Lynn Brooks’ federal collateral attack on his state conviction is untimely unless his prior collateral attack in state court satisfies 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(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.” Following
Fernandez v. Sternes,
A proviso in § 5/122-l(c) gives extra time to a prisoner who “alleges facts showing that the delay was not due to his or her culpable negligence.” Inquiry into “culpable negligence” may overlap the merits. If, for example, the prisoner contends that the prosecutor withheld material exculpatory evidence, see
Brady v. Maryland,
Brooks’ petition for rehearing and rehearing en banc contends that under
Artuz
every petition that induces a state court to address the merits of the claim must have been “properly filed” and that
Rice v. Bowen,
Saffold
shows that our decision was correct. The question in
Saffold
was
If the California Supreme Court had clearly ruled that Saffold’s 4^-month delay was “unreasonable,” [California’s word for “untimely”] that would be the end оf the matter, regardless of whether it also addressed the merits of the claim, or whether its timeliness ruling was “entangled” with the merits.
This addresses Brooks’ remaining contentions. Saffold tells us that both aspects of a dual-ground decision (substance and procedure) must be respected, so thаt an untimely petition is not “properly filed” even if the court also addresses the merits— whether or not the “timeliness ruling was ‘entangled’ with the merits.” So even when the decision about timeliness depends in part on some aspect of the merits, a conclusion that the petition had been filed too late for purposes of state practice means that it was not “properly filed” for purposes of § 2244(d)(2).
Stewart v. Smith,
read in conjunction with
Ake v. Oklahoma,
Illinois, however, does not have such a system. Its timeliness rule is quantitative (six months from the end of the direct appeal or three years from the conviction, whichever is sooner), and the exception for delay that is not attributable to “culpable neglect” is stated in terms that are neutral with respect to the substantive theory of relief. The main function of the exception is to handle contentions that depend on facts that belatedly come to light. And although these facts may give rise to constitutional theories, the justification for delay is in the normal case independent of their merit. A belated
Brady
contention, for example, could be justified on the
Neither
Rice
nor
Smith v. Walls
is incompatible with this conclusion.
Smith v. Walls
holds that a successive collateral attack in Illinois is not
automatically
outside the domain of “properly filed” сollateral attacks. Nothing in Illinois law permits such filings — but neither does any rule forbid them or subject them to prior-approval requirements, as in Indiana. See
Tinker v. Hanks, 255
F.3d 444 (7th Cir.2001). An application is “properly filed” under
Artuz
when its “delivery and acceрtance are in compliance with the applicable laws and rules governing filings” (
As for
Rice:
although our original opinion was critical of that decision, we did not purport to overrule it. Although language in
Rice
suggesting that an application necessarily was “properly filed” if any state court addressed the merits cannot be reconciled with
Saffold,
the Supreme Court’s decision leaves open a second way to understand the outcome in
Rice.
In that case, the state’s trial court summarily dismissed the application as frivolous (a merits decision) without mentioning timeliness; thе appellate court affirmed in a brief decision mentioning both timeliness and the merits but not discussing the relation between them. This created ambiguity because Rice had contended that the state forfeited its timeliness argument by not рresenting it to the trial court. The appellate court’s failure to discuss this problem, and the brevity of its order, did not rule out the possibility that the court thought that any frivolous petition must be untimely as well. A reader could not readily tell whethеr the appellate court deemed the application untimely because it was late or because timeliness and the merits came to the same thing. If the former, then the application was not “properly filed”; if the latter, then it was properly filed, was decided on the merits (exclusively), and the time to seek federal review was tolled by § 2244(d)(2). In
Saffold
itself the Supreme Court concluded that a decision of the Supreme Court of California denying an original application “on the merits”
and
for “lack of diligence” was ambiguous; “lack of diligence” differs linguistically from “unreasonable delay,” that court’s canonical phrase for “untimely,” and the Justices concluded that perhаps in state practice
The petition for rehearing is denied. No judge called for a vote on the petition for rehearing en banc, which therefore is denied.
