*1 Before F LAUM , Chief Judge , and B AUER and S YKES , Circuit Judges .
S YKES , Circuit Judge . On June 1, 1999, the Supreme Court held that the predicate drug law violations underly- ing a conviction for violating the “continuing criminal enterprise” (“CCE”) statute, 21 U.S.C. § 848(c), are elements of the CCE offense and thus require jury unanimity with respect to each individual violation. Richardson v. United States , 526 U.S. 816, 824 (1999). About six weeks later, Jimmie Poe, Sr. raised a Richardson challenge to his 1996 CCE conviction by filing a habeas corpus petition under 28 U.S.C. § 2241. This was a procedural error. Under 28 U.S.C. § 2255 para. 5, a habeas petition “shall not be entertained” if the petitioner has failed to apply to his sentencing court *2 for relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. The district court dis- missed the habeas petition without prejudice and redirected Poe to § 2255. By this time, however, the applicable limita- tions period under § 2255 had expired. When Poe filed the appropriate § 2255 motion challenging his CCE conviction under Richardson , the district court denied it as untimely.
We issued a certificate of appealability on the
Richardson
issue and also asked the parties to address the matter of
timeliness. We now affirm. Poe’s motion was indeed un-
timely under § 2255 para. 6(3), which specifies that where
the prisoner’s claim is based on a right newly recognized by
the Supreme Court, the one-year limitations period applica-
ble to § 2255 motions runs from “the date on which the
right asserted was initially recognized by the Supreme
Court.” 28 U.S.C. § 2255 para. 6(3);
Dodd v. United States,
I. Background
Poe was convicted in 1996 of five counts of distributing marijuana or possessing it with intent to distribute (21 U.S.C. § 841(a)), two counts of attempting to possess marijuana with intent to distribute (21 U.S.C. § 846), and one count each of engaging in a continuing criminal enter- prise (21 U.S.C. § 848(c)), conspiring to distribute mari- juana (21 U.S.C. § 846), and being a felon in possession of *3 a firearm (18 U.S.C. § 922(g)). Only the CCE conviction is at issue here. At Poe’s trial the district court instructed the jurors that in order to find Poe guilty of violating the CCE statute, they must find (among other things) that he was guilty of at least two violations of 21 U.S.C. § 841(a)(1), which prohibits distributing illegal drugs or possessing them with intent to distribute. The court then told the jury: “You must unanimously find that the defendant committed at least two violations of the federal drug laws, but you do not have to agree on which two violations .” (Emphasis added.) Poe’s CCE conviction was affirmed on direct appeal.
The Supreme Court’s June 1, 1999 decision in
Richardson
made it clear that the CCE jury instruction used at Poe’s
trial was erroneous; the district court should have required
the jury to agree unanimously on which violations of the
federal drug laws constituted Poe’s continuing criminal
enterprise.
Richardson
,
The § 2241 petition was pending for more than fourteen months before any action was taken on it. On September 19, *4 2000, the district court [2] entered a summary order dismiss- ing Poe’s habeas petition as procedurally improper. 28 U.S.C. § 2255 para. 5 (providing that a habeas peti- tion “shall not be entertained” if the petitioner “is autho- rized to apply for relief by motion pursuant to this section” and “has failed to apply for relief, by motion, to the court which sentenced him”). The dismissal was without preju- dice, and the court’s order advised Poe that in order to collaterally attack his federal sentence, he must file a motion to vacate, set aside, or correct the sentence under § 2255, and directed the clerk to send Poe forms for filing a § 2255 motion.
Approximately nine months later, on June 18, 2001, Poe filed a § 2255 motion, once again raising the Richardson challenge to his CCE conviction. He supplemented the motion on July 27 with a legal memorandum detailing his Richardson argument. Poe’s § 2255 motion was assigned to his sentencing judge and remained pending for more than twenty months before any action was taken. On March 17, 2003, the district court denied Poe’s § 2255 motion as untimely. On April 1, 2003, Poe filed a motion under Rule 59(e), F ED . R. C IV . P., to alter or amend the judgment. Sixteen months later, on August 18, 2004, the district court denied Poe’s Rule 59 motion. The district court then declined to issue a certificate of appealability. On May 19, 2005, we granted a certificate of appealability specifically instructing the parties to brief the Richardson jury instruc- tion issue and also to address the timeliness of Poe’s § 2255 motion.
II. Discussion
This appeal presents only questions of law, so we review
the district court’s denial of Poe’s § 2255 motion de novo.
Fuller v. United States
,
Recognizing the obvious lateness of his § 2255 motion, Poe suggests two reasons why we should count it as timely nonetheless. First, he argues that because his § 2241 habeas petition was the functional equivalent of a § 2255 motion, the district court should have construed it as a timely § 2255 motion. He cites Carter v. United States , 312 F.3d 832, 833 (7th Cir. 2002), for the proposition that “a postconviction motion that is functionally a section 2255 motion should be treated as such however it is la- beled.”
But
Carter
and similar decisions that refer to this ap-
proach to postconviction motions do so in the context
of preventing federal prisoners from circumventing
AEDPA’s requirement that they obtain permission from the
court of appeals before filing a second or successive § 2255
motion. 28 U.S.C. § 2255 para. 8;
Carter
,
Henderson v. United States
, 264 F.3d 709, 710 (7th Cir.
