Bolarinwa v. Perez

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 2010
Docket08-0832-pr
StatusPublished

This text of Bolarinwa v. Perez (Bolarinwa v. Perez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bolarinwa v. Perez, (2d Cir. 2010).

Opinion

08-0832-pr Bolarinwa v. Perez

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

_______________

August Term, 2009

(Argued: December 7, 2009 Decided: January 28, 2010)

Docket No. 08-0832-pr

SENORA L. BOLARINWA ,

Petitioner-Appellant,

—v.—

ELIZABETH WILLIAMS, Superintendent, Bedford Hills Correctional Facility

Respondent-Appellee.*

Before:

KATZMANN and LIVINGSTON , Circuit Judges,

STANTON , District Judge.** _______________

Appeal from a Decision and Order of the United States District Court for the Northern

District of New York (Lawrence E. Kahn, Judge), dated January 4, 2008, dismissing as untimely

Petitioner-Appellant’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus. We hold that mental illness can serve

as a ground for equitable tolling of the one-year statute of limitations for filing habeas petitions

* The Clerk of the Court is directed to amend the official caption as set forth above. ** The Honorable Louis L. Stanton of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, sitting by designation. prescribed by the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act. We accordingly vacate the

judgment of the district court and remand to allow Petitioner-Appellant to present that court with

evidence in support of her claim for equitable tolling.

THEODORE S. GREEN , Green & Willstatter, White Plains, NY, for Petitioner- Appellant.

ASHLYN DANNELLY , Assistant Attorney General (Barbara D. Underwood, Solicitor General, Roseann B. Mackechnie, Deputy Solicitor General for Criminal Matters, of counsel), for Andrew M. Cuomo, New York State Attorney General, New York, NY, for Respondent-Appellee.

KATZMANN , Circuit Judge:

This case calls upon us to determine whether mental illness can serve as a ground for

equitable tolling of the one-year statute of limitations for filing habeas petitions prescribed by the

Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (“AEDPA”). See 28 U.S.C. § 2244(d)(1). We

hold that it can. In addition, we find that the district court properly granted Petitioner-

Appellant’s motion for an extension of time to file a notice of appeal to this Court. We vacate

the judgment of the district court and remand to allow Petitioner-Appellant to present that court

with evidence in support of her claim for equitable tolling.

I

2 On July 16, 1995, Petitioner-Appellant Senora Bolarinwa and her father entered a police

station in Albany, New York, claiming that they could not locate her three-year-old son; at that

time, Bolarinwa made several statements indicating that she had harmed her son. Bolarinwa

directed officers to a location on the Hudson River where her son’s body was found, and she

agreed to accompany the officers back to the police station. After being provided a Miranda

warning and agreeing to speak with officers, Bolarinwa began to act peculiarly and made

statements suggesting that she was responsible for her child’s death. People v. Bolarinwa, 258

A.D.2d 827, 827-28 (3d Dep’t 1999).

Bolarinwa was tried in Albany County Court for murder in the second degree and

manslaughter in the first degree for the killing of her son. Id. at 827; see also N.Y. Penal Law §

125.25(4); id. § 125.20(4). Prior to trial the state court determined that Bolarinwa was an

incapacitated person and ordered her committed to an institution for care and treatment. In

March 1996, after six months of institutionalization, Bolarinwa was certified as fit to proceed to

trial by a psychiatrist, who found her depression and suicidal tendencies sufficiently improved to

return her to a correctional facility. Bolarinwa, 258 A.D.2d at 831. At trial Bolarinwa presented

seven experts to testify in support of her affirmative defense that she was not guilty by reason of

mental disease or defect. In opposition, the state’s expert testified that Bolarinwa did not suffer

from a mental disease or defect and did not lack the capacity to appreciate the nature and

consequences of her conduct. Id. at 831-32.

Bolarinwa was convicted by a jury of murder in the second degree, and judgment was

entered on April 4, 1997. She appealed her conviction to the New York Supreme Court,

Appellate Division, Third Department, which affirmed, finding that (1) her statements to officers

3 and her prior acts of child neglect were admissible evidence, (2) the trial court did not err in

failing to conduct sua sponte a second competency hearing during trial, and (3) the jury’s verdict

was not against the weight of the evidence. Id. at 828-32. The New York Court of Appeals

denied leave to appeal on August 12, 1999. 93 N.Y.2d 1014 (1999).

Subsequently, on July 11, 2006, Bolarinwa moved in state court for an order vacating her

conviction pursuant to N.Y. Crim. Proc. Law § 440.10, arguing that the evidence adduced at her

trial was insufficient to support her conviction and that a juror may have been sleeping during the

proceedings. The court denied the motion and the Appellate Division denied leave to appeal on

September 22, 2006. Bolarinwa’s subsequent motion for a writ of coram nobis, alleging

ineffective assistance of appellate counsel, was denied by the Appellate Division; on June 28,

2007, an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, Appellate Division denied leave to appeal to

the Court of Appeals.

On August 14, 2007 Bolarinwa filed a pro se petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the

United States District Court for the Southern District of New York; the petition was subsequently

transferred to the Northern District of New York as the appropriate jurisdiction. Construed

broadly, the petition and its 172-page attachment raise more than a dozen claims. Of relevance

for the present appeal, in the section of the petition addressing timeliness Bolarinwa contends

that the AEDPA one-year limitations period should not “bar this petition because [she] pursued

post-conviction remedy and collateral attack,” but she does not specify the dates of her

state-court filings. In response to a request from the district court, Bolarinwa filed a subsequent

affidavit stating the dates upon which her state petitions were denied, but not when they were

4 filed. Nowhere in the habeas petition does Bolarinwa argue that the statute of limitations should

be equitably tolled on account of her mental illness.

On January 4, 2008 the district court dismissed Bolarinwa’s petition and entered

judgment, finding that her state petitions could not have been filed earlier than 2005 and thus

there was a five-year gap between expiration of the AEDPA one-year limitations period on or

about November 12, 2000 and the commencement of her state collateral actions. On February

14, 2008, Bolarinwa submitted to the court a notice of appeal and a motion for an extension of

time to file the notice; in her motion she explained that she had failed to file the notice within the

prescribed thirty-day period because she had been waiting for a letter establishing her history of

mental illness. The district court granted the motion for extension of time and directed the clerk

to file the notice of appeal.

That same day Bolarinwa filed a motion requesting a certificate of appealability from the

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