OPINION
Pеtitioner Johnny Cowherd, a state prisoner in Kentucky, appeals from the denial of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. The district court, relying on
Austin v. Mitchell,
I
The relevant facts are straightforward. Cowherd was convicted in 1993 on two counts of first-degree rape, four counts of first-degree sodomy, and first-degree criminal trespass. The trial court judge sentenced Cowherd to 104 years of imprisonment, and the conviction was affirmed on direct appeal. Cowherd proceeded to file four state post-conviction motions over the next seven years. The first of these proceedings became final prior to the effective date of the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), April 24, 1996. Thus, the one-year statute of limitations under § 2244(d)(1) for filing a habeas petition began running on that date.
Searcy v. Carter,
Cowherd filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus on June 11, 2001. He raised four claims for relief: ineffective assistance of trial counsel, an Eighth Amendment claim, a Double Jeopardy
*911
Clause claim, and ineffective assistance of appellate counsel. After the habeas petition was filed, the respondеnt (“Warden”) moved to dismiss the petition as time-barred. Specifically, the Warden argued that Cowherd had not filed his petition within the one-year period, and that because the second post-conviction motion did not raise any federal claim, the second post-conviсtion proceeding did not toll the statute of limitations. In support of this argument, the Warden correctly cited
Austin,
which stated that post-conviction motions toll the statute of limitations only if they include a federal claim.
Austin,
This question was initially referred to a magistrate judge, who rejected Cowherd’s arguments and concluded, in a report and recommendatiоn, that the petition was time-barred. In subsequent objections to this report, Cowherd did not specifically raise the claim that Austin had been wrongly decided, but he did attempt to incorporate his prior arguments into his objections. He wrote, “[petitioner reasserts the arguments presented in his Memorandum in Opposition to Respondent’s Motion to Dismiss Petition as Time-Barred, and incorporates that document in reference in its entirety.”
The district court accepted the magistrate judge’s report and dismissed the petition on March 22, 2002. On May 14, 2002, however, the district court issued a certificate of appealability (“COA”). The court explained that Cowherd had met the requirements of
Slack v. McDaniel,
Cowherd’s subsequent appeal was dismissed without argument by this court pursuant to Fed. R.App. P. 34(a) on September 10, 2003. In that order, the panel upheld the district court’s finding and dismissed Cowherd’s arguments that Austin was wrongly decided, adding that it had no power to overturn a published opinion of a previous panel. It also dismissed Cowherd’s claims that the second post-conviction motion presented а federal claim. The panel’s decision was subsequently vacated when this court granted the motion for rehearing en banc.
II
Before reaching the question of Austin’s continued viability, we should briefly address threshold arguments raised by the Warden that, if correct, would prevent us from reaching the question regarding Austin. First, the Warden claims that if this court upholds Austin, it cannot considеr whether Cowherd’s second post-conviction motion included a federal claim because this issue was not included in the COA. The Warden, however, reads the COA too narrowly. The COA certified the issue of whether Cowherd’s claims were properly dismissed because they had been time-barred. Therefore, all arguments relevant to this question, including wheth *912 er the post-conviction motion raised a federal claim, are properly before this court.
Second, the Warden argues that Cowherd waived the argument that
Austin
was decided incorrectly because he fаiled to raise the argument in his objections to the magistrate judge’s report. Generally, the failure to file specific objections to a magistrate’s report constitutes a waiver of those objections.
Miller v. Currie,
This court has allowed parties to incorporate prior arguments into their objections to a magistrate judge’s report, but we disfavor such practices. In this particular case, because Cowherd’s arguments before both the district court and this court arе clear, we will allow Cowherd to rely on earlier arguments that he incorporated into his objections.
The requirement for specific objections to a magistrate judge’s report is not jurisdictional and a failure to comply may be excused in the interest of justice. In the рresent case, unlike in [a prior case], the objections directed the district judge’s attention to specific issues decided by the magistrate contrary to Kelly’s position. The district judge apparently had no problem in focusing on the specific areas of disagreemеnt between the parties. Thus, the objections served the purposes of the requirement that objections be specific.
Kelly v. Withrow,
Ill
The text of § 2244(d)(2) reads:
(2) The time during which a properly filed application for State post-conviction or other collateral review with respect to the pertinent judgment or claim is pending shall not be counted toward any period of limitation under this subsection (emphasis added).
