Destinni Mardesich v. Matthew Cate , 668 F.3d 1164 ( 2012 )


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  •                      FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    DESTINNI MARDESICH,                         
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    MATTHEW CATE*, Secretary,
    California Department of
    Corrections and Rehabilitation;
    SCOTT KERNAN*, Chief Deputy                          No. 08-55404
    Secretary for Adult Operations,
    D.C. No.
    California Department of
    Corrections and Rehabilitation;                    8:06-cv-00009-
    TERRI MCDONALD*, Director of                          ODW-AGR
    Division of Adult Institutions,                        OPINION
    California Department of
    Corrections and Rehabilitation;
    DEBORAH K. JOHNSON*, Warden,
    Central California Women’s
    Facility; KAMALA HARRIS*,
    Attorney General,
    Respondents-Appellees.
    
    *Matthew Cate is substituted for his predecessor, Roderick Q. Hickman,
    as Secretary for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilita-
    tion; Scott Kernan is substituted for his predecessor, Joseph McGrath, as
    Chief Deputy Secretary for Adult Operations for the California Depart-
    ment of Corrections and Rehabilitation; Terri McDonald is substituted for
    her predecessor, John Dovey, as Director of Division of Adult Institutions
    for the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation; Deborah
    K. Johnson is substituted for her predecessor, Debra Jacquez, as Warden,
    Central California Women’s Facility; Kamala Harris is substituted for her
    predecessor, Bill Lockyer, as Attorney General of California. See Fed. R.
    App. P. 43(c)(2).
    1929
    1930                  MARDESICH v. CATE
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    Otis D. Wright, II, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    December 5, 2011—Pasadena, California
    Filed February 21, 2012
    Before: Dorothy W. Nelson, Ronald M. Gould, and
    Sandra S. Ikuta, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Ikuta
    MARDESICH v. CATE                   1933
    COUNSEL
    Anand Krishnaswamy (argued), Michael J. Brennan, Univer-
    sity of Southern California Post-Conviction Justice Project,
    Los Angeles, California, for petitioner-appellant Destinni
    Mardesich.
    Anthony Da Silva, Deputy Attorney General, San Diego, Cal-
    ifornia, for respondents-appellees Matthew Cate, Secretary,
    California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, et
    al.
    OPINION
    IKUTA, Circuit Judge:
    Destinni Mardesich appeals the district court’s dismissal of
    three claims in her federal habeas petition as untimely under
    the one-year statute of limitations set forth in the Antiterro-
    rism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA). 
    28 U.S.C. § 2244
    (d)(1). Because we apply the AEDPA statute of limita-
    tions on a claim-by-claim basis, and because Mardesich’s
    three claims challenging a state administrative agency’s order
    were filed nearly 18 months after the statute of limitations
    expired, we affirm the district court’s dismissal.
    I
    A
    When Destinni Mardesich was 16, she convinced two
    friends to help her kill Damian McKenna, her former boy-
    friend and father of her child, because she feared McKenna
    might try to obtain custody of their young son. Though the
    fatal shots were fired by Mardesich’s friend, she was person-
    ally armed with a gun and was present during the murder. She
    1934                      MARDESICH v. CATE
    was tried as an adult in the Orange County Superior Court and
    convicted of first degree murder on December 15, 1992. The
    court sentenced her to 26 years to life, and committed her to
    the California Youth Authority, a state agency providing edu-
    cation and treatment to juvenile offenders.1
    About three years later, the California Youthful Offender
    Parole Board (Board)2 exercised its authority under section
    1737.1 of the California Welfare and Institutions Code to
    reconsider Mardesich’s commitment to the Youth Authority.3
    After conducting three hearings, the Board concluded that
    Mardesich was not amenable to treatment and was therefore
    an improper person to be retained by the Youth Authority.
    Following the last of these hearings on October 25, 1996, the
    1
    The Youth Authority is now known as the “California Department of
    Corrections and Rehabilitation, Division of Juvenile Facilities.” See 
    Cal. Penal Code § 6001
    .
