final
    judgment for “any other reason that justifies relief.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 60(b)(6).
    A party seeking relief under Rule 60(b)(6) must satisfy
    three requirements. The motion cannot be premised on
    another ground delineated in the Rule, see Liljeberg v.
    Health Serv. Acquisition Corp., 
    486 U.S. 847
    , 863 & n.11
    (1988); it must be filed “within a reasonable time,” see Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 60(c)(1); and it must demonstrate “extraordinary
    circumstances” justifying reopening the judgment, see
    Pioneer Inv. Servs. Co. v. Brunswick Assoc. Ltd. P’ship,
    
    507 U.S. 380
    , 393 (1993). Extraordinary circumstances
    occur where there are “other compelling reasons” for
    opening the judgment. Klapprott v. United States, 
    335 U.S. 601
    , 613 (1949). Bynoe’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion satisfies all
    three.
    A.
    Bynoe’s motion was properly filed under Rule 60(b)(6)
    rather than any of Rule 60(b)’s other grounds for relief. The
    basis of his motion is Mena’s change in the complete-
    exhaustion rule; his case does not involve a mistake by the
    court, newly discovered evidence, fraud, and he does not
    challenge the validity or satisfaction of the judgment. See
    Fed. R Civ. P. 60(b)(1)–(5). A Rule 60(b) motion that
    BYNOE V. BACA                             11
    attacks some procedural “defect in the integrity of the federal
    habeas proceedings” may be a reason that “justifies relief”
    under Rule 60(b)(6). 3 
    Gonzalez, 545 U.S. at 532
    ; see also
    Phelps v. Alameida, 
    569 F.3d 1120
    , 1131–34 (9th Cir. 2009).
    B.
    Unlike a motion under Rule 60(b)(1), (2), or (3), a timely
    60(b)(6) motion does not need to be filed within one year
    after the “final judgment, order, or proceeding.” See Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 60(b), (c)(1). A party who seeks relief under Rule
    60(b)(6) must act only within a “reasonable time.” Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 60(c)(1). The flexibility embedded in Rule
    60(b)(6)’s timing requirement preserves its purpose as a
    “grand reservoir of equitable power,” available as a vehicle
    for “vacat[ing] judgments whenever such action is
    appropriate to accomplish justice.” Hall v. Haws, 
    861 F.3d 977
    , 987 (9th Cir. 2017) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The timeliness of a Rule 60(b) motion is generally
    measured by reference to the date of the final judgment,
    order, or proceeding. See, e.g., Lemoge v. United States,
    
    587 F.3d 1188
    , 1197 (9th Cir. 2009). But where a change in
    law is the basis for the motion, the date of the challenged
    order provides little guidance in measuring its timeliness;
    valid grounds for reconsideration may arise long after a final
    judgment has been entered. When a Rule 60(b)(6) motion is
    premised on a change in law, courts measure timeliness “as
    3
    In the habeas context, a Rule 60(b) motion applies only to the
    extent it is not inconsistent with AEDPA. It cannot be used as a vehicle
    for raising a second or successive habeas petition as prescribed in
    28 U.S.C. § 2244. See Gonzalez v. Crosby, 
    545 U.S. 524
    , 529–30
    (2005). The basis of Bynoe’s motion is a change in procedural law; he
    neither raises a new claim for habeas relief nor challenges previous
    decisions on the substance of his claims.
    12                     BYNOE V. BACA
    of the point in time when the moving party has grounds to
    make [a Rule 60(b)] motion, regardless of the time that has
    elapsed since the entry of judgment.” Clark v. Davis,
    
    850 F.3d 770
    , 780 (5th Cir. 2017) (internal quotation marks
    omitted); see also Miller v. Mays, 
    879 F.3d 691
    , 699 (6th
    Cir. 2018).
    To evaluate whether a party’s delay in filing a Rule 60(b)
    motion was reasonable, we consider the party’s ability to
    learn earlier of the grounds relied upon, the reason for the
    delay, the parties’ interests in the finality of the judgment,
    and any prejudice caused to parties by the delay. Ashford v.
    Steuart, 
    657 F.2d 1053
    , 1055 (9th Cir. 1981).
    Our holding in Phelps v. Alameida, 
    569 F.3d 1120
    (9th
    Cir. 2009), is instructive. One year and fifteen days after the
    California Supreme Court summarily denied his state habeas
    petition, Phelps filed a federal habeas petition under
    28 U.S.C. § 2254.
    Id. at 1125.
    Under the California Rules
    of Court in force at the time, a “decision” of the state
    supreme court became final thirty days after filing, but an
    “order” of the court denying a petition for review became
    final at the time of filing.
    Id. AEDPA’s statute
    of limitations
    is one year, so if the summary denial was a “decision,” not
    an “order,” then Phelps had filed his initial petition late.
    Id. at 1126–27.
    The district court noted that “California courts
    ha[d] not clearly articulated the difference between a
    decision and an order in the context” of the relevant rule, but
    agreed with the government that the denial of review was an
    order, and dismissed Phelps’s petition as untimely.
    Id. at 1126.
    Phelps appealed, and we affirmed the district court.
    Id. At the
    time Phelps appealed, the question of how to
    construe such denials for purposes of AEDPA was “an open
    one.”
