Stephen C. Curtiss appeals the district court’s
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dismissаl of his Petition for Habe-as Corpus as untimely. He argues that the one year statute of limitations applicable to federal habeas petitions should be tolled for the period during which the petitioner could file a petition for pоst-conviction relief in state court. Recognizing that we have held to the contrary in
Painter v. Iowa,
BACKGROUND
In 1997, Curtiss pled guilty and was convicted in Story County, Iowa, of one count of third degree sexual abuse and two counts of lascivious acts with a child. He was sentenced consecutively on еach count, and is currently serving a total of twenty years in prison. He timely filed a direct appeal of his convictions. On January 13, 1999, the Iowa Supreme Court dismissed his appeal as frivolous.
Eight days later, Curtiss, acting pro se, filed a document in the Iоwa Supreme Court entitled “Legal Malpractice Suit,” naming himself as plaintiff and his former lawyer as defendant. He argued that because of how his attorney handled his case, he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. For relief, he requested that she be disbarred and that he receive twenty thousand dollars, plus costs and fees. The Iowa Supreme Court clerk received and docketed this document but took no action on it.
Several months passed with nо action from either Curtiss or any Iowa court. Eventually, Curtiss sent a letter dated May 17, 1999, to Story County District *853 Chief Judge Ronald H. Schechtman. In it, he complained again about his lawyer, and stated that he had filed a malpractice suit with the Iowa Supreme Cоurt but had not heard of any action taken on it. Judge Schechtman promptly responded by letter stating that he interpreted Curtiss’s letter as one addressing post-conviction issues and that he could not give legal advice.
Almost a year later, Curtiss sent a number of documents professing his innocence to the Story County Clerk of Court. These were filed on May 24, 2000. On May 31, 2000, Curtiss filed a document entitled “Motion to Vacate Sentence,” which the Story County clerk treated as a motion for post-conviction relief. The motion was denied, and his appeal was dismissed by the Iowa Supreme Court as frivolous on January 24, 2002.
Curtiss promptly filed his federal petition for habeas corpus, which was received by the district court on February 28, 2002. The government movеd to dismiss Cur-tiss’s habeas petition, contending it was untimely and not excused from the one year statute of limitations by any equitable tolling principle. The district court granted the government’s motion and dismissed the petition. This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
I. TIMELINESS OF CURTISS’S FEDERAL HABEAS PETITION
The main issue in this case is simple: Was Curtiss’s petition for habeas corpus filed before the statute of limitations expired? A petitioner has one year from the time a state court judgment becomes final to apply for a federal writ of habeas corpus. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)(A). A judgment is final, for these purposes, at “the conclusion of all direct criminal appeals in the state system followed by the expiration of the time allotted for filing a petition [for a writ of certiorari].”
Williams v. Bruton,
Curtiss’s direct appeal was dismissed by the Iowa Supreme Court on January 13, 1999. Taking into account the ninety days he had to рetition for certiorari, Curtiss’s statute of limitations for filing a federal habeas claim began to run on April 13, 1999.
“The time during which a properly filed application for State post-conviction or other collateral review with respect tо the pertinent judgment or claim is pending should not be counted toward any period of limitation under this subsection.” 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(2). Thus, while Curtiss would typically have to file his federal petition by April 13, 2000, the statute of limitations period would be tolled if during that time he filed a petition for post-conviction relief in state court.
See Painter v. Iowa,
Even construing Curtiss’s pro se filings liberally, he did not initiate any action for post-conviction relief in state court until-at the earliest-May 24, 2000, the day he sent documents claiming he was innocent to the Story County Clerk of Court. Because the deadline for filing Curtiss’s federal petition passed on April 13, 2000, his later filing for post-conviction relief in state court cannot act to toll the federal statute of limitations.
Painter,
Curtiss notes that his state court petition was timely under Iowa law. See Iowa Code § 822.3 (permitting petitions for post-conviction relief up to three years following final judgment on direct review). *854 He suggests that the federal statute of limitations should be tolled during the period that he could have properly filed a state court petition for post-conviction relief. Under his theory, the federal filing deadline would not expire until a year after his time for filing in state court expired. If his view were accepted, Curtiss’s federal petition would be timеly.
