NAGENDRA KUMAR NAKKA; NITHEESHA NAKKA; SRINIVAS THODUPUNURI; RAVI VATHSAL THODUPUNURI; RAJESHWAR ADDAGATLA; VISHAL ADDAGATLA; SATYA VENU BATTULA; SANDEEP BATTULA; SIVA PEDDADA; PAVANI PEDDADA; VENKATA PEDDADA; ABIGAIL EDWARDS; MIRIAM EDWARDS-BUDZADZIJA, individuаlly and on behalf of all others similarly situated, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. UNITED STATES CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION SERVICES; UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF STATE, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 22-35203
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
August 6, 2024
D.C. No. 3:19-cv-02099-YY
Youlee Yim You, Magistrate Judge, Presiding
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
OPINION
Argued and Submitted February 7, 2023 Portland, Oregon
Filed August 6, 2024
Before: Milan D. Smith, Jr., Danielle J. Forrest, and Jennifer Sung, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Sung; Concurrence by Judge Forrest
SUMMARY*
Immigration
In an action in which Plaintiffs challenged certain immigration policies in district court, the panel vacated the district court‘s order granting Defendants’ motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, and remanded, holding that the district court lacked jurisdiction over most of Plaintiffs’ claims because they were not ripe.
Plaintiffs in this putative class action are Indian nationals, who have long resided in the United States on nonimmigrant work visas, and their children, who are derivative beneficiaries of their parents’ visas. Plaintiffs seek to adjust their status to permanent resident, and challenged certain generally applicable policies that Defendants—U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS“) and the U.S. Department of State—use to determine eligibility of derivative beneficiaries.
The Government argued that the plain language of
However, the panel concluded that—with the exception of one Plaintiff—Plaintiffs’ claims are not ripe because Plaintiffs have not applied for adjustment of status, and USCIS has not denied their applications based on the challenged policies. Following Supreme Court precedent, the panel explained that Plaintiffs’ claims would ripen only once they took the affirmative step of applying and having their path blocked by the challenged policies.
As to one Plaintiff, Peddada, who did apply for adjustment of status and whose application USCIS denied, the panel concluded that she could establish ripeness. However, the panel concluded that
Finally, the panel noted that its interpretation of
Concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, Judge Forrest agreed with the majority in its ripeness determinations and its conclusion that
COUNSEL
Brent W. Renison (argued), Parrilli Renison LLC, Portland, Oregon, for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Victor M. Mercado-Santana (argued), Trial Attorney, Civil Division, Office of Immigration Litigation; Samuel P. Go, Assistant Director; William C. Peachey, Director; Office of Immigration Litigation; Brian M. Boynton, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division; United States Department of Justice; for Defendants-Appellees.
Laura K. McNally and Nicole A. Tavers, Loeb & Loeb LLP, La Grange, Illinois; Peter S. Margulies, Roger Williams University School of Law, Bristol, Rhode Island; for Amicus Curiae Immigration Law Professors.
Matt Adams, Glenda M. Aldana Madrid, Leila Kang, and Aaron Korthuis, Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, Seattle, Washington; Mary A. Kenney and Kristin Macleod-Ball, National Immigration Litigation
OPINION
SUNG, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiffs in this putative class action are Indian nationals, who have long resided in the United States on nonimmigrant work visas, and their children, who are derivative beneficiaries of their parents’ visas. Plaintiffs seek to adjust their status to permanent resident through employment-based immigrant visas, and their operative complaint challenges certain generally applicable policies that Defendants—U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS“) and the U.S. Department of State (“DOS“)—use to determine whether dependent children have “aged out” of eligibility to adjust their status as derivative beneficiaries of their parents. Plaintiffs claim that the challenged policies violate the Equal Protection guarantee of the federal constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA“).
The district court granted Defendants’ motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ complaint for failure to state a claim, with lеave to amend. Instead of amending their complaint, Plaintiffs filed this appeal. While this case was pending, the Supreme Court decided Patel v. Garland, 596 U.S. 328 (2022), which held that, under
We conclude that this case must be dismissed because we lack constitutional and statutory jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ claims challenging Defendants’ policies. We disagree with the Government that the “plain language of the statute and the rationale of Patel” compel the conclusion that
I. BACKGROUND
The named plaintiffs are Indian nationals and their dependent children who seek to adjust their status to lawful permanent resident. Plaintiff parents came to the
Plaintiff parents’ employers subsequently petitioned USCIS for immigrant visa classification for Plaintiff parents. See
Individuals with approved petitions must wait for an immigrant visa to become available before USCIS will allow them to apply for adjustment.
