ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
On Mаrch 31, 2006, this court issued an order granting petitioner James P. Dolis’s implicit request for a certificate of appeala-bility from the district court’s dismissal without prejudice of his petition for habeas corpus relief undеr 28. U.S.C. § 2254. That order also vacated the district court’s decision and remanded with instructions to consider a stay of the federal court proceedings following
Newell v. Hanks,
The State relies heavily on this court’s decision in
Moore v. Mote,
368 F.3d
*723
754 (7th Cir.2004), in which we held that a district court’s order dismissing a petition for a writ of habeas corpus with leave to refile аfter the prisoner exhausted his state court remedies was not a final judgment, and thus we had no jurisdiction over the appeal. We also noted there, however, that “there are 'special circumstances’ under which the dismissal of a case without prejudice may constitute a final appealable order,” and we explained that such circumstances are present “when it is clear that it is impossible for the plaintiff to amend the filing to remedy the problem that prompted the dismissal.”
Id.
at 755. See also
Larkin v.
Galloway,
The situation that Dolis faces, in which a new federal petition would be barred as untimely, seems to us to be just such a “special circumstance” where a dismissal without prejudice is effectively final. In Dolis’s сase, the district court dismissed for failure to exhaust state court remedies under circumstances in which it contemplated that Dolis could return and refile after exhaustion. Dolis may indeed still be able to pursue pоst-conviction relief in Illinois state court, but at this point, unless the present case can be saved, he is precluded by the one-year statute of limitations for federal habeas corpus petitions from bringing a claim under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. See,
e.g., Escamilla v. Jungwirth,
Nothing has occurred to toll § 2244(d)(l)’s one-year statute of limitations since the district court acted. Dolis has not yet pursued any state court post-conviction remedies, and his federal habe-as corpus petition did not stop the clock, see
Duncan v. Walker,
Since
Moore
was decided, the Supreme Court has spoken to one variant of this problem. In
Rhines v. Weber,
Nothing in the Supreme Court’s decision in Rhines gives us reason to alter our conclusion in Moore that a dismissal of a habeas corpus petition without prejudice for purposes of permitting the petitioner to exhaust his remedies in state court is not itself a final order. We must therefore decide whether the exercise of jurisdiction over the district court’s order in Dolis’s case, implicitly denying a stay pending exhaustion, is inconsistent with Rhines. We conclude that it is not. In the present case, we have no need to rely on the collateral order doctrine, which provided the basis for appellate jurisdiction in Rhines, because the petition was a mixed one with some exhausted and some unexhausted claims. In our case, Dolis had not exhaustеd any of his claims; it is the fact that it eventually became too late for him to amend his petition to cure this defect *725 that makes the district court’s entire judgment a final and reviewable one.
Our approach is consistent with the cases requiring a district court to consider whether a stay is appropriate under circumstances like Dolis’s where the dismissal would effectively end any chance at federal habeas reviеw. See,
e.g., Newell,
For these reasons, we Deny the State’s petition for rehearing.
Notes
. The caption in this case has been amended, at the government's request, to reflect that Dolis’s current custodian is John Chambers, the warden of the Danville Correctional Center, to which Dolis has been transferred. Rules Governing § 2254 Cases, Rule 2(a); Fed. R.App. P. 43; see also
Araujo v. Chandler,
