This appeal presents another variation on the question whether time spent pursuing state collateral remedies is excluded from the year provided by 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d) for commencing a federal collateral attack. Section 2244(d)(2) says that “time during which a properly filed application for State post-conviction or other collateral review with respect to the pertinent judgment or claim is pending shall not be counted toward any period of limitation under this subsection.” We held in
Freeman v. Page,
Angel Fernandez was convicted before § 2244(d) came into being as part of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act. We therefore treat April 24, 1996, as the beginning of his year to seek federal collateral review.
Gendron v. United States,
The motion by petitioner for leave to file a late petition for leave to appeal is allowed and is treated as a petition for leave to appeal.
Although it accepted Fernandez’s petition — a step that rendered it “properly filed” under the rationale of Jefferson — by order of December 3, 1997, the Supreme Court of Illinois denied the petition for leave to appeal. About three months later Fernandez turned to federal court, where the district judge dismissed his petition as untimely.
Jefferson and Freeman do not decide how much time is excluded when a state court permits an untimely filing. There are four possibilities, in order of increasing amounts excluded:
• Time between the order allowing the untimely filing and the final decision on the merits.
• Time between the application for leave to file out of time and the final decision on the merits.
• Time between the application for leave to file out of time and the final decision on the merits, plus the time originally available (but not used) to file a timely application.
• Time between the previous adjudication of petitioner’s claim and the final decision on the merits.
The first possibility (which the district court adopted) treats the petition as on file “during” September 24,1997, to December 3, 1997, or 70 days; the second treats the petition as on file from June 12, 1997, to December 3, 1997, or 174 days; the third adds 21 days, for a total of 195; the fourth treats the petition as on file from July 19, 1996, the date of the appellate decision, to December 3,1997, or 502 days.
Section 2244(d) does not address this subject directly, but the phrase “during which a properly filed application for State ... collateral review ... is pending” is incompatible with two of the four possibilities. The first does not fit, because it concentrates on the period while the court is considering the application, rather than the entire period “during which [the application] is pending”. Fernandez filed his motion on June 12, 1997, and it was pending between then and December 3, 1997. In this respect a motion for leave to pursue an untimely application works like a motion for leave to commence a second collateral attack under state law. We held in Tinker that if the state court declines to allow a second collateral attack, then none of the period following the application counts as time “during which a properly filed [application] is pending”; but if the state court allows the second collateral attack to proceed, then the whole period from filing to conclusion logically is excluded under § 2244(d)(2). Just so with motions to file untimely appeals and applications for discretionary review. But no one would suppose, if a state allows a second collateral attack, that this excludes all time since the prisoner began his first collateral attack, even though nothing at all was “pending” during the intervening months. Just so, again, with motions to file untimely appeals and applications for discretionary review.
Fernandez did not have a collateral attack under consideration by Illinois between July 19, 1996, and June 12, 1997, so none of that was time “during which a properly filed application for State ... collateral review ... is pending”. This 11-month gap, plus the 3 months between the state Supreme Court’s final decision and Fernandez’s federal petition, add to more than a year of countable time, so the district court correctly denied his petition as time-barred. Our conclusion that the right period of exclusion is all time between the filing of the request to excuse the default and the state court’s decision on the merits (if it elects to excuse the default) matches
*980
the period we selected in
Jefferson,
but the issue had not been raised by the parties, and
Jefferson
did not explain why we chose this period, rather than one of the other possibilities. Now that the question has been squarely presented, we convert Jefferson’s assumption into a holding. It is unnecessary to decide, and we therefore reserve, the question whether time provided for filing a petition or appeal to a higher court is treated as time during which an application is pending, if the time expires without a filing. See also
Gendron v. United States,
Only one other court of appeals has dealt with this subject.
Saffold v. Newland,
Saffold’s approach also would give § 2244(d)(2) a Cheshire-eat like quality, both there and not there at the same time. Suppose Fernandez had applied for federal collateral relief in February 1998 without seeking review by the Supreme Court of Illinois. That application unquestionably would have been out of time. Next suppose that, after the federal court dismissed his petition, he asked the Supreme Court of Illinois for permission to file an untimely petition for leave to appeal, and that court accepted the petition but denied leave to appeal. Under Saffold the clock would be reset; it would be as if a proper state petition had been pending the whole time, and Fernandez would be able to file a timely federal petition. Retroactive changes in timeliness are bad enough; if, as Saffold tells us, the state petition really had been pending the whole time, then Fernandez’s first federal petition in this hypothetical sequence should have been dismissed or stayed for failure to exhaust state remedies — for a state prisoner can’t obtain federal relief while “a properly filed application for State ... collateral review *981 ... is pending” in state court. But of course a federal court would not dismiss a petition on exhaustion grounds after the state process had come to an end and the time for review had expired. The court would say, correctly, that no state process was pending or available. State processes ended when the time to seek further review expired. They may be revived, but the prospect of revival does not make a case “pending” in the interim. Saffold implements a make-believe approach, under which petitions were continuously pending whenever a state court allows an untimely filing. We prefer reality. An untimely petition is just that; it is filed when it is filed, and it was not “pending” long before its filing. We decline to follow Saffold. (Because this decision creates a conflict among the circuits, it was circulated before release to all judges in active service. See Circuit Rule 40(e). No judge requested a hearing en banc.)
Saffold
has two additional problems, each of which would lead us to reject its conclusion even if we agreed with its understanding of the “time during which a properly filed application for State ... collateral review.... is pending”. First, Saffold did not ask for leave to file an untimely petition for discretionary review of the appellate decision rejecting his claim. He filed an original petition for a writ of habe-as corpus. It is not possible to call this a continuation of the earlier petition that keeps the initial petition “pending” for purposes of § 2244(d)(2). It is more like an application for leave to commence a new collateral proceeding. Second, the Supreme Court of California did not deny Saffold’s petition without comment. Instead it denied the petition “on the merits and for lack of diligence.” The ninth circuit held that a dual-ground denial is one on the merits, and that the additional finding of procedural default must be ignored for federal purposes. That conclusion cannot be reconciled with
Harris,
Affirmed.
