KENT J. DAWSON, District Judge.
This habeas matter under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 comes before the Court on a sua sponte inquiry as to whether the petition is subject to dismissal as time-barred and also as completely unexhausted. This order follows upon a prior show-cause order (#7) and petitioner's two responses (## 25 & 26) thereto.
Petitioner Joel Kenneth Parker challenges his Nevada state conviction, pursuant to a jury verdict, of burglary and robbery. The following procedural history is undisputed.
Petitioner initially was found guilty of burglary, robbery and grand larceny auto. On direct appeal, the Supreme Court of Nevada affirmed as to the burglary and robbery convictions. The court reversed the grand larceny auto conviction and remanded with instructions to vacate that conviction.
The state supreme court's order was filed on December 2, 2008. An amended judgment of conviction was filed in the state district court on January 22, 2009, and the time to appeal the amended judgment expired on Monday, February 23, 2009. The time to file a petition for a writ of certiorari in the United States Supreme Court from the December 2, 2008, state supreme court order expired on March 2, 2009.
Thereafter, while petitioner sought procedural relief, only, in state district court, the only proceeding that he filed in the state supreme court was a letter construed as a petition that was filed on May 18, 2010. The court denied the petition on the following grounds:
The state supreme court denied the petition on June 9, 2010, and the remittitur issued on July 8, 2010. Petitioner submitted an untimely petition for rehearing on July 20, 2010, after the issuance of the remittitur, which was denied on September 13, 2010.
The federal petition was mailed to the Clerk of this Court on or about July 25, 2011.
Pursuant to Herbst v. Cook, 260 F.3d 1039 (9th Cir. 2001), the Court sua sponte has raised the question of whether the petition is time-barred for failure to file the petition within the one-year limitation period in 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1).
Under 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(A), the federal one-year limitation period, unless otherwise tolled or subject to delayed accrual, begins running after "the date on which the judgment became final by the conclusion of direct review or the expiration of the time for seeking such direct review." Under 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(2), the federal one-year limitation period is statutorily tolled during the pendency of a properly filed application for state post-conviction relief or for other state collateral review. However, an untimely filing is not "properly filed" and thus does not statutorily toll the federal limitation period. Pace v. DiGuglielmo, 544 U.S. 408 (2005).
In the present case, the federal limitation period began running after the time for seeking certiorari review expired following the direct appeal on March 2, 2009. Absent tolling or delayed accrual, the limitation period expired one year later, on March 2, 2010.
The federal petition in this matter was not constructively filed until on or about July 25, 2011, more than a year and seven months after the federal limitation period already had expired, absent tolling or delayed accrual. The May 18, 2010, original writ petition filed in the Supreme Court of Nevada was filed after the expiration of the federal limitation period on March 2, 2010, and that filing therefore has no effect on the calculation of the limitation period absent other tolling or delayed accrual. The petition therefore is untimely on its face.
In an extensive filing, petitioner maintains that actions of a local jail and the state courts establish a basis for equitable tolling excusing his failure to file a timely federal petition.
Equitable tolling is appropriate only if the petitioner can show "`(1) that he has been pursuing his rights diligently, and (2) that some extraordinary circumstance stood in his way' and prevented timely filing." Holland v. Florida, 130 S.Ct. 2549, 2562 (2009)(quoting prior authority). Equitable tolling is "unavailable in most cases," Miles v. Prunty, 187 F.3d 1104, 1107 (9th Cir.1999), and "the threshold necessary to trigger equitable tolling is very high, lest the exceptions swallow the rule," Miranda v. Castro, 292 F.3d 1063, 1066 (9th Cir.2002) (quoting United States v. Marcello, 212 F.3d 1005, 1010 (7th Cir.2000)). The petitioner ultimately has the burden of proof on this "extraordinary exclusion." 292 F.3d at 1065. He accordingly must demonstrate a causal relationship between the extraordinary circumstance and the lateness of his filing. E.g., Spitsyn v. Moore, 345 F.3d 796, 799 (9th Cir. 2003). Accord Bryant v. Arizona Attorney General, 499 F.3d 1056, 1061 (9th Cir. 2007).
