Plаintiffs Elena Matushkina and her daughter Svetlana Son filed this suit against federal officials after a U.S. Consulate denied Matushkina’s immigrant visa application in 2015. The well-established doctrine of consular nonreviewability makes it impossible, or nearly so, for plaintiffs to challenge the visa denial. Plaintiffs insist that their suit does not challenge the visa denial. Instead, they seek relief under the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) from the government’s determination that Matushkina was inadmissible when she tried to enter the country back in 2009. The district court dismissed for lack of standing.
This is one of those cases wh'ere the line between standing and the merits is rather fine but makes little practical difference. We affirm the dismissal but we do so on the merits rather-than for lack of standing. The case is in essence a challenge to the visa denial, and that decision is not subjeсt to judicial review.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
' A. ’ The 2015 Visa Denial
Elena-Matushkina is a Russian citizen who applied for an immigrant visa to the United States. Svetlana Son is Matushki-na’s daughter and is a U.S. citizen. Sometime after Son became a citizen in 2013, she filed an. 1-130 visa petition on Ma-tushkina’s behalf. The government approved that petition, which allowed Ma-tushkina to apply for the immigrant visa. When Matushkina applied, however, a U.S. Consujate denied her aрplication in-2015 because U.S. Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”)
B.' The 2009 Inadmissibility Determination
Matushkina and Son insist that their suit does not challenge the 2016 visa denial but instead challenges.the earlier 2009 determination by CBP. In 2009, Matushkina tried to visit- the United States on a visitor’s (nonimmigrant) .visa. When she arrived at O’Hare International-Airport in Chicago, though, a CBP officer interviewed her and learned that Matushkina had not disсlosed to the U.S. Embassy that her daughter was working in the United States in violation of her .student visa, Ma-tushkina had been afraid-to disclose that fact because she feared she would not receive a visa. The officer determined that Matushkina’s failure to disclose her daughter’s violation of her student visa status was a willful misrepresentation of a material fact, and that made Matushkina herself . inadmissible under 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i),
Aliens who аre deemed inadmissible under section 1182(a)(6)(C)(i) are subject to expedited removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1225(b)(1)(A)(i). However, CBP officers have tfie option of allowing an inadmissible alien to withdraw her application for admission, leave the country, and avoid removal proceedings. See U.S. Dep’t of Justice, CBP Inspector’s Field Manual 17.2(a) (2006). On the spot, Matushkina withdrew her application for admission and acknowledgеd that her nonimmigrant visa would be cancelled. The CBP officer entered the inadmissibility finding in the State Department’s electronic lookout system. Ma-.tushkina’s nonimmigrant visa was can-celled,
C. This Lawsuit
Almost seven years after CBP’s 2009 determination at O’Hare Airport, Ma-tushkina and Son filed this suit against the Secretary of Homeland Security and the Chicago Area Port Director of the CBP under the APA. Their complaint alleged that the 2009 inadmissibility detеrmination violated the APA and that the CBP officer violated provisions of the CBP Inspector’s Field Manual and “due process and notions of fundamental fairness.” They asked the district court to set aside the inadmissibility determination and to declare that Matushkina did not make a material misrepresentation.
The district court dismissed the case for lack of standing. Matushkina v. Davies, No. 16 CV 7360,
II. Analysis
The district court found a lack of standing on the pleadings. It did not make any factual findings or rely on any of the documents the government attached to its сombined motion to dismiss for lack of standing under Rule 12(b)(1) and for failure to state a claim under Rule 12(b)(6). Our review is therefore de novo.