    2
    In 2005, the Board was abolished and its parole decisionmaking
    authority was transferred to the Board of Parole Hearings. See 
    Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code §§ 1716
    , 1725.
    3
    
    Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code § 1737.1
     (1996) provided, in pertinent part:
    Whenever any person who has been convicted of a public offense
    in adult court and committed to and accepted by the Youth
    Authority appears to the Youthful Offender Parole Board, either
    at the time of his or her first appearance before the board or
    thereafter, to be an improper person to be retained by the Youth
    Authority, or to be so incorrigible or so incapable of reformation
    under the discipline of the Youth Authority as to render his or her
    detention detrimental to the interests of the Youth Authority and
    the other persons committed thereto, the board may order the
    return of such a person to the committing court. The court may
    then commit the person to a state prison or sentence him or her
    to a county jail as provided by law for punishment of the offense
    of which he or she was convicted. The maximum term of impris-
    onment for a person committed to a state prison under this sec-
    tion shall be a period equal to the maximum term prescribed by
    law for the offense of which he or she was convicted less the
    period during which he or she was under the control of the Youth
    Authority. This section shall not apply to commitments from
    juvenile court.
    MARDESICH v. CATE                     1935
    Board issued an order returning Mardesich to the Orange
    County Superior Court for criminal resentencing pursuant to
    section 1737.1. The Board’s decision became final when it
    denied Mardesich’s administrative appeal of the return order
    on August 19, 1997. Following the Board’s order, the Orange
    County Superior Court sentenced Mardesich to 26 years to
    life in state prison on July 31, 1998.
    Mardesich challenged the Board’s return order and the sub-
    sequent Orange County resentencing in two separate legal
    proceedings. First, on October 15, 1997, Mardesich appealed
    the Board’s decision by filing a petition for administrative
    mandamus in Ventura County Superior Court. The superior
    court denied the petition and after a round of appeals, the
    Ventura County Court of Appeals ultimately affirmed the
    denial. The California Supreme Court denied review of the
    case and that decision became final on August 19, 2003 when
    the 90-day period for filing a petition for writ of certiorari to
    the United States Supreme Court expired. See Sup. Ct. R.
    13.1; People v. Quicke, 
    455 P.2d 787
    , 790 (Cal. 1969). Sec-
    ond, Mardesich appealed the Orange County Superior Court’s
    resentencing decision. This challenge was also unsuccessful.
    The Orange County Court of Appeals affirmed the sentence,
    and the California Supreme Court denied review of the case
    in a decision that became final 90 days later on December 14,
    2004.
    B
    Mardesich petitioned for federal habeas relief under 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    . On December 13, 2005, the clerk’s office of
    the district court for the Central District of California received
    Mardesich’s habeas petition, which was then officially filed
    on January 3, 2006. Mardesich filed an amended petition on
    March 27, 2006. The petition raised four claims.
    The first claim asserted that section 1737.1 violates Marde-
    sich’s federal and state constitutional due process rights
    1936                   MARDESICH v. CATE
    because it permits the Board to return a youth offender for
    criminal sentencing without giving that ward “constitutionally
    adequate notice or [an] opportunity to be heard.” According
    to the petition, section 1737.1 allows the Board to return a
    ward after administrative proceedings where the ward has,
    among other things, no “adequate notice of charges; no right
    to counsel; . . . and no right to a meaningful hearing with fair
    opportunity for presentation of evidence, cross-examination,
    and a neutral adjudicator limited to considering only evidence
    presented in the hearing.” In short, claim one alleged that sec-
    tion 1737.1 is unconstitutional because it essentially allows
    the Board to punish selected wards by “administrative fiat.”
    The second claim asserted that section 1737.1 is unconsti-
    tutionally vague because a “person reading th[e] statute can-
    not determine what specifically is—and is not—a ‘violation’
    of Section 1737.1.” Instead, “the statute leaves it up to the
    State (here, an administrative agency, the [Board]) to deter-
    mine ad hoc what will and will not result in more criminal
    punishment, based on standardless discretion.” Thus, claim
    two stated that the Board’s “exercise[ of] its unbounded dis-
    cretion to return [Mardesich] to Superior Court” was uncon-
    stitutional.