These long wait times create a potential problem for Plaintiff children, who seek to adjust their status as the derivative “child[ren]” of individuals “entitled to [] immigrant status.”
To address the aging-out problem faced by Plaintiff children and others similarly situated, Congress passed the Child Status Protection Act (“CSPA“), Pub. L. No. 107–208, 116 Stat. 927 (2002). CSPA provides a
a determination of whether an alien satisfies the age requirement [at
§ 1101(b)(1) , the statutory definition of “child“] . . . shall be made using—(A) the age of the alien on the date on which an immigrant visa number becomes available for such alien (or, in the case of subsection (d), the date on which an immigrant visa number became available for the alien‘s parent), but only if the alien has sought to acquire the status of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residenсe within one year of such availability; reduced by
(B) the number of days in the period during which the applicable petition described in paragraph (2) was pending.
Over time, USCIS has adopted different methods for determining when an immigrant visa becomes available to an applicant. At issue in this case is the method the agency employed beginning in 2018. See USCIS, Policy Alert: Child Status Protection Act, No. PA-2018-05 (May 23, 2018) (hereinafter “2018 USCIS CSPA Policy“) (modifying the USCIS Policy Manual and explaining how USCIS calculates CSPA age using the DOS Visa Bulletin).2
II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Plaintiffs filed a putative class action against USCIS and DOS in district court, challenging the policies that Defendants use to determine immigrant visa availability and CSPA age. First, Plaintiffs claim that Defendants’ use of the national origin-based Visa Bulletin chart to determine applicants’ ages for CSPA purposes violates еqual protection. Plaintiffs contend that use of national origin classifications in the Visa Bulletin “lacks a rational basis and cannot be justified by a legitimate government interest.” Second, Plaintiffs challenge the 2018 USCIS CSPA Policy3
as arbitrary and capricious under the APA. Plaintiffs also argue that Defendants violated the APA by adopting the 2018 policy without engaging in a formal rulemaking process.4
While this appeal was pending, the Supreme Court decided Patel v. Garland, 596 U.S. 328 (2022). On appeal, Defendants argued for the first time in their Answering Brief that under Patel‘s interpretation of
III. ANALYSIS
A
Title 8, section 1252, titled “Judicial review of orders of removal,” provides the statutory scheme that delineates
federal court jurisdiction in most immigration cases.
(B) Denials of discretionary relief
Notwithstanding any other provision of lаw (statutory or nonstatutory) . . . and regardless of whether the judgment, decision, or action is made in removal proceedings, no court shall have jurisdiction to review--
(i) any judgment regarding the granting of relief under section 1182(h), 1182(i), 1229b, 1229c, or 1255 of this title, or
(ii) any other decision or action of the Attorney General or the Secretary of Homeland Security the authority for which is specified under this subchapter to be in the discretion of the Attorney General or the Secretary of Homeland Security, other than the granting of relief under section 1158(a) of this title.
Subsection (B)(i) cross references various forms of discretionary relief available to qualifying noncitizens, including: (1) certain waivers of inadmissibility (
When interpreting similar jurisdiction-stripping provisions of the immigration statutory scheme, the Supreme Court has long distinguished between the “direct review of individual denials” of applications and “general collateral challenges to [unlawful] practices and policies.”
McNary v. Haitian Refugee Ctr., Inc., 498 U.S. 479, 492 (1991); see also Reno v. Cath. Soc. Servs., Inc., 509 U.S. 43, 56 (1993) (hereinafter ”CSS“) (distinguishing between challenges to “the denial of any individual application” and challenges to the “legality of a regulation“).
Generally, Plaintiffs’ claims here, like those at issue in McNary and CSS, challenge “the legality of [agency policies] without referring to or relying on the denial of any individual application.” CSS, 509 U.S. at 56. The
1
Because the Government primarily argues that Patel compels the conclusion that the scope of
In Patel, the only issue presented was whether, on Patel‘s petition for review of a final removal order,
status. Id. at 338. The Government advanced a slightly different interpretation, arguing that the statute precluded review of all discretionary decisions (ultimate and subsidiary). Id. at 337-38. And the Court-appointed amicus argued that the statute precluded review of the ultimate and subsidiary decisions, whether discretionary or not—including factual findings. Id. at 337.
