ALLEN, COMMISSIONER, ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS v. SIEBERT
No. 06-1680
Supreme Court of the United States
Decided November 5, 2007
552 U.S. 3
Dаniel Siebert was convicted and sentenced to death in the State of Alabama for the murder of Linda Jarman. Siebert‘s conviction and sentence wеre affirmed on direct appeal, and the certificate of judgment issued on May 22, 1990. This Court denied certiorari on November 5, 1990. Siebert v. Alabama, 498 U. S. 963. On August 25, 1992, Siebert filed a petition fоr postconviction relief in Alabama state court. The state courts denied the petition as untimely, however, because it was filed approximаtely three months after the expiration of the then-applicable 2-year statute of limitations,
The Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA) established a 1-year statute of limitations for filing a federal habeas petition.
The District Court dismissed Siebert‘s habeas petition as untimely, reasoning that an application for state postconviction relief is not “properly filed” if it was rejected by the state court on statute-of-limitations grounds. The Court of Appeals reversed, however, holding that Siebert‘s state postconviction petition was “properly filed” within the meaning of
While Siebert‘s habeas petition was pending on remand in the District Court, we decided Pace v. DiGuglielmo, 544 U. S. 408 (2005). In Pace, we hеld that a state postconviction petition rejected by the state court as untimely is not “properly filed” within the meaning of
The Court of Appeals’ carveout of time limits that operate as affirmative defenses is inconsistent with our holding in Pace. Although the Pennsylvania statute of limitations at issue in Pace happens to have been a jurisdictional time bar under state law, see Commonwealth v. Banks, 556 Pa. 1, 5-6,
In short, our holding in Pace turned not on the nature of the particular time limit relied upon by the state court, but rather on the fact that time limits generally establish “conditions to filing” a petition for state postconviction relief. Whether a time limit is jurisdictional, an affirmative defense, or something in between, it is a “condition to filing,” Artuz, supra, at 9—it places a limit on how long a prisoner can wait before filing a postconviction petition. The fact that Alabama‘s
Excluding from Pace‘s scope those time limits that operate as affirmative defenses would leave a gaping hole in what we plаinly meant to be a general rule, as statutes of limitations are often affirmative defenses. See, e. g.,
We therefore reiterate now what we held in Pace: “When a postconviction petition is untimely under state law, ‘that [is] the end of the matter’ for purposes of
The petition for certiorari is granted. The judgment of the Court of Aрpeals is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
There is an obvious distinction between time limits thаt go to the very initiation of a petition, and time limits that create an affirmative defense that can be waived. Compare the majority and dissenting opinions in John R. Sand & Gravel Co. v. United States, 457 F. 3d 1345 (CA Fed. 2006), cert. granted, 550 U. S. 968 (2007). The time limit under consideration in Pace v. DiGuglielmo, 544 U. S. 408 (2005), was of the former kind—as the Court‘s opinion expressly noted. See id., at 417 (discussing “time limits, which go to the very initiation of a petition and a court‘s ability to consider that petition“). The time limit at issue in this case is of the latter, distinguishable kind—as the Court of Appeals correctly stated. 480 F. 3d 1089, 1090 (CA11 2007) (holding that Pace did not address statutory tolling for “a statute of limitations that operated as an affirmative defense“).
It is true that there is language in the majority opinion in Pace that is broad enough to cover both kinds of limitations provisions, but only the former (those that do not operate as affirmative defenses) can even arguably provide a reasonable basis for concluding that an untimely petition has not been “properly filed” within the meaning of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), 110 Stat. 1214.* I therefore respectfully dissent.