    The third claim alleged that section 1737.1 is unconstitu-
    tionally overbroad because it permits the Board to return a
    ward for criminal resentencing “based upon protected First
    Amendment activities,” such as peaceful speech and thought.
    For example, in Mardesich’s case, the Board’s decision was
    in part based upon a “setback in her psychotherapy” that sug-
    gested she was “not treatable.” In short, claim three stated that
    section 1737.1 is unconstitutional because it allows the Board
    to exercise “unbounded discretion in punishing a person based
    in part on the content of his or her speech.”
    Finally, the fourth claim asserted that the 1998 Orange
    County resentencing violated the federal and California dou-
    ble jeopardy clauses because it was a “second sentence for the
    MARDESICH v. CATE                    1937
    same offense.” According to claim 4, “[t]he second sentence
    is void” because “the [Orange County] Superior Court had no
    power” to impose it in the first place.
    The magistrate judge recommended dismissing claims one
    through three of Mardesich’s amended habeas petition as
    untimely under AEDPA’s one-year statute of limitations.
    Though the magistrate found claim four to be timely, she rec-
    ommended denying it as not contrary to, or an unreasonable
    application of, clearly established Supreme Court law. The
    district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendations and
    denied Mardesich’s habeas petition. The district court denied
    her request for a Certificate of Appealability (COA). Marde-
    sich timely appealed and a motions panel of this court granted
    a COA with respect to one issue: “whether the district court
    properly dismissed claims one, two, and three as time-
    barred.”
    On appeal, Mardesich asserts that claims one through three
    of her December 13, 2005 habeas petition are timely because
    the statute of limitations for these claims did not start running
    until her appeal of the Orange County resentencing became
    final on December 14, 2004. Mardesich argues that claims in
    a habeas petition are necessarily challenges to the proceeding
    that resulted in the petitioner’s incarceration, and therefore a
    court must construe her three claims as challenges to the
    Orange County Superior Court’s resentencing that resulted in
    her incarceration. California, by contrast, argues that these
    three claims challenge the Board’s order returning Mardesich
    to superior court for resentencing pursuant to section 1737.1,
    which became final at the conclusion of Mardesich’s manda-
    mus proceedings on August 19, 2003.
    II
    We have jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    . We
    review de novo a district court’s dismissal of a habeas petition
    1938                   MARDESICH v. CATE
    on timeliness grounds. Porter v. Ollison, 
    620 F.3d 952
    , 958
    (9th Cir. 2010).
    [1] A “person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a
    State court” can file a habeas petition alleging that the peti-
    tioner “is in custody in violation of the Constitution . . . of the
    United States.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
    (a). AEDPA contains a one-
    year statute of limitations for bringing such petitions, which
    provides in relevant part:
    (d)(1) A 1-year period of limitation shall apply to an
    application for a writ of habeas corpus by a person
    in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court.
    The limitation period shall run from the latest of-
    (A) the date on which the judgment became
    final by the conclusion of direct review or
    the expiration of the time for seeking such
    review;
    . . . or
    (D) the date on which the factual predicate
    of the claim or claims presented could have
    been discovered through the exercise of due
    diligence.
    § 2244(d)(1). This one-year limitations period is tolled during
    the pendency of a “properly filed application for State post-
    conviction or other collateral review with respect to the perti-
    nent judgment or claim . . . .” § 2244(d)(2).
    In order to address the timeliness of Mardesich’s claims on
    appeal, we must consider two threshold issues: (1) whether
    we apply the one-year statute of limitations to the entire
    habeas petition, or to individual claims within the petition,
    and (2) whether the claims at issue here are challenges to the
    MARDESICH v. CATE                          1939
    Board’s return order or to the superior court’s subsequent
    resentencing.
