Lead Opinion
In our opinion reported at
The key to our decision was the classification of Neal’s second petition as indeed “second or successive” within the meaning of the statute. That classification is challenged by the petition for rehearing, and we have thought it proper to amplify our reasons.
Neal’s first petition for habeas corpus was denied on the merits. The second petition is based on a decision rendered after that denial. Neal arguеs that since he could not have included a ground based on that decision in his first petition, he
He misses the essential distinction between a dismissal of a petition for habeas corpus for technical procedural reasons, of which the most common is a failure to exhaust state remedies, and a dismissal on the merits. The former type of dismissal does not affect the petitioner’s right to file a subsequent petition, because, as the Supreme Court explained in the case on which Neal principally relies, otherwise “a dismissal of a first habeas petition for technical procedural reasons would bar the prisoner from ever obtaining federal habeas review.” Stewart v. Martinez-Villareal,
Neal’s first petition was disposed of not on a procedural ground, but on the merits. Sеe Neal v. Gramley,
Before the enactment of the Anti-terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act, which added section 2244(b)(2) to the habeаs corpus statute, specifying the criteria for when a second or successive petition is permitted, the only limitation on a prisoner’s right to file successive petitions for federal habeas corpus was the judge-made concept of “abuse of the writ.” That concеpt, an application to the habeas corpus setting of general principles of waiver or forfeiture, was replaced by the new criteria and passed out of the law. As we explained in Burris v. Parke,
If the dicta to which we referred are taken literally, which we do not think it would be a kindness to the courts uttering them to do, AEDPA, rather than tightening up collateral attack on state convictions, made such attacks easier by giving the prisoner two bites at the apple. Un
To see just how anomalous the interpretation would be, consider the first criterion in the new law for when a second or successive petition can be entertained: when “the claim [in the petition] relies on a new rule of constitutional law, made retroactive to cases on collateral review by the Supreme Court, that was previously unavailable.” 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(2)(A) (emphasis added). Neal’s argument is that a petition that advances a claim based on a new (hence previously unavailable) case is not a second or successive petition at all; it is a first petition. If this is right, the criterion in subsection A, a criterion for when a second or successive petition is not to be dismissed, would never come into play. Take a simple case. In 1997 the defendant presents his (available) claims and loses on the • merits. In 1998 the Supreme Court dеcides a case that helps the defendant, unexpectedly overruling one of its precedents. In 1999 the defendant files a petition for habeas corpus based on the Supreme Court’s case. Is this an initial petition or a second petition? It must be the latter, even though the contention could not have been raised earlier, because section 2244(b)(2)(A) says that a new decision is a reason for appellate authorization to file a second petition (provided the Supreme Court had made the decision retroactive). By Neal’s reаsoning, the new decision is a reason to go to the district court, not the court of appeals, and to bypass entirely the question whether the Supreme Court has declared that its decision is retroactive. ■ That can’t be right.
There remains the possibility that a claim in no sense abusive, because it could not have been raised earlier, yet not within the dispensation that section 2244(b)(2) grants for the filing of some second or successive petitions, would have sufficient merit that the barring of it would raise an issue under the clause of the Constitution that forbids suspending federal habeas corpus other than in times of rebellion or invasion. U.S. Const., art. I, § 9, cl. 2; Felker v. Turpin,
Dissenting Opinion
join, dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc.
In my view, this case presents two distinct issues that are worthy of the en banc
Regardless of whether the panel has come to the correct decision on the second of these two points in this particular case, it is beyond debate that the system inaugurated three years ago by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”) is a complex one. District and appellate judges alike across the country have grappled with such questions as: When has a first petition been dismissed for purely technical reasons, such that it can be disregarded for purposes of § 2244(b)(3), and when has it not? See, e.g., Martinez-Villareal v. Stewart,
When the law is sо unsettled and complicated, it seems to me inappropriate to use the heavy hand of a writ of mandamus to correct a perceived jurisdictional error on the part of the district court. The mere fact, as the supplemental opinion of the panel notes, that mandamus can lie for .the correction of jurisdictional errors does not mean that it is the preferred remedy for such issues. Quite the contrary is true: in the overwhelming majority of cases, this court and all others require parties to save their jurisdictional objections — even those that relate to something as fundamental as subject matter jurisdiction — for an appeal in the ordinary course of events unless there is a compelling reason why appeal would be an inadequate remedy. E.g., Kerr v. United States Dist. Court,
Under the current state of AEDPA law, it is especially appropriate tо allow the district court to complete its consideration of the case and to make a full record for appeal. Such a record will often throw light on the district court’s reasons for holding that a particular petition was not one subject to the § 2244 procedures. If the court of appeals agrees, then the appeal on the merits can proceed. If the court of appeals disagrees, it has effective procedures at its disposal for correcting the district court’s jurisdictional error. If
Perhaps at some point the rules for distinguishing seсond or successive petitions from initial ones will become so blindingly clear that a district judge who disregards them should be corrected immediately through a writ of mandamus. I respectfully suggest that we have not yet reached that point. Furthermore, the fact that this court has needed morе than three months to consider the petition for rehearing and suggestion for rehearing en banc in this case, the fact that a significant number of judges on this court thought that rehearing en banc was warranted, and the fact that the panel has responded with a more complete explanation of its rеasoning all suggest that the-choice of mandamus was an unfortunate one here. Last, it is regrettable, particularly given the flood of petitions under § 2254 that reach us, that the full court does not consider it worth its time to give a more complete elaboration of the standards it will follow in the future •for deciding which cases must pass through the § 2244 gate and which fall within the district court’s jurisdiction. For these reasons, I dissent from the decision not to rehear this case en banc.
