This аppeal marks the latest chapter in what has become a crusade: the unremitting effort of plaintiff-appellee Celso Lopez Lopez (Lopez), a native Puerto Rican, to eliminate, or at least curtail, the operations of certain checkpoints established by the federal Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) at the Luis Munoz Marin International Airport in Isla Verde, Puerto Rico. 1 Because we believe that the district court should have closed the book on this case sooner rather than later, we reverse the grant of equitable relief.
Background
The backdrop of the original litigation (which we shall call
“Lopez I”)
has been vividly portrayed in a series of opinions,
see Lopez Lopez v. Aran,
In
Lopez II,
plaintiffs central thesis was that the INS agents acted unlawfully because they had no sufficient authority or reason to question and detain him in connection with an intra-island flight. The pertinent facts are documented in a further rescript of the district court.
See Lopez Lopez v. Garriga,
Defendants’ actions related to the questioning and detention of plaintiff were lawful only if defendants had a sufficiently reasonable suspicion that plaintiff was an illegal аlien. If defendants did not have such a reasonable suspicion, then the preventive measures taken against plaintiff on December 6,' 1987, were unlawful and you must find for plaintiff. If you find, on the other hand, that Mr. Lopez’ behavior aroused a reasonable suspicion in the minds of the INS agents that he was an illegal alien, then you must then find for the federal dеfendants.
Lopez II,
The jury determined this issue antithetic to Lopez’ interests. To borrow the district court’s summarization, the jury’s verdict signified that plaintiff's rights had not been violated since the defendants “had a sufficiently reasonable suspicion to detain [him]” on the occasion in question.
Id.
at 1068. The district court upheld the jury’s finding,
id.
at 1069, and Lopez took no appeal from it. The finding has, therefore, become the law of the case.
See Raxton Corp. v. Anania Assoc., Inc.,
*67
Plaintiff also sought equitable relief which the court below described as comprising “a declaration and an injunction to prevent future violations of his fourth- and fifth-amendment rights.”
Lopez II,
Notwithstanding the jury verdict, the district court proceeded to restrain the federаl defendants
... from subjecting United States citizens to the pre-flight inspection practice authorized and established pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1182(d)(7) and 8 C.F.R. § 235.5(a) when the passengers are passing through Luis Munoz Marin Airport but not departing Puerto Rico for the continental United States. No United States citizen at the airport, unless departing Puerto Rico for the continеntal United States, shall be questioned, detained, or otherwise inspected by INS agents unless the agents have an objectively reasonable and articulable suspicion that the person is an illegal alien.
Lopez II,
Analysis
Appellants advance a salmagundi of reasons why the injunction should not have been issued or, at least, should have been morе narrowly tailored. We need not reach the majority of these asseverations, however, because this is a case, pure and simple, where the district court acted without authority in granting any injunctive relief.
We start with bedrock. A court can only grant permanent injunctive relief to a plaintiff who has met certain preconditions. The first of these implicates the doctrine of standing; an injunction-seeking plaintiff must establish that he “ ‘has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining some direct injury’ as the result of the challenged official conduct and the injury or threat of injury must be both ‘real and immediate,' not ‘conjectural’ or ‘hypothetical.’ ”
City of Los Angeles v. Lyons,
Closely related to such easе-or-controversy considerations is the requirement that a plaintiff must state a “sound basis for equitable relief.”
Id.
at 103,
In this case, as a mаtter of law, these threshold requirements were unfulfilled in the court below. It follows inexorably, then, that the lower court had no authority to grant a permanent injunction in Lopez’ favor. We explain briefly.
Plaintiff’s prayer for injunctive relief was based on the following syllogism: (1) my constitutional rights were violated when I attempted to fly from San Juan (Isla Verde) to Mayaguez on December 6, 1987; (2) the procedures employed by INS officials on that day were typical of those used by INS officials generally; (3) I will frequently be flying the same route in the future; therefore (4) it is likely that my rights will be violated in the future. This construct, however, while perhaps valid in the pleading stage, was devastated by the jury verdict — a verdict which thе trial judge refused to set aside,
see Lopez II,
To be blunt, plaintiff failed on the mеrits of his case — he was unable to show that any of his rights were abridged on the day in question — and he cannot, therefore, be awarded an injunction against either the very conduct which the jury determined not to be violative of his rights or conduct alleged but unproven. Lopez did, of course, show that prospective intra-island passengers are sometimes asked about their citizenship as they pass the airport checkpoints. Nonetheless, standing alone, such a showing merited no relief; the constitutionality of this limited aspect of the government officials’ protocol cannot be gainsaid.