    Id. Fifteen months
    after Phelps’s appeal became final,
    BYNOE V. BACA                        13
    we settled the law and held that summary denials by the
    California Supreme Court were “orders.” Id; see Bunney v.
    Mitchell, 
    262 F.3d 973
    , 974 (9th Cir. 2001) (per curiam).
    Phelps then filed a Rule 60(b)(6) motion, asking the district
    court to reconsider the denial of his petition because of the
    intervening change in law. 
    Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1127
    . The
    district court concluded the motion was a successive habeas
    petition and denied the motion.
    Id. We dismissed
    Phelps’s
    appeal.
    Id. at 1127–28.
    Eleven months later, the Supreme Court held in
    Gonzalez that a Rule 60(b) motion that challenges a district
    court’s ruling on the AEDPA statute of limitations is not a
    successive petition. 
    See 545 U.S. at 535
    –36. Ten months
    after the Supreme Court issued Gonzalez—and six years
    after his initial habeas petition had been dismissed—Phelps
    filed his second Rule 60(b) motion. 
    Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1126
    –27, 1137–38 & n.21. The district court again refused
    to reconsider its dismissal and again denied a certificate of
    appealability.
    Id. at 1128–29.
    We initially denied his
    petition for a certificate of appealability, but eventually
    granted it to address only whether the inconsistent
    application of rules governing finality from habeas decisions
    by the California Supreme Court warranted relief under Rule
    60(b)(6).
    Id. at 1129.
    Finally addressing the merits of Phelps’s Rule 60(b)
    motion, we held that it had been timely filed.
    Id. at 1129–
    31. Noting that he had prepared his motion without counsel,
    writing from his prison cell, we could not “imagine a more
    sterling example of diligence” than Phelps had exhibited.
    Id. at 1137.
    We further concluded that Phelps could not be
    faulted for the six years that had passed since he filed his
    initial habeas petition; his first motion had been incorrectly
    dismissed as a successive habeas petition, the government’s
    14                    BYNOE V. BACA
    interests in the finality of an erroneous procedural judgment
    were minor, and the delay prejudiced neither party. See
    id. at 1137–39;
    see also, e.g., Jones v. Ryan, 
    733 F.3d 825
    , 839
    (9th Cir. 2013) (holding that the petitioner’s seventeen-
    month delay carried “little weight”); Ritter v. Smith,
    
    811 F.2d 1398
    , 1402 (11th Cir. 1987) (describing a motion
    for reconsideration filed nine months after the judgment
    became final as a “brief delay”); Thompson v. Bell, 
    580 F.3d 423
    , 443–44 (6th Cir. 2010) (concluding that a four-year
    delay in filing a 60(b)(6) motion premised on a change in
    law was timely in light of the petitioner’s diligence). We
    thus reversed the district court’s denial of Phelps’s Rule
    60(b)(6) motion.
    Bynoe sought relief less than seven months after we
    decided Mena. Mena provided the basis for his motion to
    reopen his habeas proceeding so that he could seek a stay
    under Rhines. Any “delay” prior to Mena is irrelevant,
    because the basis for Bynoe’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion did not
    yet exist. See 
    Ashford, 657 F.2d at 1054
    . A seven-month
    delay is well within the timeframe considered by Phelps and
    the presumptive one-year timeframe suggested by the Rule.
    Notably, the motion was also filed only two months after
    Bynoe was appointed counsel. In July 2015, Bynoe filed a
    new habeas petition in the district court, and the Office of
    the Federal Public Defender filed a motion for appointment
    of counsel at the end of July 2016, five months after Mena.
    The court granted the motion and ordered Bynoe to file an
    amended petition within sixty days. In response, Bynoe’s
    attorney filed the Rule 60(b)(6) motion and requested a stay
    of the new federal case. These events underscore the
    consequences of Bynoe’s “lack of resources and legal
    training,” and his inability to learn of the grounds raised in
    his Rule 60(b)(6) motion without counsel. See Foley v.
    BYNOE V. BACA                         15
    Biter, 
    793 F.3d 998
    , 1004 (9th Cir. 2015). Bynoe was
    diligent in filing his motion and, as we explain later, the
    prejudice suffered by Nevada in this context is minimal.
    We hold that Bynoe’s Rule 60(b) motion was timely.
    C.
    We turn to whether there are “extraordinary
    circumstances necessary to grant relief.” 
    Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1140
    . The extraordinary-circumstances requirement was
    first introduced—albeit, likely unintentionally—in 1949, the
    year after amended Rule 60(b) became effective. Prior to the
    amendment of Rule 60, courts were unduly constrained in
    their authority to revisit final judgments. 4 The original Rule
    60(b) permitted reconsideration of a judgment only on
    specific grounds made within a strict, six-month time limit.
