Appellant Feldman filed in the district court a habeas corpus petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241 seeking release from custody and appointment of advisory counsel for his pending appeal from his conviction for unarmed bank robbery. Feldman alleged that certain errors by our court in the handling of his appeal from his conviction entitled him to the writ requested. Feldman did not allege any error in the trial court’s handling of his case, his conviction, or the sentence imposed. The district court denied his petition on the merits without deciding whether or not it had jurisdiction. Feldman timely appeals.
We do not address the merits of Feld-man’s habeas claims because the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to entertain Feldman’s habeas corpus petition. Instead, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand this matter to the district court with instructions to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
I.
In his habeas corpus petition, Feldman raises two claims which, during his appeal from his conviction, he had previously presented before our court of appeals: (1) that our court should have granted him advisory counsel on appeal from his conviction, and (2) that our court’s delay in hearing his appeal from this conviction violated his right to procedural due process. The two motions panels which ruled on these claims found them meritless and denied them.
Before the district court ruled on Feldman’s habeas corpus petition, another panel of our court decided the merits of his appeal from the conviction, rejecting each of Feldman’s claims of error in the trial.
United States v. Feldman,
After this court affirmed Feldman’s conviction, the district court decided Feldman’s habeas corpus claims adversely to Feld-man, apparently construing his petition as one requesting either premature release from his affirmed term of imprisonment or the granting of a new appeal with the aid of court-appointed, advisory counsel. The district court did not address the effect on its jurisdiction caused (1) by our court’s resolution of Feldman’s claims in the two motions he made during his appeal from the conviction or (2) by the then pending petition for certiorari before the Supreme Court.
II.
A district court
should not
entertain a habeas corpus petition while there is an appeal pending in this court or in the Supreme Court.
Black v. United States,
Because the Supreme Court had not yet decided how it would treat Feldman’s petition for certiorari prior to the district court’s handling of his habeas corpus petition, the district court had no authority to entertain the writ. Federal prisoners must exhaust their federal appellate review prior to filing a habeas corpus petition in the district court.
Cf. Martinez v. Roberts,
III.
The district court’s decision to review Feldman’s habeas corpus petition without deciding if it had jurisdiction to review matters already decided by our court raises additional concerns. Absent Supreme Court authority contrary to our decision in a case, a district court
cannot
entertain, even in a matter properly before it, a petition by a party which in effect seeks to undo our court’s resolution of a matter first addressed to and fully and fairly adjudicated by it.
Insurance Group Comm. v. Denver & Rio Grande Western R.R.,
As the district judge in Wolfson correctly held:
[T]he effect of [petitioner’s habeas corpus writ] is to [ask the district court] to review the discretionary actions of the Court of Appeals---- This the [district court] will not do. Whether [the petitioner] should have been or should be released ... pending certiorari to the Supreme Court is a matter exclusively within the jurisdiction and power of the Court of Appeals, the Supreme Court or any Judge or Justice thereof. Since the Court of Appeals ... ha[s] acted on [petitioner’s claims, the district court] is without power to [grant petitioner’s writ].
Wolfson,
Both of the claims presented by Feldman's habeas corpus petition were already decided by our court and the district court had no authority to “redecide” them — even where, as in this case, the district court’s resolution is in accord with the decisions made by our panels. Although some matters may be advanced for a second time in a habeas petition “even though the issue has been presented and resolved on direct appeal from a criminal conviction, ... we find here none of the elements ... warranting relitigation.”
Clayton v. United States,
IV.
Feldman complains that to rule that the district court lacks jurisdiction effectively denies him judicial recourse for redress of abuses by our court. This claim is meritless because the appropriate relief was actually available to Feldman within our court
Feldman could have applied to our court for an amendment to the mandate.
See, e.g., Newhouse,
V.
The cases cited to us by Feldman are inapposite. Each involves the availability of either habeas corpus relief in a district court from
state
court judgments or immediate relief from an alleged abuse in a federal court of appeals raised in the course of the appeal itself.
See, e.g., Od-sen v. Moore,
THE DISTRICT COURT’S JUDGMENT IS VACATED. THIS CASE IS REMANDED TO THE DISTRICT COURT WITH INSTRUCTIONS TO DISMISS FOR LACK OF SUBJECT MATTER JURISDICTION.
Notes
.
See United States v. Houser,
. Because it is not an “actual adjudication” under 28 U.S.C. § 2244(c), the Supreme Court’s subsequent denial of Feldman’s petition for certiorari,
see
— U.S. -,
.
But see Insurance Group Comm. v. Denver & Rio Grande Western R.R.,
