Carlos Ibarra-Leyva v. Jeh Johnson, Secretary

623 F. App'x 163
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 19, 2015
Docket14-60552
StatusUnpublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 623 F. App'x 163 (Carlos Ibarra-Leyva v. Jeh Johnson, Secretary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlos Ibarra-Leyva v. Jeh Johnson, Secretary, 623 F. App'x 163 (5th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

PER CURIAM: *

The federal government may order that an immigrant who commits certain offenses be removed from the country. If the alien returns, that removal order may be reinstated.. Federal courts have limited jurisdiction to review these orders. In our circuit, if an alien challenges a reinstatement order by raising a collateral attack on the underlying order of removal, we have jurisdiction to hear the petition only if the initial removal proceedings constituted a gross miscarriage of justice.

Carlos Ibarra-Leyva was convicted of manslaughter in state court, and the government, concluding that manslaughter was a “crime of violence” rendering him removable under the Immigration Act, ordered him deported. Ibarra-Leyva illegally reentered, was apprehended, and his removal order was reinstated. He now challenges that reinstatement, arguing that because our court has since held that manslaughter was not a crime of violence, his initial removal was improper.

Because it was not clear at the time the removal proceedings became final that the agency was in error, we hold that the initial proceedings did not constitute a gross miscarriage of justice. We dismiss this petition for want of jurisdiction.

I.

Carlos Ibarra-Leyva, a native and citizen of Mexico, was admitted to the United States as a lawful permanent resident in 1992. Four years later, Ibarra-Leyva crashed his car and killed Claudia Cruz. He was convicted of manslaughter in Texas state court and sentenced to ten years in prison.

In 1998, the former Immigration and Naturalization Service began removal proceedings against Ibarra-Leyva on the grounds that he had been convicted of an *165 aggravated felony. 1 After notice and a hearing, an immigration judge found him removable. Ibarra-Leyva appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals, arguing that the agency had violated his due process rights. 2 The BIA disagreed.

In affirming, the BIA also held that manslaughter was a “crime of violence,” a species within the genus of the “aggravated felon[ies]” that render an alien deporta-ble. 3 Such crimes include “any ... offense that is a felony and that, by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another may be used in the course of committing the offense.” 4 Then, as now, “[a] person commits [manslaughter under Texas law] if he recklessly causes the death of an individual.” 5 The BIA concluded that:

[R]ecklessly causing the death of another does, by its nature, involves a substantial risk that physical force against the person or property of another may be used in the course of committing the offense. We also note that [m]anslaugh-ter has been recognized to constitute a “crime of violence,” even though, the mental element is “recklessness” rather than “specific intent.”

In support of that latter proposition, the BIA cited to one of its earlier decisions and an opinion from the Ninth Circuit. In the penultimate paragraph of its order, the agency also stated that “[i]n the present case, because the respondent drove his vehicle over 86 miles per hour on the wrong side of the road, he caused an automobile collision that killed a woman.”

Ibarra-Leyva petitioned our court for. review of the BIA’s removal order. The BIA moved to dismiss the petition, arguing that because Ibarra-Leyva was removable because he committed an aggravated felony, our court lacked jurisdiction to review the order under 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(C). 6 We concurred, and in June 1999 we dismissed the petition for lack of jurisdiction. Ibarra-Leyva was removed from the country in 2001.

He subsequently reentered the United States illegally, was arrested, and in 2014 the Department of Homeland Security gave him notice of an intent to reinstate the original removal order. Ibarra-Leyva challenged the proposed reinstatement, arguing that in its original removal order, *166 the BIA had “committed errors ... resulting in a gross miscarriage of justice.” He pointed to United States v. Dominguez-Hernandez, 7 an unpublished opinion issued by our court in 2004, where we had held that the manslaughter offense under which Ibamtr-Leyva was convicted is not a “crime of violence.” By concluding otherwise, he argued, the BIA had grievously erred. The BIA disagreed, and reinstated the original removal order.

This petition for review of the reinstatement order follows.

II.

A.

Our ability to consider this petition is limited. Congress has, as a general matter, explicitly exempted reinstatement orders from appellate review. 8 That broad rule has a notable limitation: courts may still review “constitutional claims or questions of law raised [in] a petition for review.” 9 We have construed this provision narrowly. “Any collateral attack on an underlying order of removal, including constitutional or legal questions, however, may be considered only if the alien demonstrates that ... the initial removal proceedings constituted a gross miscarriage of justice.” 10 In our circuit, the'gross miscarriage requirement is jurisdictional. 11 We, of course, maintain jurisdiction to determine our own jurisdiction. 12 Our task is not to determine the wisdom or textual moorings of the “gross miscarriage” exception; suffice it to say that it is our court’s precedent.

We have been chary to define affirmatively “gross miscarriage of justice,” 13 and have limited ourselves to saying what it is not. It does not include situations “where the petitioner failed to contest his remova-bility in prior proceedings” or waives appeal. 14 Nor does it include challenges to an aggravated felony determination where the government “did not inform [the petitioner] of the specific conviction that qualified as an aggravated felony,” at least so long the petitioner was given general notice that he was deportable under the aggravated felony prong. 15

*167

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Bluebook (online)
623 F. App'x 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlos-ibarra-leyva-v-jeh-johnson-secretary-ca5-2015.