    [2] We first turn to the question whether we apply the one-
    year statute of limitations on a claim-by-claim basis, so that
    each claim must survive the time bar, or whether we consider
    the habeas petition as a whole, such that all claims in a peti-
    tion may proceed so long as at least one of them is timely. As
    noted above, the district court applied the claim-by-claim
    approach when it dismissed claims one through three of
    Mardesich’s habeas petition, but accepted her fourth claim as
    timely. Under the second approach, Mardesich’s petition (and
    all its claims) would not be time-barred so long as the fourth
    claim is timely. We asked for supplemental briefing on this
    issue over which our sister circuits have split.4
    [3] The AEDPA statute of limitations provides that “[a] 1
    year period of limitation shall apply to an application for a
    writ of habeas corpus by a person in custody pursuant to the
    judgment of a State court,” and states that “the limitation
    period shall run from the latest of” a number of triggering
    dates. § 2244(d)(1). Interpreting this language, the Eleventh
    Circuit held that because § 2244(d)(1) declares the limitations
    period “shall apply to an application for a writ of habeas cor-
    pus,” a court must “look at whether the ‘application’ is timely,
    not whether the individual ‘claims’ within the application are
    timely.” Walker v. Crosby, 
    341 F.3d 1240
    , 1243 (11th Cir.
    2003) (emphasis in original). Under this interpretation, anap-
    plication is timely so long as one claim within the application
    4
    This issue was not certified on appeal. “Under Ninth Circuit Rule
    22-1(e), uncertified issues raised on appeal ‘will be construed as a motion
    to expand the COA and will be addressed by the merits panel to such
    extent as it deems appropriate.’ ” Towery v. Schriro, 
    641 F.3d 300
    , 311
    (9th Cir. 2010) (quoting Ninth Cir. R. 22-1(e)). We grant this motion to
    expand the COA because, given the split in authority, we hold that “rea-
    sonable jurists could debate” whether the existence of one timely claim in
    Mardesich’s petition renders her entire petition timely. See Slack v.
    McDaniel, 
    529 U.S. 473
    , 484 (2000).
    1940                   MARDESICH v. CATE
    is timely. Applying this rule, Walker held that a habeas peti-
    tion with four untimely claims and one timely claim was a
    “timely” petition under AEDPA. Id. at 1242, 1245-46.
    [4] In Fielder v. Varner, the Third Circuit rejected this
    analysis. 
    379 F.3d 113
    , 117-18 (3d Cir. 2004) (Alito, J.).
    Instead, it held that AEDPA’s statute of limitations should be
    applied to each individual claim in a habeas petition. 
    Id.
    According to Fielder, the Walker court’s reliance on the term
    “application” in § 2244(d)(1) was misguided because it con-
    flicted with the language in § 2244(d)(1)(D), which provides
    that the one-year statute of limitations runs from “the date on
    which the factual predicate of the claim or claims presented
    could have been discovered through the exercise of due dili-
    gence.” Id. In Fielder, the petitioner’s application presented
    two claims, one involving prosecutorial misconduct at trial
    (which was known to the petitioner at the time of trial) and
    one involving newly discovered evidence, which was not
    known to petitioner until years later. Id. at 118. In this situa-
    tion, the Walker interpretation could not provide guidance for
    selecting which triggering date starts the one-year statute of
    limitations for the entire application because “there is nothing
    in § 2244(d)(1) that provides a ground for picking one date
    over the other.” Id. The Fielder court reasoned that this
    ambiguity was not resolved by § 2244(d)(1)’s instruction that
    “[t]he limitation period shall run from the latest of” one of the
    four triggering dates in § 2244(d)(1)(A)-(D), because that ref-
    erence only “tells a court how to choose from among the four
    dates specified in subsections (A) through (D) once those
    dates are identified.” Id. (emphasis in original). It “does not
    tell a court how to identify the date specified in subsection
    (D) in a case in which the application contains multiple
    claims.” Id. As a result, Walker’s application-based interpreta-
    tion “fail[ed] on its own terms.” Id.
