USAMA JAMIL HAMAMA, et al., Petitioners-Appellees, v. REBECCA ADDUCCI, Director of the Detroit District of United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement, et al., Respondents-Appellants.
No. 19-1080
United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
January 3, 2020
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b). File Name: 20a0003p.06. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit. No. 2:17-cv-11910—Mark A. Goldsmith, District Judge.
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
File Name: 20a0003p.06
COUNSEL
ON BRIEF: Michael A. Celone, William C. Silvis, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Appellants. Miriam J. Aukerman, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FUND OF MICHIGAN, Grand Rapids, Judy Rabinovitz, Lee Gelernt, Anand Balakrishnan, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION, New York, New York, Margo Schlanger, Ann Arbor, Michigan, Nadine Yousif, CODE LEGAL AID INC., Madison Heights, Michigan, Kimberly L. Scott, Wendolyn Wrosch Richards, MILLER, CANFIELD, PADDOCK & STONE, PLC, Ann Arbor, Michigan, William W. Swor, WILLIAM W. SWOR & ASSOCIATES, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellees.
SUTTON, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which BATCHELDER, J., joined. WHITE, J. (pp. 9–13), delivered a separate opinion concurring only in the judgment.
OPINION
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Last time around, we held that Congress removed jurisdiction from the district courts to enter class-wide injunctions restraining the enforcement of the following immigration statutes:
I.
Usama Hamama is the named plaintiff in a class of over one thousand Iraqi nationals. The federal government entered final removal orders against Hamama and the class members between March 1 and June 24, 2017, and the government has detained them or will do so in the future. So far, most of them remain in the United States due to diplomatic difficulties preventing their return to Iraq.
The district court certified three subclasses: (1) all primary class members without individual habeas petitions who are or will be detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, (2) those in the first subclass who are also subject to final removal orders, and (3) those in the first subclass whose motions to reopen their removal proceedings have been granted and who are being held under a statute mandating their detention. Today‘s appeal concerns the first subclass.
The district court now has entered a trio of preliminary injunctions. We vacated two of them the last time we encountered this case. Hamama v. Adducci, 912 F.3d 869, 871–72 (6th Cir. 2018). The first injunction prevented removal of certain Iraqi nationals located throughout the country. The district court, we explained, lacked jurisdiction to grant this relief under
In today‘s appeal, the government challenges the third injunction, issued shortly before we decided the last appeal. The third injunction presumptively requires the government to release all primary subclass members, those in the first subclass, once the government has detained them for six months, no matter the statutory authority under which they were held.
In issuing this injunction, the district court offered three explanations. First, it relied on Zadvydas v. Davis, 533 U.S. 678, 701 (2001), which required release of certain immigration detainees after six months if the detainees could show that there was no “significant likelihood” that they would be removed in the “reasonably foreseeable future.” The government held the detainees in Zadvydas under
Second, the district court concluded that the class members showed that the government was unlikely to repatriate them to Iraq in the reasonably foreseeable future. Even though the government has sent some of the affected individuals back to Iraq since 2017, the evidence showed that diplomatic discussions had stalled and repatriation attempts had failed. The court concluded that this trouble likely would persist.
Third, the district court reasoned that the government “acted ignobly” throughout the litigation process and found no substantial likelihood of removal as a sanction for its conduct. R. 490 at 1, 53.
For the reasons offered in our last opinion and others elaborated below, the district court lacked jurisdiction to enter its class-wide preliminary injunction and at any rate had no license to extend Zadvydas to this setting.
II.
The district court had no jurisdiction to do what it did. Congress stripped all courts, save for the Supreme Court, of jurisdiction to enjoin or restrain the operation of
In each case, the government detained the aliens under
Hamama defends the district court‘s most recent injunction on four grounds, each unavailing.
He starts by insisting that the district court in truth did not enjoin the statutes. It merely granted habeas corpus relief instead. As proof, he points out that the order required the release of detainees from confinement, a form of relief that resembles a grant of the writ of habeas corpus and that is consistent with the styling of the lawsuit as a habeas petition.
That is a hard sell. As a matter of form, the district court entered a “preliminary injunction.” R. 490 at 1. That‘s just what Hamama asked for in his motion, and that‘s presumably why the court called it one. As a matter of substance, the district court considered the four-factor test for a preliminary injunction, never mentioning
Hamama could not succeed, moreover, even if this were a grant of habeas relief. One problem is that not all members of this subclass currently are in custody. The subclass includes individuals who will be detained in the future. Eligibility for habeas relief, as noted, covers only those individuals currently in custody,
No matter, Hamama responds: The court had authority to order the class members’ release as a sanction for the government‘s misconduct during the litigation, either under its inherent powers or under
Hamama‘s third attempt to rehabilitate the district court‘s injunction echoes an argument from the last appeal. He claims that the district court did not enjoin or restrain the immigration statutes; it just implemented them. But as we pointed out last time in responding to a similar argument, the district court ordered detainees released, created new time limits on detention, and adopted new standards that the government had to meet to continue detention. Hamama, 912 F.3d at 879–80. “If these limitations on what the government can and cannot do under the . . . detention provisions are not ‘restraints,’ it is not at all clear what would qualify as a restraint.” Id. at 880.
Last of all, Hamama asks us to uphold the preliminary injunction on the ground that the court could have entered it as a declaratory judgment. Maybe; maybe not. Whatever we think about that issue in the abstract, however, the district court did not enter its preliminary order as a declaratory judgment. And Hamama at any rate did not seek that relief in the motion, making it forfeited anyway. Nor should anyone assume Hamama could have obtained preliminary declaratory relief. The Supreme Court has suggested preliminary declaratory judgment does not exist. Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc., 422 U.S. 922, 931 (1975).
