We have consolidated for decision two appeals by federal prisoners whose petitions for habeas corpus, filed under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 in the federal district courts in which they are imprisoned, which are different districts from the ones in which they were sentenced, were dismissed for want of jurisdiction. With irrelevant exceptions, a federal prisoner who wants to mount a collateral attack on the judgment pursuant to which he is imprisoned must do so by motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 (the federal prisoner’s habeas corpus substitute) in the district in which the judgment was rendered. The district courts in these two cases, not being the courts that sentenced these prisoners, were therefore correct that they had no jurisdiction. This ruling, and the dismissals based on it, leave these prisoners free to file their post-conviction petitions in the sentencing district. A dismissal for want of jurisdiction wipes out the petition, and so its refiling in the proper district is not a second or subsequent petition that under 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2) would require our permission to file.
In re Page,
When a court lacks jurisdiction, the ordinary course is, indeed, to dismiss, just as these two district courts did. But 28 U.S.C. § 1631, enacted in 1982, provides that a district court that finds it lacks jurisdiction over a case “shall, if it is in the interests of justice, transfer such action ... to any other court in which the action ... could have been brought at the time it was filed.” ' Since the term “interests of justice” is vague, district courts have a good deal of discretion in deciding whether to transfer a case.
Gunn v. United States Dept. of Agriculture,
A compelling reason for transfer is that the plaintiff, whose case if transferred is for statute of limitations purposes deemed by section 1631 to have been filed in the transferor court, e.g.,
Edwards v. INS,
The district courts in these cases did not, so far as appears, consider whether to transfer these eases; and so in the ordinary course we would remand. But as it is apparent from the appeal papers that both petitions for habeas corpus were untimely when filed, these cases fall within the “sure loser” exception to section 1631. Phillips filed his petition almost two years, and Watson more than three years, after each conviction had become final. The statutory deadline is, as we noted, one year, and neither appellant suggests that he fits within any of the four exceptions recognized by the statute.
AFFIRMED.
