Case Information
*1 In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
No. 99-2065
Alejandro Morales-Ramirez,
Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
Janet Reno, Attorney General of the United States; Doris Meissner, Commissioner of the Immigration, Naturalization Service; Brian R. Perryman, Chicago District Director of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, and the Immigration and Naturalization Service, Respondents-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division. No. 99 C 7067--Blanche M. Manning, Judge.
Argued February 11, 2000--Decided April 13, 2000 Before Posner, Chief Judge, and Manion and Kanne, Circuit Judges.
Kanne, Circuit Judge. In 1997, the INS ordered
Alejandro Morales-Ramirez to be removed to Mexico
as a result of a 1993 conviction for importation
of marijuana. Morales-Ramirez sought habeas
corpus review of his removal in district court,
claiming that he was denied due process as a
result of the INS’s failure to institute timely
exclusion proceedings against him. The district
court dismissed his petition on the basis of our
holding in LaGuerre v. Reno,
Alejandro Morales-Ramirez is a native and citizen of Mexico. Since 1976, he has also been a lawful permanent resident of the United States. In February 1993, Morales-Ramirez attempted to enter the United States with about 350 pounds of marijuana in his car. He was stopped at the *2 border and arrested. Following his arrest, the INS "paroled" Morales-Ramirez into the United States for criminal prosecution.
"Parole" into the United States allows an individual physically to enter the country, but it is not equivalent to legal entry into the United States. Upon his parole into the country, the INS served Morales-Ramirez with a "Notice of Exclusion Proceedings," which informed him that his actions may have rendered him inadmissable to the United States. Under immigration procedures at that time, Morales-Ramirez would have been compelled to enter into "exclusion" proceedings, in which the immigration court had the discretion to determine whether his exclusion might be waived. See 8 U.S.C. sec. 1226(a) (1995). However the INS never sought officially to commence proceedings by filing the appropriate charging document, the "Notice of Exclusion Proceedings," with the district court, as required by 8 C.F.R. sec. 240.30 (1999).
In June 1993, Morales-Ramirez pleaded guilty to importation of a controlled substance and was sentenced to sixty months imprisonment, followed by forty-eight months supervised release. In August 1993, the INS issued a warrant of detainer on Morales-Ramirez, which ensured that he would be transferred to INS custody upon his release from prison. Morales-Ramirez was released after serving fifty-two months in prison.
During the course of Morales-Ramirez’s incarceration, Congress passed the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 ("IIRIRA"), Pub. L. 104-208 (1996), and the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 ("AEDPA"), Pub. L. 104-132 (1996), which changed the nature of proceedings against immigrants alleged to have violated the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1952 ("INA"), 8 U.S.C. sec. 1101 et seq. One among the many amendments to the INA instituted therein was the replacement of exclusion and deportation proceedings with removal proceedings. In removal proceedings, unlike exclusion proceedings, aggravated felons such as Morales-Ramirez are no longer eligible to apply for relief from deportation, now entitled "cancellation of removal." See 8 U.S.C. sec. 1229b(a) (1996).
These amendments took effect on April 1, 1997, and apply to all aliens eligible to be removed after that date. However, all aliens previously in deportation or exclusion proceedings as of April 1, 1997, were to remain in deportation or exclusion proceedings, rather than in removal proceedings. See IIRIRA sec. 309(c)(1)(A), enacted as 8 U.S.C. sec. 1101; 8 C.F.R. sec.sec. 240.30, 240.40 (1997).
On August 4, 1997, Morales-Ramirez finished his prison sentence and was taken into INS custody. Instead of initiating exclusion proceedings against Morales-Ramirez, the INS initiated removal proceedings against him. At his removal hearing, Morales-Ramirez moved to terminate the removal proceedings, claiming that the INS had previously commenced exclusion proceedings against him by serving him with the "Notice of Exclusion Proceedings." By commencing removal proceedings, he claimed that the INS had terminated his exclusion proceedings without authority. However, the immigration judge found that proceedings had never commenced because the "Notice of Exclusion Proceedings" had never been filed with the immigration court. Therefore the court denied Morales-Ramirez’s motion and ordered him removed to Mexico. Morales-Ramirez appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals ("BIA"), but in August 1998, the BIA affirmed the decisions of the immigration court on the grounds that the charging document had never been filed.
On November 4, 1998, Morales-Ramirez filed a
petition for writ of habeas corpus with the
district court, claiming that the INS had
violated his due process rights by impermissibly
terminating the exclusion proceedings that it had
brought against him. On December 22, 1998, we
issued LaGuerre,
II. Analysis
As a threshold matter, we must determine
whether the district court correctly dismissed
Morales-Ramirez’s petition. Morales-Ramirez
originally challenged his order of removal by
habeas corpus petition filed in district court.
