Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b) (1994), the District Court has certified the following question for our consideration:
Can and should a federal district court in a federal habeas corpus action involving the death penalty hold the federal case in abeyance, retaining jurisdiction and maintaining the stay against execution, to allow the petitioner to exhaust his state remedies in a situation where it is unclear under state law that state procedures are available to the petitioner to raise his claims in state court?
We answer this question in the negative, holding that the proper course of action for a district court in these circumstances is to dismiss the petition for a writ of habeas corpus, put the petitioner to his state remedies, and lift the federal stay of execution.
I.
The evidence presented at Victor’s trial in state court overwhelmingly proved that on December 26, 1987, Victor murdered 82-year-old Alice Singleton in her home in Omaha, Nebraska, by slashing her throat several times. Victor had been Singleton’s gardener. A jury found Victor guilty of first degree murder and use of a weapon to commit a felony. A three-judge sentencing panel imposed the death penalty. On direct appeal, the Nebraska Supreme Court affirmed Victor’s conviction and the imposition of the death penalty.
State v. Victor, 235
Neb. 770,
*278 On September 2, 1994, Victor, representing himself, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, a motion for appointment of counsel, a motion for a stay of execution, and a motion to proceed in forma pauperis. The District Court, having jurisdiction to “entertain an application for a writ of habeas corpus” pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1994), granted Victor’s motions for appointment of counsel and for a stay of execution and granted in part his motion to proceed in forma pauperis. Victor’s appointed counsel filed an amended petition for a writ of habeas corpus on January 17, 1995. In that petition, Victor makes numerous claims for relief. Later, Victor realized that some of the claims in his amended petition never have been presented to the Nebraska state courts either on direct appeal or in post-conviction proceedings. Victor then requested the District Court to hold his petition in abeyance and maintain the stay of execution while he attempted to raise these claims in a second state petition for post-conviction relief. The District Court granted Victor’s motion over the state’s objection.
In its order granting Victor’s motion to hold his petition in abeyance and maintain the stay of execution, the District Court certified that the question set out above is “a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion” and “that an immediate appeal from the order may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation.”
Victor v. Hopkins,
II.
The state argues that the District Court abused its discretion when it granted Victor’s motion because both this Court and the Supreme Court have held that federal courts must dismiss habeas petitions that include both exhausted and unexhausted claims unless either the petitioner chooses to proceed on his exhausted claims only or the state waives the requirement of exhaustion. In this case, the state argues that it has waived exhaustion and, to a certain extent, urges that the case proceed to a decision on the merits. 1 Victor argues that, under other precedents of this Court, the District Court has the discretion to retain jurisdiction over a habeas petition pending a petitioner’s exhaustion of state-court remedies and that the state’s qualified waiver of the exhaustion requirement is insufficient to allow the District Court to reach the merits of his petition at this time.
A.
As an initial matter, we must consider whether the state has waived the exhaustion requirement. If the state’s waiver was effective, the question certified by the District Court would be moot. Exhaustion would not be necessary, and the District Court could choose to continue its proceedings on Victor’s habeas petition rather than holding it in abeyance. We conclude, however, that the state’s waiver of the exhaustion requirement was not effective.
The parties agree that Victor’s petition includes some new, unexhausted claims. In certain circumstances, a federal district court can consider the merits of an unexhausted claim when the exhaustion requirement has been waived by the state.
See Hampton v. Miller,
In its brief, the state argues that it has waived the exhaustion requirement. The District Court rejected that argument, holding that the state did not waive the exhaus
*279
tion requirement because the state retained the right to argue that Victor’s new claims for relief were procedurally defaulted in state court.
Victor v. Hopkins,
In order to be “exhausted” a claim must be “fairly presented” to [the state courts].... That Victor has not done....
Default ... is the antithesis of “fair presentment”. [sic] It is the price a litigant pays for failure to “fairly present” a claim within the procedural structures afforded by the state courts.
HopMns’s Brief at 15. The state is willing to forego the requirement that Victor fairly present his new claims to the state courts but wants to penalize Victor for failing to fairly present his claims. The state’s purported waiver, as the District Court properly held, is not an unqualified waiver of the exhaustion requirement, and the District Court did not err when it refused to accept the state’s waiver of the exhaustion requirement.
Having held that the state has not effectively waived the exhaustion requirement in this case, we now consider the proper procedure to be employed by a district court when faced with a habeas petition that includes both exhausted and unexhausted claims.
B.
The District Court has asked us whether it has the authority to hold in abeyance this petition for the writ of habeas corpus, thus retaining jurisdiction over the case, while Victor attempts to exhaust his remedies in state court. This is a question of law that we review de novo.
