California state prisoner, Brian David Frye, filed a 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition after the expiration of the one-year statute of limitations contained in the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”), 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1). The key issue in this appeal is whether the statute of limitations was equitably tolled when his attorney negligently failed to file a petition within the year, even as adjusted to account for statutory tolling. The district court held that there was no equitable tolling. We appointed counsel because the issue is one of first impression in this circuit. We have been greatly assisted by appointed counsel’s participation through our Pro Bono Representation Project.
Petitioner was tried on charges of first degree murder and attempted murder on May 2, 1989. On August of that year, the jury found him guilty of those offenses. On October 20, 1989, the California Court of Appeal affirmed petitioner’s conviction and partially modified his sentence. The California Supreme Court denied his petition for review in September 1992. Petitioner then pursued state habeas relief, beginning with a fifing in Sacramento County Superior Court on October 4,1996. The Superior Court denied the petition on December 4, 1996. On February 3, 1997, petitioner filed an appeal. The California Court of Appeal denied the petition on February 21, and the California Supreme Court eventually denied the petition on May 28, 1997. Petitioner filed his federal habeas petition in April 1998, over five years after the California Supreme Court
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denied his direct appeal. His appointed counsel on appeal have shown that the AEDPA statute should be statutorily tolled for varying reasons, principally because of the pendency of state habeas proceedings.
See Nino v. Galaza,
For a petitioner to have the benefit of equitable tolling of the AEDPA statute, we have held that there must be “extraordinary circumstances” beyond the prisoner’s control that made it impossible to file a petition on time.
Calderon v. United States District Court (Beeler),
In
Beeler,
a capital habeas corpus case, we held that the statute was equitably tolled when the petitioner’s attorney moved out of the state, a matter over which the petitioner had no control, and that made it impossible for another attorney to file a petition within the statutory limits. In capital cases, an indigent petitioner has a statutory right to counsel.
See
21 U.S.C. § 848(q)(4)(B). Thus, the dereliction of his appointed counsel made it impossible for the petitioner to file the petition he was statutorily entitled to file.
Beeler,
This case is not a death penalty case, however, and therefore the petitioner did not have a right to counsel on a habeas petition.
See Bonin v. Vasquez,
AFFIRMED.
