Robert K. DILS, Petitioner-Appellant, v. Larry SMALL, Warden; Attorney General of the State of California, Respondents-Appellees.
No. 99-55412.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued Nov. 13, 2000. Submission Deferred Dec. 18, 2000. Submitted July 30, 2001. Filed Aug. 6, 2001.
260 F.3d 984
David P. Druliner, Chief Assistant Attorney General; Carol Wendelin Pollack, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Kenneth C. Byrne, Supervising Deputy Attorney General; Beverly K. Falk, Deputy Attorney General, Los Angeles, California, for the respondents-appellees.
Before: PREGERSON, NOONAN, and SILVERMAN, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge NOONAN; Concurrence by Judge PREGERSON
NOONAN, Circuit Judge:
Robert K. Dils appeals the dismissal of his petition for habeas corpus. The case presents a persistent petitioner whose persistence has not resulted in an adjudication of his federal appeal on the merits. Because of controlling congressional legislation, we lack jurisdiction over his latest effort.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
April 23, 1990, Dils shot and killed his wife, from whom he had separated, and her live-in male companion. December 13, 1990, a jury convicted Dils on two counts of first degree murder. He was sentenced to life imprisonment without possibility of parole. April 27, 1993, the California Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, affirmed the judgment. August 12, 1993, the California Supreme Court denied his petition for review.
September 24, 1993, Dils sought habeas corpus pursuant to
Dils appealed to this court the July 26, 1994 denial of a CPC. February 6, 1997, a motions panel of this court denied the request. Dils was also denied a certificate of appealability (COA). The order further provided that “no motions for reconsideration, rehearing, clarification, stay of mandate or any other submission shall be filed or entertained in this closed docket.” February 12, 1997, this order was “lodged” in the district court.
March 27, 1997, Dils filed a second petition for habeas with the California Supreme Court. May 28, 1997, the petition was denied. June 10, 1997, Dils filed a third such petition with the California Supreme Court; it was denied on October 29, 1997.
April 30, 1998, Dils mailed from prison a third federal habeas petition. January 8, 1999, it was denied for lack of timeliness under
May 26, 1999, a motions panel of this court granted a COA with respect to one issue, viz., “whether the district court erred by dismissing petitioner‘s section 2254 petition as time-barred. See
ANALYSIS
Dils had one year after April 23, 1996, the date of enactment of the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA), to file a federal habeas petition.
Dils argues that his third petition relates back to his first petition. Our decisional law forecloses that contention if the first petition was no longer pending. Green v. White, 223 F.3d 1001, 1003 (9th Cir.2000). Dils argues, however, that his first petition was in fact still pending on April 30, 1998. But our order disposing of the case had been entered on the docket of the district court by February 12, 1997. The life of the first federal petition had come to an end.
Dils claims his petition had an after-life, given it by a document he offered to the district court on September 16, 1997, entitled “Request and Declaration for Late Traverse” and bearing the document number of his first federal petition. The district court did not file this document and returned it to Dils. Dils appealed, and the district court construed the appeal as a request for a COA, which the district court denied on February 2, 1998. A motions panel of this court continued to construe his appeal as a request for a COA and on April 15, 1998 denied it, with the same provision as to no further motions used by the motions panel in its order of February
Dils argues that his “inartful” pro se petition of September 16, 1997 should have been construed as a statement that he had exhausted his state remedies and was now asking the federal court for judgment on the merits. But there was no way the district court could have engaged in such interpretation. By order of this court the docket was closed. Further filings were forbidden. The case had no life after the issue of our February 6 order, its issue necessarily preceded by one or more days the docketing of the order in the district court on February 12, 1997.
Dils raises two additional arguments: that his September 16, 1997 document should have been construed as a new habeas petition and that the district court should have warned him at the time of the dismissal of his second habeas petition that he ran the risk of returning too late to the federal court if he spent time exhausting his state remedies. These questions are not presented by the COA and are therefore as much beyond our jurisdiction as his untimely third petition.
DISMISSED.
PREGERSON, Circuit Judge, concurring specially:
I concur in the result.