    Because the ambiguous language in § 2244(d)(1) did not
    provide sufficient guidance, Fielder considered the statute as
    a whole, and saw “two strong reasons for concluding that the
    MARDESICH v. CATE                           1941
    statute of limitations set out in § 2244(d)(1) should be applied
    on a claim-by-claim basis.” Id. First, a claim-by-claim
    approach was consistent with how statutes of limitations are
    generally applied in civil and criminal cases, and there was no
    indication that Congress intended to depart from this norm in
    AEDPA. Id. at 118-19. Second, such an approach avoided the
    strange situation in Walker whereby a “late-accruing federal
    habeas claim . . . open[s] the door for the assertion of other
    claims that had become time-barred years earlier.” Id. at 120.
    [5] The Fielder interpretation was subsequently adopted by
    the Sixth Circuit. See Bachman v. Bagley, 
    487 F.3d 979
    , 984
    (6th Cir. 2007). And we likewise adopted Fielder’s approach
    in a case that was later vacated on other grounds. See Souli-
    otes v. Evans, 
    622 F.3d 1173
    , 1179-80 (9th Cir. 2010),
    vacated by Souliotes v. Evans, 
    654 F.3d 902
     (9th Cir. 2011).
    Souliotes evaluated a habeas petition that included one claim
    that the petitioner was actually innocent, based on evidence
    discovered some eight months before the petition was filed,
    and three claims challenging the underlying conviction that
    had become final over a year before the petition was filed.
    
    622 F.3d at 1176, 1179
    . The district court dismissed the entire
    petition as time-barred. 
    Id. at 1177
    . On appeal, we endorsed
    the reasoning in Fielder. 
    Id. at 1180
    .5 Further, we noted that
    a claim-by-claim approach was consistent with Supreme
    Court dicta in Pace v. DiGuglielmo, 
    544 U.S. 408
    , 416 n.6
    (2005), which suggested that § 2244(d)(1)(B)-(D) “require[d]
    claim-by-claim consideration.” Souliotes, 
    622 F.3d at
    1180
    n.4. Applying this approach, we reversed the dismissal of
    Souliotes’s claim based on newly discovered evidence, but
    5
    Souliotes was not vacated because of any controversy regarding this
    holding, but because it relied on another Ninth Circuit case (that was later
    reversed en banc) to hold that there was no “actual innocence” exception
    to AEPDA’s statute of limitations for original petitions under
    § 2244(d)(1). Id. at 1181 (citing Lee v. Lampert, 
    610 F.3d 1125
     (9th Cir.
    2010), vacated and reversed en banc by Lee v. Lampert, 
    653 F.3d 929
     (9th
    Cir. 2011) (en banc)).
    1942                  MARDESICH v. CATE
    affirmed the holding that his other three claims were
    untimely. Id. at 1180-82.
    [6] We are persuaded by the reasoning in Fielder, just as
    we were in Souliotes. Stretched to its logical extreme, Walk-
    er’s application-based approach would hold that AEDPA’s
    statute of limitations never completely runs on any claim so
    long as there is a possibility of a timely challenge for one
    claim. There is no evidence that Congress intended such a
    result when it placed a time bar on habeas petitions by enact-
    ing a one-year statute of limitations. See Duncan v. Walker,
    
    533 U.S. 167
    , 179 (2001) (“The 1-year limitation period of
    § 2244(d)(1) quite plainly serves the well-recognized interest
    in the finality of state court judgments.”).
    [7] In her supplemental briefing, Mardesich echoes the
    arguments made in Walker. According to Mardesich, the plain
    text of § 2244(d)(1) unambiguously states that the limitations
    period shall be applied to “applications” and if Congress had
    intended for the limitations to be applied to claims, it would
    have said so. We reject this argument because, as shown
    above, it cannot properly resolve the ambiguity in
    § 2244(d)(1)(D). Therefore, we hold that AEDPA’s one-year
    statute of limitations in § 2244(d)(1) applies to each claim in
    a habeas application on an individual basis.
    III
    [8] We now turn to our second threshold issue: whether
    Mardesich’s three claims on appeal are challenging the
    Board’s order under section 1737.1 returning her to the supe-
    rior court for resentencing or the subsequent state court resen-
    tencing judgment.