Considering the statutory text, the Court interpreted thе term “any judgment” to mean “judgments ‘of whatever kind’ under
Significantly, all the types of “judgments” that the Patel Court considered and ultimately concluded are encompassed by
nor decided whether it also encompasses generally applicable agency policies and procedures.
Further, in Patel, the Court stated that
Because Patel did not decide the statutory interpretation issue presented here, we turn to the statutory text.
2
In McNary and CSS, the Court interpreted comparable statutes and concluded that they strip jurisdiction over denials of individual applications for relief, but not “general collateral challenges to unconstitutional practices and policies used by the agency in processing applications.” McNary, 498 U.S. at 492. In McNary, the Court interpreted
The McNary Court concluded that
Although
statutory text is not a beacon of clarity, a policy or procedure would not typically “grant” relief without case-specific adjudication. Second and similarly, the heading of
Fourth, Congress could have used broader language to encompass collateral policy and procedure claims, but it did not. Cf. McNary, 498 U.S. at 494 (finding
to agency policies and practices by expressly “channeling into the [statute‘s] special review procedures ‘all causes . . . arising under any of the provisions’ of the . . . program [at issue],” or “referring to review ‘on all questions of law and fact’ under the . . . program.” McNary, 498 U.S. at 494. Thus, in J.E.F.M., we concluded that another jurisdiction-stripping provision enacted in 1996,
But Congress did not follow the McNary blueprint when it drafted
Fifth, Congress did not explicitly strip jurisdiction over policy and procedure claims in
Finally, Congress‘s use of the term “judgment” is additional, albeit weaker, textual evidence that it intended
somewhat ambiguous, they at least suggest “judgment” refers to a decision that is made when an adjudicator, for example, applies law to particular facts—that is, when an agency processes a particular person‘s application for relief—and not to broad agency policies or procedures.10
We are further persuaded that “judgment” refers to a decision in an individual case by the language in
Our conclusion that “judgment” in clause (i) means something different from “other decision or action” in clause (ii) is consistent with the Court‘s interpretations of
“clause (ii) [is] a catchall provision covering ‘any other decision [or action].‘” 558 U.S. at 246 (quoting
Together, Kucana, Patel, and the statutory text compel the conclusion that “judgment” is a specific type of decision and that there are other types of decisions that are not “judgments.” Thus, we conclude that “any judgment regarding the granting of relief” refers to the authoritative decisions an agency makes when adjudicating an individual application for discretionary relief. And “other decision or action” more broadly includes other types of agency decisions—including those that may not qualify as “judgments.”11
3
The Government argues for a maximalist interpretation of
The Government points to the “regardless” clause of
But the Government is incorrect. USCIS and the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS“) grant or deny individual applications for discretionary relief—and therefore make judgments in adjudicating those applications—outside “removal proceedings” in at least three different circumstances.
First, when an individual who is lawfully present in the United States pursuant to a valid visa applies for adjustment of status under
Third, other forms of relief can be granted only by USCIS or DHS, not an IJ, outside removal proceedings. For example, only USCIS or DHS can grant relief to arriving aliens13 who are in removal proceedings. See
Without the “regardless” clause,
The Government also points to the word “regarding” in the phrase “any judgment regarding the granting of relief.” See
The Court has repeatedly cautioned against reading terms like “relate to” or “regarding” too broadly. See, e.g., Dubin v. United States, 599 U.S. 110, 119 (2023). As the Court explained in Dubin, “[i]f ‘relate to’ were taken to extend to the furthest stretch of its indeterminacy, then for all practiсal purposes there would be no limits, as really, universally, relations stop nowhere.” Id. (cleaned up) (quoting N.Y. State Conf. of Blue Cross & Blue Shield Plans v. Travelers Ins. Co., 514 U.S. 645, 655 (1995)). “That the phrase refers to a relationship or nexus of some kind is clear. Yet the kind of relationship required, its nature and strength, will be informed by context.” Id. (internal citation omitted). Thus, “[i]n deciding between the parties’ readings, one limited and one near limitless, precedent and prudence require a careful examination of [the statute]‘s text and structure.” Id. at 118.
