A series of missteps has derailed this litigation.
Bernard Beyer is in prison on two unrelated convictions. The district court concluded that it is imperative to challenge both in a single federal collateral attack, and when Beyer failed to amend his petition challenging the first conviction to add an attack on the second, the court dismissed his separate challenge as “second or successive” within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b).
Next a judge of this court issued a certificate of appealability identifying a single question — “whether a prisoner serving consecutive sentences resulting from separate court judgments may bring separate petitions for writs of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 without facing the bar of 28 U.S.C. § 2244, if the conviction that is the subject of the second § 2254 petition was not the subject of a prior § 2254 petition.” This certificate does not comply with 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(3), which provides that the judge must specifically identify a substantial
constitutional
issue. Aware of this requirement, which was reiterated in
Slack v. McDaniel,
At this point either side could—and both should—have brought the problem to our attention. Appellate judges reviewing requests for certificates of appealability do not have counsel’s familiarity with the ease (review is expedited and based on a subset of the record), and the task of drafting the order’s language often is delegated to staff attorneys, who may lack appreciation of thе pitfalls in collateral-review practice. Counsel could have seen at a glance that this order was problematic and called it to the issuing judge’s attention. See
Cage v. McCaughtry,
Of course, if the state had called the problem to our attention before briefing, this would not necessarily have led us to dismiss the appeal. Instead thе judge who issued the certificate (or a motions panel) would have inquired whether a substantial constitutional issue is presented, and if so would have expanded the certificate to encompass it; but if there is no such issue, the case could have been concluded expeditiously. Ramunno settles these matters (and adds that if the problem goes unnoticed until after briefing, there is no jurisdictional impediment to resolution of the appeal).
Beyer’s quiеscence had a greater potential to cause problems, because it created a risk that even a constitutional violation would not be enough. His counsel took the view that, because the certificate did not specify any constitutional issue, they were free to limit their attention to the statutory question. After all, the certificate says that “to the extent required by [Slack ], the parties’ briefs should address the constitutional questions”. Reсognizing that neither Slack nor § 2253(c) calls for an issue to be briefed, counsel took the view that this part of the certificate was a dead letter. They did not consider the possibility that the certificate’s defect, coupled with thеir own failure to accept the judge’s invitation to brief constitutional issues, could lead to the collateral attack’s demise.
The Attorney General of Wisconsin, who like Beyer had done nothing about the omission of a constitutional issue from the certificate, pounced on the equivalent omission from Beyer’s brief. Relying on
Anderson v. Litscher,
Notwithstanding these consideratiоns, a court ought not follow W.C. Fields’ ukase: “Never give a sucker an even break.” A litigant whose lawyer is misled by the language of a judicial order should not suffer ill consequences. Beyer’s appellate counsel took the language of this certificate of appealability literally. Maybe they shouldn’t have, but they did, and their client need not pay a penalty for excess literalism. The order says that constitutional questions must be briefed to the extеnt that Slack requires, and counsel rightly concluded that Slack imposes duties on judges rather than lawyers, and thus never requires any particular question to be briefed. The duty is a judicial one — to state in the certificate the substantial constitutional question to which the statutory issue is pendent. Counsel took a risk by disdaining their opportunity to show that Beyer has a substantial constitutional claim that justifies further proceedings in the district court, but given the certificate’s language the worst consequences of risk-taking do not come to pass. Future petitioners and their lawyers should undertake to show that a substantial constitutional issue exists, however, lest the court of appeals conclude that the procedural error is harmless and a remand pointless.
Thus we arrive at the proсedural question, on which the state commendably has confessed error. Beyer contends, and Wisconsin concedes, that a prisoner is entitled to one free-standing collateral attack per judgment, rather than one attack per stretch of imprisonment (as the district court held). Independent consideration brings us out in the same place as the parties.
Section 2244(b) provides that a second or successive “claim” must be dismissed unlеss the court of appeals has approved its filing under § 2244(b)(3). The statute does not define the word “claim,” which can cause problems for mul
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tiple petitions with respect to a single judgment when the initial petition did not end in a rеsolution of the merits. See, e.g.,
Stewart v. Martinez-Villareal,
Under Rule 2(d) of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts, prisoners must file separately to challenge judgments of different courts. Although Rulе 2(d) leaves open the possibility of one collateral attack on multiple judgments of the same court, these should be rare. Time factors will differ, exhaustion of state remedies may occur at different times (which will prеclude joinder), and so on. Often a prisoner will be required to challenge one sentence (lest the time run) before another is ripe for collateral attack. When multiple convictions are amenable to simultaneous challenge (as Beyer’s were, having been imposed only five months apart by separate divisions of the same court), joinder might help a federal court determine whether a particular claim or theory is moot, for if the sentences are concurrent then an order rejecting a collateral attack on the longer sentence obviates anything else. Yet Beyer’s sentences are consecutive. Anyway, mootnеss depends on the outcome of a collateral attack (that is, the conclusion of the appellate process, not the decision of the district court), so there is rarely any compelling need for сonsolidation in the district court even if the sentences overlap.
Beyer is serving separate, and consecutive, sentences imposed by different state judges at different times for different criminal offenses. One is for drug crimеs and the other (the one now under challenge) for receiving stolen property. As we wrote in
O’Connor v. United States,
