A group of political asylum applicants sought injunctive and declaratory relief against filing requirements imposed by Immigration Judge Daniel in addition to those required by INS regulations. After suit was filed, the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) suspended the additional requirements and reopened deportation proceedings in those cases in which asylum applications had been rejected for failure to comply with them. The district court dismissed the action as moot, but awarded fees to plaintiffs under the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA). The government appeals, raising no issues under EAJA but arguing the district court was without power to award fees because it lacked jurisdiction over the underlying action. We affirm.
I.
An INS regulation (8 C.F.R. § 208.2) requires asylum applicants to complete form 1-589, which calls for personal data regarding the applicant and conclusory recitations disclosing the basis for the application. In addition Immigration Judge Daniel required applicants to submit an affidavit setting forth in detail the specific factual basis of their claim, affidavits of witnesses or written offers of proof signed by counsel reflecting the testimony of all proposed witnesses, and copies of all documentary or other evidence to be offered at the hearing. Any applicant not meeting these requirements was “deemed to have ABANDONED his/her request for asylum.” (emphasis in original notice). Judge Daniel also reviewed the contents of completed applications, including those accompanied by the additional documentation, and rejected those that failed to meet an unstated standard of sufficiency. 1 Upon rejecting an application for filing Judge Daniel fixed a date for voluntary departure. If the applicant failed to comply, an order of deportation was entered.
Judge Daniel’s refusal to permit the applicants to file their applications completed in accordance with the regulations denied those applicants the benefit of a number of rights. Applicants for political asylum who file complete and timely applications are eligible for asylum proceedings, deportation withholding proceedings and temporary employment authorization. See 8 C.F.R. §§ 208.3, 208.4, 242.17(c). As the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) pointed out:
Under the facts presented and controlling regulations, the immigration judge was required to forward the application to the Bureau of Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs for an advisory opinion, provide the respondent the opportunity to inspect, explain and rebut that opinion, provide the parties the opportunity to present evidence for the record in deportation proceedings regarding the application, and rule on merits of the *534 application. See 8 C.F.R. §§ 208.6 and 208.10(b), (c), (e) and (f).
In re Marina Isabel Palma-Callejas, No. A27' 209 610 (BIA 1986).
A group of attorneys met with Judge Daniel informally to express concern over the additional filing requirements, but Judge Daniel took no action. As the trial court pointed out, district counsel for the Los Angeles District Office of the INS announced the practice “would continue, unless challenged by a lawsuit.” The Chief Immigration Judge knew of Judge Daniel’s filing requirements six months before ap-pellees filed this lawsuit, but did nothing.
On June 23, 1986, appellees filed this suit on behalf of themselves and a proposed class of asylum applicants 2 . They sought injunctive and declaratory relief on the ground that the additional requirements violated INS regulations, the due process clause and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees, TIAS 6577, 19 U.S. T.S. 6223. Two days later, the Chief Immigration Judge suspended Judge Daniel’s additional requirements and directed that copies of the suspension order be sent to all parties whose asylum applications had been rejected for filing. In July, INS moved to reopen the cases of all members of the proposed class who could be identified.
In the meantime one of the applicants whose petition had been rejected as incomplete had sought administrative relief by appealing to the BIA. On August 1, 1986, the BIA declared Judge Daniel’s filing requirements invalid. Palma-Callejas, supra. Shortly thereafter the Immigration Judge and the BIA granted the government’s motions to reopen the remaining cases.
The district court rejected the government’s claims that section 106(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1105a, vested exclusive jurisdiction to review deportation orders in the Courts of Appeal, and that administrative remedies were not exhausted as required by § 1105a(c) and by applicable case law. Nonetheless, the district court found appel-lees no longer needed injunctive or declaratory relief because the government had agreed to stay the deportation of applicants whose applications had been rejected for filing, to reopen the deportation proceedings of these applicants, and to notify ap-pellees before reinstating any of the challenged filing requirements.
Appellees requested attorneys’ fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act. 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(B) (EAJA). The district court awarded fees against Judge Daniel but not against the Attorney General or the EOIR. The government appeals the award of attorneys’ fees. 3
II.
The parties agree a court must have jurisdiction over an action before it may award fees under EAJA.
See
28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). We review questions of subject matter jurisdiction de novo.
