Petitioner Harvey F. Garlotte (“Garlotte”) brings a habeas corpus action pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, challenging a 1985 state con-vietion for possession of marijuana. The district court, adopting the magistrate judge’s Report and Recommendation, dismissed the petition for failure to exhaust state remedies without requiring the respondent to file an answer. We granted Garlotte’s request for a Certificate of Probable Cause, ordering Respondent Kirk Fordice (“Fordice”) to brief the issue whether the district court prematurely dismissed Garlotte’s petition without requiring an answer or conducting an eviden-tiary hearing. Concluding that under recent United States Supreme Court precedent Garlotte was not “in custody” for purposes of § 2254, we affirm the district court’s dismissal of the petition, but on the separate ground of lack of jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 1985, Garlotte pleaded guilty to one count of possession with intent to deliver or sell one ounce or less of marijuana and was sentenced to three years imprisonment. On the same day he pleaded guilty to two counts of murder and received two life sentences, which the court ordered to run concurrently. The court also ordered that the concurrent life sentences were to run “consecutive, and after” the three year marijuana conviction. Garlotte did not appeal his marijuana conviction, and his two state post-conviction motions were denied. He is currently eligible for parole consideration on March 1, 1996.
In 1989, Garlotte filed a federal petition for habeas corpus relief challenging the 1985 marijuana conviction. Fordice filed a motion to dismiss for failure to exhaust state habeas remedies, and the magistrate judge recommended that the petition be dismissed with prejudice. The district court remanded the matter to the magistrate for reconsideration.
On remand, the magistrate recommended dismissing the petition without requiring Fordice to file an answer, concluding that although it was unclear whether Garlotte had exhausted his state remedies, even if they were unexhausted the requirement should be waived because exhaustion would be futile. After reviewing the magistrate’s Report and Recommendation, the district court adopted it, dismissed the petition, and denied Gar-lotte’s request for a Certificate of Probable Cause.
DISCUSSION
For the first time on appeal, Fordice argues Garlotte’s habeas petition should be dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because he is not “in custody” within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2254. A challenge to subject matter jurisdiction may be raised for the first time on appeal because it may not be waived.
Hensgens v. Deere &
Co.,
Federal district courts lack subject matter jurisdiction to entertain § 2254 actions if, at the time the petition is filed, the petitioner is not “in custody” under the conviction or sentence which the petition attacks.
Maleng v. Cook,
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Garlotte does not challenge Fordice’s contention that his three year marijuana sentence has expired, but argues instead that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Peyton v. Rowe,
This Court has held that a petitioner can challenge a fully expired sentence if the expired sentence delayed the time for which the petitioner could receive credit for time served on the current sentence.
Cappetta v. Wainwright,
We have never held, however, that a habe-as petitioner may be “in custody” under a conviction when the sentence imposed for that conviction has fully expired at the time the petition is filed.
Maleng,
In
Peyton,
the Supreme Court held that a petitioner who was serving consecutive sentences imposed by the state court is “in custody” under any one of those sentences.
Peyton,
As for Garlotte’s contention that because his parole consideration date has been delayed by the marijuana conviction a nexus exists between the marijuana conviction and the murder conviction, we find that this argument too must fail. As the Supreme Court stated in Maleng:
[O]nce the sentence imposed for a conviction has completely expired, the collateral consequences of that conviction are not themselves sufficient to render an individual “in custody” for the purposes of a habe-as attack upon it.
Maleng,
