*1149 ORDER RE: MOTION TO DISMISS AND FURTHER PROCEEDINGS
Raymond Romero, an inmate at Donovan Correctional Facility in San Diego, California, filed a federal habeas petition, raising nine grounds for why his September 18, 1995, conviction for burglarizing a home and his resulting thirty-five year sentеnce violates the United States Constitution. Respondent has moved to dismiss the petition as time-barred and for including unexhausted claims.
Whether the present petition is time-barred turns on whether Romero was “properly рursuing his state post-conviction remedies” during the fifteen-month gap between the disposition of his habeas petition before the California Court of Appeals and the filing of a successive petition in the California Supreme Court. If so, then the petition was timely-filed. If not, the one-year limitation period for state prisoners to file their federal habeas petitions will likely bar consideration of the instant petition.
Romero’s dirеct efforts at overturning his conviction were completed on July 30, 1997, when the California Supreme Court denied his petition for review “without prejudice to filing a petition for writ of habeas corpus in the sentencing cоurt.” The clock started ticking on the one-year limitations period ninety days later on October 28, 1997, when Romero’s conviction became final.
See Bowen v. Roe,
On two separate occasions Romero filed a habeas petition with the state trial court in an effort to collaterally attack his conviction. Both petitions were denied by the trial court, the first after a five-day interval and the second after a twenty-day interval. On Septеmber 3,1998 (nearly thirty-five days after the denial of the last petition by the state trial court), Romero filed a state habeas petition with the California Court of Appeals, which denied the petition on the merits nine days latеr. After fifteen months had passed, Romero filed a successive habeas petition with the California Supreme Court. The petition was summarily denied by the California Supreme Court without citation to authority on March 29, 2000.
Romero then sought to challenge the constitutional soundness of his conviction by filing the instant petition in federal court on June 1, 2000.
Respondent argues that Romero is precluded from tolling the one-year limitations period for the fifteen-month gap between his state habeas petitions, which is essential to find that the instant petition is timely-filed. Section 2244(d)(1) imposes a one-year limitation period for state prisoners to file their federal hаbeas petitions. The statute, however, tolls the limitations period while a “properly filed” application for habeas review is pending in state court.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(2). The Ninth Circuit stated in
Nino v. Galaza,
The respondent asserts that the instant petition presents such an instance of substantial delay. Respondent urges the Court that a fifteen-month delay is “too vast” to consider that anything was pending and draws a bleak picture should the Court find otherwise. Respondent, for instance, suggests that allowing a fifteen-month delay to toll the limitations period would encourage other prisoners to wait five or even ten years before filing their successive habeas petition. Respondent also asserts that allowing such a delay to toll thе limitations period would place no “reasonable limits” to the rule announced in
Nino.
Exactly what “reasonable limits” respondent would have the Court impose
*1150
on
Nino
tolling is, not surprisingly, unclear. If a fifteen-month delay is “too vast,” what about a six-month delay? The Ninth Circuit has already held that
Nino
tolling is appropriate even where there was a four-and-a-half month delay.
See Saffold v. Newland,
Respondent’s approach would necessarily lead to
ad hoc
judicial line drawing (a four-month delay is okay, but a six-month delay is just too long) without any mooring to the federal habeas statute. Section 2244(d)(2) speaks in terms of “properly filed applications for state post-conviction or other collateral review.” Application of the statute’s tolling provision is therefore necessarily grounded in and defined by considerations of state law. Federal courts have deferred such considerations to the state courts.
See Nino,
As those courts have made clear, “[t]he whole purpose of the tolling requirement is to permit state courts to address the merits of the petitioner’s claim.”
Saffold,
Respondent has instead read the decision in
Saffold
as being based on the court’s judgment that a four-month delay is not fatal for
Nino
tolling. The decision in
Saffold
was not based on such temporal considerations. Rather, what made the four-month delay inconsequential was the fact that the state court decided, at least in part, the tardily-filed petition on the merits.
See Saffold,
Such a rule would not lead tо the catastrophic scenarios envisioned, by the respondent of prisoners waiting years between the disposition of one petition and the filing of the next because the limitations period would be tolled in the interim. Such a prisoner wTould be taking a risk in allowing such lengthy gaps to develop. Although the state courts, as in this case, may proceed to consider the successive petition on the merits, the courts could just as easily (and in far more probability)
*1151
deny the petition as untimely. Such a ruling would sever the prisoner’s ability to use the gap for tolling purposes. And, given the- short nature of the limitations period, such unaccounted gaps would in all likеlihood sound the death knell for the prisoner’s ability to file a timely federal habeas petition. Romero got lucky. The California Supreme Court denied his successive petition on the merits.
See Hunter v. Aispuro,
Accordingly, the Court hereby ORDERS that the motion to dismiss is DENIED insofar as it claims that the petition is time-barred.
Respоndent also contends that numerous grounds in Romero’s petition are unexhausted because the state habeas petition presented to the California Supreme Court did not contain all the federal legal theories now advanced in his federal habeas petition.
Section 2254 “requires a federal habeas corpus petitioner to provide the state courts with a ‘fair opportunity’ to apply controlling legal principles to the facts bearing upon his constitutional claim.”
Anderson v. Harless,
Accordingly, the Court offers Romero an opportunity, within 20 days of the date of this Order, to file a voluntary dismissal of the first, second, seventh, and eighth grounds as well as the
ex post facto
issue in the ninth ground. If Romero fails to voluntarily dismiss any unexhausted claims, the Court intends to recommend dismissal of the entire petition.
See Rose v. Lundy,