Stock West, Inc. v. Confederated Tribes,
*535
The government’s argument is that the district court did not have jurisdiction over the underlying cause of action because appellees are attacking final orders of deportation, and 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a) vests exclusive jurisdiction in the court of appeals to review “all final orders of deportation ... made against aliens within the United States pursuant to administrative proceedings under section 1252(b) [deportation hearings]”. Appellees respond that they are not seeking review of individual orders of deportation, but are challenging the policy or practice followed by Judge Daniel in processing claims for asylum.
The Supreme Court has construed “final orders of deportation” under § 1105a(a) as including rulings upon which the validity of the deportation order is contingent.
INS v. Chadha,
Nevertheless, section 1105a(a) does not “embrace[] all determinations ‘directly affecting the execution of’ a final deportation order.”
Cheng Fan Kwok v. INS,
Section 1105a(a) also does not apply to suits alleging a pattern and practice by immigration officials which violates the constitutional rights of a class of aliens.
Haitian Refugee Center v. Smith,
In
Haitian Refugee Center v. Smith,
plaintiffs sued in district court challenging INS’ use of expedited administrative procedures to process Haitian asylum applications. The court distinguished the exclusive jurisdiction of the courts of appeal under Section 1105a to review “alleged procedural irregularities in an individual deportation hearing
to the extent these irregularities may provide a basis for reversing an individual deportation order”
from “the authority of a district court to wield its equitable powers” when confronted with “a program, pattern or scheme by immigration officials to violate the constitutional rights of aliens.”
This circuit adopted and applied the rationale of
Haitian Refugee Center v. Smith
*536
in
National Center for Immigrants Rights, Inc. v. INS,
Cases from other circuits have reaffirmed this exception to the exclusivity provision of § 1105a(a).
See Salehi v. District Director, INS,
Similarly, in this case appellees were not seeking to set aside individual deportation orders, but to obtain injunctive and declaratory relief to protect the rights of a class of asylum-seekers during deportation proceedings. Like the policy regarding Haitians in
Haitian Refugee Center v. Smith,
Judge Daniel’s policy was designed to clear a backlog of a class of cases — Salvadoran political asylum applications — -and accomplished that objective.
See
Pittston Coal Group v. Sebben,
The government contends this case does not come within the
Haitian Refugee Center v. Smith
exception because it involves the actions of a single judge. Judge Daniel’s unauthorized filing requirements applied to all asylum applicants appearing before him; it constituted an established pattern or practice existing outside the context of any particular deportation hearing.
6
Moreover, the pattern or practice can be attributed fairly to the Attorney General. Judge Daniel is an employee of the Attorney General and the EOIR acting under the general supervision and direction of the Chief Immigration Judge.
See
8 U.S.C. § 1103; 8 C.F.R. § 3.9. Evidence in the record reflects, and the Justice Department admitted at oral argument, that the Chief Immigration Judge knew of Judge Daniel’s policy six months before suit was filed, yet did nothing to change it. A governing authority “may not avoid attribution of policy to itself simply by officially retaining unexercised ultimate authority to countermand a policy ...”
Spell v. McDaniel,
III.
The statutory exhaustion requirement of § 1105a(c) is co-extensive with the exclusivity provision of § 1105a(a), and therefore is also inapplicable to this case.
Haitian Refugee Center, Inc. v. Nelson,
(1) agency expertise makes agency consideration necessary to generate a proper record and reach a proper decision; (2) relaxation of the requirement would encourage the deliberate bypass of the administrative scheme; and (3) administrative review is likely to allow the agency to correct its own mistakes and to preclude the need for judicial review.
Id.
Further development of the record is not necessary in this case because appellees raise legal issues not within the particular expertise of the Attorney General.
See Haitian Refugee Center v. Smith,
The government argues the district court should have refrained from exercising jurisdiction because the BIA would have corrected Judge Daniel’s mistakes, pointing to the BIA’s decision in Palma-Callejas. After a careful review of the circumstances, the district court concluded Judge Daniel’s practices were suspended because of the filing of this lawsuit, not because of the decision in Palma-Callejas. The court flatly found the actions taken by the government that mooted this suit “would not have been achieved, but for the *538 lawsuit.” This is a finding of fact, and it is not clearly erroneous. 8 Moreover, the government itself implicitly recognized the inadequacy of individual administrative appeals by moving the Immigration Judge and the BIA to reopen all cases rejected by Judge Daniel without waiting for applicants to take an administrative appeal, and by staying the deportation of those putative class members who had not taken such appeals. 9
IV.