However, section 306(f)(1)(g) of IIRIRA, enacted
as 8 U.S.C. sec. 1252(g), restricts review of
"any cause or claim by or on behalf of any alien
arising from the decision or action by the
Attorney General to commence proceedings,
adjudicate cases, or execute removal orders
against any alien." 8 U.S.C. sec. 1252(g). In
LaGuerre, we held that the 1996 amendments to the
INA eliminate habeas corpus jurisdiction in all
cases after the effective date of the statutes.
LaGuerre,
Reno,
Several other circuits have interpreted AADC to
preserve an alien’s right to petition for habeas
corpus in cases where sec. 1252(g) does not
apply. See Magana-Pizano v. INS,
Pasquarell,
1252(g). See id. Therefore, Singh and LaGuerre control, and we conclude that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to hear Morales-Ramirez’s petition for writ of habeas corpus.
Morales-Ramirez concedes that the district court
lacked jurisdiction to entertain his habeas
corpus petition. Nonetheless, he contends that
his due process claim raises substantial
constitutional issues that we should address
directly. In LaGuerre, we proposed that, rather
than seek habeas corpus review, when a deportee
raises constitutional claims "the deportee can
seek review of constitutional issues in the court
of appeals directly." LaGuerre,
1252(b)(1); see Singh,
At that time, Morales-Ramirez claims that he
followed the directives of two prior cases, which
suggested that the appropriate avenue for review
of removal proceedings was by habeas petition
made to the district court. See Turkhan v. INS,
Perryman,
To retain jurisdiction under the "safety valve"
exception created in LaGuerre, Morales-Ramirez
must raise substantial constitutional claims. See
LaGuerre,
212(c), discontinuing the eligibility of criminal aliens to apply for waiver of exclusion. See 8 U.S.C. sec. 1182(c) (1997). For this reason, Morales-Ramirez claims that by commencing removal proceedings, the INS, in effect, terminated "pending" exclusion proceedings and deprived him of his substantive right to apply for waiver of exclusion.
The government claims that proceedings did not commence until it filed a charging document with the immigration court in August 1997, because its regulations condition the commencement of proceedings on the filing--not service. See 8 C.F.R. sec. 240.30 (1999) ("An exclusion proceeding is commenced by the filing of [the charging document] with the Immigration Court, and an alien is considered to be in exclusion proceedings only upon such filing."). Because the charging documents were not filed until 1997, after the effective date of the repeal of sec. 212(c) by IIRIRA sec. 304(b), the government claims that Morales-Ramirez’s case was not "pending" before the effective date of sec.
304(b), and he was never eligible for waiver of exclusion. For this reason, at the time that the INS commenced removal proceedings, Morales- Ramirez had no substantive right to apply for waiver of exclusion and cannot raise a constitutional claim on these grounds.
Morales-Ramirez disputes the government’s contention that 8 C.F.R. sec. 240.30 should control our analysis of when proceedings commence. He claims that proceedings commenced *7 when he was served with the "Notice of Exclusion Proceedings," in March 1993. Had proceedings against Morales-Ramirez commenced in 1993, his exclusion proceedings would have been "pending" in 1997, when IIRIRA came into force. In such case, Morales-Ramirez’s case would fall within the pending cases exception of IIRIRA sec. 309(c)(1)(A), which applies to "an alien who is in exclusion or deportation proceedings before [April 1, 1997]." If his exclusion proceedings were "pending" as of that date, sec. 212(c) would still apply to such proceedings, and Morales- Ramirez would remain eligible to apply for waiver of exclusion.
The question whether to apply 8 C.F.R. sec.
240.30, which pegs the commencement of
proceedings on the filing of a charging document
in immigration court to determine when
proceedings commence is a question of first
impression in this circuit. Morales-Ramirez
places great emphasis on decisions of other
circuits that determined the commencement of
proceedings to have occurred when the charging
document was served on individuals. See Wallace
v. Reno,
440(d) should not be applied retroactively to
"pending" proceedings, and based its
determination whether proceedings were actually
"pending" on the reliance interests of aliens
involved in the process. See id. Thus, in
Wallace, the First Circuit did not directly
confront the question of when to consider
proceedings to have commenced; the court faced
the question whether retroactivity is appropriate
in circumstances where aliens may have relied on
a "Notice of Exclusion Proceedings." In Alanis-
Bustamante v. Reno, the Eleventh Circuit adopted
the First Circuit’s determination in the context
of sec. 440(d) retroactivity analysis and also
based its conclusions on the reasonable reliance
of aliens.
