ORDER AND OPINION
ORDER
This order redesignates the memorandum filed on March 19, 2010, as a published per curiam opinion.
OPINION
Petitioner White appeals from the district court’s dismissal of his habeas petition as untimely. We review a district court’s denial of a habeas corpus petition de novo. Gonzalez v. Brown, 585 F.3d 1202, 1206 (9th Cir.2009). We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2253, and we affirm.
I.
The Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA) has a one-year statute of limitations for habeas cases by persons in custody pursuant to a state court judgment. 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1). The AEDPA statute of limitations may be tolled for the time during which a “properly filed” state habeas petition is pending.
Id.
§ 2244(d)(2). The Supreme Court has made it clear that “[w]hen a postconviction [habeas] petition is untimely under state law, that is the end of the matter for purposes of § 2244(d)(2).”
Pace v. DiGuglielmo,
White argues that California’s timeliness rule is not an “adequate” procedural bar because it is vague, ambiguous, and inconsistently applied. However, the adequacy analysis used to decide procedural default issues is inapplicable to the issue of whether a state petition was “properly filed” for purposes of section 2244(d)(2).
See Zepeda v. Walker,
II.
White argues alternatively that equitable tolling should apply to render his federal habeas petition timely. We construe this argument as a motion to expand the Certificate of Appealability in this case to include the issue of equitable tolling, and we grant the motion.
See
Ninth Circuit Rule 22-l(e). We review de novo the question of whether a statute of limitations should be equitably tolled.
Harris v. Carter,
White’s primary argument for equitable tolling is that Pace overruled earlier Ninth Circuit case law and that, until this court’s mandate issued in Bonner, he reasonably relied on earlier circuit precedent that would have tolled the AEDPA statute of limitations for the entire time that he was seeking state habeas relief. To qualify for equitable tolling, petitioners “must demonstrate that they have been pursuing their rights diligently and that some extraordinary circumstance stood in their way.” Roy v. Lampert, 465 F.3d 964, 969 (9th Cir.2006) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted).
Bonner
was decided on October 6, 2005. White’s state petition was first held untimely on January 6, 2006.
Bonner's
mandate issued on March 20, 2006. Yet White waited until December 14, 2006— more than 14 months after
Bonner,
more than 11 months after the state superior court held his state petition untimely, and almost nine months after the
Bonner
mandate — to file his federal petition. The Supreme Court in
Pace
acknowledged that “a petitioner trying in good faith to exhaust state remedies may litigate in state court for years only to find out at the end that he was never ‘properly filed,’ and thus that his federal habeas petition is time barred,” but suggested that “[a] prisoner ... might avoid this predicament ... by filing a ‘protective’ petition in federal court and asking the federal court to stay and abey the federal habeas proceedings until state remedies are exhausted.”
White has asked that we take judicial notice of certain facts in support of his equitable tolling argument: (1) the
Bonner
docket sheet; (2) proceedings in another California habeas case; and (3) state bar records reflecting disciplinary proceedings against White’s former counsel. Those facts are appropriate for judicial notice, and we therefore grant White’s request.
See United States v. 14.02 Acres of Land,
III.
Finally, White argues that, as to one of his state habeas claims, the state superior court did not make an untimeliness finding but instead dismissed the claim on its merits; therefore, statutory tolling operates to render his federal habeas petition timely as to that claim. We do not reach this argument. White does not appear to have made this argument in the district court; his opposition to the motion to dismiss does not suggest that one claim in his state habeas petition might stand in a different legal posture than the others as to untimeliness. Generally, arguments not raised before the district court are waived on appeal.
O’Guinn v. Lovelock Corr. Ctr.,
AFFIRMED.