    See Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b) (1938). Often unable to rely on the
    text of the rule for granting relief, courts began to craft
    innovative interpretations of the rule, extending the six-
    month period during which they could grant post-judgment
    relief or relying on their inherent powers to revisit a final
    judgment. See, e.g., Schram v. O’Connor, 
    2 F.R.D. 192
    ,
    194–95 (E.D. Mich. 1941); Preveden v. Hahn, 
    36 F. Supp. 952
    , 953 (S.D.N.Y. 1941). In response, Rule 60(b) was
    broadened, the time limits were expanded, and the catch-all
    provision was added. 5
    4
    See Note, Federal Rule 60(b): Relief from Civil Judgments,
    61 Yale L.J. 76, 77–78 (1952).
    5
    See Scott Dodson, Rethinking Extraordinary Circumstances,
    106 Nw. L. Rev. Colloquy 111, 111–14 (2011–2012); Mary Kay Kane,
    Relief From Federal Judgments: A Morass Unrelieved by a Rule, 30
    16                        BYNOE V. BACA
    The Supreme Court addressed the newly amended rule
    for the first time in Klapprott v. United States, 
    335 U.S. 601
    (1949). It considered whether the district court erred in
    denying a Rule 60(b)(6) motion seeking to set aside a default
    judgment depriving the petitioner of his citizenship.
    Id. at 601,
    613. The default judgment had been entered against
    the petitioner because he had been “in jail . . . , weakened
    from illness, without a lawyer in the denaturalization
    proceedings or funds to hire one, disturbed and fully
    occupied in efforts to protect himself against the gravest
    criminal charges.”
    Id. at 614.
    Although four years had
    passed since the judgment had been entered, the Court held
    that relief under amended Rule 60(b)(6) was appropriate
    because the events leading to the default judgment far
    exceeded the “excusable neglect” standard in Rule 60(b)(1);
    his “extraordinary situation” could not “fairly or logically be
    classified as mere ‘neglect’ on his part.”
    Id. at 613.
    The following year, the Court described Klapprott as “a
    case of extraordinary circumstances,” Ackermann v. United
    States, 
    340 U.S. 193
    , 199 (1950), and denied Rule 60(b)(6)
    relief in a similar denaturalization case. Even if the district
    court had erred in its judgment, the Court explained, the
    petitioner had “made a considered choice not to appeal,” and
    could not “be relieved of such a choice because hindsight
    seems to indicate to him that his decision not to appeal was
    probably wrong.”
    Id. at 198.
    Ackermann, and decisions that
    followed it, solidified Rule 60(b)(6)’s extra-textual
    requirement that a movant demonstrate a compelling
    justification for failing to raise the basis for the motion
    during the pendency of the case. See, e.g., Martella v.
    Marine Cooks & Stewards Union, 
    448 F.2d 729
    , 730 (9th
    Hasting L. J. 41, 41–47 (1978); see also 11C Charles A. Wright & Arthur
    R. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2851 (3d ed.).
    BYNOE V. BACA                          17
    Cir. 1971) (per curiam) (“In order to bring himself within the
    limited area of Rule 60(b)(6) a petitioner is required to
    establish the existence of extraordinary circumstances which
    prevented or rendered him unable to prosecute an appeal.”).
    A “clear and authoritative” change in the law governing
    the judgment in a petitioner’s case may present extraordinary
    circumstances. See Polites v. United States, 
    364 U.S. 426
    ,
    433 (1960). Federal courts have considered a variety of
    factors to evaluate whether the context of the change and its
    consequences are sufficiently extraordinary. A relevant
    alteration to constitutional rights, for example, may be
    sufficient, McGuire v. Warden, Chillicothe Corr. Inst.,
    
    738 F.3d 741
    , 750–51 (6th Cir. 2013), but a narrow change
    in peripheral law is “rarely” enough, Satterfield v. Dist.
    Attorney Phil., 
    872 F.3d 152
    , 160 (3d Cir. 2017); see also
    Mitchell v. United States, 
    958 F.3d 775
    , 790–91 (9th Cir.
    2020). Courts also consider the prejudice caused to other
    parties, including the state’s interest in the finality of the
    judgment and “the risk of undermining the public’s
    confidence in the judicial process.” 
    Liljeberg, 486 U.S. at 863
    –64. The context and nature of the injustice borne by
    the petitioner absent a re-opening of the judgment is also
    relevant. See, e.g., Buck v. Davis, 
    137 S. Ct. 759
    , 778–79
    (2017).
    For Rule 60(b)(6) motions premised on post-judgment
    changes in law, we have distilled the extraordinary-
    circumstances requirement into six factors, considered
    flexibly and in their totality. We examine (1) the nature of
    the legal change, including whether the change in law
    resolved an unsettled legal question; (2) whether the movant
    exercised diligence in pursuing reconsideration of his or her
    claim; (3) the parties’ reliance interests in the finality of the
    judgment; (4) the delay between the finality of the judgment
    18                   BYNOE V. BACA
    and the Rule 60(b)(6) motion; (5) the relationship between
    the change in law and the challenged judgment; and
    (6) whether there are concerns of comity that would be
    disturbed by reopening a case. See 
    Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1134
    –40; 
    Hall, 861 F.3d at 987
    –88. We address each factor
    in turn, without “suggest[ing] that they impose a rigid or
    exhaustive checklist.” 
    Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1135
    .
    1.
    We first consider the nature of the intervening law. See
    Lopez v. Ryan, 
    678 F.3d 1131
    , 1135–36 (9th Cir. 2012). A
    change in law “does not always supply sufficient conditions
    for granting” a Rule 60(b)(6) motion. Riley v. Filson,
    
    933 F.3d 1068
    , 1071 (9th Cir. 2019). A dismissal of a
    petition based on an accurate application of then-settled
    law—even after the Supreme Court overrules such
    precedent—is “hardly extraordinary.” 
