Medina Carreon v. Garland

71 F.4th 247
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 15, 2023
Docket21-60391
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 71 F.4th 247 (Medina Carreon v. Garland) 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
Medina Carreon v. Garland, 71 F.4th 247 (5th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

Case: 21-60391 Document: 00516787823 Page: 1 Date Filed: 06/15/2023

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit

FILED June 15, 2023 No. 21-60391 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk

Jose Luis Medina Carreon,

Petitioner,

versus

Merrick Garland, U.S. Attorney General,

Respondent.

Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals BIA No. A200 224 818

Before Wiener, Higginson, and Wilson, Circuit Judges. Cory T. Wilson, Circuit Judge: Jose Luis Medina Carreon, a native and citizen of Mexico, petitions for review of a decision by the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) dismissing his appeal from the denial of his application for cancellation of removal. He challenges the BIA decision on grounds that: (1) it was ultra vires because the order was signed by a temporary BIA member whose term had expired; (2) the BIA erred in finding that Medina Carreon lacked good moral character; and (3) the BIA erred in affirming the denial of voluntary departure. We lack jurisdiction to consider some of Medina Carreon’s Case: 21-60391 Document: 00516787823 Page: 2 Date Filed: 06/15/2023

No. 21-60391

arguments, and where we have jurisdiction, his arguments fail. Accordingly, we dismiss his petition in part and deny it in part. I. Medina Carreon entered the United States in 1996 without being admitted or paroled. In 2011, while serving a sentence for three misdemeanor convictions arising out of an illegal cockfighting ring, 1 he was served with a notice to appear for removal proceedings. At a hearing in March 2013, Medina Carreon conceded removability and filed an application for cancellation of removal. At a September 2018 hearing concerning his application, he testified that he did not know cockfighting was illegal in Texas, as it commonly occurs in Mexico. Following that hearing, the Immigration Judge (IJ) determined that Medina Carreon was ineligible for cancellation of removal because he lacked good moral character under 8 U.S.C. § 1101(f)’s “catchall” provision.2 The IJ weighed facts bearing on Medina Carreon’s character as either positive or negative. As positives, the IJ considered Medina Carreon’s family, his long residence in the United States, his “enduring marriage,” his employment record, his assets, and character testimony that he was “a hard, good worker, and a good family man and neighbor.” As negatives, the IJ considered

1 Medina Carreon was arrested while attending a cockfight in Grayson County, Texas. Subsequently, he was convicted of attempt to commit cruelty to livestock animals, keeping a gambling place, and gambling promotion. For these crimes, he was sentenced to 180 days in prison but only served five months. 2 Section 1101(f) provides a multi-part definition for whether an alien may be regarded as a person of good moral character. The definition first prohibits such a finding for aliens falling into certain per se classes. See 8 U.S.C. § 1101(f)(1)–(9). It ends with a “catchall” provision, which states that “[t]he fact that any person is not within any of the foregoing classes shall not preclude a finding that for other reasons such person is or was not of good moral character.” Id. § 1101(f).

2 Case: 21-60391 Document: 00516787823 Page: 3 Date Filed: 06/15/2023

Medina Carreon’s three cockfighting-related convictions, another conviction for driving on a suspended license, and the fact that he “hired workers unlawfully in the United States and paid his workers in cash, leaving it up to them to report their income to the IRS.” Because the “negative factors far outweigh[ed] the positive factors,” the IJ concluded “in its discretion” that Medina Carreon lacked good moral character and denied his application for cancellation of removal. “For the same reasons,” the IJ sua sponte denied Medina Carreon the privilege of voluntary departure “as a matter of . . . discretion.”3 The BIA agreed with the IJ and dismissed Medina Carreon’s appeal. Medina Carreon timely petitioned our court for review. II. Medina Carreon first asserts that the BIA’s ruling was an invalid ultra vires act because two of the three BIA members who ruled on his case were temporary members whose initial terms had expired. The Government responds that (A) we lack jurisdiction to consider this claim because Medina Carreon did not exhaust it before the BIA, (B) such challenges may not be raised in a petition for review, and (C) the claim fails on its merits. We consider each of the Government’s arguments in turn. A. As a preliminary matter, the Government contends that we lack jurisdiction to consider this claim because Medina Carreon failed to raise it before the BIA. Our court considered a similar claim in Ayala Chapa v. Garland and held that the exhaustion requirement in 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1) applies to such claims. 60 F.4th 901, 905 (5th Cir. 2023). Because Ayala

3 The IJ noted that Medina Carreon did not request voluntary departure.

3 Case: 21-60391 Document: 00516787823 Page: 4 Date Filed: 06/15/2023

Chapa “never presented his ultra vires claim to the BIA, even though he could have raised it in his motion to reconsider,” we concluded that he had failed to exhaust the claim and we lacked jurisdiction to consider it. Id. Ayala Chapa, however, has been abrogated by the Supreme Court’s intervening decision in Santos-Zacaria v. Garland. 143 S. Ct. 1103 (2023). Santos-Zacaria clarified that an alien need not file a motion for reconsideration to exhaust arguments that arise as the result of a BIA opinion. Id. at 1116–17 (“[Section] 1252(d)(1) does not require that [an alien] seek reconsideration from the Board[.]”). Therefore, Medina Carreon’s failure to press this claim in a motion for reconsideration before the BIA is no bar to our considering it now. B. Immigration regulations permit the Director of the Executive Office for Immigration Review (the Director) to “designate . . . temporary Board members for terms not to exceed six months.” 8 C.F.R. § 1003.1(a)(4). Medina Carreon contends that the two temporary BIA members who ruled in his case did so ultra vires because their six-month terms had expired and “had not been renewed in accordance with [this] regulation.” The Government responds that its adherence to “regulations governing internal agency procedures” cannot be challenged in a petition for review before our court. After all, petitions for review may challenge only “matters on which the validity of the final order is contingent.” INS v. Chadha, 462 U.S. 919, 938 (1983) (quotations and citation omitted). Because the regulation at issue “merely concerns the Board’s organization, management, and internal procedures,” the Government submits that Medina Carreon’s removal order “is not fairly contingent on the operation of the regulation” such that the regulation “is not within the scope of [our] review[.]”

4 Case: 21-60391 Document: 00516787823 Page: 5 Date Filed: 06/15/2023

But Medina Carreon does not merely challenge the Government’s compliance with a regulation. Rather, he contends that non-compliance rendered the BIA’s decision in his case ultra vires. “[A]n agency acts ultra vires when it ‘go[es] beyond what Congress has permitted it to do[.]’” Nastase v. Barr, 964 F.3d 313, 318 (5th Cir.

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71 F.4th 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/medina-carreon-v-garland-ca5-2023.