Antonio Reyes-Hernandez v. Immigration and Naturalization Service

89 F.3d 490, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 17570
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 17, 1996
Docket95-3677
StatusPublished
Cited by72 cases

This text of 89 F.3d 490 (Antonio Reyes-Hernandez v. Immigration and Naturalization Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antonio Reyes-Hernandez v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 89 F.3d 490, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 17570 (7th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

POSNER, Chief Judge.

The petitioner is a 45-year-old citizen of Mexico who became a lawful permanent resident of the United States in 1981 following his marriage to a U.S. citizen named Gail Reyes. He has three children who are U.S. citizens. He and his wife divorced in 1986, shortly before his conviction in a state court for unlawful possession of cocaine. He was sentenced to probation for that offense. Three years later he was arrested and convicted of a similar charge. After his release from prison the following year, he and Gail remarried and there is substantial evidence that he is fully rehabilitated and that deporting him would be a considerable hardship to Gail, who has health problems.

The petitioner conceded deportability but applied for relief under section 212(c) of the Immigration and .Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. .§ 1182(c). That provision has been interpreted , to give the Attorney General discretionary authority to waive the deportation of deportable aliens who have been lawful permanent residents of the United States for at least seven consecutive years. Cordoba-Chaves v. INS, 946 F.2d 1244, 1246 (7th Cir.1991). No standard for guiding this discretion is set forth in the statute, but the Board of Immigration Appeals — the Attorney General’s delegate for the exercise of the statutory discretion — considers the hardship to the deportee and other equitable factors bearing for and against the deportee’s plea to be allowed to remain. In re Marin, 16 I. & N. Dec. 581, 585 (B.I.A.1978). An immigration judge conducted an evidentiary hearing on Reyes-Hernandez’s application and concluded that it should be denied. The Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed this denial in October of last year, issuing a final order of deportation, and the petitioner seeks our review of that order pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a), which gives the federal courts of appeals exclusive jurisdiction to review such final orders.

On April 24 of this year, shortly before the oral argument of the appeal, the President signed into law the Antiterrorism and Effec- *492 five Death Penalty Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214. Section 440(a) of the Act, amending section 106(a)(10) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a)(10), provides that “any final order of deportation against an alien who is deport-able by reason of having committed” certain criminal offenses, including those of which this petitioner was convicted, “shall not be subject to review by any court.” And section 440(d) of the new Act amends section 212(c) of the Immigration and Nationality Act to make such aliens ineligible for relief under that section. The new Act does not specify the effective date of these two sections, 440(a) and 440(d). The government, contending that they took effect the minute the President signed the Act into law, filed a motion on May 9 asking us to dismiss the petition for review on the basis of these two sections of the new Act, which if applicable disentitle the petitioner to relief as well as to any judicial review of the denial of his application for relief. We invited full briefing of the issue. The briefs have been submitted and the appeal is ripe for decision.

A statute that diminishes substantive rights, or remedies, or augments substantive liabilities, or sanctions, will not be applied retroactively, which is to say to events completed before the effective date of the statute (or the date of enactment if no separate effective date is stated), unless the statute provides explicitly for retroactive application. Landgraf v. USI Film Products, 511 U.S. 244,-, 114 S.Ct. 1483, 1498-1502, 128 L.Ed.2d 229 (1994). This means that (with the same qualification — the lack of a clear statement in the legislation that it is to be applied retroactively) such a statute will not be applied to pending cases, because a pending ease will, with the exception of a suit to enjoin a continuing or prospective harm, have grown out of events completed before the case began. In contrast, jurisdictional and procedural provisions normally are applied to pending cases despite the absence of a clear statement of legislative intent to do so. Id: at-, 114 S.Ct. at 1501-02. People normally don’t rely on such provisions in planning and conducting the affairs of life, and so the reliance interest which is the foundation of the interpretive principle limiting retroactive application is not engaged. This is in general, however, not in every case. Id. at- n. 29, 114 S.Ct. at 1502 n. 29. The test of the interpretive principle laid down in Landgraf is unitary. It is whether “the new provision attaches new legal consequences to events completed before its enactment.” Id. at -, 114 S.Ct. at 1499. If a new procedural or jurisdictional provision would if applied in a pending case attach a new legal consequence to a completed event, then it will not be applied in that case unless Congress has made clear its intention that it shall apply.

Reyes-Hernandez conceded deportability knowing that he would have a shot at section 212(c) relief and that if he were turned down for such relief by the immigration judge and the Board of Immigration Appeals he could have a go at this court, which has on a nontrivial number of occasions vacated the Board’s denial of section 212(c) relief and remanded for further proceedings. E.g., Cortes-Castillo v. INS, 997 F.2d 1199, 1201-03 (7th Cir.1993); Espinoza v. INS, 991 F.2d 1294 (7th Cir.1993); Akinyemi v. INS, 969 F.2d 285 (7th Cir.1992). Section 440(d) of the new Act extinguished Reyes-Hernandez’s section 212(c) option entirely, if the section is applied retroactively, and section 440(a) extinguished the included option of seeking judicial relief from the Board’s denial of the section 212(c) petition. Had Reyes-Hernandez known that either or both routes were closed he might have contested deportability, with what success we do not know.

Considering the fell consequences of deportation, especially in cases of exceptional hardship, which are precisely the eases in which an appeal to section 212(c) would have a chance of success, we think it unlikely that Congress intended to mousetrap aliens into conceding deportability by holding out to them the hope of relief under section 212(e) only to dash that hope after they had conceded deportability. No such ignoble intention appears in the statute. Its absence is determinative under Landgraf because to make the concession of deportability a bar to relief under section 212(c) would be to attach *493 a new legal consequence to the concession, an event that occurred before the new law came into existence.

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Bluebook (online)
89 F.3d 490, 1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 17570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antonio-reyes-hernandez-v-immigration-and-naturalization-service-ca7-1996.