In 2001, Tyrone White was convicted in Minnesota state court of felony murder and attempted first-degree murder and was sentenced to life imprisonment. In a prior appeal we affirmed the district court’s dismissal of White’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus because the petition cоntained claims that had not been fully exhausted in state court.
See White v. Dingle,
We affirm the district court’s conclusion on the issue certifiеd for appeal, joining our sister circuits in holding that a second or amended habeas petition cannot relate back to the time at which the original petition was filed. But we also conclude that under the unusual circumstances presented here, White is entitled to equitable tоlling of the statute of limitations, and we remand the case with instructions for the district court to consider White’s exhausted claims on the merits.
I.
In order to explain the procedural difficulty that White currently faces, it is necessary to lay out in some detail the facts surrounding his attempt to obtain federal habeas review. When White filed his original habeas petition on April 7, 2006, he had more than eight months remaining before the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act’s (AEDPA) one-year statute of limitations was set to expire on
Approximately one month after the statute of limitations had expired, the district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation and dismissed White’s petition without prejudice. The district court then granted White a certifícate of appealability on the question whether his claims were exhausted, finding the issue to be a debatable question warranting appellate review. The district court additionally found that the unexhausted claims appeared to be at least facially viable.
As mentioned above, we affirmed the district court’s conclusion that White’s petition included at least one unexhausted claim and that his petition was therefore subject to dismissal without prejudice. Critically, however, our opinion failed to address White’s alternative argument that, if we affirmed the district court, we should remand his case with instructions for the district court to allow him to voluntarily dismiss the unexhausted claims and have the remаining exhausted claims adjudicated on the merits. The opinion was silent on the procedure that should govern White’s case going forward.
Immediately following our decision, White returned to the district court and filed a motion to amend his habeas petition to dismiss any unexhausted claims. His promptness in taking this action cannot be questioned, as the motion was in fact filed before the mandate had issued from our decision. Recognizing that the statute of limitations was by then long-expired, the district court denied White’s motion to amend his petition and certified the question noted above.
II.
Several of the challenges that White has faced in obtaining merits review of his federal habeas petition stem from the interaction of long-standing Supreme Court precedent and the one-year statute of limitations under the AEDPA. In
Rose v. Lundy,
The Supreme Court considered this issue in
Rhines v. Weber,
III.
The issue certified for appeal is whether an amended habeas petition should be allowed to relate bаck to the date of an original petition that was dismissed without prejudice. We conclude that the answer to that question is no. As the district court noted, every circuit to address this issue has refused to allow an amended petition to relate back.
See, e.g., Marsh v. Soares,
There are persuasive theoretical аnd practical justifications for this outcome. Theoretically, there is nothing to which such an amendment can relate back, because the dismissed petition is no longer pending. From a technical standpoint, the original petition no longer exists and it is as if the original petition had nеver been filed.
See Neverson v. Bissonnette,
This conclusion does not end our inquiry, however. We have the discretion to consider issues outside the scope of the certificate of appealability, and although we exercise that disсretion carefully, we will do so when it is in the interest of justice.
See King v. United States,
The state does not contend that White has failed to diligently pursue his claims. White filed his habeas petition more than eight months before the statute of limitations expired, and he has been steadily litigating his case ever since, all with the goal of having his claims considered on the merits. After we affirmed the district court’s exhaustion determination, White promptly returned to the district court and unsuccessfully sought to amend his petition. Thus, we conclude that White has satisfied the diligence requirement and we turn to the question whether White has demonstrated an extraordinary circumstance that warrants equitable relief.
White’s current inability to obtain federal review of his exhausted claims is a direсt result of our failure to remand his prior appeal with instructions that the district court consider those claims on the merits. 1 Had we done so, the district court could have given White an opportunity to proceed with his exhausted claims rather than having his entire petition dismissed. There is no indication that our failure to remand White’s case was anything other than an oversight. Indeed, such a remand would have been fully consistent with the Supreme Court’s directive in Rhines v. Weber to avoid dismissal without prejudice when it would unreasonably jeopardize a petitioner’s access to review of his exhausted claims.
We previously endorsed remand under similar circumstances in
Underdahl v. Carlson,
We conclude that our failure to remand White’s petition after his first appeal qualifies as an extraordinary circumstance. As noted above, White specifically requested that his petition be remanded in the event that we affirmed the district court, and
The state essentially maintains that White gambled and lost, and that his misstep eliminates any entitlement to federal review of his exhausted claims. This argument, however, assumes that White was required to deсide between accepting the magistrate judge’s initial ruling on the exhaustion question or running the risk that, if that ruling was later affirmed, he would forfeit any further federal review. We can see no reason why a petitioner should be required to make that decision in a case like this — where the district cоurt later determined that the unexhausted claims were facially viable and that its exhaustion analysis involved a debatable question warranting appellate review. White can hardly be faulted for appealing such an important determination.
Moreover, even if the rule that the stаte proposes were a desirable one for future cases, there was nothing that would have put White on notice of the risk that he faced in appealing the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation. To the contrary, the cases we have discussed support thе conclusion that a petitioner in White’s situation may seek appellate review of the district court’s exhaustion determination without fear that an unsuccessful appeal will preclude any further review. Accordingly, we conclude that White has demonstrated an extraordinary circumstance that warrants tolling of the limitations period.
IV.
We affirm the judgment of the district court on the question certified for appeal, and we remand the case with instructions for the court to allow White to amend his petition and proceed with his exhausted claims.
Notes
. The slate contеnds that our failure to remand binds us under the law of the case doctrine, arguing that we implicitly denied White the opportunity to amend his petition after his first appeal. We disagree. Our previous decision addressed only the district court’s exhaustion determination and was silent on the procеdure that should govern White’s continued pursuit of habeas relief. Because resolution of that procedural question was not a necessary part of our holding, the law of the case doctrine does not apply.
See UniGroup, Inc. v. Winokur,
