United States v. Juan Cortez
This text of 930 F.3d 350 (United States v. Juan Cortez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge:
Juan Cortez, a citizen of Mexico, was charged with illegally reentering the United States after having been removed years prior. Cortez conceded that he was unlawfully present, but argued that his initial removal order was invalid because of an alleged filing defect that deprived the immigration court of "jurisdiction" over his case. The district court rejected that argument, and Cortez subsequently pleaded guilty while preserving his right to raise the issue on appeal.
We affirm the district court's order. We first hold that the premise of Cortez's argument - that the purported filing defect in his case deprived the immigration court of authority to enter a removal order, so that he may collaterally challenge that order in subsequent criminal proceedings - is incorrect. And in any event, there in fact was no defect. As the district court explained, the applicable regulations do not require that the information identified by Cortez - a date and time for a subsequent removal hearing - be included in the "notice to appear" that is filed with an immigration court to initiate proceedings.
I.
A.
Juan Cortez is a citizen of Mexico who has been found to be unlawfully present in the United States on two occasions. The first was in 2011. On February 27 of that year, the Department of Homeland Security ("Department") served Cortez with a document labeled "Notice to Appear." That notice advised him, among other things, that he was charged with being unlawfully present in the country, and that the Department was initiating removal proceedings against him. The notice provided Cortez with the location of the immigration court where his removal hearing would be held, but did not provide a date and time, stating only that the hearing would occur "on a date to be set at a time to be set." J.A. 10. At the same time it served Cortez with this written notice, however, the Department orally informed him of his hearing date and time.
The Department filed the notice to appear with the immigration court on March 3, 2011. Two weeks later, on March 17, 2011, the immigration court held a removal hearing, which Cortez attended via video conference. The immigration judge confirmed that Cortez was unlawfully present and ordered that he be removed from the country. There is no indication that Cortez challenged the contents of the notice to appear or the immigration judge's authority to order his removal, and Cortez neither administratively nor judicially appealed the removal order on any ground. Cortez was removed from the United States in April 2011.
B.
At some point following his removal, Cortez entered the United States a second time, again without applying for legal admission. In September 2018, the government located Cortez in the vicinity of Lynchburg, Virginia. This time, the government criminally charged Cortez with illegal reentry under
Before the district court, Cortez moved to dismiss the indictment against him. He conceded that he had entered the United States without legal authority, so that the second element of his criminal charge - unlawful presence - was satisfied. But the first element - a previous removal from the country - was not satisfied, Cortez argued, because even though he attended his 2011 immigration hearing, "the immigration judge lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter an order of removal against him." J.A. 6. It followed, Cortez contended, that his 2011 removal order was void, and could not be the basis for a charge under § 1326(a).
As a general rule, Cortez recognized, a criminal defendant may collaterally attack a removal order in a prosecution for illegal reentry only if three conditions are met: "(1) [he] exhausted any administrative remedies that may have been available to seek relief against the order; (2) the deportation proceedings at which the order was issued improperly deprived [him] of the opportunity for judicial review; and (3) the entry of the order was fundamentally unfair."
The purported error at the heart of Cortez's claim was the failure of the notice to appear filed in connection with his 2011 removal proceeding to specify a date and time for his hearing. Under the regulations governing removal proceedings, Cortez explained, proceedings commence and "[j]urisdiction vests" with the immigration judge when a "charging document" is filed with the immigration court.
The district court disagreed. The court did not dispute the premise of Cortez's argument: that a defect in the notice to appear would implicate the immigration court's jurisdiction and allow for a collateral attack on the removal order.
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PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge:
Juan Cortez, a citizen of Mexico, was charged with illegally reentering the United States after having been removed years prior. Cortez conceded that he was unlawfully present, but argued that his initial removal order was invalid because of an alleged filing defect that deprived the immigration court of "jurisdiction" over his case. The district court rejected that argument, and Cortez subsequently pleaded guilty while preserving his right to raise the issue on appeal.
We affirm the district court's order. We first hold that the premise of Cortez's argument - that the purported filing defect in his case deprived the immigration court of authority to enter a removal order, so that he may collaterally challenge that order in subsequent criminal proceedings - is incorrect. And in any event, there in fact was no defect. As the district court explained, the applicable regulations do not require that the information identified by Cortez - a date and time for a subsequent removal hearing - be included in the "notice to appear" that is filed with an immigration court to initiate proceedings.
I.
A.