    A
    We begin by briefly outlining the background legal princi-
    ples. Although petitioners must be in “custody pursuant to a
    MARDESICH v. CATE                    1943
    state court judgment” in order to bring a habeas petition under
    § 2254, they are not limited to challenging the specific judg-
    ment of conviction and sentence that resulted in their state
    custody. See Shelby v. Bartlett, 
    391 F.3d 1061
    , 1063 (9th Cir.
    2004). Rather, petitioners can also challenge “the fact or dura-
    tion of [their] confinement” based “upon the alleged unconsti-
    tutionality of state administrative action.” Preiser v.
    Rodriguez, 
    411 U.S. 475
    , 489 (1973). The Supreme Court has
    indicated that such challenges to administrative actions are
    cognizable in habeas if their success “would necessarily dem-
    onstrate the invalidity of confinement or its duration,” such as
    through obtaining an “injunction compelling speedier release
    or . . . through a judicial determination that necessarily
    implies the unlawfulness of the State’s custody.” Wilkinson v.
    Dotson, 
    544 U.S. 74
    , 81, 82 (2005).
    We have held that the one-year limitations period applies
    to “all applications for writ of habeas corpus” under § 2254,
    including those challenging state administrative actions.
    Shelby, 
    391 F.3d at 1064
    ; Redd v. McGrath, 
    343 F.3d 1077
    ,
    1084 (9th Cir. 2003). In Redd, we established the mechanics
    for courts applying the limitations period to such petitions.
    Redd, 
    343 F.3d at 1081-85
    . Redd involved a habeas petition
    challenging a denial of parole. 
    Id. at 1079
    . In determining
    whether the statute of limitations barred Redd’s claims, we
    considered whether the applicable triggering date under
    § 2244(d)(1) was (1) § 2241(d)(1)(A), which provides that the
    statute of limitations begins to run on “the date on which the
    judgment became final by the conclusion of direct review or
    the expiration of the time for seeking such review,” or (2)
    § 2241(d)(1)(D), which provides that the statute of limitations
    begins to run on “the date on which the factual predicate of
    the claim or claims presented could have been discovered
    through the exercise of due diligence.” Id. at 1081-82. We
    concluded that subparagraph (D), rather than (A), was appli-
    cable because an administrative decision, such as the denial
    of parole in Redd, is not a “judgment” as defined in subpara-
    graph (A). Id. Therefore, by its plain language, subparagraph
    1944                        MARDESICH v. CATE
    (A) is not applicable to petitions challenging an administrative
    decision. Applying subparagraph (D), we held that the factual
    predicate for Redd’s claim was the parole board’s denial of
    his administrative appeal and that the statute of limitations
    began running the next day. Id. at 1082-84; see also Shelby,
    
    391 F.3d at 1062, 1066
    .
    [9] Therefore, under Redd and Shelby, when a habeas peti-
    tioner challenges an administrative decision affecting the
    “fact or duration of his confinement,” AEDPA’s one-year
    statute of limitations runs from when the “factual predicate”
    of the habeas claims “could have been discovered through the
    exercise of due diligence.” § 2244(d)(1)(D); see Shelby, 
    391 F.3d at 1066
    .6 As a general rule, the state agency’s denial of
    an administrative appeal is the “factual predicate” for such
    habeas claims. See Shelby, 
    391 F.3d at 1066
    ; Redd, 
    343 F.3d at 1085
    .
    B
    We now review Mardesich’s three claims on appeal. As
    previously noted, see supra at 1935-36, the first three claims
    in Mardesich’s habeas petition challenge the constitutionality
    of section 1737.1, the statute authorizing the Board to order
    her return to superior court for resentencing, as well as the
    Board’s exercise of its power under that provision.7 Claim one
    6
    Several of our sister circuits have reached similar conclusions on this
    issue. See Brown v. Barrow, 
    512 F.3d 1304
    , 1307 (11th Cir. 2008); Dul-
    worth v. Evans, 
    442 F.3d 1265
    , 1268 (10th Cir. 2006); Cook v. N.Y. State
    Division of Parole, 
    321 F.3d 274
    , 280-81 (2d Cir. 2003); Kimbrell v.