The statute governing habeas procedures provides as follows:
An application for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a person in custody pursuant to the judgment of a State court shall not be granted unless it appears that the applicant has exhausted the remedies available in the courts of the State, or that there is either an absence of available State corrective process or the existence of circumstances rendering such process ineffective to protect the rights of the prisoner.
28 U.S.C. § 2254(b) (1994). The exhaustion requirement “is grounded primarily upon the respect which federal courts have for the state judicial processes and upon the administrative necessities of the federal judiciary.”
Wade v. Mayo,
In
Rose v. Lundy,
Despite the apparent clarity of the holding of Rose v. Lundy, this Court has not always required the dismissal of petitions containing unexhausted claims. 2 As the District Court noted in its memorandum and order, and as the state acknowledges on appeal, we have, “over time, both ordered abeyance and affirmed denial of a requested abeyance in cases where ‘mixed’ petitions were before the district courts.” Hopkins’s Brief at 11. The certified question we here answer enables us to untangle this thicket.
Victor has directed our attention to three cases in which we have stated that district courts have discretionary authority to hold habeas petitions in abeyance and maintain stays of execution pending exhaustion of state remedies. In
Collins v. Lockhart,
we relied on
Rose v. Lundy
to reverse the district court’s denial of a habeas petition that contained both exhausted and unexhausted claims.
*281
After
Collins,
we made at least three additional conclusory statements, either in dicta or without independent analysis of the issue, regarding the authority of a court to hold a mixed petition in abeyance.
Collins
was cited as the sole authority for the proposition that a federal court may retain jurisdiction and hold a petition in abeyance in
Williams v. Wyrick,
Through our independent research, we have discovered one additional case in which we noted the possibility of retaining jurisdiction while a prisoner pursued unexhausted claims in state court. In
Sloan v. Delo,
In contradistinction to
Sloan
and the cases cited by Victor, we have repeatedly adhered to the command of
Rose v. Lundy
in other cases.
See, e.g., Williams v. Groose,
We conclude that any suggestion in our prior cases that a district court has broad discretion to hold in abeyance a habeas petition including both exhausted and unex-hausted claims pending exhaustion of state remedies is contrary to the Supreme Court’s explicit directions in
Rose v. Lundy.
Except for eases of the sort noted earlier,
see supra
note 2, a mixed petition must be dismissed or the petitioner must elect to proceed on only the exhausted claims. The District Court in this case, after considering our pri- or cases, noted that
Collins, Simmons,
and
Williams
failed to “articulate standards by which” the court could determine “whether holding this case in abeyance and maintaining the existing stay of execution is appropriate.”
Victor v. Hopkins,
Our decision is bolstered by the Supreme Court’s post-Rose
v. Lundy
practice. The Court twice has granted certiorari in cases involving mixed petitions and summarily disposed of them. In
Duckworth v. Cowell,
the Court remanded the case to the Seventh Circuit and directed that court to instruct the district court to dismiss the petition.
In the present case, Victor argues that the state may execute him prior to the exhaustion of his state-court remedies. The District Court was clearly concerned about this possibility. The court remarked that
the state offers me no assurance that it will not seek from the Nebraska Supreme Court a death warrant if I lift the existing stay of execution. Thus, if I lift the stay ... and the state secures a death warrant ... I would undoubtedly be faced with another motion for a stay of execution, which I would be required to grant.
Victor v. Hopkins,
III.
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the District Court is reversed, and the case is remanded with directions to dismiss Victor’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus and to lift the stay of execution.
Notes
. As discussed below, the state does not waive its defense that Victor’s new claims are procedurally defaulted because they were not raised in his first state-court petition for post-conviction relief.
. We have explicitly recognized several exceptions to the general rule stated in
Rose v. Lundy
that we believe are consistent with the Supreme Court's opinion in that case. For example, we have held that a district court may consider mixed petitions when the unexhausted claims do not state claims for relief based on federal constitutional rights and thus are not cognizable under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
See Martin v. Solem,
.
See also Simpson v. Camper,
. Justice Stevens dissented, arguing that dismissal of the petition, the result he believed would be required by the Court's order, would cause unwarranted delay. He noted that the unexhausted claim was not addressed by the Sixth Circuit and was not one of the issues raised in the petition for certiorari. Thus the petitioner could refile his petition without the unexhausted claim and the litigation would substantively be repeated right up to the refiling of the very same certiorari petition that was before the Court that day.
Bergman v. Burton,