Juan Cortez is a citizen of Mexico who has been found to be unlawfully present in the United States on two occasions. The first was in 2011. On February 27 of that year, the Department of Homeland Security ("Department") served Cortez with a document labeled "Notice to Appear." That notice advised him, among other things, that he was charged with being unlawfully present in the country, and that the Department was initiating removal proceedings against him. The notice provided Cortez with the location of the immigration court where his removal hearing would be held, but did not provide a date and time, stating only that the hearing would occur "on a date to be set at a time to be set." J.A. 10. At the same time it served Cortez with this written notice, however, the Department orally informed him of his hearing date and time.
The Department filed the notice to appear with the immigration court on March 3, 2011. Two weeks later, on March 17, 2011, the immigration court held a removal hearing, which Cortez attended via video conference. The immigration judge confirmed that Cortez was unlawfully present and ordered that he be removed from the country. There is no indication that Cortez challenged the contents of the notice to appear or the immigration judge's authority to order his removal, and Cortez neither administratively nor judicially appealed the removal order on any ground. Cortez was removed from the United States in April 2011.
B.
At some point following his removal, Cortez entered the United States a second time, again without applying for legal admission. In September 2018, the government located Cortez in the vicinity of Lynchburg, Virginia. This time, the government criminally charged Cortez with illegal reentry under
Before the district court, Cortez moved to dismiss the indictment against him. He conceded that he had entered the United States without legal authority, so that the second element of his criminal charge - unlawful presence - was satisfied. But the first element - a previous removal from the country - was not satisfied, Cortez argued, because even though he attended his 2011 immigration hearing, "the immigration judge lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter an order of removal against him." J.A. 6. It followed, Cortez contended, that his 2011 removal order was void, and could not be the basis for a charge under § 1326(a).
As a general rule, Cortez recognized, a criminal defendant may collaterally attack a removal order in a prosecution for illegal reentry only if three conditions are met: "(1) [he] exhausted any administrative remedies that may have been available to seek relief against the order; (2) the deportation proceedings at which the order was issued improperly deprived [him] of the opportunity for judicial review; and (3) the entry of the order was fundamentally unfair."
The purported error at the heart of Cortez's claim was the failure of the notice to appear filed in connection with his 2011 removal proceeding to specify a date and time for his hearing. Under the regulations governing removal proceedings, Cortez explained, proceedings commence and "[j]urisdiction vests" with the immigration judge when a "charging document" is filed with the immigration court.
The district court disagreed. The court did not dispute the premise of Cortez's argument: that a defect in the notice to appear would implicate the immigration court's jurisdiction and allow for a collateral attack on the removal order. But, the court held, the notice to appear was not defective, because the regulatory definition of the "notice to appear" that vests a court with "jurisdiction" under
Because Cortez had shown no defect affecting the immigration court's "jurisdiction," the court concluded, he could attack his removal order collaterally only if he could satisfy the standard § 1326(d) requirements. Jumping directly to the third requirement, the court held that Cortez's removal order was not "fundamentally unfair," J.A. 20, in part because Cortez - who attended his hearing after being provided with oral notice of the date and time - suffered no "actual prejudice," J.A. 21. Accordingly, the district court denied Cortez's motion to dismiss the indictment against him.
Cortez pleaded guilty less than two weeks later, and the district court sentenced him to time served. Cortez's plea agreement reserved his right to appeal the district court's ruling on his motion to dismiss the indictment, and he timely noticed this appeal.
II.
Cortez makes the same argument on appeal as he did before the district court: Because no proper notice to appear was filed in his removal proceedings, the immigration court lacked "jurisdiction," and as a result, there is no valid removal order on which to base a prosecution for illegal reentry. We review this claim, which turns on purely legal questions, de novo,
United States v. Hatcher
,
Before we even reach Cortez's argument - that the immigration court lacked "subject matter jurisdiction" to enter his 2011 removal order because of a defect in the notice to appear filed with the court - we are confronted with a threshold issue. Both parties assume that a successful challenge to the "subject matter jurisdiction" of an immigration court would by itself be grounds for a collateral attack on a removal order, relieving Cortez of the obligation to satisfy the § 1326(d) requirements that ordinarily apply to collateral challenges. We have questions about that assumption, which we outline below.
We need not resolve the issue, however, because for two independent reasons, Cortez cannot succeed in his challenge to the immigration court's "jurisdiction." First, the regulation on which Cortez relies,
At bottom, this case is about a collateral challenge to a removal order in a criminal proceeding for illegal reentry under
In a criminal proceeding for illegal reentry, the existence of a removal order usually is enough to meet the government's burden of establishing the defendant's prior removal or deportation.