    Cockrell, 
    311 F.3d 361
    , 363-64 (5th Cir. 2002) (using administrative deci-
    sion itself as the factual predicate, but noting that a properly filed adminis-
    trative appeal would toll the statute of limitations); but see Cox v.
    McBride, 
    279 F.3d 492
    , 493 (7th Cir. 2002) (holding that AEDPA’s stat-
    ute of limitations does not apply to petitions challenging administrative
    decisions).
    7
    As noted above, the pertinent language in section 1737.1 provides that
    whenever a ward “appears to the [Board] . . . to be an improper person to
    MARDESICH v. CATE                           1945
    asserts that section 1737.1 deprived Mardesich of due process
    because it allowed the Board to order her return without giv-
    ing her procedural safeguards such as notice of charges or the
    right to counsel. Claims two and three allege that section
    1737.1 is void for vagueness and unconstitutionally over-
    broad, respectively, because it gave the Board unbounded dis-
    cretion in making its decision to order her return. By contrast,
    the fourth claim contends that the superior court’s resentenc-
    ing procedure was unconstitutional because it violated double
    jeopardy.
    [10] We conclude that the first three claims in Mardesich’s
    federal habeas petition asserted constitutional infirmities in
    the Board’s decision, not the state superior court’s. As we
    have recognized, the issuance of the return order is entirely
    “in the discretion of the [Board], whose authority is ‘separate
    and distinct from that of the sentencing judge.’ ” Torrey v.
    Estelle, 
    842 F.2d 234
    , 236 (9th Cir. 1988) (quoting Sanchez
    v. United States, 
    572 F.2d 210
    , 211 (9th Cir. 1977)). Thus,
    while the Board’s return order under section 1737.1 may be
    a precursor to the subsequent state court resentencing, it is an
    administrative decision “in which the sentencing court does
    not participate.” 
    Id.
     at 236 n.2. California courts have simi-
    larly recognized that section 1737.1 gives the Board exclusive
    authority to determine whether or not to retain a ward com-
    mitted to its authority. See People v. Lo, 
    49 Cal. Rptr. 2d 594
    ,
    600-01 (Cal. Ct. App. 1996); cf. Owen E. v. West (In re Owen
    E.), 
    592 P.2d 720
    , 723 (Cal. 1979) (analogizing the Board’s
    role to that of a parole board for youth wards). As such, the
    Board’s order returning Mardesich to superior court because
    she was not amenable to treatment and the superior court’s
    be retained by the Youth Authority, or to be so incorrigible or so incapable
    of reformation under the discipline of the Youth Authority as to render his
    or her detention detrimental to the interests of the Youth Authority and the
    other persons committed thereto, the [B]oard may order the return of such
    a person to the committing court.”
    1946                  MARDESICH v. CATE
    subsequent resentencing proceeding are two independent state
    actions that are separately challengeable via federal habeas
    petitions. Given this distinct allocation of authority, Marde-
    sich’s three claims challenging the scheme in section 1737.1
    are allegations that the Board, not the resentencing court, vio-
    lated her constitutional rights.
    [11] Mardesich’s constitutional challenges to the Board’s
    decision are cognizable in habeas. Each of the three claims
    challenges the “fact or duration” of her incarceration based
    “upon the alleged unconstitutionality” of the Board’s action.
    Preiser, 
    411 U.S. at 489
    . Here, as in Shelby and Redd, success
    on these claims “would necessarily demonstrate the invalidity
    of confinement or its duration” because the Board’s return
    order led directly to Mardesich’s subsequent criminal resen-
    tencing and incarceration. Wilkinson, 
    544 U.S. at 82
    . There-
    fore, the one-year limitations period for challenging this
    administrative action is governed by § 2244(d)(1)(D), and is
    triggered by the “date on which the factual predicate of the
    claim or claims presented could have been discovered through
    the exercise of due diligence.”
