Petitioner Herbert Espey is a Florida prisoner who filed a pro se 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254 petition for habeas corpus relief with the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. His petition alleged the following six grounds for relief: (1) denial of the effective assistance of counsel; (2) insanity at the time of the crime and of his trial; (3) improper prosecutorial comments; (4) improper jury charge; (5) his mandatory life sentence is unconstitutional; and (6) erroneous introduction of similar fact evidence at trial. In response, the State filed an answer alleging that Espey had exhausted his state remedies on all of his claims except ground two and, therefore, his petition constituted a mixed petition which should be dismissed for lack of exhaustion. A magistrate subsequently reviewed Espey’s claims and determined that he had failed to exhaust his state remedies concerning ground two, his claim of insanity. Consequently, she recommended that the petition be dismissed without prejudice to allow Espey the opportunity to exhaust that claim.
Following the magistrate’s recommendation, Espey twice filed identical replies to the State’s answer with an alternative motion to strike ground two from the petition. Additionally, Espey filed objections to the magistrate’s recommendation, also containing an alternative motion to strike ground two of the petition.
Two months later, the district court accepted the magistrate’s recommendation and dismissed the petition without prejudice. The court did not address Espey’s motions to strike the unexhausted claim. Espey filed a timely notice of appeal. The district court denied Espey’s application for a certificate of probable cause to appeal and his motion for leave to appeal in forma pauperis. This Court granted Espey’s application for a certificate of probable cause for this appeal and granted him leave to proceed in forma pauperis.
The sole issue raised by this appeal is whether the district court abused its discretion in dismissing Espey’s petition for lack of exhaustion without allowing him to amend the petition to delete the unexhausted claim. Concluding that it did, we reverse and remand this case to the district court for further consideration of Espey’s exhausted habeas claims.
In
Rose v. Lundy,
Fed.R.Civ.Proc. 15(a) governs the amendments to pleadings and provides that, after any responsive pleading has been filed, subsequent amendments are permitted only with the leave of the district court. The decision whether to grant leave to amend is committed to the sound discretion of the trial court.
Best Canvas Products & Supplies, Inc. v. Ploof Truck Lines, Inc.,
“The types of reasons that might justify denial of permission to amend a pleading include undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, and undue prejudice to the opposing party.”
Id.
at 598;
see also Best Canvas Products & Supplies, Inc.,
REVERSED and REMANDED.
