Wе have consolidated for decision three appeals from denial or dismissal of motions under Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure that present similar questions about the circumstances in which prisoners subject to the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act’s amendments to the federal habeas corpus statute, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241
et seq.,
and its substitute for federal prisoners, 28 U.S.C. § 2255, may file motions under Rule 60(b) to vacate a judgment denying habeas corpus. The rule allows a federal district court to relieve a party from a final judgment of the court on a variety of grounds, including “mistake,” “fraud,” and “newly discovered evidence which by due diligence could not have been discovered in time to move for a new trial,” and “any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.” The habeas corpus statute, however, without mentioning Rule 60(b), permits a second or subsequent application for relief only if the court of aрpeals certifies that the application is based either on a new rule of constitutional law made rеtroactively applicable by the Supreme Court to collateral challenges to final judgments or on nеwly discovered evidence that demonstrates that no reasonable finder of fact could have found the applicant guilty. 28 U.S.C. §§ 2244(b)(2), 2255 ¶ 8. These provisions are clear and bar a district court from using Rule 60(b) to give a prisoner broader relief from a judgment rendered by the court in the prisoner’s federal habeas corpus (including section 2255) proсeeding. Otherwise AEDPA’s limitations on collateral attack would be set at naught. As we said recently, “Prisoners are not allowed to avoid the restrictions that Congress has placed on collateral attacks on their conviсtions or other custody-creating or -enhancing punishments by styling their collateral attacks as motions for reconsideration under Rule 60(b). There must be no circumvention of those restrictions by classifying a collateral attack аs a Rule 60(b) motion.”
Harris v. Cotton,
But it is important to note the limitations of the principle enunciated in
Harris
and the cases that precede it; doing so will help us to deal with the оutlier. It is only when Rule 60(b) conflicts with AEDPA that it is unavailable to a prisoner. Rule 60(b) has a very broad scope and it is easy tо imagine eases in which allowing a prisoner to file a motion under it would
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pose no risk of conflict with the limitations that AEDPA places on successive collateral attacks on state or federal criminal judgments. Supposе the state procured dismissal of a prisoner’s first federal habe-as corpus proceeding by making fraudulent rеpresentations to the district court, and the prisoner discovered this and filed a motion with the district court to vaсate the judgment of dismissal. AEDPA would not be offended by allowing the district court to entertain the motion. See
Banks v. United States, supra,
The Second Circuit’s opinion in
Rodriguez
emphasized such cases, see
The Supreme Court has granted certio-rari to decide in what circumstances if any a prisoner in a proceeding governed by AEDPA can invoke Rule 60(b).
Abdur’Rahman v. Bell,
— U.S. -,
Dunlap filed a second habeas corpus application that simply reasserted the claims alleged in his first application. The district court сonstrued the second application as a Rule 60(b) motion and denied it on the merits. That was a mistake. The court should have dismissed it for what it was, a second habeas corpus application barred by AEDPA.
Hunt based his Rule 60(b) motion, filеd while his request for a certificate of appealability from the district court’s denial of his habeas corрus application based on a similar ground was pending in this court, on the ubiquitous
Apprendi
decision. After we denied the certificate on the ground that Hunt had made “no substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right,” for he had failed to show а violation of
Apprendi,
see
Curtis v. United States,
Lanzotti based his Rule 60(b) motion on newly discovered evidence that his lawyеr in his criminal trial had given him ineffective assistance. The district court, though noting that it was an unauthorized collateral attack, denied the motion on its merits. Again error. The motion was precluded by AEDPA.
So the three motions were properly rejected, though on the wrong grounds. Dunlap’s and Lanzotti’s, moreover, should have been dismissed rather than denied, givеn that the district courts lacked jurisdiction. Hunt’s motion was dismissed, albeit on the wrong jurisdictional ground
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(mootness). The judgment in
Hunt
is therefore affirmed, but the judgments in
Dunlap
and
Lanzotti
are vacated and those cases remanded to the respective district courts to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
Nunez v. United States,