    Gonzalez, 545 U.S. at 536
    . But the resolution of unsettled law, see 
    Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1135
    –36, or a “remarkable—if limited”
    development in relevant settled law may present
    extraordinary circumstances, 
    Lopez, 678 F.3d at 1136
    (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Bynoe’s motion is predicated upon Mena’s resolution of
    an outstanding habeas question. Before Mena, Rhines held
    that district courts may, in certain circumstances, stay a
    mixed habeas petition while the petitioner exhausted his
    federal claims in state 
    court. 544 U.S. at 275
    –77. The Court
    left open whether stay-and-abeyance extended to habeas
    petitions consisting solely of unexhausted claims.
    Acknowledging this uncertainty, we initially declined to
    read Rhines to authorize stays of entirely unexhausted
    petitions. Rasberry v. Garcia, 
    448 F.3d 1150
    , 1154 (9th Cir.
    2006). District courts faced with such petitions could
    “simply dismiss the habeas petition for failure to exhaust,”
    BYNOE V. BACA                              19
    without addressing whether Rhines applied.
    Id. (citing Jiminez
    v. Rice, 
    276 F.3d 478
    , 481 (9th Cir. 2001)).
    In Mena, we recognized that we had not yet “addressed
    in our circuit whether such a stay-and-abeyance procedure is
    available when a petition is fully unexhausted, not 
    mixed.” 813 F.3d at 910
    . Analyzing the Supreme Court’s limited
    guidance on the issue, we—like three circuits before us 6—
    answered the question in the affirmative.
    Despite Mena’s recognition of and answer to the open
    question, the district court explained it remained “unclear”
    whether Mena “should be viewed as a subsequent change in
    the law that affected an unsettled area of law.” Bynoe I, 
    2017 WL 4079263
    , at *3. The court found that Mena’s
    acknowledgement of the issue was not dispositive because
    we had previously denied Bynoe a certificate of
    appealability on the same issue in an unpublished order.
    Id. Relying on
    that order, the court concluded the denial of the
    certificate “suggest[ed] that reasonable jurists . . . would not
    have debated the conclusion that district courts could not
    stay fully unexhausted petitions.”
    Id. Unsettled legal
    questions are sometimes difficult to
    detect, not obvious until presented by the right facts and
    circumstances. This was not such a case: Mena resolved an
    unanswered question of law, and it explicitly acknowledged
    doing so. 
    See 813 F.3d at 910
    . Despite the district court’s
    suggestion to the contrary, unpublished dispositions—like
    our denial of Bynoe’s certificate of appealability—do not
    settle questions of law. See 
    Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1126
    –27.
    6
    See Doe v. Jones, 
    762 F.3d 1174
    , 1174 (10th Cir. 2014); Heleva v.
    Brooks, 
    581 F.3d 187
    , 191 (3d Cir. 2009); Dolis v. Chambers, 
    454 F.3d 721
    , 724 (7th Cir. 2006).
    20                    BYNOE V. BACA
    The district court abused its discretion by relying on the
    unpublished order in light of Mena’s own jurisprudential
    characterization. This factor weighs in Bynoe’s favor.
    2.
    The second factor considers whether the petitioner
    exhibited sufficient diligence in advancing his claim. The
    diligence analysis overlaps significantly with the timeliness
    requirement in Rule 60(b); a petitioner who has filed his
    motion within a “reasonable time” under the Rule has
    diligently pursued his claim. See, e.g., 
    Jones, 733 F.3d at 839
    (analyzing diligence by reference to the petitioner’s
    delay in filing his Rule 60(b)(6) motion); 
    Hall, 861 F.3d at 987
    –88 (evaluating diligence and timeliness together); see
    also 
    Miller, 879 F.3d at 699
    (explaining that the timeliness
    of a Rule 60(b)(6) motion is measured by “considering a
    petitioner’s diligence in seeking relief”).
    Diligence may also be measured by reference to the
    petitioner’s urgency in litigating his claim. In Gonzalez, the
    Court concluded the petitioner had failed to diligently pursue
    his habeas claim because he did not petition for rehearing
    after his certificate of appealability was denied by the
    Eleventh 
    Circuit. 545 U.S. at 537
    . We distinguished the
    diligence of the petitioner in Phelps from Gonzalez because
    Phelps had appealed the denial of his petition to the Supreme
    Court and filed a Rule 60(b) motion within a year of the
    relevant change in procedural 
    law. 569 F.3d at 1136
    –37.
    Phelps had also repeatedly sought to have various claims
    reviewed over the course of a decade, often without the
    assistance of counsel.
    Id. at 1137.
    Bynoe, like Phelps, diligently pursued his present claim.
    He filed his Rule 60(b) motion within a “reasonable time”
    and promptly sought a certificate of appealability from both
    BYNOE V. BACA                            21
    the lower court and this court on the issue. Often proceeding
    pro se, he exhibited the “effort that a reasonable person
    might be expected to deliver under his or her particular
    circumstances.” Brooks v. Yates, 
    818 F.3d 532
    , 535 (9th Cir.