    [12] Given this conclusion, and mindful that we apply the
    AEDPA statute of limitations on a claim-by-claim basis, see
    supra at Part II, we hold that Mardesich’s claims that chal-
    lenge the Board’s order returning her to superior court for
    resentencing are not timely. As previously explained, the
    “factual predicate” for these claims is the state agency’s
    denial of the petitioner’s administrative appeal. See Shelby,
    
    391 F.3d at 1066
    ; Redd, 
    343 F.3d at 1082
    . Here, the Board
    denied Mardesich’s administrative appeal on August 19,
    1997. The limitations period began running on the next day,
    see Redd, 
    343 F.3d at 1082
    , and a total of 56 days then passed
    before Mardesich collaterally challenged the decision by fil-
    ing for administrative mandamus, see 
    id. at 1082-85
     (running
    the limitations period during this time before petitioner sought
    state review of the administrative order). The limitations
    period was then tolled between October 15, 1997 and August
    MARDESICH v. CATE                              1947
    19, 2003, during the pendency of Mardesich’s petition for
    administrative mandamus. See § 2244(d)(2). The limitations
    period resumed on August 20, 2003, and expired 309 days
    later, on June 24, 2004.8 Accordingly, the claims challenging
    the Board’s return order in Mardesich’s December 13, 2005
    habeas petition were untimely by nearly 18 months.9
    Mardesich argues that claims one through three of her
    habeas petition necessarily challenge her 1998 Orange County
    resentencing because she is in custody pursuant to that state
    court judgment. We reject this argument. As Shelby made
    clear, “we ask whether the petitioner is in custody pursuant to
    a state court judgment” because such custody is a prerequisite
    to the filing of a habeas petition under § 2254. Shelby, 
    391 F.3d at 1063
     (internal quotation marks and citation omitted);
    see also White v. Lambert, 
    370 F.3d 1002
    , 1007 (9th Cir.
    2004) (holding that Ҥ 2254 is the exclusive vehicle for a
    habeas petition by a state prisoner in custody pursuant to a
    state court judgment, even when the petitioner is not challeng-
    ing his underlying state court conviction”), overruled on other
    grounds by Hayward v. Marshall, 
    603 F.3d 546
     (9th Cir.
    2010). But once a petitioner has made this threshold showing
    of custody pursuant to a state court judgment, the petitioner
    is not limited to challenging that state court judgment. In fact,
    the very nature of habeas petitions challenging administrative
    decisions is such that a prisoner is in custody pursuant to a
    state court conviction and sentence, but alleges that an
    entirely different state administrative action violated his con-
    stitutional rights. See, e.g., Shelby, 
    391 F.3d at 1062-64
    ; Redd,
    
    343 F.3d at 1079
    .
    8
    This date is 56 days earlier than the date arrived at by the district court,
    August 19, 2004, because the district court did not count the 56 days
    between the denial of administrative appeal and Mardesich’s mandamus
    filing. Under Redd, a court must count these days. 
    343 F.3d at 1082-85
    .
    9
    Because we hold that Mardesich’s claims on appeal are untimely on
    this basis, we need not address her argument that claims challenging the
    Orange County Superior Court’s resentencing judgment would have been
    timely.
    1948                 MARDESICH v. CATE
    [13] Such is the case here. Mardesich properly filed her
    habeas petition under § 2254 because she is in custody pursu-
    ant to the Orange County Superior Court’s resentencing judg-
    ment. See Burton v. Stewart, 
    549 U.S. 147
    , 156-57 (2007)
    (holding that a sentencing qualifies as a state court “judg-
    ment”). But instead of challenging that judgment, her claims
    on appeal alleged that the Board violated her constitutional
    rights when it returned her to superior court for sentencing.
    As shown above, those claims are stale and must be dis-
    missed.
    IV
    Because the limitations period for the administrative action
    Mardesich challenges in claims one through three of her
    habeas petition expired nearly 18 months before the petition
    was filed, the district court’s dismissal of those claims as
    untimely is AFFIRMED.