The district court denied a petition for habeas corpus by a state prisoner. The merits are considered and decided in an unpublished order that we issue today. We confine this opinion to the question whether the, district court should, without reaching the merits of the petition, have entered a default judgment in the petitioner’s favor when the state neglected to file a timely response. The state had until January 20, 1992, to respond to the petition; it missed this deadline and on February 7 filed an untimely motion for an extension of time to March 31, which the court granted. The state filed its response on March 11.
A default judgment is a sanction,
Philips Medical Systems Int’l B.V. v. Bruetman,
Still we should consider whether allowing the state to file an untimely response to the petition was proper.
United States ex rel. Mattox v. Scott,
We are mindful of long delays in a number of districts within this circuit in the filing by state attorneys general of responses to petitions for habeas corpus. This is a deplorable situation, but certainly in a case such as this where the delay was brief and nonprejudieial and was found by the district judge not to have been inexcusably neglectful, the entry of a default judgment would not have been an appropriate response. The judge acted within his discretion, and the judgment is therefore
Affirmed.
