In this habeas corpus case, Robert Kerns appeals the district court’s dismissal of his 28 U.S.C. § 2254 petition. Because we agree that his claim is procedurally defaulted, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
An associate of Kerns mugged a man, using a knife or razor 1 as a weapon, and stole the man’s laptop computer. Kerns then participated in the theft by pawning the laptop. Later, Kerns held up a series of businesses by handing the desk clerk a note demanding mоney and insinuating that he had a weapon. Once caught, Kerns pled guilty to theft and four second-degree robbery charges. Pursuant to the government’s recommendation, the state court sentenced Kerns to two consecutive ten-year sentences, two concurrent ten-year sentences, and one concurrent five-year sentence, for a total of twenty years.
As rеlevant to this action, Kerns appealed to the Iowa Court of Appeals claiming that the sentencing court improperly relied on the premise that he used a razor in the mugging, because his associate performed the mugging and used the weapon. However, Kerns only advanced state law arguments in support of this position. The Iowa Court of Appeals rejeсted Kerns’ claim and cited no federal law in its opinion.
State v. Kerns,
No. 99-811,
Kerns timely filed a federal habeas corpus petition that contained both exhausted and unexhausted claims. The government filed an answer and moved to dismiss the mixed petition on this basis, and it also asserted in its answer that some of Kerns’ claims (including the sentencing issue based upon the use of the razor) were procedurally defaulted. The district court agreed that Kerns’ petition contained unexhausted assertions and allowed him to amend his pеtition to assert only his exhausted claims. After Kerns filed his amended petition, the district court denied the state’s motion to dismiss. Kerns proceeded with two claims-a due process claim based оn the razor/sentencing issue, and a constitutional challenge to Iowa’s eighty-five percent sentencing' law. The district court 2 denied the sentencing claim on its merits. The court further concluded that because Kerns had not presented a federal constitutional challenge for the razor/sentencing issue in his direct state appeal, the issue was procedurally defaultеd.
The only issue certified for appeal concerns the due process claim. Importantly, Kerns concedes that the claim is *449 procedurally defaulted. 3 However, he argues that because the claim survived the motion to dismiss despite the state’s argument that it was procedurally defaulted, and because the district court did not suggest that he replead the claim, his claim can advance on оne of two grounds: 1) that it is “law of the case” that the district court implicitly rejected the procedural default defense when it did not grant the motion to dismiss or counsel Kerns to re-plead this clаim; or 2) that the state has waived the procedural default defense after it was implicitly rejected by the district court and the state did not ask for a motion to reconsider the denial of thе motion to dismiss.
II. DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s legal conclusions concerning procedural default de novo.
Frasier v. Maschner,
We summarily dispose of Kerns’ law-of-the-;case argument. The district court denied thе state’s motion to dismiss once Kerns had withdrawn the unexhausted claims. The order denying this motion cites only to
Rose v. Lundy,
*450 Similarly, Kerns’ waiver argument-that the state waived its procedural default defense by not asking for reconsideration of the denial of the motion tо dismiss-is without merit. The state raised procedural default defenses in its answer, and when it later (after the motion to dismiss was denied) filed its Respondent’s Brief with the district court, it continued to assert the procedural default defenses.
Kerns argues that because of the state’s “waiver” of the issue, he did not have adequate notice to respond to the procedural bar argument. When Kerns drafted his amended pro se petition to exclude the unexhausted claims, he was under the mistaken assumption that the procedural bar defense had been rejected, and therefore did not assert cause, prejudice or actual innocence claims. However, after counsel was appointed, Kerns filed a reply brief in response to the state’s brief. Instead of advancing arguments in favor of the cause and prejudice or actual innocence exceptions to the procedural default rule, Kerns argued that the law of the cаse prevented consideration of the procedural default issue, and that, in any event, the razor/sentencing due process claim was presented to the Iowa courts and therefоre not procedurally defaulted (though he now concedes that same point). Even now, on appeal, Kerns has failed to advance arguments in his briefs 4 about what might constitute cause and prejudice or actual innocence in this case. We, like the district court, decline to make these arguments for Kerns. The federal component to the claim was not presented to the state courts, and Kerns would now be barred from bringing such a claim in state court. See ante n. 3.
In any event, the claim clearly would fail on the merits.
See Perry v. Kemna,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. At various points in the record, the weapon is referred tо as a “scalpel-type knife” and a razor. We, like the parties, will simply refer to the weapon throughout this opinion as a razor.
. The Honorable Ronald E. Longstaff, Chief Judge, United States Distriсt Court for the Southern District of Iowa, adopting the Report and Recommendation of Chief Magistrate Judge Ross A. Walters.
. All parties discuss this issue without mentioning the exhaustion doctrine. While Kerns did fairly prеsent the factual basis for his claim to the state court, he clearly did not present a federal constitutional allegation, nor did the court decide the case on federal grounds. Bоth the factual and legal basis must be presented for exhaustion to occur.
McCartney v. Vitek,
Accordingly, because exhaustion has been waived, we need not examine the futility doctrine and we can proceed directly to the question оf whether Iowa law would currently apply a procedural bar to Kerns claim.
Gray
v.
Netherland,
. Kerns argued at oral argument that one of the two exceptions to the procedural bar rule should be applied to his admittedly procedurally barred claim.