The following factual assertions
Petitioner's detailed factual recital does not establish that extraordinary circumstances stood in the way of and prevented the timely filing of a federal petition.
With regard to the circumstances specifically during the running of the federal limitation period from March 2, 2009, through March 2, 2010, petitioner proceeds on fallacious assumptions, inter alia: (a) that a noncapital habeas petitioner is automatically entitled to appointment of counsel to prepare a state petition; (b) that it is a proper duty and function of the state trial judge and state court clerk to advise a litigant how to proceed; (c) that he could seek relief by a letter to a judge; and (d) that time constraints and the nature of the judicial function permit judges to respond to letters from litigants. Merely because petitioner persisted in requesting appointment of counsel, requesting legal advice from court personnel, and sending letters after being told that he instead must file motions does not establish a basis for tolling of any limitation period, whether state or federal. Moreover, petitioner was told within the limitation period that counsel was not being appointed by the state court. While his incorrect belief that he had an unqualified right to appointment of counsel provided no basis for tolling in the first instance, he clearly was advised within the limitation period that the state court was not appointing counsel.
More to the point, none of the circumstances relied upon by petitioner in the state courts stood in the way of his timely filing a federal petition. Following his direct appeal, petitioner had exhausted constitutional claims.
A failure of the state district court to grant petitioner's request for appointment of counsel to file a state petition did not stand in the way of petitioner filing a timely federal petition. He had no right to appointment of counsel to prepare and file either petition.
A failure of the state district court and state court clerk to provide petitioner legal advice regarding the filing of a state petition did not stand in the way of petitioner filing a timely federal petition. It is not the role of court personnel to provide advice as to either.
A failure of the state district judge to actively correspond with petitioner in response to his letters did not stand in the way of petitioner filing a timely federal petition.
A failure of the state district court to have petitioner transported to appear at state court hearings did not stand in the way of petitioner filing a timely federal petition. Petitioner's argument that such failure deprived him of due process has no relevance to equitable tolling of the federal limitation period. Petitioner must demonstrate that extraordinary circumstances stood in the way of and prevented him from filing a timely federal petition. Not being transported for state court hearings did not prevent petitioner from filing in a federal court, whether in Las Vegas, Nevada, or Jonesboro, Arkansas.
Nor did any alleged failure by the local jail to comply with the specifics of this Court's order regarding law library access for petitioner's federal criminal case constitute an extraordinary circumstance that stood in the way of and caused an untimely filing of the federal petition. The Court's order was issued in connection with petitioner's then-current efforts to file pro se motions in his federal criminal case over and above what his counsel had filed. Nothing in the Court's order established a minimum threshold required for petitioner to be able to file a federal habeas petition — as to a state criminal conviction that was not the subject of the federal criminal case. In any event, there is no requirement that a convicted state inmate have law library access of "twelve hours a day on the days he is presently scheduled to have access to the law library" in order to file a timely federal petition.
Petitioner maintains that he had access to neither the law library nor his legal materials for a 49 day period from November 26, 2009, through January 15, 2010. However, when such access was restored on January 15, 2010, petitioner had (a) all of this legal materials back, including a nearly completed state petition, (b) exhausted federal constitutional claims from the direct appeal; and, importantly, (c) 46 days left in the federal limitation period. Nothing stood in the way of petitioner filing a federal petition with the materials then on hand and then seeking an opportunity to amend and/or a stay to exhaust any unexhausted claims in the state courts. Cf. Waldron-Ramsey v. Pacholke, 556 F.3d 1008, 1014 (9th Cir. 2009)(the petitioner's lack of access to all of his files did not provide a viable basis for equitable tolling because he could have filed a timely original petition and then sought to amend to allege additional information). A different issue perhaps might have been presented if the petitioner had missed the federal deadline by a matter of days in March 2010 following a diligent but unsuccessful effort to file a timely federal petition after getting his legal materials back on January 15, 2010. But petitioner did not file a federal petition until more than a yearand-a-half later, on or about July 25, 2011. Clearly, the limitations on access while petitioner was in segregation confinement for 49 days prior to the expiration of the federal limitation period did not cause a failure to file by March 2, 2010, much less all the way through to July 25, 2011.
