Muhammad Salman RAIS, Petitioner, v. Eric H. HOLDER, Jr., Respondent.
No. 13-3639.
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
Sept. 16, 2014.
Rehearing En Banc Denied Dec. 11, 2014.
Before: BOGGS and DONALD, Circuit Judges; HOOD, District Judge.*
OPINION
BERNICE BOUIE DONALD, Circuit Judge.
Muhammad Salman Rais, a native and citizen of Pakistan, is under a final order of removal from the United States. He has twice moved the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) to reopen removal proceedings against him without success, requesting that the proceedings be suspended while the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) adjudicates his application for adjustment of status. The BIA denied the first motion on the merits and refused to exercise its sua sponte authority to grant the second, which was untimely and number-barred. Rais now petitions for judicial review of the second denial. For the reasons that follow, however, we DISMISS the petition for want of jurisdiction.
I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND & PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. Context.
The legal context of this case—caught, as it is, between two branches of the federal immigration system—potentially clouds apprehension of the questions that it raises. Accordingly, a brief sketch of that context is in order:
Our immigration system empowers two different entities to adjudicate an adjustment of status application. Immigration Judges, subject to review by the [BIA], decide adjustment applications for most noncitizens who are in removal proceedings. Applications from all other noncitizens are decided by USCIS. Pursuant to interim regulations adopted by the Executive Office for Immigration Review in 2006, however, ... [the] adjustment applications [of a small group of ‘arriving aliens’] are within USCIS’[s] exclusive jurisdiction, even though these noncitizens are in removal proceedings [before an IJ or the BIA] or have removal orders [pending] against them.1
When USCIS denies an application for adjustment of status in a final agency action, the noncitizen typically requests relief in federal district court under the Administrative Procedure Act.... But when an Immigration Judge or the [BIA] denies an application in the process of entering a final removal order ... the noncitizen’s only recourse is to ask the [BIA] to reopen or reconsider the matter, or to file a petition for review of the Board’s order in a [federal] court of appeals.
Marrakchi v. Napolitano, 494 Fed. Appx. 877, 887 (10th Cir. 2012) (Lucero, J., dissenting) (citations omitted) (discussing an issue that “[t]he majority d[id] not reach”). Non-citizens are subject to a ten-year bar on re-entry into the United States if they are found to have been unlawfully present here for more than one year.
B. History.
Against this backdrop, this case presents two discrete claims that a convoluted factual and procedural history similarly
Rais was born in Pakistan in 1975. He entered the United States in 2002 to attend school. Shortly after his arrival, Rais married a United States citizen and applied for adjustment of status to lawful permanent residency. He was convicted of domestic violence against his wife, also in 2002. Rais was granted advance parole,2 allowing him to leave the United States without abandoning his application for adjustment of status. He was paroled back into this country in 2003. In 2004, [Rais’s] application for adjustment of status was denied because [he] and his wife were divorcing. [Rais] married another United States citizen in 2005, and again applied for adjustment of status. That application was denied in 2009 because of [the] domestic violence conviction.3 Simultaneously, Rais was placed in removal proceedings [in Detroit, Michigan], in which he also attempted to apply for adjustment of status. The IJ [ordered his removal], determining that she lacked jurisdiction to grant Rais adjustment of status under
8 U.S.C. § 1255 and applicable implementing regulations,4 and the BIA affirmed [on February 13, 2012, (A.R. 180, 204-05) ]. Meanwhile, Rais had filed another application for adjustment of status with [USCIS], which was also denied in 2012.5
Rais v. Holder, 518 Fed. Appx. 476, 476 (6th Cir. 2013) (per curiam).6
Rais then filed a fourth application for adjustment of status (discounting the request for status adjustment that he directed to the IJ) with USCIS on March 5, 2013, to which he appended nearly one hundred pages of information to evidence his fitness to remain in the United States and to demonstrate the hardship that removal from the country would impose on him and his family.
