Petitioner Jackson challenges California’s jurisdiction to confine him under its Sexually Violent Predator Act (SVPA). Before he filed his federal habeas petition, his SVPA confinement term expired, and he voluntarily recommitted himself. We consider whether he had standing to bring this challenge.
I
California’s SVPA, see Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code § 6600 et seq., allows the state to confine particularly dangerous individuals who have been convicted of multiple sexual offenses. In order to confine a person under the SVPA, the state must petition a state court to commit him, see id. § 6601(i), and the court (or a jury, if either party so requests) must determine that he is a “sexually violent predator,” see id. § 6604. 1 An SVPA petition may be filed only if the person named in the petition is “in custody ... at the time the petition is filed.” Id. § 6601(a)(2).
The SVPA took effect on January 1, 1996, when Jackson was in prison for a parole violation. At the time, his release was scheduled for February 25, 1996. Because Jackson had multiple rape convictions, state officials began considering him for confinement under the SVPA. The state Board of Prison Terms (BPT), perhaps concerned that it would not be able to satisfy the prerequisites for filing an SVPA petition before Jackson’s scheduled release, placed a three-day hold on his
On February 27, the day before Jackson’s new release date and two days after his original one, the BPT determined that there was probable cause that he was a sexually violent predator. It therefore placed a 45-day hold on his release pursuant to Cal.Code Regs. tit. 15, § 2600.1. While this second hold was in force, the Sacramento County District Attorney filed a petition to commit Jackson under the SVPA. A jury determined that Jackson was a sexually violent predator, and he was ordered committed for two years at Atascadero State Hospital (ASH).
While his direct appeal was pending, Jackson filed a state habeas petition. He argued that the three-day hold on his release was illegal, see note 2 supra, and that the state was required to release him on February 25 under California’s “mandatory kick-out” rule, see Cal. Pen.Code § 3000(a)(4) (1996) (“[A]t the end of the maximum statutory period of parole ... the inmate shall be discharged from custody.”). Thus, Jackson claimed, he was not lawfully in custody when the SVPA petition was filed. Reading the SVPA’s requirement that the person named in the petition be “in custody” as referring only to lawful custody, Jackson contended that the state court did not have jurisdiction to order him confined. See Cal. Welf. & Inst. Code § 6601(a)(2). The California Court of Appeal summarily denied his habeas petition, and the California Supreme Court denied a subsequent petition.
Jackson then petitioned for federal ha-beas relief. The district court denied the petition on the ground that it could not grant a habeas petition that claimed only that a state court lacked jurisdiction under state law.' Jackson appeals.
II
The state court ordered Jackson confined for two years. When his term expired in 1999, Jackson voluntarily recommitted himself for an additional two-year period. After his voluntary recommitment, Jackson filed the habeas petition at issue here in February 2000. Before we may consider the merits of Jackson’s petition, we must decide whether it presents a case or controversy under Article III of the Constitution.
See Allen v. Wright,
Article III imposes two important limitations on the type of interest that a litigant must have for a federal court to adjudicate his case. First, Jackson must have had standing to bring his claim. In other words, Jackson must have suffered (1) an “injury in fact” that is (2) “fairly traceable” to the state court’s commitment order that he challenges, and, (3) that is “likely [to be] redressed by a favorable decision.”
See Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc.,
Hubbart had petitioned for habeas during his initial SVPA confinement, but, by the time the case reached us on appeal, his term had ended. Id. at 777. However, Hubbart had not been released after his term expired. Although SVPA confinements last only two years, the state may petition for an additional two-year confinement period. As the second period ends, the state may seek a third, and so forth. This is what happened with Hubbart: When his initial SVPA term expired, the state successfully petitioned to commit him for a second two-year term. Id. at 777 n. 1.
Each two-year confinement term is based on a distinct proceeding,
see Burris v. Hunter,
We nevertheless held that we had jurisdiction to consider Hubbart’s case because it fell into an exception to mootness for cases that are “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
Hubbart,
Relying on
Hubbart,
Jackson argues that we have jurisdiction to consider his habeas petition even though his initial term of commitment has expired. But
Hubbart
does not apply here. Hubbart’s initial SVPA term expired two weeks
after
he petitioned the district court for habeas relief.
See
Here, by contrast, Jackson’s initial SVPA term expired before he brought his federal habeas petition. When the district court first considered his case, Jackson was no longer confined under the order he claims the state lacked jurisdiction to enter. The relevant question is not whether Jackson’s challenge became moot at some point, but whether he had standing when he brought it.
Standing and mootness are similar doctrines: Both require some sort of interest in the case, and both go to whether there is a case or controversy under Article III. Yet, the doctrines have important
Ill
Jackson argues that the state court lacked jurisdiction under the SVPA to commit him. But he clearly could not rely on his expired SVPA term for standing to raise this claim. Even if the district court were to agree with him that the state court lacked jurisdiction, it could not remedy an expired commitment term. Jackson may nonetheless have had standing if the state court’s SVPA commitment order still carried with it “some, concrete and continuing injury other than the now-ended incarceration.”
Spencer,
But Jackson must demonstrate that such .consequences exist.