    2016) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Petitioners are not required to file repeated, meritless
    habeas petitions or motions to demonstrate diligence, but
    Bynoe also fully pursued each of his pre-Mena petitions. He
    began litigating the propriety of his guilty plea shortly after
    he was sentenced, filing letters and motions with the Nevada
    Supreme Court and trial court without the assistance of
    counsel. He raised the exhaustion issue six years before
    Mena, correctly arguing that his unexhausted petition should
    be eligible for a Rhines stay. After he lost that argument, he
    sought a certificate appealability on the question, and when
    that was denied, he sought a certificate from this court. Once
    that was denied, he filed a certiorari petition with the
    Supreme Court—but that too was denied. At no point did
    Bynoe fail to exercise an appellate right available to him.
    This factor weighs in Bynoe’s favor.
    3.
    We next evaluate whether granting the motion would
    somehow “undo the past, executed effects of the judgment.”
    
    Ritter, 811 F.2d at 1402
    . 7 This factor assesses the extent of
    the parties’ reliance interests on the judgment; “relief is less
    warranted when the final judgment being challenged has
    caused one or more of the parties to change his legal
    position” because of the judgment. Phelps, 
    569 F.3d 7
           Ritter was cited favorably by the Supreme Court and “is
    instructive” for courts applying Rule 60(b)(6) in the habeas context.
    Harvest v. Castro, 
    531 F.3d 737
    , 748 n.8 (9th Cir. 2008).
    22                     BYNOE V. BACA
    at 1138. A combined health fund that has used payments it
    receives pursuant to a declaratory judgment to cover the
    medical health benefits of retirees, for example, has
    “substantial[ly]” relied on the judgment. See Blue Diamond
    Coal Co. v. Trustees of the UMWA Combined Benefit Fund,
    
    249 F.3d 519
    , 528–29 (6th Cir. 2001). We evaluate both the
    parties’ “abstract interest in finality” and any action each
    party took in reliance on the judgment. Henson v. Fid. Nat’l
    Fin., Inc., 
    943 F.3d 434
    , 450 (9th Cir. 2019).
    Nevada has an abstract interest in the finality of its
    criminal judgments. “But the ‘whole purpose’ of Rule 60(b)
    ‘is to make an exception to finality.’” 
    Buck, 137 S. Ct. at 779
    (quoting 
    Gonzalez, 545 U.S. at 529
    ). When a habeas petition
    is dismissed on flawed procedural grounds, “[t]here are no
    ‘past effects’ of the judgment that would be disturbed” if the
    habeas proceeding were reopened for further consideration,
    
    Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1138
    , and the state’s interest in finality
    “deserves little weight,” 
    Buck, 137 S. Ct. at 779
    . Bynoe
    never had the opportunity to litigate his underlying claims
    on the merits in a federal habeas proceeding, and the state
    never expended resources disputing them. See 
    Miller, 879 F.3d at 701
    . He remains incarcerated, and “the parties
    would simply pick up where they left off.” 
    Phelps, 569 F.3d at 1138
    .
    That seven years passed between when the district court
    initially denied Bynoe’s request for a Rhines stay and Bynoe
    filed his motion does not heighten the importance of the
    state’s abstract finality interest; indeed, in Phelps, we found
    this factor to be minimal even though Phelps filed his Rule
    60(b) motion eleven years after the district court reviewed
    his habeas petition.
    Id. We agree
    with the district court that
    this factor “weighs heavily in [Bynoe’s] favor.”
    Id. at 1138.
                           BYNOE V. BACA                         23
    4.
    We next address the delay between the final judgment in
    Bynoe’s case and his Rule 60(b) motion. “This factor
    represents the simple principle that a change in the law
    should not indefinitely render preexisting judgments subject
    to potential challenge. Rather, individuals seeking to have a
    new legal rule applied to their otherwise final case should
    petition the court for reconsideration with a degree of
    promptness[.]”
    Id. at 1138.
    A long delay can be offset by a petitioner’s diligence.
    See
    id. “In this
    respect, [this] factor is similar, although not
    identical, to the second Gonzalez factor, which emphasizes
    the petitioner’s diligence in challenging on appeal the
    judgment he now seeks to overturn.”
    Id. Bynoe filed
    his
    Rule 60(b)(6) motion within a year of Mena’s change in law.
    In the interim seven years, Bynoe sought Supreme Court
    review and, as discussed, exhibited diligence in pursuing his
    habeas claims. The district court erred by taking note only
    of the seven-year gap between the denial of Bynoe’s request
    for a Rhines stay and the filing of his Rule 60(b)(6) motion
    and failing to accord appropriate weight to Bynoe’s
    diligence and his ultimate timeliness. This factor slightly
    favors Bynoe.
    5.
    The fifth factor asks whether the challenged judgment
    has a close relationship to the change in law underlying the
    Rule 60(b)(6) motion. Where a court rested its judgment on
    a basis only marginally altered by later changes in relevant
    law, reopening a judgement is disfavored. See 
    Lopez, 678 F.3d at 1137
    . Many legal rulings cast some doubt on the
    reasoning in previous cases; only those that may have
    affected the outcome of the judgment the petitioner seeks to
    24                     BYNOE V. BACA
    review should weigh toward a finding of extraordinary
    circumstances.
    As applied to Bynoe’s petition, Mena is one such ruling.
