Michael M. Corjasso, III is serving a life sentence without possibility of parole in California state prison. Proceeding pro se and in forma pauperis, he filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus in federal district court on December 13, 1996. His petition was eventually dismissed as untimely pursuant to the one-year statute of limitations contained in the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (“AED-PA”). See 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d). We agree with Corjasso that he is entitled to equitable tolling of the statute of limitations. We therefore reverse the dismissal of his petition as untimely and remand for further proceedings.
I
Corjasso’s conviction became final on July 17, 1996. Sometime before December 1996, he filed his first federal petition for habeas corpus in the Northern District of California. Because Corjasso was incarcerated in the Eastern District of California, the Northern District correctly dismissed his petition for lack of jurisdiction. On December 13, 1996, Corjasso attempted to refile the same petition in the Eastern District court. He did not have a preprinted cover sheet from the Eastern District, so he used a cover sheet from the Northern District. Except for the difference in the words “Eastern” and “Northern,” the cover sheets are identical. Corjasso simply “whited-out” the word “Northern” and wrote in “Eastern.”
The Eastern District court clerk’s office refused to accept Corjasso’s petition for filing. It sent him an Eastern District cover sheet and instructed him to resubmit his petition, but it did not return the body of his petition to him. On January 6,1997, Corjasso submitted the new cover page and referenced the petition he had filed less than a month earlier, but the clerk’s office never joined the new cover page to the body of the petition. The district court deemed Corjasso’s January filing incomplete and dismissed it with leave to amend on February 25. On March 24, Corjasso filed a letter explaining that he could not amend his petition because he had not retained copies of the attachments when he submitted his original petition on December 13, 1996. The district court appears to have lost the body of the original petition by the time Corjasso’s letter was received.
Corjasso did not hear from the district court again until June 19, 1997, when a magistrate judge appointed counsel to represent Corjasso. The magistrate judge scheduled a first status conference for August 28, 1997. Absent tolling, Corjasso’s one-year filing period under AEDPA would have expired on July 17, 1997 — 42 days before the status conference. At some point prior to the status conference, Cor-jasso’s appointed counsel managed to retrieve the petition Corjasso had filed in the Northern District. (The Eastern District filing was never found.) On September 10, 1997, shortly after the status conference, the court granted Corjasso’s counsel’s request to file an amended petition within 120 days.
On January 7, 1998, Corjasso, through his appointed counsel, filed a first amended petition. Because the petition contained new, unexhausted claims, Corjasso
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also filed a new petition with the California Supreme Court on January 16, 1998 in order to exhaust those claims.
See
28 U.S.C. §§ 2254(b), (c);
Rose v. Lundy,
On December 22, 1998, the California Supreme Court denied Corjasso’s state petition. Having thus exhausted his state remedies, Corjasso returned to federal court. On January 27, 1999, Corjasso filed a second amended federal petition containing the exhausted claims. On March 29, the state moved to dismiss Corjasso’s petition as untimely under AEDPA. Nine months later, on December 28, 1999, the magistrate judge recommended that Cor-jasso’s petition be dismissed as untimely. Corjasso objected, but the district court agreed with the magistrate judge and dismissed his petition on April 25, 2000. The district court declined to issue a Certificate of Appealability (“COA”) as to any issue. See 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c).
Corjasso timely appealed. We granted a COA on his claim that the statute of limitations should have been equitably tolled because of the mishandling of his petition by the district court. We review
de novo
the dismissal of a petition for writ of habeas corpus on statute of limitations grounds.
Miles v. Prunty,
II
Corjasso’s one-year statute of limitations began to run on July 18, 1996, the day after his conviction became final.
See Patterson v. Stewart,
AEDPA’s statute of limitations provision is subject to equitable tolling.
See Calderon v. United States Dist. Court (Beeler),
In spite of the “high hurdle” to the application of equitable tolling,
Beeler,
Here, Corjasso, proceeding
pro se,
filed his first federal habeas petition in the proper district court on December 13, 1996, 149 days after his conviction became final. Corjasso’s petition was defective (if it was defective at all;
see
E.D. Cal. Local R. 3-200) only in that he used white-out and a pen on his cover sheet to write the correct name of the court in which he filed. Because Corjasso was a
pro se
petitioner, the district court erred in rejecting his petition on the ground that he had used a whited-out cover sheet from the wrong district.