Moreover, all of petitioner's extensive filings — in the state district court, in federal court in the Eastern District of Arkansas, in the state supreme court, and in the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals — belie any claim that petitioner was unable to obtain sufficient access to the courts in order to file a timely federal petition. His extensive filings prior to March 2, 2010 — including a 22 page filing in federal court in Arkansas the day before the expiration of the federal limitation period — wholly belie any claim that he could not instead have been filing a timely federal habeas petition. Petitioner's extensive filings also after March 2, 2010, reinforce the point that even if he had established equitable tolling prior to that date, which he has not, he nonetheless demonstrated his ability to seek judicial relief more than a year prior to the July 25, 2011, constructive filing date of the federal petition.
The showing that petitioner tenders in support of his claim of equitable tolling thus — on its face — neither presents a potentially viable basis for equitable tolling nor warrants further factual development. In the final analysis, however, petitioner's July 5, 2011, letter to the Clerk of this Court — referenced in numbered paragraph 50, supra — completely undercuts the already insufficient showing that petitioner has presented. What the July 5, 2011, letter shows — by petitioner's own words — is that petitioner did not file a federal habeas petition sooner because he erroneously believed that he had a year from the conclusion of the state supreme court proceeding on his extraordinary petition to file a federal petition. Petitioner's claims herein that the myriad circumstances extensively outlined in his response instead caused the untimely filing are belied by his own words. Petitioner's own words belie a claim that anything other than his failure to properly calculate the running of the federal limitation period caused him to fail to file a timely federal petition.
Under established law, a petitioner's pro se status and alleged ignorance of the law does not provide a basis for equitable tolling of the federal limitation period. See, e.g., Waldron-Ramsey, 556 F.3d at 1013 n.4; Rasberry v. Garcia, 448 F.3d 1150, 1154 (9th Cir. 2006). Miscalculation of the federal limitation period by the petitioner in particular does not provide a basis for equitable tolling. Waldron-Ramsey, 556 F.3d at 1011. Petitioner's own words establish that he directed his efforts extensively to other litigation in state and federal court under an erroneous belief that he had a year from the conclusion of the state supreme court proceedings on his extraordinary writ petition to file a federal petition. He did not. The federal limitation period already had expired before he filed that proceeding.
Petitioner therefore has failed to demonstrate that extraordinary circumstances stood in his way and prevented a timely federal filing. Nor has petitioner demonstrated that further factual development adding further detail potentially would lead to a different conclusion.
Petitioner further has failed to demonstrate that he pursued his rights diligently. Dogged pursuit of other litigation in other courts, including a federal action in Arkansas, does not demonstrate that petitioner pursued his rights diligently with regard to federal postconviction relief. Persistence in repeatedly requesting collateral requests for appointed counsel and/or to be transported to state court hearings does not constitute diligence in doing what actually was necessary to present timely post-conviction claims. It would have been clear to any reasonable litigant, including a lay litigant, very early on that the state court was not going to appoint counsel, respond to requests for relief presented in letters, and/or order that petitioner be transported from custody for motion settings after the conclusion of his original state criminal proceeding. Petitioner's focus on such matters rather than on actually presenting claims pro se — i.e., not himself seeking relief after not obtaining the requested assistance and/or personal attendance at motion settings — perhaps may show other characteristics. However, it does not show diligence by the lay litigant in actually doing what was necessary to pursue post-conviction relief. A diligent petitioner — like many who pursue post-conviction relief in this Court — instead would have promptly sought post-conviction relief rather than continuing to doggedly litigate his other procedural requests after no appointment of counsel was forthcoming. That is, diligence requires that, after one has not received requested help, one then proceeds promptly to seek relief without such assistance.
Petitioner therefore has failed to establish a potentially viable basis for equitable tolling or for further inquiry regarding same.
Petitioner further suggests that he can establish delayed accrual under 28 U.S.C § 2244(d)(1)(B) on the basis that the limitation period instead ran from "the date on which the impediment to filing an application created by State action in violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States is removed, if the applicant was prevented from filing by such action." He maintains that the alleged circumstances discussed above as to equitable tolling constituted such an impediment.
