This аppeal calls upon us to decide whether a state prisoner can invoke federal habeas corpus relief to redress a state court’s inordinate delay in hearing and deciding a state petition for post-conviction rеlief. We recently addressed this very issue in
Montgomery v. Meloy,
I. History
In June of 1980, Marshall Jackson was convicted of felony murder and is presently serving a sixty-year sentence in an Indiana state prison! The Indiana Supreme Court affirmed his conviction in 1983.
See Jackson v. Indiana,
On December 3, 1993, Jackson filed a
pro se
petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the Northern District of Indiana, alleging
only
that the state court’s inordinate delay in considering his post-conviction petition violated his right to due process. Jackson’s petition did not ask the district court to address any federal claims raised in his state-court petition. The State filed a motion to dismiss, but the court denied the motion, holding that Jackson did not hаve to exhaust his state court remedies before seeking federal habeas corpus relief and that Indiana’s excessive delay in adjudicating Jackson’s post-conviction petition could support a due process claim under 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
See Jackson v. Duckworth,
After reviewing both Jackson’s and the State’s arguments regarding prejudice, the district court determined that Jackson had failed to state a colorable claim for relief and denied his habeas petition. Jackson v. Duckworth, Civ. No. H 93-328, slip op. at 3-4 (N.D.Ind. July 25, 1994). In particular, thе court found that Jackson had waived all of the claims in his state post-conviction petition because he had failed to raise them on direct appeal. Id.
On August 15, 1994, Jackson filed a notice of appeal and a request for a сertificate of probable cause to appeal. The district court denied this request, but we granted Jackson’s request for a certificate on December 2, 1994. 2
After the district court rendered its decision, but before we granted Jackson’s rеquest for a certificate of appealability, the state court finally acted. On April 21, 1994, the Superior Court of Lake County held a hearing on Jackson’s state post-conviction petition stating that “the only reason that we are here is to accommodate the federal court” and that he would not allow Jackson to “embarrass this court in the federal system.” That court denied Jackson’s petition on March 6,1996, and Jackson (acting pro se) has appealed that decision.
II. Analysis 3
Although Jackson raises various issues in his brief, they all rest upon one critical
assumption
— i.e., that federal habeas corpus relief may appropriately redress a prisoner’s solitary claim that the state’s excessive delay in hearing and deciding his state post-conviction petition violated his right to due process. The district court ruled that such relief was possible but denied the writ because Jackson had not shown how
*880
the inordinate delay had prejudiced him. At the time the district court ruled, however, it did not have the benefit of this court’s
Montgomery
decision, which was decided more than two years later. In
Montgomery,
we held that “delay in receiving a ruling on a discretionary state collateral appeal is not a ground for federal habeas corpus relief.”
Montgomery,
Our decision in
Montgomery
rests on the foundation that federal habeas corpus cannot remedy a delay in a state collateral proceeding because such an error has absolutely nothing to do with the reason for a defendant’s confinement. Indeed, if federal habeas corpus could remedy delays in a state post-conviction proceeding, then a state prisoner would be entitled to a release from confinement (or a reduction in sentence, which Jackson asserts is a suitable remedy here) even though his state criminal trial and direct appeals were constitutionally flawless. Habeas corpus does not contemplate such a compensatory remedy — its “object is not to make whole someone who has suffered a loss,” but “to determine whether a person is being confined in violation of basic norms of legality.”
Allen v. Duckworth,
In reaching our conclusion in Montgomery, we first looked to federal law and found that no “constitutional provision or federal law entitles [a defendant] to any state сollateral review,
Pennsylvania v. Finley,
We bolstered our analysis by distinguishing direct review, where inexcusable delay may violate due process,
see Allen,
Montgomery,
howevеr, did leave one avenue for state prisoners to obtain federal habeas corpus relief based solely on a state’s delay in reviewing a discretionary collateral appeal. The court noted that habeas relief might bе appropriate if the state’s conduct in the collateral proceedings violated an “independent constitutional right, such as the Equal Protection Clause.”
Montgomery,
Jackson maintains that our ruling will leave him with a constitutional right to due process, but no remedy to enforce that right. Every legal right, however, does not necessarily have a legal remedy.
See Allen,
6
*881
F.3d at 461. Moreover, contrary to Jackson’s assertion, he does have a remedy for any violation caused by the delay in the adjudication of his state post-conviction petition. Inordinate, unjustifiable delay in a state-court collateral proceeding еxcuses the requirement of petitioners to exhaust their state-court remedies before seeking federal habeas corpus relief.
See Lane v. Richards,
Assuming that the State’s delay exempts Jackson from meeting the exhaustion requirement, we still cannot reach the merits of the federal claims alleged in his state post-conviction petition because Jackson did not include them in his § 2254 petition. We must construe Jackson’s
pro se
habeas petition liberally,
see Haines v. Kerner,
Finally, we note that our decision should in no way be read as an approval of Indiana’s disturbing inability to adjudicate Jackson’s state postconviction petition more quickly. Federal habeas corpus simply provides Jackson with no relief. Thus, we Affirm the district court’s denial of Marshall Jackson’s § 2254 petition.
Notes
. Unfortunately for Jackson, a petition for post-conviction relief does not come within the ambit *879 of Rule 53.1 of the Indiana Rules of Trial Procedure. This rule requires a trial judge to promptly rule on a motion or lose jurisdiction. A special judge is then named by the Indiana Supreme Court to decide the matter. Petitions for post-conviction relief are sрecifically excluded from this procedure. Ind.R.Tr.P. 53.1(B)(4).
. After both Jackson and the State initially briefed this appeal, we ordered counsel appointed for Jackson and directed his appointed counsel to address specific questiоns. Jackson's counsel was appointed on April 16, 1996, and both parties rebriefed the issues.
. Although the Superior Court of Lake County ultimately denied Jackson’s petition for postconviction relief, this case is not moot. Jackson has appealed that decision, which is presently before the Indiana courts.
Cf. Allen v. Duckworth,
. The State concedes that the delay was inordinate, but it does contest whether it was unjustified. We need not decide this issue, however, because Jackson did not include the federal claims from his petition fоr state post-conviction relief in his petition for federal habeas corpus.
. The district court also denied Jackson's April 1, 1994 request for adjudication on the merits of his state-court petition because Jackson had not presented those grounds to the court as required by Rule 2(c) of the Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases in the United States District Courts. See Jackson v. Duckworth, Civ. No. H 93-328, slip op. at 2 (N.D.Ind. June 23, 1994).
.We express no opinion regarding whether Jackson may bring a subsequent § 2254 petition based on any federal claims alleged in his state petition for post-conviction review.
