Taliani, a state prisoner, sought federal habeas corpus. 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The district court denied his petition as untimely, rejecting his argument that the one-year limitations period (28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1)), which in his case began to run on April 24, 1996, see
Gendron v. United States,
He missed the deadline by a little more than a month and argues that this was due to his lawyer’s having miscalculated the limitations period because of inadequate research. The initial question, novel in this circuit, is whether the one-year deadline in section 2244(d)(1) is subject to equitable tolling — the judge-made doctrine, well established in federal common law, that excuses a timely filing when the plaintiff could not, despite the exercise of reasonable diligence, have discovered all the information he needed in order to be able to file his claim on time. E.g.,
Chappie v. National Starch & Chemical Co.,
What is of more general importance, section 2244(d)(1) already contains an equitable-tolling provision, subsection (D), which postpones the running of the one-year limitation for the filing of a petition for habeas corpus to “the [earliest] date on which the factual predicate of the claim or claims presented could have been discovered through the exercise of due diligence.” Given this and other express tolling provisions (28 U.S.C. §§ 2244(d)(1)(B), (C), (2)), it is unclear what room remains for importing the judge-made doctrine of equitable tolling, though both
Davis v. Johnson, supra,
Denied.