4
The SVPA it
There are, however, other injuries that Jackson suffers or has suffered that might be consequences of the state court’s determination that he is a sexually violent predator: (1) the voluntary confinement term he was serving when he filed his habeas petition; (2) the possibility that he will be involuntarily confined in the future; and (3) the reputational harm associated with the SVPA determination. We consider each of these in turn.
Current Voluntary Confinement
When Jackson’s initial SVPA term expired in 1999, the state did not petition to commit him for a second two-year term; he voluntarily recommitted himself. As a result, Jackson was still confined at ASH when he filed his habeas petition.
5
But while his confinement was clearly an injury in fact, it is hardly clear that it was “fairly traceable to the challenged action” of the state.
Friends of the Earth,
It is possible that Jackson committed himself because the state would otherwise have asked a court to recommit him involuntarily. If he stood little chance of defeating such a request, but would incur some hardship in trying, perhaps we would be willing to say that his decision to voluntarily recommit himself was traceable to the state court’s initial decision to confine him. However, that is not the only possible explanation for Jackson’s decision to recommit himself, and it is not our duty to hypothesize circumstances under which jurisdiction might have been proper. Instead, it was Jackson’s burden, as the “party who [sought] the exercise of jurisdiction in his favor,”
McNutt v. Gen. Motors Acceptance Corp.,
Jackson’s pleadings below did not explain why he decided to voluntarily recommit himself. His habeas petition listed his first voluntary confinement term as a
future
sentence, even though he was currently serving it, and indicated only that he “waived his second trial” under the SVPA. Jackson’s memorandum in support of his habeas petition did not mention any events that occurred after the state court ordered him confined. And his supplemental memorandum in support of the ha-beas petition ignored the difference between his initial, involuntary SVPA term and his voluntary confinement, claiming that a “string of administrative and judicial proceedings” resulted in Jackson’s incarceration at ASH, “where he remains confined today.” No other part of the record before the district court contained an explanation of Jackson’s decision to recommit himself.
6
There is therefore no basis
Possibility of Future Confinement
Another possibility is that Jackson had standing because he might in the future be confined involuntarily. If Jackson had never voluntarily recommitted himself, but had instead been committed under successive SVPA petitions, his initial SVPA confinement would have served as a prerequisite for a second petition, the second petition as a prerequisite for a third, and so forth. Thus, any future petition to recommit him could be traced back, through preceding petitions, to his initial confinement.
But Jackson’s case does not involve such a chain. If the state petitions to recommit him, the prerequisite for the petition would be his current voluntary confinement. Since we cannot say that this current confinement is traceable to the state court’s SVPA confinement order, we likewise cannot trace any future confinement petitions back to the order.
Reputational Harm
Finally, we have little doubt that Jackson’s adjudication as a sexually violent predator carries with it consequences to his reputation. Although it is not clear how much of the harm is attributable to the SVPA designation as such — as opposed to the sexual crime convictions that provided the basis for the designation — the designation itself is an injury. Moreover, some of this harm could be remedied by a judgment that the state court lacked jurisdiction under the SVPA. But not all injuries amount to injuries in fact that can support standing.
The Supreme Court has consistently held that reputation is not a sufficient interest to avoid mootness.
See Spencer,
* * *
Because Jackson did not demonstrate that he had standing to challenge the state court’s jurisdiction to order his confinement, the district court lacked jurisdiction to consider his habeas petition. The judgment of the district court is vacated, and
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The SVPA defines "sexually violent predator" as "a person who has been convicted of a sexually violent offense against two or more victims and who has a diagnosed mental disorder that makes the person a danger to the health and safety of others in that it is likely that he or she will engage in sexually violent criminal behavior.” Cal. Welf. & Inst.Code § 6600(a)(1).
. To justify the hold, the state relied on Cal. Pen.Code § 3056, which provides that "[prisoners on parole ... shall be subject at any time to be taken back within the inclosure of the prison.” Jackson argues that this provision was inapplicable to him, because he had already been “taken back within the inclosure of the prison” for a parole violation. The state responds that the hold was also proper under Cal.Code Regs. tit. 15, § 2600.1(b), which allows the BPT to "order imposition of a temporary hold on [a] ... parolee in revoked status for up to three (3) working days pending a probable cause hearing by the -board.” Given our disposition of the case, we need not decide whether the hold was valid.
. We do not decide whether, if the issue here were mootness, Hubbart would control even though Jackson voluntarily committed himself.
. In its mootness cases, the Supreme Court has been willing to presume that a criminal conviction gives rise to collateral consequences. Se
e Spencer,
Jackson was civilly confined under the SVPA, not pursuant to a criminal conviction.
See, e.g., People v. Calhoun,
. Jackson remains committed at ASH. After he filed his federal habeas petition, Jackson voluntarily recommitted himself twice more— in 2001 and 2003.
. Nor, for that matter, does the record before us reveal any additional information that would support Jackson’s standing. At oral
. The converse is not necessarily true. Because of the Court’s concerns about the litigation costs incurred by the time mootness becomes an issue,
see
page 8
supra,
an interest may be sufficient to keep the case from becoming moot even if it could not have supported standing to bring the case in federal court.
Cf. Friends of the Earth,