Delayed accrual is available to a petitioner under § 2244(d)(1)(B) only if the alleged impediment "altogether prevented him from presenting his claims in any form, to any court." Ramirez v. Yates, 571 F.3d 993, 1001 (9th Cir. 2009)(emphasis in original). Nothing in the alleged circumstances relied upon by petitioner prevented him from presenting his claims in any form to any court while the federal limitation period otherwise was running after March 2, 2009, through March 2, 2010. During that time, petitioner presented multiple papers to the state district court and also initiated and pursued a federal civil rights action in the Eastern District of Arkansas. Nothing that the state district court or his jailers did or failed to do during that time period prevented petitioner from also filing a timely federal habeas petition in this Court in Las Vegas while he was incarcerated in North Las Vegas. He simply did not file a federal petition during the putative running of the federal limitation period while he instead was pursuing other judicial relief in multiple other courts, both prior to and following the putative expiration of the federal limitation period on March 2, 2010.
Delayed accrual under § 2244(d)(1)(B) therefore is not applicable to this case.
The Court accordingly holds that the federal petition is time-barred under § 2244(d).
The Court further holds in the alternative that the petition is subject to immediate dismissal because the petition is completely unexhausted.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 2254(b)(1)(A), a habeas petitioner first must exhaust his state court remedies on a claim before presenting that claim to the federal courts. To satisfy this exhaustion requirement, the claim must have been fairly presented to the state courts completely through to the highest court available, in this case the Supreme Court of Nevada. E.g., Peterson v. Lampert, 319 F.3d 1153, 1156 (9th Cir. 2003)(en banc); Vang v. Nevada, 329 F.3d 1069, 1075 (9th Cir. 2003). The exhaustion requirement insures that the state courts, as a matter of federal-state comity, will have the first opportunity to pass upon and correct alleged violations of federal constitutional guarantees. See, e.g., Coleman v. Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 731(1991). A petition that is completely unexhausted is subject to immediate dismissal without further advisements or proceedings. See, e.g., Rasberry v. Garcia, 448 F.3d 1150, 1154 (9th Cir. 2006); Jiminez v. Rice, 276 F.3d 478, 481 (9th Cir.2001).
In the present case, all of the claims in the federal petition are based upon claims of ineffective assistance of counsel. While petitioner includes additional conclusory allegations of a denial of, e.g., due process, all of the claims are grounded in operative factual allegations asserting that petitioner's constitutional rights were violated due to alleged ineffective assistance of counsel.
Such claims are not considered on direct appeal under Nevada state practice. Nor were any such claims of alleged ineffective assistance of counsel either raised or considered on direct appeal in this particular case.
The only proceeding perhaps for collateral review filed by petitioner was the May 18, 2010, original petition for extraordinary relief filed in the Supreme Court of Nevada.
As noted previously, the state supreme court denied the original petition on the following grounds:
June 9, 2010, Order Denying Petition in No. 56047.
It is long-established law that a claim is not fairly presented and is not exhausted when a petitioner fails to present the claim in state district court under available state postconviction procedures and instead presents the claim in an original petition to the state's high court seeking to invoke an extraordinary discretionary jurisdiction. See, e.g., Ex parte Hawk, 321 U.S. 114, 116 (1944); Sweet v. Cupp, 640 F.2d 233, 238 (9th Cir. 1981). Accord Lindquist v. Gardner, 770 F.2d 876 (9th Cir. 1985). See also Castille v. Peoples, 489 U.S. 346, 351 (1989)(presenting a claim in a procedural context in which the merits of the claim will not be considered, or will be considered only in special circumstances, does not constitute fair presentation of the claim); Roettgen v. Copeland, 33 F.3d 36, 38 (9th Cir. 1994)(applying the rule to the filing of an original writ petition in a state high court).
Accordingly, even if this Court were to assume, arguendo, that the ineffective assistance claims in the federal petition are the same as any claims in the original proceeding in the Supreme Court of Nevada, the presentation of the claims in that petition or letter did not fairly present and exhaust the claims in that court. The Supreme Court of Nevada explicitly stated that it did not consider the merits of any claim when it declined to exercise an extraordinary original jurisdiction.