In
Austin,
this court interpreted § 2244(d)(2) to mean that, in order to toll the statute of limitations, the state post-conviction petition “must raise a federal constitutional issue.”
Austin,
[T]he federal habeas exhaustion doctrine is not meant to apply to purely state law or state constitutional claims, such as teсhnical defects in indictments. This rule is sound for another reason, as well. Federal courts do not necessarily know the intricacies of state law and the possi *913 ble claims the latter may make available to a petitioner; it would, therefore, be inappropriate fоr a federal court to determine whether a petitioner’s non-federal remedies have been exhausted. By the same token, the federal habeas tolling provision should not be invoked except when a federal claim remains unex-hausted in state court. Tolling is the complement of the exhaustion requirement. We hold, therefore, that a state petition for post-conviction or other collateral review must present a federally cognizable claim for it to toll the statute of limitations pursuant to [§ 2244(d)(2) ].
Austin,
Since our decision in
Austin,
at least four other circuits havе wrestled with this particular issue, and all have rejected
Austin’s
interpretation.
See Ford v. Moore,
A
In determining statutory meaning, this court looks “first to the plain language of the stаtute.”
The Ltd., Inc. v. Comm’r,
The thrust of the textual argument against
Austin
is that it reads the word “judgment” out of the statute. Under
Austin’s
interpretation, the post-conviction motion must, in order to toll the statute of limitations, include a federal
claim,
even though the statute says
judgment
or
claim.
As this court has explained, “[i]t is a basic principle of statutory construction that terms joined by the disjunctive ‘or’ must have different meanings because otherwise the statute or provision would be redundant.”
United States v. Hill,
The Ninth Circuit, in Tillema, offers persuasive textual analysis on this point.
The state’s argument is plainly wrong. To begin with, the state’s reading of section 2244(d)(2) fails on its own terms. The words “judgment” and “claim” are used in the disjunctive. Thus, to accept the state’s argument would be to render the word judgment “surplusage.” ... The text of section 2244(d) makes clear that, in drafting the provision in question, Congress was aware of the distinction between the word “judgment” and the word “claim,” and did not intend that the first word employed in the provision be ignored.
The Warden responds that the opposite approach reads the word “claim” out of the *914 statute, but Tillema persuasively shows why that argument fails:
This construction of section 2244(d)(2) does not, as the state contends, read the word “claim” out of the statute. Although it is true that in most cases a state application that includes a pertinent claim will also, as a matter of course, relate to the pertinent judgment, such will not always be the case. For example, a claim that a death-row inmate is incompetent to be executed doеs not challenge the validity of the judgment, but only its execution. Similarly, a claim challenging the unconstitutional revocation of “good-time credits,” though cognizable only in habeas corpus proceedings, has no bearing on the underlying judgment of conviction and sentence.
We find these textual arguments persuasive. Austin does not adequately consider the difference between “judgment” and “claim” in § 2244(d)(2). Thus, the plain meaning of the statutory text requires us to reject Austin’s interpretation. In light of this decision, it is unnecessary to reach the question of whether Cowherd’s second post-conviction motion should be construеd as including a federal claim.
B
Although we need not consider policy arguments because the statute is unambiguous, we note that there are also sound policy reasons for abandoning Austin. As explained above, Austin’s interpretation relied heavily on comity and the exhaustion requirement in 28 U.S.C. § 2254(c). The Seventh Cirсuit illustrated the shortcomings of these particular policy arguments:
[Austin ] is not correct; it confuses tolling with exhaustion. A state court must be given the first opportunity to address the federal issue, but this exhaustion requirement can be satisfied on direct appeal as well as on collateral attack. Usually it is preferable to raise the federal question as soon as possible, which means at trial and on direct appeal. This does not imply, however, that state prisoners must proceed immediately from their direct appeals to federal collateral attacks. A state collateral proceeding based solely on state-law issues may avoid the need for federal relief, and a tolling rule permits prisoners to pursue such theories in state court without jeopardizing them ability to raise the federal constitutiоnal issues later in federal court, if that proves to be necessary.
Carter v. Litseher,
IV
For the reasons stated above, we now overrule
Austin v. Mitchell,
Notes
. At the time the district court issued the COA, the Seventh Circuit had joined the Ninth Circuit in rejecting
Austin. Carter v. Litscher,