    Mena rejected the legal core of the district court’s denial of
    his request for a Rhines stay. The court denied the stay
    because it was “well established law in this circuit that a
    petition containing only unexhausted claims must be
    dismissed.” Bynoe I, 
    2009 WL 3060372
    , at *2 (emphasis
    added). Mena directly repudiated this absolute view of the
    existing law and held that district courts have discretion to
    stay fully unexhausted 
    petitions. 813 F.3d at 910
    , 912. Had
    Mena been the law when Bynoe sought a Rhines stay, the
    district court may well have reached a different outcome.
    The district court denied Bynoe’s Rule 60(b) motion
    because Mena did not mandate a different outcome. See
    Bynoe II, 
    2017 WL 4079263
    , at *4. But the standard for
    evaluating the relationship between intervening law and the
    underlying issue in a district court’s dismissal is not whether
    the change in law requires a different outcome; we consider
    only whether the change in law affects an issue dispositive
    to the outcome of the case. See 
    Lopez, 678 F.3d at 1137
    .
    Mena undermined the central premise of the court’s denial
    of a Rhines stay. That is sufficient, and this factor weighs in
    Bynoe’s favor.
    6.
    Finally, we consider whether principles of comity weigh
    against reopening Bynoe’s habeas proceeding.           The
    considerations of comity for state laws and other judicial
    decisions may sometimes warrant abstention from
    overturning well-reasoned results. Comity concerns are
    minimal, however, when a petitioner seeks reconsideration
    of an erroneous procedural decision. See Phelps, 569 F.3d
    BYNOE V. BACA                             25
    at 1139–40. In such situations, reopening the decision does
    not risk disturbing a court’s reasoned, merits-based
    conclusion, because there never was one.
    Bynoe seeks reconsideration of the procedural decision
    to deny his request for a stay. On this factor, Bynoe’s case
    is indistinguishable from Phelps. See
    id. at 1139.
    This factor
    weighs in Bynoe’s favor.
    III.
    In its resolve to put an end to Bynoe’s habeas claims, the
    district court failed to recognize that Bynoe timely filed his
    motion and presented extraordinary circumstances
    warranting re-opening the final judgment. 8 All six Phelps
    factors support reconsidering the district court’s 2009
    judgment. The court abused its discretion in denying
    Bynoe’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion.
    We therefore reverse and remand the district court’s
    denial of Bynoe’s Rule 60(b)(6) motion. On remand, Bynoe
    may request the district court to stay his petition under
    Rhines and Mena while he returns to state court to exhaust
    his federal constitutional claims.
    REVERSED and REMANDED.
    8
    We express no views on the merits of Bynoe’s habeas claims in
    determining whether the district court abused its discretion in denying
    Bynoe’s Rule 60(b) motion.
    26                      BYNOE V. BACA
    RAWLINSON, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent from the majority disposition
    because, in my view, the majority does not adhere to the
    applicable standard of review, abuse of discretion.
    As an initial matter, it is important to note that relief
    under Rule 60(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
    “rarely occur[s] in the habeas context,” and the discretion
    afforded district courts in making the determination of
    whether relief is warranted is “especially broad.” Miller v.
    Mays, 
    879 F.3d 691
    , 698 (6th Cir. 2018) (citations and
    internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis in the original);
    see also Gonzalez v. Crosby, 
    545 U.S. 524
    , 535 (2005)
    (directing a “strict interpretation of Rule 60(b)”); Hall v.
    Haws, 
    861 F.3d 977
    , 987 (9th Cir. 2017) (agreeing that Rule
    60(b)(6) should be used “rarely in the habeas context . . .
    sparingly as an equitable remedy to prevent manifest
    injustice”) (citation omitted).
    “The decision to grant Rule 60(b)(6) relief [in the habeas
    context] is a case-by-case inquiry that requires the trial court
    to intensively balance numerous factors . . .” 
    Hall, 861 F.3d at 987
    (citation omitted) (emphasis added). The discretion
    vested in the district court “is a grand reservoir of equitable
    power” to be exercised by the district court.
    Id. The obvious
    point is that it is the job of the district court,
    not this court, to “intensively balance” Rule 60(b)(6)
    factors,
    id., which balance
    we review for an abuse of
    discretion. See
    id. at 984.
    An abuse of discretion occurs if
    the district court “does not apply the correct law or if it rests
    its decision on a clearly erroneous finding of material fact.”
    Id. (citation omitted).
    There is a clear distinction between
    deciding whether the district court applied the incorrect law
    (abuse of discretion review) or applied the law incorrectly
    BYNOE V. BACA                              27
    (de novo review). The former is an appropriate role for our
    court under Rule 30(b)(6); the latter is not. See
    id. Our task
    is to examine the balancing of relevant factors
    by the district court and determine whether the district court
    abused its discretion in conducting that balancing, rather
    than conducting the balancing of factors ourselves. See id;
    see also 
    Miller, 879 F.3d at 697
    (reviewing the district
    court’s reasoning). We must keep in mind that the discretion
    vested in the Rule 60(b) context is “especially broad due to
    the underlying equitable principles involved.” 
    Miller, 879 F.3d at 698
    (citation omitted).
    The district court first examined whether our decision in
    Mena v. Long, 
    813 F.3d 907
    (9th Cir. 2016), addressed an
    unsettled area of law. The district court observed that in
    Mena, the panel stated that this court “had not previously
    addressed the question of whether the question of the Rhines
    [v. Weber, 
    544 U.S. 269
    (2005)] stay-and-abey procedure is
    available when a petition was fully unexhausted, not mixed.