Here, as in Dubin, careful examination of
Thus, we conclude that
B
Where, as here, Plaintiffs request injunctive and declaratory relief from the policies of administrative agencies, courts “have been reluctant” to grant such requests “unless [they] arise in the context of a controversy ‘ripe’ for judicial resolution, that is to say, unless the effects of the administrative action challenged have been felt in a concrete way by the challenging parties.” CSS, 509 U.S. at 57 (cleaned up) (quoting Abbott Lab‘ys v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136, 140 (1967)). In some cases, “the promulgation of a regulation will itself affect parties concretely enough to satisfy this requirement,” for example, when it “present[s] plaintiffs with the immediate dilemma to choose between complying with newly imposed, disadvantageous restrictions and risking serious penalties for violation.” Id. (citations omitted).
However, the policies challenged in this case, like the regulations challenged in CSS, “impose no penalties for violating any newly imposed restriction, but [instead]
In CSS, the plaintiffs had not taken all possible affirmative steps before filing their complaint—meaning, they had not filed and obtained formal denials of their applications based on the challenged policies. See id. at 65 n.25. The plaintiffs had tо obtain formal denials to establish ripeness, unless they demonstrated that their circumstances justified an exception. Id. at 59, 61. The Court identified at least two circumstances that would justify making an exception: first, the plaintiffs’ collateral claims would be deemed ripe if they demonstrated that the statute‘s “limited [review] scheme would afford them inadequate review” of their claims. See id. at 60-61 (citing McNary, 498 U.S. at 487). Second, the plaintiffs would not have to file applications to establish ripeness if they demonstrated that the agency would informally reject their applications at a “prefiling” stage, under an agency practice referred to as “front-desking.” Id. at 61-62. Here, only one of the named Plaintiffs filed an application for adjustment of status. We address ripeness as it relates first to the “non-filing Plaintiffs” (Nitheesha Nakka, Ravi Thodupunuri, Vishal Addagatla, and Venkata Peddada) and then to the one filing Plaintiff (Pavani Peddada).
1
Most of the Plaintiffs have not submitted applications for adjustment to USCIS, but they argue that both exceptions identified in CSS apply. We disagree.
First, the non-filing Plaintiffs have not shown that their collateral claims challenging USCIS policies “could receive no practical judicial review within the scheme established by [
Plaintiffs assert that the agency‘s record on a petition for review would be inadequate for meaningful review of their claims. Considering the nature of their claims, we disagree. The administrative record would include any USCIS or DHS records related to their applications, and Plaintiffs do not identify what additional documents they would need to adjudicate their claims but could not introduce into the record—either through admission into the record of a removal hearing or judicial notice. Plaintiffs correctly note that they would need to intrоduce the challenged agency guidance manuals, but they do not explain why they could not file these manuals before the immigration court, or otherwise request that the IJ, or the court of appeals, take notice of the guidance. See
Second, the non-filing Plaintiffs have not shown that USCIS would front-desk their applications based on the challenged policies.17 Although Plaintiffs allege that USCIS would front-desk their applications, and we normally treat all well-pleaded factual allegations in a complaint as true, “we need not accept as true allegations that contradict matters properly subject to judicial notice or by exhibit.” Gonzalez v. Planned Parenthood of Los Angeles, 759 F.3d 1112, 1115 (9th Cir. 2014) (cleaned up). Here, we do not accept the allegations regarding front-desking because, during this litigation, Plaintiffs submitted a document to the district court showing that USCIS did not front-desk Plaintiff P. Peddada‘s application. Specifically, Plaintiffs filed a copy of USCIS‘s written decision formally denying P. Peddаda‘s application. This decision was not a “prefiling rejection,” CSS, 509 U.S. at 61, but a “formal[] deni[al] . . . on the ground that the [challenged policies] rendered [P. Peddada] ineligible” for adjustment of status, id. at 60. Additionally, the non-filing Plaintiffs allege that they are similarly situated to P. Peddada and that USCIS would apply the same policies to them. Accepting that USCIS would treat the non-filing Plaintiffs like it treated P. Peddada, we must assume that USCIS would accept and process the non-filing Plaintiffs’ applications.18
2
Because USCIS denied P. Peddada‘s application for adjustment of status based on the challenged policies, she can establish ripeness. But, as discussed above, when a plaintiff relies on the denial of her application to satisfy ripeness and the statutory scheme channels review of such denials into a limited review process, then she will “still find [herself] at least temporarily barred” from review by those channeling provisions.19 CSS, 509 U.S. at 60. Plaintiffs resist this conclusion by arguing that
C
Plaintiffs contend that Congress intended to strip district courts of jurisdiction to review denials of adjustment of status for applicants who are unlawfully present and removable but to preserve district court jurisdiction to review such denials for applicants who are lawfully present and not removable. Plaintiffs find evidence of such intent in Congress‘s use of the term “relief” in