The very same argument Curtiss advances now was considered and rejected in Painter. There, the petitioner’s federal statute of limitations expired on April 24, 1997. He did not file a petition for post-conviction relief in Iowa state court until Novembеr of 1997. He argued that because his state court action was timely under Iowa state law, and exhaustion of state court remedies is a prerequisite for federal habeas relief, equity required that the federal filing deadline be tolled until his three years to file a state claim ran out. Our court disagreed:
A review of our cases makes clear ... that the time between the date that direct review of a conviction is completed and the date that an application fоr state post-conviction relief is filed counts against the one-year [federal statute of limitations] period. In this case, the one-year period ended on April 24, 1997. Therefore, as the district court held, by the time Painter filed his state-court application on November 11, 1997 there was no federal limitations period remaining to toll, and the petition was properly dismissed as time-barred.
Painter, 247 F.Bd at 1256 (citations omitted).
Apparently cognizant of the burden
Painter
puts on his argument, Curtiss contends
Carey v. Saffold,
In
Sajfold,
the petitioner was convicted in state court of murder and several other charges. His conviction became final on direct review, and, before his federal statute of limitations expired, he filed a petition in state court for post-conviction relief. His motion was denied. Due to California’s post-conviction procedures, he was permitted to file a second “original” petition in the state’s appellate courts, rather than appeal the lower cоurt’s judgment.
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California had not specified a filing deadline for these appellate petitions, instead determining timeliness of each petition based on a “reasonableness” standard. Saf
fold,
*855 The exhaustion requirement serves AEDPA’s goal of promoting “comity, finality, and federalism,” by giving state courts “the first opportunity to review [the] claim,” and to “correct” any “constitutional violation in the first instance.” And AEDPA’s limitations period-with its accompanying tolling provision-ensures the achievement of this goal because it “promotes the exhaustion of state remedies while rеspecting the interest in the finality of state court judgments.” California’s interpretation violates these principles by encouraging state prisoners to file federal habeas petitions before the State completes a full round of collateral review. This would lead to great uncertainty in the federal courts, requiring them to contend with habeas petitions that are in one sense unlawful (because the claims have not been exhausted) but in another sense required by law (because they would otherwise be barred by the 1-year statute of limitations).
Id.
at 220,
The rationale of
Saffold,
if applied to Curtiss’s case, points in his favor. If it would respect AEDPA’s favored principles of comity, finality, and federalism to toll the federal statute of limitations while a state post-conviction proceeding is “pending” (i.e., from time of filing through conclusion of state appellate procedures), those same goals are effectuated by tolling the federal deadline during the time a petitioner
could
file a timely applicаtion in state court. However, the petitioner’s circumstance in
Saffold
differs from Curtiss in one important respect: Saffold filed his state court petition before the federal statute of limitations expired.
Id.
at 217,
II. EQUITABLE TOLLING
Curtiss contends that even if
Painter
remains good law, his failure to observe the federal filing deadline should be excused. A court may equitably toll AEDPA’s statute of limitations in “extraordinary circumstances.”
Kreutzer v. Bowersox,
Curtiss suggests that the Iowa Supreme Court’s refusal to act on his “Legal
*856
Malpractice” lawsuit and failure to contact him regarding the suit lulled him into inaction. The fаcts do not support Curtiss’s claim. He filed his lawsuit in January of 1999. He requested no response from the court, and he did not timely check the status of this claim. Rather, four months later, he wrote to a district court judge and mentioned the pending suit. After receiving thе judge’s response, he still did not check the status of his suit. There is nothing in the record to indicate that the state made it difficult or impossible for Curtiss to either check the status of his state suit or simply file a concurrent federal petition in a timely manner.
Accord Jihad v. Hvass,
CONCLUSION
Curtiss contends that the time limitation on filing his federal habeas claim should be tolled during the time he could have filed a state court petition for post-conviction relief.
Painter v. Iowa,
Notes
. The Honorable Robert W. Pratt, United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa.
. As the Court noted, while different in form from most state post-conviction procedures, Cаlifornia's system has the same substantive result, as it permits an appellate court to consider the merits of a post-conviction petition that was denied by a lower court.
Saf-fold,
. Since
Saffold,
at least one other circuit has adhered to
Painter's
rationale by refusing to toll the federal deadline during the time a рetitioner could file a state court petition for post-conviction relief.
See Burger
v.
Scott,