Pro se
habeas petitioners may not be held to the same technical standards as litigants represented by counsel.
See, e.g., Holiday v. Johnston,
At the time he attempted to file his first petition in the Eastern District court, Cor-jasso had complied with all substantive requirements for filing a federal habeas petition. For the next eight months, until the district court held the status conference on August 28, 1997, the treatment (and therefore, the timeliness) of Corjas-so’s habeas petition was essentially beyond his control. AEDPA allows a petitioner just 365 days to complete the entire process of filing a fully-exhausted federal ha-beas petition. The district court’s error and its consequences consumed 258 days of that 365-day period.
The district court’s incorrect dismissal, combined with its loss of the body of Corjasso’s petition, constitutes an “extraordinary circumstance” as contemplated by our equitable tolling cases.
See, e.g., Miles,
When the status conference took place, the one-year statute of limitations had already expired. The “extraordinary circumstance” and its consequence thus made it impossible for Corjasso to file his peti-
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tion in a timely fashion. Once the status conference took place, Corjasso acted with reasonable diligence to move his petition forward.
See Allen, 255
F.3d at 800-01 (“ ‘If the person seeking equitable tolling has not exercised
reasonable diligence
in attempting to file, after the extraordinary circumstances began, the link of causation between the extraordinary circumstances and the failure to file is broken ....’”) (quoting
Valverde v. Stinson,
Although the district court did not know it at the time, we now know, because of the Supreme Court’s holding in
Duncan v. Walker,
Ill
There is no dispute that Corjasso is entitled to statutory tolling for any period during which he had a properly filed habe-as petition pending in state court.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(2) (AEDPA’s one-year statute of limitations is statutorily tolled during the time in which “a properly filed application for State post-conviction or other collateral review ... is pending.”). Although the statutory provision does not allow for tolling during the pendency of a federal petition,
see Duncan,
The limitations period was statutorily tolled beginning on January 16, 1998 when Corjasso filed his habeas petition with the California Supreme Court. The statute of limitations remained statutorily tolled until the California Supreme Court’s dismissal of Corjasso’s petition became final. Rule 24(a) of the California Rules of Court provides that “[a] decision of the Supreme Court becomes final 30 days after filing.” The denial of a writ petition, even a denial without an opinion, is a “decision” within the meaning of Rule 24.
See People v. Carrington,
IV
In sum, when Corjasso filed his first petition with the district court for the Eastern District on December 13, 1996, 149 days of AEDPA’s one-year statute of limitations had run. The statute was then equitably tolled through August 28, 1997, the date of the status conference. The time period resumed running on August 29, 1997 and continued to run for a total of 141 days, until Corjasso filed his petition with the California Supreme Court on January 16,1998. The statute was then statutorily tolled pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(2) while Corjasso’s petition was pending before the California Supreme Court. Finally, the. time period ran for six days between January 21, 1999, the date the California Supreme Court’s denial of his petition became final, and January 27, 1999, the date Corjasso filed his second amended federal petition. Corjasso’s petition was therefore timely filed on January 27, 1999, as he had used up only 296 days (149 plus 141 plus 6) of the 365-day statute of limitations.
V
Corjasso also seeks to present two claims not encompassed by the COA. First, he argues that the district court erroneously refused to vacate the stipulated dismissal of his first amended petition. Between the time the parties lodged the stipulated dismissal and the date the court approved it, this court had held that, rather than dismiss a petition containing unexhausted claims, a district court may issue a stay and hold the petition in abeyance while the petitioner exhausts those claims.
See Calderon v. United States Dist. Court (Taylor),
We REVERSE the dismissal of Corjas-so’s petition as untimely and REMAND for further proceedings.
Notes
. Although it does not affect the outcome in this case, we note that the Judicial Council of California has recently promulgated Proposed Rule 29.4, which will make the California Supreme Court’s denial of a petition for habe-as final upon filing. The proposed rule is scheduled to take effect July 1, 2002.