Analytically, it is helpful to bifurcate the challenged actions. The point of dеmarcation distinguishing the two moieties for fourth amendment purposes is the point in time at which a traveler can be deemed to have been “seized” by government actors. It is well settled that seizure occurs “only if, in view of all of the circum
*69
stances surrounding the incident, a reasonable person would have believed that he was not free to leave.”
United States v. Mendenhall,
The second phase of the protocol begins when the officials, not content with merely inquiring about citizenship, take additional steps to obtain an answer to the pending question.
See, e.g., Lopez II,
In this сase, the balancing was performed by the jury. Its verdict for the defendants, as the district court recognized, was based on a determination that seizing plaintiff on the occasion in question was reasonable.
See Lopez II,
*70 Nor is Lopez assisted by his prayer for declaratory relief. Although the court below also purported to grant a declaration of rights, the dеclaration, read in context, branded unconstitutional only pre-flight inspections (1) which amount to seizures and (2) for which no specific and articulable suspicion of illegal alienage exists. As has been amply demonstrated, no such unconstitutional seizure occurred in this case. Moreover, the INS conceded forthrightly at oral argumеnt in this court that it claimed no power to detain or seize a prospective passenger merely because he or she refused to answer an agent’s random citizenship inquiry. The declaration of rights was at most confirmatory of what all parties agreed to be settled law, and thus, superfluous.
To the extent, if at all, that the declaration purports to go beyond an uncontroversial statement of the obvious, the district court was without authority to issue it, for much the same reason as the court was powerless, on this record, to grant injunctive relief.
See Golden v. Zwickler,
Conclusion
To recapitulate, once the jury rejected plaintiff’s constitutional claim, he was left without any sound basis for equitable redress. He no longer had standing to press for a restraining order or a declaratory judgment. The final chapter of Lopez II must inevitably recite that, given the jury verdict, the lower court’s formulation of an injunction and declaration in plaintiff’s favor was unsupportable. Accordingly, we reverse the grant of equitable relief and remand the cause to the court below for vacation of the restraining order and entry of judgment on the jury verdict.
Although supererogatory for present purposes, we reеmphasize, in light of appellee’s avowed concerns of principle, what we pointed out in note 6,
supra:
today’s decision in no way suggests that the controlling statute, 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(1), applies differently in San Juan than in any other part of the United States. The fourth amendment permits immigration officers — whether at a factory in California or an airpоrt in Puerto Rico — to ask questions about immigration status as long as those whom they question can freely disregard the questions and continue about their business.
See Delgado,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. We have previously noted that the checkpoints "are used for preliminary screening of persons attempting to board domestic flights between Puerto Rico and the continental United States.”
Lopez Lopez v. Aran,
. The damages claim was brought under the imprimatur of
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of Narcotics,
.Plaintiff originally contended that the local police abetted the violation of his rights. He later dropped his case against officer Orozco. His case against officer Santiago Cruz culminated in a jury verdict for the defendant.
Lopez II,
. In
Lopez I,
. It is too basic to require exegetic discussion thаt Lopez must show his own rights are in jeopardy in order to secure injunctive relief.
See Warth v. Seldin,
. There is much debate in this case about the authority of the INS, under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(d)(7) and 8 C.F.R. § 235.5(a), to operate a Puerto Rican checkpoint for flights other than to the mainland United States. We do not enter this fray. The INS activity involved here — mere questioning, augmented by further actions only upon the emergence of reasonable suspicion — is аuthorized under 8 U.S.C. § 1357(a)(1) (1988), which empowers any INS official, without a warrant, to "interrogate any alien or person believed to be an alien as to his right to be or to remain in the United States." This authorization to question individuals is not geographically limited: it is as valid in Puerto Rico as in, say, Nebraska; it appertains not only in airports but in factories,
see Delgado,
. It is important to note that Lopez’ damages case was decided on the merits, rather than on the basis of qualified immunity.
See Lopez II,
