State prisoner Henderson appeals from the district court’s judgment denying his habeas petition. The district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 2254, and we have jurisdiction over this timely appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253. Because the petition raises the same claims Henderson raised in an earlier petition that was dismissed on grounds of state procedural default, and because he cannot now challenge the grounds on which the first petition was dismissed, the current petition is a “second or successive” petition barred by 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(1). We therefore affirm.
I.
In 1990, Henderson pled guilty to murder in Oregon state court. Believing that it was without discretion to do otherwise, the state court sentenced Henderson to 121 months in accordance with his plea agreement. However, after conducting further research, the state court judge concluded that he could have imposed a higher sentence. He therefore, on his own motion, ordered Henderson and the prosecutor back into court, vacated the sentence, and reassigned the case to another judge for resentencing.
Henderson filed a motion seeking reinstatement of the 121-month sentence. The court (with a new judge presiding) rejected Henderson’s arguments, affirmed the order vacating the sentence, explained that Henderson could be sentenced to up to 25 years, and gave him the option to withdraw his plea. Henderson reaffirmed his guilty plea, and the court scheduled a new sentencing hearing. The court subsequently sentenced Henderson to life in prison with a mandatory minimum of 25 years, to be followed by a lifetime of post-prison supervision. Henderson appealed.
The Oregon Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction but remanded the case for resentencing.
State v. Henderson,
The parties returned to the court for sentencing in accordance with the post-conviction remand order. Henderson was resentenced to a 25-year prison sentence with a lifetime of post-prison supervision (which was the same sentence he received in the first resentencing, minus the indeterminate life prison term). ' Henderson appealed from this second resentencing (Resentencing Appeal), but the court of appeals affirmed.
State v. Henderson,
Throughout these various state proceedings, Henderson never raised any claim pursuant to the Double Jeopardy Clause.
In 1996, while the Resentencing Appeal was still pending, Henderson filed his first section 2254 federal habeas petition (First Petition). It alleged that Henderson’s rights under the Double Jeopardy Clause were violated when his original 121-month sentence was vacated and he was resen-tenced to 25 years to life. In the First Petition, Henderson answered “yes” to a question asking whether he had “any petition or appeal now pending in any court, either state or federal, as to the judgment under attack.” No description of this proceeding was included in the First Petition, so it is unclear whether he was referring to the appeal from the post-conviction judgment (which had been dismissed for failure to file a brief), the Resentencing Appeal, or some other proceeding.
The magistrate judge’s 1996 order required the state to include, in its answer to the First Petition, a “statement as to whether petitioner has exhausted all available state remedies,” as required by Rule 5 of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases. The state did so and moved to deny habeas corpus relief, arguing that Hénderson had procedurally defaulted all his claims. The state outlined most of the proceedings discussed above, with one exception: the state did not mention the Resentencing Appeal,- which was still pending at that time. Nothing in the record, however, suggests that the state’s omission was intentional. Henderson’s filings in opposition to the state’s motion to deny habe-as relief also did not mention the Resen-tencing Appeal.
The magistrate judge then issued an order permitting additional briefing because “[i]t appeared] from the record that petitioner has procedurally defaulted on his claims” and Henderson had not addressed the issue of procedural default. In his supplemental brief, Henderson again failed to mention the Resentencing Appeal. Rather, citing the state’s answer to the First Petition, he stated that he “has no remaining state remedies on the issues he raises in this habeas corpus proceeding,” but contended that cause and prejudice existed to excuse the procedural default. The magistrate judge recommended that the First Petition be denied because Henderson had procedurally defaulted on his claims and had failed to establish cause for the procedural default. Henderson’s objections to the magistrate’s findings and recommendation again did not mention the Resentencing Appeal. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s findings and recommendation and denied the First Petition. Henderson did not appeal the district court’s decision.
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Henderson then filed a petition for habe-as corpus relief in the Oregon state court alleging, among other things, that the state violated the Double Jeopardy Clause. The state court dismissed the petition, and the court of appeals affirmed,
Henderson v. Lampert,
II.
We review de novo a district court’s determination that a habeas petition is “second or successive” for purposes of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDP1A).
See Thompson v. Calderon,
Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244(b)(1), “[a] claim presented in a second or successive habeas corpus application under section 2254 that was presented in a prior application shall be dismissed.” In challenging the district court’s determination that the Current Petition is barred by section 2244(b)(1), Henderson makes two primary arguments. First, he contends that the Current Petition should not be treated as successive because the district court did not reach the merits of the claims in the First Petition. Second, he argues that even if a dismissal on grounds of state procedural default renders a later petition successive, we■ should consider the First Petition as having been dismissed as unex-hausted in deciding whether the Current Petition is successive. He points out that the district court addressing the First Petition was unaware that the Resentencing Appeal was still pending at the time the First Petition was filed, and he argues that the First Petition should have been dismissed as unexhausted rather than procedurally defaulted because he (supposedly) still had state remedies available. His argument, continues that if the First Petition had in fact been dismissed as unexhausted, section 2244(b)(1) would not bar the Current Petition, because “[a] habeas petition filed in the. district court after an initial habeas petition was unadjudicated on its merits and dismissed for failure to exhaust state remedies is not a second or successive petition.”