Petitioner's arguments that the state supreme court has such an extraordinary original jurisdiction accordingly beg the question. The court's order declining to exercise the extraordinary discretionary jurisdiction expressly without deciding the merits of any claim leads to a conclusion that no claims were fairly presented to and considered by the court in that proceeding. E.g., Ex parte Hawk, supra.
Petitioner's arguments that exhaustion was not required because he allegedly had no available state process also miss the mark.
The state district court's failure to appoint counsel did not render state corrective process unavailable. Nor did the state district court's failure to order that petitioner be transported for motion settings after his conviction render state corrective process unavailable to petitioner. Countless inmates timely file state post-conviction petitions without first being appointed counsel and/or transported for state court motion settings.
Nor did the state district court's denial of petitioner's post-expiration request for an extension of time to file a state petition render state corrective process unavailable to petitioner. Petitioner at any time after the expiration of the state limitations period could have filed a state petition (as, indeed, he actually could have done prior to the expiration of the limitation period with diligence in actually presenting claims) and sought to establish good cause for his failure to file timely petition. Even if that petition ultimately were denied as untimely, through to a completed appeal from denial of the petition in the state supreme court, petitioner then would have exhausted his ineffective-assistance claims through available state court procedure. Petitioner instead presented requests to the district court for an extension of the limitation period and thereafter sent a letter to the state supreme court that was denied as an extraordinary petition without consideration of the merits. Petitioner's failure to actually file the allegedly nearly-completed state petition — not any state action — stands as the only reason for his failure to exhaust his claims through available state court procedure. In short, state corrective process was available, but it simply was not actually invoked by petitioner by the filing of the allegedly nearly-completed state petition.
Whether the issue is equitable tolling, delayed accrual under § 2244(d)(1)(B), or instead as here exhaustion of state judicial remedies, a petitioner at some point must press forward and actually present claims in a post-conviction petition. Being denied appointment of counsel, transport for a personal appearance for motion settings, or even a requested extension of the state limitations period did not render state corrective process unavailable. Petitioner asserted that he had a nearly-completed state post-conviction petition, but he never actually filed it in the state district court and pursued it through to the state high court. The state supreme court's order declining to hear his May 2010 petition, without addressing the merits of any claims, clearly did not foreclose any further possible relief in the state courts.
Petitioner's remaining arguments and inapposite legal citation similarly provide no basis for constructive exhaustion of the wholly unexhausted petition.
The Court accordingly holds in the alternative that the petition also is subject to immediate dismissal as a wholly unexhausted petition.
IT THEREFORE IS ORDERED that the petition shall be DISMISSED with prejudice as time-barred.
IT FURTHER IS ORDERED that a certificate of appealability is DENIED. Jurists of reason would not find the Court's dismissal of the petition as time-barred or, in the alternative, as completely unexhausted to be debatable or wrong. With regard to untimeliness, petitioner's extensively detailed presentation does not establish a potentially viable basis for equitable tolling or delayed accrual under 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(B). The federal limitation period expired on its face on March 2, 2010, but the federal petition was not constructively filed until on or about July 25, 2011. Over the course of the time from March 2, 2009, forward, petitioner filed and pursued multiple requests for procedural relief in the state district court, a civil rights action in federal court in Arkansas, an appeal to the Eighth Circuit in that action, and a proceeding in the state supreme court. Nothing in the state district court's denial of petitioner's requests, inter alia, for appointment of counsel, to be transported for motion settings, and/or for an extension of time to file a state petition stood in the way of and prevented petitioner from filing a timely federal petition. Nor did a 49 day period in segregation confinement proximately cause an untimely federal filing. A July 5, 2011, letter by petitioner to the Clerk of this Court instead reflects that the untimely federal filing was due to petitioner's miscalculation of the federal limitation period.
IT FURTHER IS ORDERED that counsel for respondents shall enter a notice of appearance by an individual attorney within
The Clerk of Court shall enter final judgment accordingly, in favor of respondents and against petitioner, dismissing this action with prejudice.