Plaintiffs recognize that
The Government disputes Plaintiffs’ interpretation of the term “relief” and contends that it refers to an immigration benefit even when the applicant does not need “relief from removal.” The Government also argues that the “regardless” clause shows that Congress intended to encompass all denials of discretionary relief, even
Both parties offer plausible interpretations based on the text of
Plaintiffs also cite some statements from the legislative history of the REAL ID Act and IIRIRA that suggest Congress intended to limit judicial review only in the removal context. For example, when Congress amended
Although we find genuine ambiguity, we disagree with Plaintiffs’ argument that we can resolve it by applying the presumption favoring judicial review of administrative action. As thе Government contends, that presumption does not apply because the statute does not completely bar review of USCIS and DHS denials of adjustment applications. Instead, the statute channels review of those denials into a petition for review from an order of removal. See City of Rialto v. W. Coast Loading Corp., 581 F.3d 865, 874 (9th Cir. 2009) (Generally, “the same act that would ripen a claim would also bring the claim within the reach of the statutory bar to federal court jurisdiction, thus requiring the plaintiffs to bring their claims at the time envisioned by the statutory scheme of judicial review.” (citing CSS, 509 U.S. at 60)). Specifically,
Plaintiffs also argue that construing
We recognize that individuals like P. Peddada—who have not violated any immigration laws—must violate the law to render themselves removable and obtain judicial review. And, “[w]e normally do not require plaintiffs to ‘bet the farm’ . . . by taking the violative action before testing the validity of the law, and we do not consider this a meaningful avenue of relief.” Id. (cleaned up). However, Congress can require review in this manner by expressly limiting and channeling judicial review. See id. at 489-90. And, in CSS, the Court considered an almost identical situation. There, to obtain judicial review, the plaintiffs had to “either surrender to the INS for deportation or wait for the INS to catch [them] and commence a deportation proceeding, and then suffer a final adverse decision in that proceeding, before having an opportunity to challenge the INS‘s denial of [the] application in court.” 509 U.S. at 55. Yet, the Court found that this statutory scheme preserved a “latent right to judicial review.” Id. at 54.
Thus, neither the legislative history nor the presumption of reviewability resolves the textual ambiguity in this case, and we must return to the text and statutory context. Although it is a close question, because Congress, in at least a few instances, used the term “relief” to refer more broadly to immigration benefits that individuals who are lawfully present could apply for, we conclude that “relief under section . . . 1255” refers generally to adjustment of status, whether the applicant is seeking relief from removal or not. Consequently, although P. Peddada can rely on USCIS‘s denial of her application for adjustment of status to show that her claims are ripe, she is still “temporarily barred” from obtaining judicial review, CSS, 509 U.S. at 60, and her claims are reviewable only if presented in a petition for review from a final order of removal.
D
Finally, we note that our interpretation of
Our decision is also consistent with the holdings of the D.C. Circuit in Abuzeid v. Mayorkas, 62 F.4th 578 (D.C. Cir. 2023), and of the Seventh Circuit in Britkovyy v. Mayorkas, 60 F.4th 1024 (7th Cir. 2023). In these post-Patel cases, our sister circuits held that district courts lack jurisdiction to hear plaintiffs’ challenges to USCIS‘s denials оf their applications for adjustment of status, even though plaintiffs challenged those denials as arbitrary and capricious under the APA. Abuzeid, 62 F.4th at 586; Britkovyy, 60 F.4th at 1032. Unlike the Nakka plaintiffs, the Abuzeid and Britkovyy plaintiffs tried to use the APA to get district court review of individualized USCIS denials. See Abuzeid, 62 F.4th at 582 (noting plaintiff “asserted that the denials of [his] applications were arbitrary and capricious, an abuse of discretion, and contrary to law, in violation of the APA“); Britkovyy, 60 F.4th at 1026 (plaintiff “argued that the [USCIS‘s] denial was reviewable under [the APA], and he asked the court to set aside USCIS‘s decision“). That is, those plaintiffs’ APA claims “refer[red] to or rel[ied] on the denial of [their] individual application[s],” CSS, 509 U.S. at 56, and thus, they were not actually collateral policy challenges arising outside the scope of
We ultimately agree with our sister circuits that
***
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court here lacked constitutional jurisdiction over most of Plaintiffs’ claims because they are not ripe. And although P. Peddada‘s claims are ripe,
VACATED AND REMANDED.21
FORREST, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment:
I agree with the majority that (1) plaintiffs Nitheesha Nakka, Ravi Thodupunuri, Sandeep Battula, Vishal Addagatla, and Vishal Peddada‘s collateral, procedural challenges to the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services’ (USCIS) processing of adjustment-of-status applications are not ripe and, therefore, the district court lacked Article III jurisdiction, and (2) the district court lacked statutory jurisdiction over plaintiff Pavani Peddada‘s claims because
I.