    
    Mena, 813 F.3d at 910
    .” On the other hand, the district court
    noted that the Ninth Circuit had previously denied Bynoe a
    certificate of appealability (COA) on this very issue,
    reflecting that the issue was one of settled law within the
    Circuit. 1 See Gonzalez v. Thaler, 
    565 U.S. 134
    , 140–41
    (2012) (explaining that a “petitioner seeking a COA must
    show both that jurists of reason would find it debatable
    whether the petition states a valid claim of the denial of a
    1
    The fact that the COA ruling was not made in a published decision
    did not preclude the district court from considering the ruling as part of
    the record of proceedings. See Phelps v. Alameida, 
    569 F.3d 1120
    , 1133
    (9th Cir. 2009) (instructing that “the proper course when analyzing a
    Rule 60(b)(6) motion predicated on an intervening change in the law is
    to evaluate the circumstances surrounding the specific motion before the
    court”) (emphasis added).
    28                    BYNOE V. BACA
    constitutional right and that jurists of reason would find it
    debatable whether the district court was correct in its
    procedural ruling”) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted). Denial of Bynoe’s requested COA signified that
    he did not make the required showing, i.e., that the issue of
    staying and abeying unexhausted habeas petition was
    debatable. Denial also conveyed that the law was settled in
    a way that was not favorable to Bynoe’s position. See United
    States v. Winkles, 
    795 F.3d 1134
    , 1143–47 (9th Cir. 2015)
    (analyzing the COA standard).
    The district court next considered Bynoe’s diligence and
    acknowledged that Bynoe had consistently raised the stay-
    and-abey issue throughout the proceedings.
    The district court analyzed together the factors
    concerning reliance on the district court ruling, the delay
    between the finality of the judgment and the motion for Rule
    60(b) relief, and comity concerns. The district court
    acknowledged Bynoe’s contention that the state “relied only
    minimally” on the original ruling denying relief, because
    once Bynoe’s habeas petition was dismissed the state’s
    obligations regarding the matter came to an end. On the
    other side of the equation, the court considered the “strong”
    comity concerns presented by the state. The district court
    was receptive to the state’s argument “that the Supreme
    Court has repeatedly recognized that the states have
    significant interests in comity and finality, and the
    exhaustion requirement is supposed to work in tandem with
    the statute of limitations and AEDPA’s limited scope of
    review to protect those interests.” The district court’s focus
    on the state’s interest is consistent with Supreme Court
    precedent. See Calderon v. Thompson, 
    523 U.S. 538
    , 555
    (1998) (explaining that the limits placed on habeas relief
    “reflect [the Supreme Court’s] enduring respect for the
    BYNOE V. BACA                         29
    State’s interest in the finality of convictions that have
    survived direct review within the state court system”)
    (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Finally, the district court discussed the relationship
    between the original decision and the decision embodying
    the change in the law. The court contemplated Bynoe’s
    argument that the Ninth Circuit’s ruling in Mena completely
    negated the district court’s previous order dismissing
    Bynoe’s habeas petition.         The district court readily
    acknowledged that Mena adopted the analysis advanced by
    Bynoe in the course of litigating his motion for a stay and
    abeyance of his fully unexhausted petition. Nevertheless,
    the district court determined that the analysis did not end
    there. Rather, the district court observed that even if it had
    concluded that it had discretion to stay a fully unexhausted
    petition, that determination would not have necessarily
    translated into success for Bynoe on his habeas petition.
    Consequently, although Mena affected a preliminary portion
    of the analysis, the relationship between the district court’s
    original decision and Mena was not ultimately of sufficient
    import to militate toward a finding of extraordinary
    circumstances in the district court’s view.
    The majority purports to take issue with the district
    court’s exercise of its discretion. However, the majority’s
    approach to review of the district court’s ruling is actually
    more akin to cases involving de novo review rather than
    review for the broad discretion bestowed upon district courts
    in this context. Initially, the majority faults the district
    court’s determination that our decision in Mena did not
    resolve a matter of unsettled law despite the fact that the
    district court referenced our denial of a COA requested by
    Bynoe on the very issue resolved by Mena. Nevertheless,
    the majority concludes that the district court’s reliance on the
    30                     BYNOE V. BACA
    COA was legal error because the order denying the COA
    was unpublished. See Majority Opinion, p. 19–20. The
    majority relies upon Phelps to support this rationale. See
    id. However, Phelps
    stands for exactly the opposite proposition,
    concluding that the area of law was unsettled because of
    “various competing memorandum 
    dispositions.” 569 F.3d at 1126
    . The Phelps panel left no doubt that the unpublished
    dispositions controlled the outcome of the cases before those
    panels. See
    id. (noting that
    if Phelps’ appeal had been heard
    by a panel that favored his position he would have
    prevailed). So in Bynoe’s case, where there was no
    competing unpublished disposition to render the law
    unsettled, the district court appropriately looked to the denial
    of the COA to conclude that the law was not unsettled. In
    fact, Phelps directs district courts to “evaluate the
    circumstances surrounding the specific [Rule 60(b)] motion
    before the court.”
    Id. at 1133.
    In this case, those
    circumstances included the denial of a COA rendered in an
    unpublished disposition.
