Some years ago, Willie Edwards was charged and convicted on one count of conspiring to distribute heroin and cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. §§ 846 and 841(a)(1), and another count of using a telephone to facilitate the distribution of heroin and cocaine, in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 843(b). He was sentenced to 324 months’ imprisonment on the first count and, concurrently, 96 months on the second. This court affirmed both the convictions and sentences on direct appeal, in
United States v. Edwards,
Before reaching the merits of Edwards’s Apprendi argument, however, we must address a preliminary question touching this court’s jurisdiction. The district court denied Edwards’s § 2255 motion on July 29, 1999; it entered judgment on the same day. On August 16, 1999, the district court docketed a paper from Edwards entitled “Motion Pursuant to Rule 59(e) and Request for Evidentiary Hearing Pursuant to Rule 8(c) that Governs Habeas Corpus and 28 U.S.C. § 2243.” Edwards had tendered this paper, with the correct postage, to the prison authorities on August 10, 1999. About two months later, on October 14, 1999, the district court denied the motion, and Edwards filed his notice of appeal to this court on October 22, 1999.
The question is whether Edwards filed that notice of appeal in a timely manner. In general, because the United States is a party to a § 2255 case, a petitioner has 60 days in which to appeal. See Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(1)(B). Measuring that time from the original judgment, however, yields a time for appeal of September 27, 1999, well before Edwards’s actual filing date of October 22, 1999. This means that Edwards’s appeal was not timely unless the time for filing was tolled by his Motion Pursuant to Rule 59(e). Those motions must be filed within 10 business days of the district court’s order, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e), 6(a). The tenth business day after July 29, 1999, was August 12, 1999, two days after Edwards tendered his motion to the prison authorities and four days before the district court received and docketed the motion. If the motion was a timely Rule 59(e) filing, it served to toll the time
*758
for taking an appeal until the district court disposed of it. See,
e.g., Life Ins. Co. of N. Am. v. Von Valtier,
In
Houston v. Lack,
In 1999, this court extended
Houston’s
mailbox rule to the filing of petitions for a writ of habeas corpus, but it noted in the same decision that “this circuit has not ruled on whether the rule should be extended to a
pro se
prisoner’s filing of other papers.”
Jones v. Bertrand,
The policy on which the
HoustonCourt
relied — that is, that institutional constraints prevent prisoners from monitoring the delivery of a notice of appeal after it has been entrusted to the prison authorities — applies with equal force to the filing of a motion under Rule 59(e). We need not decide here whether there is any kind of paper, or any circumstance, under which a district court would be entitled to hold a
pro se
prisoner litigant to an actual receipt standard, but we are confident that this would be an exceptional situation. As the
Houston
Court put it, the
“pro se
prisoner [ ] cannot personally travel to the courthouse to see that the notice is stamped ‘filed’ or to establish the date on which the court received the notice.”
Unfortunately for Edwards, this procedural victory is not a harbinger of success on the merits. On appeal, he has abandoned the grounds for the § 2255 motion that he had presented to the district court and has instead urged us to find that Apprendi requires us to set aside his conviction and sentence. This court granted a certificate of appealability on two issues: (1) whether Edwards’s sentence of 324 months is lawful in light of Apprendi, and (2) whether Apprendi applies retroactively to first-time motions under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, as opposed to second or successive motions.
Upon closer examination of the record, we have concluded that neither one of these questions is properly presented in Edwards’s case. Even assuming that
Apprendi
applies retroactively to cases on collateral review, Edwards’s sentence does not run afoul of its holding. It was uncontested that Edwards had a prior felony drug conviction. The government filed an enhancement information under 21 U.S.C. § 851, and we have now made it clear on a number of occasions that we do not read
Apprendi
as having overruled
Almendarez-Torres v. United States,
We therefore AffiRM the judgment of the district court.