As the majority explains, the claims asserted by the plaintiffs who have not yet applied for an adjustment of status (non-filing plaintiffs) are not ripe. Ripeness is a justiciability requirement “drawn both from Article III limitations on judicial power and from prudential reasons for refusing to exercise jurisdiction.” Reno v. Cath. Soc. Servs., Inc., 509 U.S. 43, 57 n. 18 (1993) (hereafter CSS); see also United States v. Antelope, 395 F.3d 1128, 1132 (9th Cir. 2005) (“The constitutional component of ripeness is a jurisdictional prerequisite.“). It is grounded in the principle that federal courts should not “entangl[e] themselves in abstract disagreements.” Twitter, Inc. v. Paxton, 56 F.4th 1170, 1173 (9th Cir. 2022) (quoting Portman v. County of Santa Clara, 995 F.2d 898, 902 (9th Cir. 1993); see also Fed. Election Comm‘n v. Cruz, 563 U.S. 125, 132 (2011) (“Under Article III, the Federal Judiciary is vested with the ‘Power’ to resolve not questions and issues but ‘Cases’ or ‘Controversies.‘“)). The constitutional component of the ripeness requirement
Here, the non-filing plaintiffs have not felt the effects of USCIS‘s actions “in a concrete way.” CSS, 509 U.S. at 57 (citation omitted). The USCIS has not applied its challenged policies and practices governing applications for adjustment of status to the non-filing plaintiffs because they have not applied for an adjustment of status. See FDA v. All. for Hippocratic Med., 602 U.S. 367, 144 S.Ct. 1540, 1554 (2024) (“For a plaintiff to get in the fеderal courthouse door and obtain a judicial determination of what the governing law is, the plaintiff cannot be a mere bystander, but instead must have a ‘personal stake’ in the dispute.“); see also Bassett v. ABM Parking Serv., Inc., 883 F.3d 776, 779 (9th Cir. 2018) (holding an injury is concrete if it “actually exists‘; in other words, it is ‘real and not abstract.‘“) (quoting Spokeo, Inc., v. Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 340 (2016)). Thus, we lack Article III jurisdiction over the non-filing plaintiffs’ claims, Bishop Paiute Tribe, 863 F.3d at 1153, and I would not address whether
II.
Pavani Peddada‘s claims are ripe. During the pendency of this litigation, she applied for and was denied adjustment of status based on USCIS‘s challenged policies and practices. Therefore, we must address whether statutory jurisdiction exists to review the USCIS‘s individualized denial of her application for adjustment of status. See CSS, 509 U.S. at 57.
On that issue, I agree that the district court lacked statutory jurisdiction because individualized decisions on applications for adjustment of status, even for applicants who are not removable when they file their application, can be challenged only through removal proceedings, over which this court, not the district court, has judicial review.2
Nasrallah v. Barr, 590 U.S. 573, (2020) (a noncitizen may obtain “direct ‘review of a final order of removal’ in a court of appeals” (quoting
Additionally, because USCIS made an individualized determination on Pavani Peddada‘s application for adjustment of status, any generalized or collateral challenge that she asserts to USCIS‘s policies and practices presents an “abstract disagreement[].” Abbott Lab‘ys, 387 U.S. at 148. That is, Pavani Peddada can no longer be deemed to assert any truly collateral claims because the policies and practices that she challenges were directly applied to her in denying her application for adjustment of status. See McNary v. Haitian Refugee Ctr., Inc., 498 U.S. 479, 492 (1991) (the Supreme Court has long distinguished between “direct review of individual denials” of applications and “general collateral challenges to [unlawful] praсtices and policies.“). Therefore, there is no cause in this case to address whether
For these reasons, I respectfully concur in part and concur in the judgment.