    Indeed, the United States Supreme Court has also
    considered the denial of a COA in an unpublished
    disposition. See Buck v. Davis, 
    137 S. Ct. 759
    , 773 (citing
    the denial of a COA in Buck v. Stephens, 
    623 Fed. Appx. 668
    , 673 (5th Cir. 2015)). And we have similarly referenced
    an unpublished disposition addressing a co-defendant’s
    habeas claims in the course of resolving a Rule 60(b) issue.
    See 
    Hall, 861 F.3d at 983
    (referencing habeas relief granted
    to a co-defendant in the unpublished disposition of Sherrors
    v. Woodford, 
    425 Fed. Appx. 617
    (9th Cir. 2011)). Thus, it
    is apparent that the district court’s reference to the denial of
    the COA was faithful to our direction in Phelps to “evaluate
    the circumstances surrounding the specific [Rule 60(b)]
    motion before the 
    court.” 569 F.3d at 1133
    . And it was
    consistent with the practice of the Supreme Court and our
    BYNOE V. BACA                         31
    court. See 
    Buck, 137 S. Ct. at 773
    ; see also 
    Hall, 861 F.3d at 983
    . Because the district court’s reliance on the COA was
    not an error of law and was supported by the record, its
    determination that Mena did not address a settled area of law
    fit comfortably within its “grand reservoir of equitable
    power.” 
    Hall, 861 F.3d at 987
    . The majority’s disregard of
    this discretion elides our standard of review.
    The district court acknowledged that Bynoe was diligent
    in pursuing his habeas claim. However, the majority
    attempts to bootstrap this diligence determination into a
    finding of timeliness, which is a separate inquiry. See
    Majority Opinion, p. 20. In any event, without citation to
    any authority, the majority criticizes the district court for
    “taking note only of the seven-year gap between the denial
    of Bynoe’s request for a Rhines stay and the filing of his Rule
    60(b)(6) motion and failing to accord appropriate weight to
    Bynoe’s diligence and his ultimate timeliness.” Majority
    Opinion, p. 23. However, the district court considered
    precisely the factor as articulated in Phelps. 
    See 569 F.3d at 1138
    (“The second factor . . . examines the delay between
    the finality of the judgment and the motion for Rule 60(b)(6)
    relief.”) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)
    (emphasis added).
    In Phelps, we reasoned that “[t]his factor represents the
    simple principle that a change in the law should not
    indefinitely render preexisting judgments subject to
    potential challenge.”
    Id. (emphasis added).
    Nothing in
    Phelps required the district court to temper its finding on the
    delay factor by its separate evaluation of the diligence factor.
    And there is absolutely no mention of the majority’s newly-
    imposed and untethered “ultimate timeliness” consideration.
    More importantly, the Phelps factors are only guidelines for
    the exercise of the district court’s broad discretion. See
    id. 32 BYNOE
    V. BACA
    at 1135 (“The factors we discuss below are designed to
    guide courts in determining whether such extraordinary
    circumstances have been demonstrated . . .) (footnote
    reference omitted) (emphases added); see also 
    Hall, 861 F.3d at 987
    (noting that the Phelps factors “are not a
    rigid or exhaustive checklist”) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted). Contrary to the majority’s
    contention, Bynoe is not in the same position as Phelps was.
    As noted by the panel in Phelps, “his original motion for
    consideration was filed only four months after the judgment
    dismissing his petition became final.” (footnote reference
    omitted) (emphasis in the original). Simply put, the district
    court acted within its discretion and in harmony with our
    decision in Phelps when evaluating the delay factor.
    The dissent also takes issue with the district court’s
    assessment of the import of Mena. The district court did not
    state that Mena failed to mandate a different outcome.
    Rather, as discussed, the district court observed that even if
    it had determined that it had discretion to stay a fully
    unexhausted petition, that determination would not have
    necessarily changed the outcome. Ultimately, the outcome
    might have changed or it might not have changed.
    Finally, the majority disagrees with the district court’s
    evaluation of the comity concerns. However, the district
    court was completely entitled to adhere to the well-
    established “enduring respect for the State’s interest in the
    finality of convictions that have survived direct review
    within the state court system.” 
    Calderon, 523 U.S. at 555
    ;
    see also 
    Miller, 879 F.3d at 700
    (discussing the “profound
    respect” afforded “finality interests”). The district court
    committed no legal error and made no clearly erroneous
    finding of fact in weighing the comity factor. See 
    Hall, 861 F.3d at 984
    . That the majority would have assessed this
    BYNOE V. BACA                        33
    factor differently does not constitute an abuse of discretion
    on the part of the district court. See
    id. At bottom,
    the majority would have weighed the factors
    in a different manner. However, that difference of opinion
    does not constitute an abuse of discretion. See
    id. In so
    holding, the majority fails to respect the “intensive []
    balance” that is to be made by the district court,
    id. at 987.
    and the especially broad discretion vested in the district
    court. 
    Miller, 879 F.3d at 698
    .
    Keeping in mind that the relief sought by Bynoe is to be
    granted “rarely” and “sparingly” by a district court, 
    Hall, 861 F.3d at 987
    , I cannot in good conscience impose my own
    view of the appropriate weighing of the Phelps factors and
    pass it off as abuse of discretion review. Rather, I respect
    the “grand reservoir of equitable power” upon which the
    district court decision rested.
    Id. I respectfully
    dissent.