A. Standing
The line between a lack of standing and a failure to state a claim for relief on the merits can be a fine one, as this case shows. The basic problem is that the lead plaintiff does not have a legal right enforceable in a federal court, but it is not always obvious in such сases whether the problem is a lack of standing or lack of a viable claim on the merits. We explain first why Matushkina meets the requirements for standing before explaining why she lacks a legally enforceable right. Because Matushkina has standing, we need not address whether her daughter does. E.g., Ezell v. City of Chicago,
? has three elements: “The plaintiff must have (1) suffered an injury in fact, (2) that is fairly traceable to the challenged conduct of the defendant, and (3)that is likely to be redressed by a favorable judicial decision.” Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 578 U.S. -, -,
1. Injury in Fact
An injury in fact requires ‘“an invasion of a legally protected interest’ that is ‘concrete and particularized’ and ‘actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.’” Spokeo, 578 U.S. at -,
Matushkina had an interest in her admissibility to the United States, and the injury to that intеrest is apparent on the face of the complaint. The CBP officer entered the inadmissibility finding in the lookout system, Matushkina’s nonimmi-grant visa was cancelled, and a U.S. Consulate later denied Matushkina’s request for an immigrant visa because of the earlier inadmissibility determination. Matushki-na also satisfies the other components of an injury in fact. Her injury is concrete because it “actually exist[s],” Spokeo, 578 U.S. аt -,
The district court reasoned that Ma-tushkina lacked standing because she is an alien who “has no right of entry into the United States, and no cause of action to press in furtherance of [her] claim for admission.” A right of entry, however, is not a prerequisite to standing in the case of someone seeking entry to the United States. See Stenographic Machs., Inc. v. Reg’l Adm’r for Emp’t & Training,
2. Causation
Causation is straightforward here. The plaintiffs alleged injury must be causally connected to a defendant’s conduct rather than to a third party’s conduct. Lujan,
3. Bedressability,
The alleged injury could be redressed by a court if Matushkina could prevail on the merits. See Lujan,
B. Consular Nonreviewability
By seeking to set aside the inadmissibility determination, Matushkina attacks the basis for the- denial of her visa application. “Consular nonreviewability” is the general rule that decisions “to issue or withhold a visa” are not reviewable in' court “unless Congress says otherwise.” Saavedra Bruno v. Albright,
First, we may conduct а limited review to determine whether a visa was denied for a bona fide and facially legitimate reason. Id., again citing Mandel,
The timing of Matushkina’s suit is telling. Instead of filing suit after her nonim-migrant visa was cancelled and CBP entered the inadmissibility determination in the lookout system in 2009, she filed suit in 2016 after the Consulate denied her immigrant visa application. And the relief Ma-tushkina seeks is equally telling. Shе wanted the district court to declare invalid CBP’s determination that she misrepresented something on her earlier visa application and to declare that she did not make a material misrepresentation. The end result of either relief explains why consular nonreviewability bars Matushki-na’s claim: each would remove an obstacle for her visa application, which is why she has standing to assert, hеr claim.
Turning-back to doctrinal substance, neither of the doctrine’s suggested exceptions can save Matushkina’s claims. We have not applied these exceptions to antecedent determinations underlying a visa denial. Even if the exceptions applied, Matushkina’s claims would still fail. The recprd makes clear that, the CBP officer’s determination .of fraud was facially legitimate and bona fide. The issue is not whether the officer properly construed and applied 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(C)(i). Examining whether an official properly construed and applied the law would expand the facial-legitimacy. and bona-fide-reason inquiry into full-blown merits review;. See Hazama v. Tillerson,
In addition, the stated basis for the ftnd-ing (as well as the visa denial) was bona fide and facially legitimate. The officer cited
Even if the exception for an effect on a citizen’s constitutional rights could apply, Son was not a citizen when Matushkina was deemed inadmissible. That makes her unlike the citizen-plaintiffs in Morfin, Hazama, and Din. Moreover, Son—like the sponsor-plaintiffs in Saavedra Bruno— does not assert any freestanding constitutional claim of her own. See Saavedra Bruno v. Albright,
' In an attempt to avoid the consular non-reviewability doctrine, Matushkina cites three cases, but they db hot persuade us to allow her suit to proceed. The first is Legal Assistance for Vietnamese Asylum Seekers v. Dep’t of State,
Second, Matushkina cites Patel v. Reno,
Third, Matushkina tries to counter, the force of Saavedra Bruno by citing Maramjaya v. U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Servs., No. 06-2158 (RCL),
Finally, we explain briefly why we have jurisdiction on appeal, in the absence of a cross-appeal, to convert the dismissal for lack of standing to a dismissal on the merits. As a general rule, where a defendant
The generаl rule does not apply, however, where a jurisdictional dismissal effectively bars relief on the merits in any judicial forum. In such cases, modifying the dismissal from jurisdiction to merits makes no practical difference. It does not expand the defendant’s rights and does not require a cross-appeal. We took that approach in Hazama v. Tillerson,
The case should not have been dismissed for lack of standing but it must be dismissed on the merits. We modify the judgment to a dismissal on the merits for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted, and as modified, the judgment is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court did not reach the government's arguments that the suit should fail under the APA for laсk of final agency action, see 5 U.S.C. § 704, and as barred by the statute of limitations in 28 U.S.C. § 2401(a). We do not think either argument affects subject matter jurisdiction. The Supreme Court recently held that the other subsection of section 2401 is not jurisdictional. United States v. Kwai Fun Wong, 575 U.S. -, -,
, We treat the doctrine of consular nonre-viewability as a matter of a case’s merits rather than the federal courts’ subject matter jurisdiction. See Morfin,