Additionally, Rais noted that he has cooperated with the United States as a plaintiff in a qui tam action; observed that conditions in Pakistan would be too dangerous for his children, and especially his daughter, to return there with him; and explained that he and his wife are the primary caretakers of their elderly parents. He also asserted that his ex-wife had submitted a letter in support of his efforts to challenge his domestic-violence conviction. The conviction was set aside for lack of jurisdiction in March 2013.
Rais next filed a motion with the BIA to reopen and administratively close—read: “suspend”—the removal proceedings against him while he awaited USCIS’s ruling. He had filed a previous motion to reopen in March of 2012, but was unsuccessful.7 In his second motion, filed on
This is Dr. Rais’s second motion. He filed his first motion when the USCIS ruled that the Immigration Court, and not the USCIS, had jurisdiction over his adjustment of status application. The USCIS later reconsidered its decision and exercised jurisdiction over Dr. Rais’s application.
The [BIA] should exercise its sua sponte authority to reopen and administratively close these proceedings because of the compelling humanitarian factors.
(A.R. 23 (citing In re J-J-, 21 I. & N. Dec. 976, 984 (BIA 1997)); accord A.R. 25 (also citing In re J-J-, 21 I. & N. Dec. at 984) (“There are exceptional circumstances in Dr. Rais’s case that warrant the sua sponte reopening of his removal proceedings.”)).
On May 15, 2013, the BIA denied the second motion as untimely and number-barred. It observed that the motion had been filed more than a year after the final order of removal had been entered and explained that administrative closure is “not appropriate” after the entry of a final order.8 The BIA also reaffirmed its previous determination that USCIS had jurisdiction over Rais’s application for adjustment of status and concluded that Rais “ha[d] not demonstrated ‘exceptional circumstances’ that would warrant the exercise of [the BIA’s] sua sponte authority to reopen” the removal proceedings against him.9 According to the BIA, although it “sympathize[d] with the procedural irregularities that [Rais] ha[d] faced,”10 it would not grant Rais’s motion to reopen because USCIS appeared to be proceeding with adjudication of his latest application.
C. The Instant Proceedings.
Rais petitioned this court for judicial review of the BIA’s order on May 24, 2013, raising two claims for relief: (1) whether the denial of his second motion to reopen frustrated his statutory right to apply for adjustment of status before USCIS; and (2) whether the denial ran counter to the policy goals of avoiding needless separation of families. He also requested that the court stay his removal from the country and hold his petition in abeyance until USCIS adjudicated his status-adjustment application.11
On October 30, 2013, we granted the first request but denied the second, concluding that USCIS’s disposition of Rais’s application “w[ould] have no impact on the issues presented [to this court].” We also
II. ANALYSIS
A. Statutory Prerequisites.
As of May 11, 2005, the
Here, the facts are not in dispute. The BIA denied Rais’s second motion to reopen the removal proceedings against him on May 15, 2013, and Rais filed a petition for judicial review of that denial nine days later, on May 24, 2013. The IJ who completed removal proceedings against Rais did so in Detroit, Michigan. Accordingly, the court’s exercise of jurisdiction over Rais’s petition ordinarily would be proper.
B. Jurisdictional Question.
There exists, however, a jurisdictional question related to the BIA’s denial of the underlying motion to reopen. Rais neither disputes that the motion was both untimely and number-barred nor asserts that he qualifies for any exception to the filing requirements. See
As the Supreme Court has explained, there is no statutory mechanism by which removal proceedings may be reopened. INS v. Doherty, 502 U.S. 314, 322 (1992); cf. Kucana v. Holder, 558 U.S. 233, 243-44 (2010) (citing
With regard to the BIA’s sua sponte authority, however, we apply a different rule. Under Barry v. Mukasey and Harchenko v. INS, the exercise of this specific authority “‘is committed to the unfettered discretion of the BIA’ and therefore is not subject to judicial review.” Barry, 524 F.3d at 723 (quoting Harchenko, 379 F.3d at 410-11). Our most recent decisions on the matter—for example, Lisboa v. Holder, 570 Fed. Appx. 468 (2014), Zhang v. Holder, 702 F.3d 878, 882 (6th Cir. 2012), and Gor v. Holder, 607 F.3d 180, 182 (6th Cir. 2010)—adhere to this view. Accordingly, we lack jurisdiction to review the BIA’s denial of Rais’s second motion to reopen.