2001) (noting that
United States v. Evans
,
Indeed, this court has rejected an equitable tolling argument in this context in Nolan v. United States , 358 F.3d 480, 484-86 (7th Cir. 2004). Poe acknowledges Nolan and says he is not arguing for equitable tolling. But his argument and the one advanced in Nolan are essentially *7 the same regardless of doctrinal nomenclature. Nolan had filed a motion for a new trial pursuant to Rule 33, F ED . R. C RIM . P., just before the expiration of the applicable AEDPA limitations period. After the Rule 33 motion was denied, he filed a § 2255 motion, which was dismissed as untimely. He invoked equitable tolling, arguing that the Rule 33 motion should be construed as a § 2255 motion by application of the decisions cited above that require postconviction motions that are substantively equivalent to § 2255 motions to be treated as § 2255 motions—regardless of label—for pur- poses of AEDPA’s rules governing second or successive motions.
We rejected this argument, noting that Nolan chose to file a Rule 33 motion, not a § 2255 motion, within AEDPA’s limitations period. “From the point of view of timeliness (as opposed to the ‘successive petitions’ rule), he did so at his peril.” Id. at 484. The same is true here. There is no legal basis for Poe to claim he was entitled to have his improper § 2241 petition construed as a § 2255 motion for purposes of AEDPA’s statute of limitations. See Henderson, 264 F.3d at 711 (“Nothing in AEDPA says that a motion not labeled as a section 2255 motion shall nevertheless be deemed one if it could have been so labeled accurately. . . . All we hold today . . . is that we won’t deem a rule 33 (or other misla- beled motion) a section 2255 motion unless the movant has been warned about the consequences of his mistake.”).
Still, we are compelled to comment on the district court’s apparent inattentiveness to the promptness re- quirement of Rule 4 of the “Rules Governing Section 2254 Cases .” Rule 4 directs district judges to “promptly” examine incoming habeas petitions and to “dismiss the petition and direct the clerk to notify the petitioner” if it “plainly ap- *8 pears . . . district court.” Poe filed his § 2241 petition less than two months after the Supreme Court decided Richard- son and the one-year limitations period began running. Had the district court complied with Rule 4 and “promptly” examined and dismissed his petition, Poe would have had ample time to fix the problem and timely file a § 2255 motion. Rule 4 does not define “promptly,” but we are confident a fourteen-month delay in preliminary screening is not what the rule contemplates. The district court’s neglect deprived Poe of the opportunity to correct his mistake.
This brings us to Poe’s secondary argument, which is that
we should forgive his § 2255 motion’s untimeliness under
the doctrine of “unique circumstances.” The doctrine is a
narrow one that applies “only where a party has performed
an act which, if properly done, would postpone the deadline
for filing his appeal and has received specific assurance by
a judicial officer that his act has been properly done.”
Osterneck v. Ernst & Whinney
,
A FFIRMED . *10 A true Copy:
Teste:
________________________________ Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit USCA-02-C-0072—11-6-06
Notes
[1] In
Lanier v. United States
,
[2] Chief Judge J. Phil Gilbert.
[3] Judge William D. Stiehl.
[4]
Henderson
and
Evans
also stand for the proposition that
before a district court “converts” a mislabeled but functionally
equivalent § 2255 motion, the court must notify the petitioner,
explain the “second or successive” consequences of treating the
mislabeled filing as a § 2255 motion, and give the petitioner an
opportunity to withdraw the motion.
Henderson v. United States
,
264 F.3d 709, 711 (7th Cir. 2001);
United States v. Evans
, F.3d 670, 675 (7th Cir. 2000). The Supreme Court later endorsed
this approach in
Castro v. United States
,
[5] Equitable tolling is “reserved for ‘[e]xtraordinary circumstances
far beyond the litigant’s control [that] . . . prevented timely fil-
ing.’ ”
Nolan v. United States
,
[6] Rule 1(b) of these rules allows them to be applied to other habeas corpus petitions, such as Poe’s § 2241 petition.
[7] The inexplicable twenty-month delay in denying Poe’s § 2255 motion as untimely also qualifies for these criticisms, see Rule 4(b) of the “Rules Governing Section 2255 Proceedings,” as does the sixteen-month delay in disposing of Poe’s Rule 59 motion. We have not focused on these delays, however, as they had no legal significance. Poe’s limitations period expired long before he filed his § 2255 motion, so the twenty-month lag between motion and disposition did not contribute to the motion’s untimeli- ness. The same is true of the sixteen months it took the district court to decide Poe’s Rule 59 motion.
[8] Had it been timely, Poe’s § 2255 motion would have run up against this circuit’s case law holding Richardson error to be harmless where the jury unanimously convicted the defendant of two or more separate drug offenses along with the CCE offense. United States v. Wilson , 237 F.3d 827, 833-34 (7th Cir. 2001) (“Because the jury unanimously agreed that each defendant had committed two of the predicate offenses with which he was charged[,] . . . the omission of the instruction was harmless error and the CCE convictions stand.”); United States v. Jackson , 207 F.3d 910, 919 (7th Cir. 2000) (omission of unanimity instruction on CCE count was harmless error where jury unanimously convicted defendant on three predicate offenses). Poe was separately convicted of five felony counts of distributing mari- juana or possessing marijuana with intent to distribute.