Relying on
Rhodes v. Stewart,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The EOIR's Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) later held:
There is no authority under existing regulations for an immigration judge to "reject” at the outset a completed and timely filed asylum application based on a threshold assessment that the substantive claims presented do not reflect either a clear probability of persecution or a well-founded fear of persecution. Moreover, an immigration judge cannot refuse to accept and process a completed and timely filed asylum application based on filing requirements that go beyond those mandated by controlling regulations. In re Marina Isabel Palma-Callejas, No. A27 209 610 (BIA 1986).
. Appellees defined the proposed class as "all persons who have in the past or may in the future attempt to file duly executed applications for political asylum and withholding of deportation before Immigration Judge Roy Daniel and whose applications have been or will be rejected for filing and adjudication.” The district court denied certification of the class on the basis of appellants' representations that the case was moot.
. The three defendants in this case are the Attorney General, the Executive Office for Immigration Review, and Immigration Judge Daniel. The district court awarded fees only against Judge Daniel, finding the other defendants’ positions “substantially justified.” The INS' notice of appeal listed only the Attorney General, not Judge Daniel, designating the remaining defendants as "et al.” A notice of appeal must "specify the party or parties taking the appeal.” Fed. R.App.P. 3(c). While the use of “et al.” is insufficient to confer appellate jurisdiction where it fails to give notice of a particular defendant’s intent to appeal,
Torres v. Oakland Scavenger Co.,
. The government argues this case differs from Haitian Refugee Center v. Smith because that case was unique in the pervasive and unconstitutional nature of the harm alleged, the irreparable harm suffered, and the entrenched position of the agency. As we pointed out above, Judge Daniel's conduct was contrary to established law, and he had refused to change it despite requests. Contrary to the government’s assertion that rejected applications could be im *536 proved and refiled, Judge Daniel's imposition of an unspecified standard of adequacy made it as impossible for asylum applicants to pursue their claims as did the summary adjudication practices at issue in Haitian Refugee Center v. Smith.
.
Compare Ayuda, Inc. v. Thornburgh,
. At least 1,244 aliens appeared before Judge Daniel during the time the challenged filing requirements were in effect (January 6 to June 25, 1986).
. This conclusion is not inconsistent with the district court’s finding that as a factual matter neither the Attorney General nor EOIR condoned or participated in Judge Daniel’s pattern and practice. The lack of condonation makes Judge Daniel’s actions no less attributable to the government — especially since Judge Daniel was the only government decisionmaker the asylum applicants had access to.
. The court noted that:
1. Nine days before the hearing in district court (but after suit was commenced) the Chief IJ suspended IJ Daniel's asylum filing requirements;
2. Defendants had moved to reopen the cases of all putative class members identified to date (and those cases had been reopened);
3. INS District Counsel had stayed the deportation orders of those putative class members who had not appealed and whose voluntary departure dates had passed; and
4. Defendants represented to the court they would give notice prior to reinstituting the challenged policy.
These actions, the court concluded, "were taken in direct response to this [lawsuit] and resulted in plaintiffs obtaining all that they sought from the action.”
. It is a reasonable assumption that individual administrative appeals did not provide a practical remedy. The parties were able to identify 34 cases in which Judge Daniel deemed applicants to have abandoned their asylum applications and issued deportation orders against them. At least 15 of these appellees and putative class members did not file administrative appeals. Notices were sent to the 1,244 aliens who appeared before Judge Daniels during the period in which the unlawful pattern and practices applied. Only 101 responded; of these, nine reported they were deterred from filing applications because of the practices followed in Judge Daniel's court. Two hundred eighty five notices were returned as undeliverable.
Moreover, appellees assert the record on appeal did not include the "abandoned” asylum applications but only determinations of deporta-bility and grants of voluntary departure. The government does not dispute this. Thus, there was no record on which the BIA could have entertained an appeal even if the alien had the resources to file one.
.The government agreed not to raise the issue of whether plaintiffs were prevailing parties under EAJA. Relying on this agreement, plaintiffs dropped their cross-appeal. Shortly thereafter, Rhodes was decided, and the government raised the case in its briefs.