C. Arguments in Favor of Jurisdiction.
1. Kucana.
Rais contends that the Supreme Court’s intervening decision in Kucana v. Holder undercuts Barry and Harchenko and, recognizing that they are otherwise binding on this panel, suggests that this court reconsider those precedents en banc. Two points are relevant here. First, the
Second, to the extent that Rais identifies a conflict between this court’s precedent and Kucana, en banc review is not necessary to resolve it: A prior panel decision is binding on later panels only to the extent that “an inconsistent decision of the ... Supreme Court [does not] require[ ] modification of the decision.” Ward v. Holder, 733 F.3d 601, 608 (6th Cir. 2013) (quoting Salmi v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs., 774 F.2d 685, 689 (6th Cir. 1985)). Accordingly, this panel would not be constrained by Barry and Harchenko if, as Rais argues, Kucana mandates a contrary result. This court already rejected en banc review in Gor, 607 F.3d 180, reh’g en banc denied, No. 08-3859, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 21449 (Oct. 5, 2010), and in an unpublished case that involved similar claims, see Arestov v. Holder, 489 Fed. Appx. 911, 921 & n. 6 (6th Cir. 2012) (“With respect to the BIA’s refusal to exercise its sua sponte authority to grant [the petitioner’s] motion to reopen, [the petitioner] contends that the Supreme Court’s decision in Kucana ... controls our result.... [O]ur court has declined to grant an initial hearing en banc in this case.”).
Further, this court already has determined that Barry and Harchenko were not overruled by Kucana. There, the Supreme Court held that
This holding is consistent with the longstanding practice of federal courts generally to review administrative denials of motions to reopen for abuse of discretion. Id. at 242. And, as this court since has recognized, Kucana therefore “casts considerable doubt on ... circuit precedent that dictates that [the exercise of the BIA’s sua sponte authority to act on such motions is beyond judicial review].” Gor, 607 F.3d at 182; accord id. at 197 (Cole, J., concurring).16
Under these precedents, we do not have jurisdiction to review the BIA’s denial of Rais’s motion to reopen.
2. 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(D).
Generously construed, Rais’s brief contends that judicial review nevertheless remains available under
In any event, neither of the two claims that Rais raises before this court is a constitutional claim, and only the first, which alleges the frustration of a statutory right, is even potentially a question of law.19 But Barry and Harchenko prevent the panel from exercising jurisdiction over even that claim.
Recall that the Supreme Court held in Kucana that
But Barry and Harchenko expressly hold that the BIA’s exercise of its sua sponte authority “‘is committed to [its] unfettered discretion ... and therefore is not subject to judicial review.’” Barry, 524 F.3d at 723 (quoting Harchenko, 379 F.3d at 410-11). And, as Chief Judge Batchelder has noted, neither case relied on
Put differently, Congress need not designate the BIA’s sua sponte authority as discretionary by statute in order for the Attorney General’s regulatory determination that the power is discretionary, see
III. CONCLUSION
Rais failed to satisfy the requirements for filing a second motion to reopen the removal proceedings against him and claims shelter under no exception to those requirements. Consequently, the BIA’s sua sponte authority to grant his motion was the only means by which he could have obtained relief. Binding circuit precedent, unimpaired by recent Supreme Court case law, establishes that this court does not have jurisdiction to review the BIA’s decision to refrain from exercising that authority. We therefore DISMISS Rais’s petition for judicial review of the BIA’s decision for want of jurisdiction.