Slack v. McDaniel,
Thus, in order to resolve this appeal, we answer two questions. First, does the dismissal of a first petition on grounds of state procedural default render a later petition raising the same claims “second or successive” for purposes of AEDP1A? If so, we must next consider whether a petitioner — who did not appeal the first dismissal — can nonetheless challenge the grounds for the first dismissal when bringing a second petition, in order to avoid the second petition being deemed successive.
A.
We first address whether a habeas petition filed after a previous petition is
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dismissed for state procedural' default is “second or successive” for purposes of AEDP1A. “AEDP1A does not define the terms ‘second or successive.’ ”
Hill v. Alaska,
In the pre-AEDPlA decision of
Howard v. Lewis,
[When a claim is dismissed as unex-hausted], the state courts have not rendered a decision regarding the merits of defendant’s claims, but the opportunity is still open for the defendant to obtain a disposition on the merits of his or her claims in the state courts. After exhausting state court remedies, a subsequent federal petition for habeas corpus could be entertained while preserving the principles of federal-state comity. In the case of state procedural default, a state court has not rendered a decision regarding the merits of the defendant’s claims, but the defendant has no further opportunity to obtain a disposition on the merits of his or her claims in the state courts. In a subsequent petition raising the same claims that were dismissed previously on the basis of state procedural default, the interest underlying the dismissal of the first petition, i.e., federal-state comity, is still present.
Id. at 1322-23.
We may look to pre-AEDPlA decisions involving the successive petition doctrine to interpret AEDPlA’s provisions on successive petitions.
See Slack,
B.
We next consider Henderson’s contention that the Current Petition is not successive because the First Petition should have been dismissed as unexhausted rather than.procedurally defaulted.
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In a similar appeal, we rejected the argument that a petition should not be deemed successive because the district court that dismissed an earlier petition “should have” done something other than it actually did, and the petitioner had not appealed in the earlier proceedings. In
Cooper v. Calderon,
Decisions from other circuits, both pre- and post-AEDPlA, also suggest that Henderson’s failure to appeal the dismissal of the First Petition precludes him from challenging that dismissal now. In
Hawkins v. Evans,
Petitioner did not appeal the district court’s dismissal of his first federal ha-beas petition. By so doing, Petitioner did not challenge the district court’s ruling that he procedurally defaulted in state court without cause when he failed to directly appeal his conviction. Because Petitioner did not appeal the federal district court’s ruling of state procedural default, we reject his attempts to collaterally attack that unappealed final order in this proceeding by arguing that he had cause to excuse the state procedural default.
Id.
(emphasis added).
See also Harvey v. Horan,
This rule is not necessarily absolute, as our own decision in
Howard
demonstrates. There, Howard’s first petition had been dismissed on grounds of state procedural default, and Howard had not appealed that dismissal.
Howard
will not help Henderson. He was not “prevented” from responding to the state’s arguments that the claims in the First Petition werp procedurally defaulted. On the contrary, the magistrate judge allowed Henderson to submit a supplemental brief on that very question. In effect, Henderson asks us to hold that the state “prevents” a petitioner’s response when it fails to inform the district court accurately of the petitioner’s state proceedings.
See
Rule 5, Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases, 28 U.S.C. foll. § 2254 (requiring answer to á habeas petition to “state whether any claim in the petition is barred by a failure to exhaust state remedies”);
Granberry v. Greer,
In this case, we will not look beyond the stated basis for the dismissal of the First Petition in deciding whether the Current Petition is second or successive. “Because[Henderson] did not appeal the federal district court’s ruling of state procedural default, we reject his attempts to collaterally attack that unappealed final order in this proceeding by arguing that” the claims in the First Petition were actually unexhausted rather than procedurally defaulted.
Hawkins,
III.
Henderson also offers two additional arguments why the Current Petition should not be classified as “second or successive.” First, he contends that “the district court [addressing the First Petition] was obligated to inform him, as a
pro se
litigant, of his options with respect to his unexhausted claims,” even though it did not have any reason to think they were unexhausted. Neither of the two decisions upon which he relies support that novel argument. The first,
Ford v. Hubbard,
'Henderson’s second argument is that the state should be equitably estopped
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from relying on AEDPlA’s bar on successive petitions because it failed to inform the district court of the Resentencing Appeal in the proceedings related to the First Petition. However, a party claiming es-toppel must show, among other things, that his reliance on his adversary’s conduct was “reasonable in that the party claiming the estoppel did not know
nor should it have known
that its adversary’s conduct was misleading.”
Heckler v. Cmty. Health Servs.,
AFFIRMED.
