delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 2244(d)(2) of Title 28 U. S. C. (1994 ed., Supp. IV) provides that “[tjhe time during which a properly filed application for State post-conviction or other collateral review with respect to the pertinent judgment or claim is рending shall not be counted toward any period of limitation under this subsection.” This case presents the question whether an application for state postconviction relief containing claims that are procedurally barred is “properly filed” within the meaning of this provision.
I
After a 1984 jury trial in the Supreme Court of New York, Queens County, respondent was convicted of attempted mur *6 der, criminal possession of a weapon, rеckless endangerment, criminal possession of stolen property, and unauthorized use of a motor vehicle. The Appellate Division affirmed, and the New York Court of Appeals denied leave to apрeal. After unsuccessfully pursuing state postconvietion relief in 1991, respondent in 1995 moved pro se to vacate his judgment of conviction. On November 30, 1995, the state trial court denied the motion in an oral decision on the recоrd; no reasons were given. Respondent claims never to have received a copy of a written order reflecting the denial, despite several written requests.
In February 1998, respondent filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, alleging, inter alia, that the state trial court’s refusal to allow a defense witness to testify deprived him of his right to a fair trial and his right to present witnesses in his own defense, that his absence from a pretrial hearing violated due process, and that his trial counsel was constitutionally ineffective in failing to object to allegedly improper remarks made by the prosecutоr in summation. The District Court summarily dismissed the petition as untimely, noting that it had been filed more than one year and nine months after the effective date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA), 110 Stat. 1214.
The United States Court оf Appeals for the Second Circuit reversed and remanded.
*8 II
Petitioner contends here, as he did below, that an application for state postconviction or other collateral review is not “properly filed” for purposеs of § 2244(d)(2) unless it complies with all mandatory state-law procedural requirements that would bar review of the merits of the application. We disagree.
An application as stood, when it is delivered to, and acсepted by, the appropriate court officer for placement into the official record. See,
e. g., United States
v.
Lombardo,
Petitioner contends that such an interpretation of the statutory phrase renders the word “properly,” and possibly both words (“properly filed”), surplusage, since if the provision omittеd those words, and tolled simply for “[t]he time during which a[n]... application for State post-conviction [relief] is pending,” it would necessarily condition tolling on compliance with filing requirements of the sort described above. That is not so. If, for example, an application is erroneously accepted by the clerk of a court lacking jurisdiction, or is erroneously accepted without the requisite filing fee, it will be pending, but not properly filed.
Petitioner’s interрretation is flawed for a more fundamen-reason. By construing “properly filed application” to mean “application raising claims that are not mandatorily procedurally barred,” petitioner elides the difference between an “application” and a “claim.” Only individual
claims,
and not the application containing those claims, can procedurally defaulted under state law pursuant to our holdings in
Coleman
v.
Thompson,
Petitioner’s remaining arguments are beside the point. He argues, for example, that tolling for applications that raise procedurally barred claims does nothing to enable the exhaustion of available state remedies — which is the object of § 2244(d)(2). Respondent counters that petitioner’s view would trigger a flood of protective filings in federal courts, absorbing their resources in threshold interpretations of state proсedural rules. Whatever merits these and other policy arguments may have, it is not the province of this Court to rewrite the statute to accommodate them. We hold as we do because respondent’s view seеms to us the only permissible interpretation of the text — which may, for all we know, have slighted' policy concerns on one or the other side of the issue as part of the legislative compromise that enabled the law to be enacted.
I — I b-t I — I
The state procedural bars at issue in this case — N. Y. Crim. Proc. Law §§440.10(2)(a) and (c) (McKinney 1994)— simply prescribe a rule of decision for a court confronted *11 with claims that were “previously determined on the merits upon an appeal from the judgment” of conviction or that could have been raised on direct appeal but were not: “[T]he court must deny” such claims for relief. Neither provision purports tо set forth a condition to filing, as opposed to a condition to obtaining relief. Motions to vacate that violate these provisions will not be successful, but they have been properly delivered and aсcepted so long as the filing conditions have been met. Consequently, the alleged failure of respondent’s application to comply with §§440.10(2)(a) and (c) does not render it “[im]properly filed” for purposes of § 2244(d)(2). The judgment of the Court of Appeals must therefore be affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Notes
The cited provisions read in full as follows:
“Notwithstanding the provisions of subdivision one [which sets forth various grounds upon which a court may vacate its earlier judgment], the court must deny a motion to vacаte a judgment when:
“(a) The ground or issue raised upon the motion was previously determined on the merits upon an appeal from the judgment, unless since the time of such appellate determination there has been a retroactively effective change in the law controlling such issue; or
“(e) Although sufficient facts appear on the record of the proceedings underlying the judgment to have permitted, upon appeal from such judgment, adequate review of the ground or issue raised upon the motion, no *8 such appellate review or determination occurred owing to the defendant’s unjustifiable failure to take or perfeсt an appeal during the prescribed period or to his unjustifiable failure to raise such ground or issue upon an appeal actually perfected by him; . . . .” N. Y. Crim. Proc. Law §§440.10(2)(a) and (e) (McKinney 1994).
We express no view on exceptions to a timely filing requirement can prevent a late application
from
being considered improperly filed. See,
e.g., Smith
v.
Ward,