2000). In these cases, the courts concluded that the relevant inquiry lay not in when proceedings actually commenced, but when the reliance interests of aliens should be considered for the purposes of determining whether sec. 440(d) should be retroactively applied.
In LaGuerre and Turkhan II, we acknowledged the
importance of an alien’s reliance interests, but
we reached the opposite conclusion on the
question whether sec. 440(d) should be applied
*8
retroactively. We concluded that criminal aliens
rarely relied on sec. 212(c) waivers in such a
way that retroactive application of the statute
would "pull the rug out from under [them]."
LaGuerre,
The regulations cited by the government, 8 C.F.R. sec.sec. 3.14 and 240.30, indicate that proceedings have not commenced until a charging document has been filed in immigration court.
Congress has explicitly restricted our ability to review the decision by the Attorney General’s delegates to commence proceedings, see 8 U.S.C. sec. 1252(g), so our review is limited to the question whether this discretion to commence proceedings empowered the Attorney General to issue regulations on when proceedings must be adjudged to have commenced. Morales-Ramirez does not question whether the Attorney General had the appropriate discretion to promulgate these regulations, and owing to the deference that courts generally show to regulations of procedural rules which govern administrative practice, see, e.g., Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v.
Natural Resources Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 843-44 (1984), we do not seriously entertain this question either. The purpose of the filing requirement is to allow immigration courts to manage the vast number of cases that are litigated before them each year. Allowing proceedings to commence at whatever point the INS decides to serve a charging document on an alien would frustrate this purpose and further ensnarl the bureaucratic web of immigration proceedings. Morales-Ramirez instead attempts to analogize his case to Singh, in which the alien who sought waiver from exclusion was prevented from applying for relief because of the untimely dismissal of *9 his case, which ultimately was reinstated after the 1996 amendments to the INA. Singh, 180 F.3d at 507.
Singh presented an unusual case in which the alien’s deportation hearing was clearly "pending" during the period before the passage of AEDPA and IIRIRA, even if actual proceedings in that case had not yet been re-calendared. Morales-Ramirez presents us with no unusual circumstances that could lead us to conclude that his claim was "pending" prior to the commencement of proceedings as measured by 8 C.F.R. sec. 240.30. He was served with a "Notice of Exclusion Proceedings" in 1993, and in the same year, the INS obtained a warrant of detainer to ensure that he be returned to INS custody on release from his period of federal incarceration. However, during the period of his incarceration, Morales-Ramirez made no effort, unlike the petitioner in Singh, to apply for discretionary waiver under sec.
212(c), and the INS made no effort to initiate
proceedings against him. Morales-Ramirez presents
no arguments or evidence that he relied on sec.
212(c); he simply claims that failing to commence
proceedings at the appropriate time cost him the
opportunity to apply for discretionary waiver. We
agree that the failure to commence proceedings
cost him the opportunity to apply for waiver, but
we fail to perceive a protected liberty or
property interest at stake in the INS’s
discretionary decision when to commence
proceedings. Lacking any protected liberty or
property interest, Morales-Ramirez cannot meet
the threshold test to establish a due process
violation. See Board of Regents v. Roth, 408 U.S.
564, 569 (1972); Garcia v. INS,
The INS did not file the appropriate charging document with the immigration court until after April 1, 1997. Therefore, exclusion proceedings were not "pending" against Morales-Ramirez at the time that the relevant provisions of IIRIRA came into force. Because his case was not "pending" before April 1, 1997, Morales-Ramirez had no protected interest in retaining the ability guaranteed by sec. 212(c) to apply for discretionary waiver of exclusion. For this reason, the immigration court did not violate Morales-Ramirez’s due process rights by denying his motion to terminate removal proceedings and commence exclusion proceedings. Morales-Ramirez *10 does not raise any substantial constitutional issues regarding the decision of the Attorney General to issue an order of removal against him. Because his claim fails to present any substantial constitutional claims, we lack subject matter jurisdiction to review his claim.
III. Conclusion
Under LaGuerre, the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Morales- Ramirez’s petition for writ of habeas corpus. In addition, Morales-Ramirez has not stated a claim that implicates any constitutional rights, so we also lack subject-matter jurisdiction to review it. For these reasons, the case is DISMISSED.
/1 In considering whether Morales-Ramirez states a
substantial constitutional claim, we need not
assert jurisdiction to hear his claim. Instead,
we merely assert jurisdiction to consider whether
we have jurisdiction to hear his claim. See Xiong
v. INS,