The broader point, through all of Hamama‘s attempts to reconceptualize this unlawful district court order, is that one does not lightly cleanse a prohibited action by identifying after the fact some other form of relief that might work sometimes in some circumstances. That is no way to run a railroad.
III.
The district court separately read too much into Zadvydas, 533 U.S. at 678, and overlooked the teachings of Jennings v. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830 (2018), in granting relief.
In Zadvydas, aliens detained under
Today‘s case differs in material ways. The government has detained class members under four provisions:
None of those three provisions implicates Zadvydas‘s concern about indefinite detention. Zadvydas sprang from the observation that a “statute permitting indefinite detention of an alien would raise a serious constitutional problem.” 533 U.S. at 690. But, as Jennings noted, all three of these provisions, unlike the Zadvydas provision, have endpoints: conclusion of asylum proceedings or entry of a removal order. 138 S. Ct. at 844, 846. The Supreme Court, moreover, has separately upheld detention during deportation proceedings against constitutional challenge, allaying any constitutional concerns on that front. Demore v. Kim, 538 U.S. 510 (2003).
More, Congress wrote two of the statutes—
Jennings indeed forbade this precise form of interpretation in construing
Ly v. Hansen does not require a different result. 351 F.3d 263 (6th Cir. 2003). Yes, it extended Zadvydas and its reasoning to other detention statutes. But Ly did not survive Jennings.
Jennings restored the constitutional distinction between pre- and post-removal order detention that Ly collapsed. Ly held
Ly also turned on a constitutional avoidance reading of
We vacate the district court‘s injunction and remand for further proceedings.
CONCURRING IN THE JUDGMENT
HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment only. I recognize that the majority‘s opinion in Hamama v. Adducci, 912 F.3d 869 (6th Cir. 2018) (Hamama I) requires us to vacate the class-wide preliminary injunction. I therefore concur in the judgment. However, I adhere to my dissent in Hamama I and disagree with the conclusions the majority draws from Supreme Court and Sixth Circuit precedent.
I.
The majority asserts that Hamama could not succeed even if the district court‘s order is characterized as habeas relief because it “applies prospectively . . . to those whose confinement might become unlawful in the future.” Maj. Op. at 4-5. Under a Zadvydas analysis, however, it is necessary to examine the possibility of future indefinite and unconstitutional detention. Zadvydas did not neatly establish that detention shorter than six months is lawful while detention longer than six months is unlawful. Instead, in balancing the liberty interests of detainees with the executive branch‘s need for leeway in accomplishing removals, Zadvydas established a presumption that six months of detention is reasonable. 533 U.S. 678, 700–01 (2001). After six months, Zadvydas provides process to detainees whose confinement might be unlawful—a review of the likelihood of removal in the reasonably foreseeable future. Id. Here, the district court conducted this review and found that “the record unquestionably demonstrates that there is no significant likelihood of repatriation in the reasonably foreseeable future.” R. 490, PID 14171. This is not a case in which “confinement might become unlawful in the future,” but a case in which confinement will be unlawful once class members reach six months of detention.
This court has acknowledged that the Supreme Court “has construed the ‘in custody’ requirement in a reasonably liberal fashion and held that the writ may be appropriate in situations beyond the traditional one in which petitioner‘s claim
Here, the Zadvydas subclass members whose periods of detention will reach six months have already established that there is no reasonably foreseeable likelihood of repatriation. Therefore, upon the expiration of the six-month presumption “each day they are incarcerated . . . while their cases are in the courts will be time that they might properly have enjoyed as free men.” Peyton, 391 U.S. at 64. The district court‘s order releasing any subclass member whose detention reaches six months, allowing the government to show special justification for continued detention of specific individuals, and allowing the government to remove individuals prior to the time required for release, would constitute permissible habeas relief under
Even if we assume the district court could not grant habeas relief prospectively, Part 1 of the order, applying to subclass members who have been detained for more than six months, would remain a valid form of habeas relief. Part 2 of the order, applying to any subclass member whose detention reaches six months, could be reissued upon the actual expiration of six months of detention.
The majority also casts doubt on the possibility of declaratory relief. As I observed in Hamama I, “the request for such relief is part of the case and should be entertained by the district court on remand without prejudgment by this court.” 912 F.3d at 887 (White, J., dissenting).
II.
I disagree with the majority‘s conclusion that Demore v. Kim, 538 U.S. 510 (2003) and Jennings v. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830 (2018) foreclose all relief and that Ly v. Hansen, 351 F.3d 263 (6th Cir. 2003) does not survive Jennings.
Although the Court in Jennings observed that ”
make claims of prolonged detention effectively unreviewable. By the time a final order of removal was eventually entered, the allegedly excessive detention would have already taken place. And of course, it is possible that no such order would ever be entered in a particular case, depriving that detainee of any meaningful chance for judicial review.
The Supreme Court has not allayed all constitutional concerns regarding detention during deportation proceedings. Although Demore considered detention under
Thus, on the very grounds the Supreme Court distinguished Demore from Zadvydas, the situation here is closer to Zadvydas. The class members here were detained for a year and a half, not a “brief” or “limited period” by any measure, and the district court found that removal is not significantly likely in the reasonably foreseeable future. It therefore remains possible, under the majority‘s approach, that removal is never completed “in a particular case, depriving that detainee of any meaningful chance for judicial review.” Jennings, 138 S. Ct. at 840.
Further, as Hamama argues, Jennings did not disturb Ly‘s discussion of constitutional principles. Neither should this court. See United States v. Adewani, 467 F.3d 1340, 1342 (D.C. Cir. 2006). Unlike the constitutional avoidance and statutory interpretation of
III.
In sum, I would vacate the preliminary injunction, and remand for reconsideration in light of Hamama I and for consideration of any remedies consistent with this opinion.