United States v. Moreno-Tapia
,
It is readily apparent that Cortez cannot make any of those showings. First, Cortez failed to exhaust his administrative remedies: He neither administratively appealed the immigration judge's decision nor provided any explanation for why he could not do so. Second, Cortez failed to show that the alleged defect in his proceeding - the absence of a hearing date on the notice filed with the immigration court - somehow deprived him of the opportunity for judicial review of a removal proceeding of which he had actual notice and in which he actively participated. Finally, Cortez cannot establish "fundamental unfairness," which requires that "but for the errors complained of, there was a reasonable probability that he would not have been deported,"
United States v. El Shami
,
Thus, Cortez may proceed with his collateral attack only if there is some exception-to-the-exception that would allow him to bypass these normal requirements. Cortez argues that there is just such an exception: If he is correct that a defect in the notice to appear filed with the immigration court to commence his proceedings deprived the immigration court of "jurisdiction" under
First, contrary to what seems to be Cortez's assumption, there is no freestanding rule allowing for collateral attacks based on a lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Instead, the opposite is true: "Even subject-matter jurisdiction ... may not be attacked collaterally."
Kontrick v. Ryan
,
Second, there is good reason to question Cortez's supposition that a claim characterized as "jurisdictional" should be exempt from § 1326(d) 's limits, including the statutory exhaustion requirement. Cortez proceeds by analogy to federal court subject matter jurisdiction under Article III of the Constitution: Challenges to that jurisdiction cannot be waived or forfeited,
see
Brickwood Contractors, Inc. v. Datanet Eng'g, Inc.
,
City of Arlington
involved the degree of deference owed to an agency interpretation of a statute bearing on its own "jurisdiction," or statutory authority.
1621 Route 22 W. Operating Co., LLC v. NLRB
,
The government, however, has not raised this objection. Instead, it accepts Cortez's premise that a proceeding conducted outside the scope of an immigration court's adjudicatory authority must be deemed void on collateral review. Moreover, other courts addressing similar challenges to the "jurisdiction" of immigration courts have made the same assumption.
See, e.g.
,
Hernandez-Perez v. Whitaker
,
Even accepting Cortez's threshold presumption - that a "jurisdictional" defect in the notice to appear that commenced his removal proceedings would entitle him to collaterally challenge his removal order - we find his argument lacking in two independent respects. First, the purported defect Cortez has identified - the failure of the notice to appear filed with the immigration court to include a date and time for his removal hearing - does not implicate the immigration court's adjudicatory authority or "jurisdiction." And second, there is in any event no defect, because the regulations that govern the filing of a notice to appear do not require inclusion of a hearing date and time.
1.
We start with Cortez's contention that any defect in the notice that commenced his removal proceedings would deprive the immigration court of "subject matter jurisdiction" to issue a removal order. At the outset, we clarify some terminology: When it comes to administrative agencies, the question of subject matter jurisdiction "is more appropriately framed" as "whether the agency actor, such as the [immigration judge] here, lacked statutory authority to act" or acted outside its "authority to adjudicate."
United States v. Arroyo
,
Exercising congressionally delegated authority,
see
The central question at this stage of our analysis is whether the term "jurisdiction" in § 1003.14(a) signals a limit on the scope of an immigration court's adjudicatory authority, so that a hypothetical defect in a notice to appear filed with the immigration court would deprive the court of authority to hear and decide the case. Both parties assume this to be true. And a substantial majority of courts addressing this issue have done likewise, treating § 1003.14(a) as though it implicates an immigration court's adjudicatory authority or "subject matter jurisdiction."
See, e.g.
,
Ali v. Barr
,
It is true, as Cortez emphasizes, that § 1003.14(a) refers to the vesting of "jurisdiction," a word that "[p]roperly used ... refers to the 'classes of cases ... falling within a court's adjudicatory authority.' "
Hyman v. City Of Gastonia
,
In drawing that distinction here, we find the Supreme Court's decision in
Union Pacific
particularly instructive. At issue in that case was the jurisdictional status of an agency rule requiring that parties before an administrative tribunal - there, the National Railroad Adjustment Board - submit proof of settlement efforts in mediation, or "conference," when initiating grievance proceedings.
The same factors govern here, and lead to the same result. As in
Union Pacific
, the immigration courts' adjudicatory authority over removal proceedings comes not from the agency regulation codified at
Nor - again paralleling
Union Pacific
- is there any indication that the regulation at
There is also the question of the regulation's function.
See
Union Pac. R.R.
,
The regulation's history confirms that reading. Before § 1003.14(a) 's predecessor regulation was adopted in 1987, the INS had the authority both to initiate deportation proceedings and to "terminate [those] proceedings at any time prior to the actual commencement of the hearing." Aliens and Nationality; Rules of Procedure for Proceedings Before Immigration Judges,
We think that regulatory history makes clear, were there any doubt, that § 1003.14(a) is "not a grant of authority" with jurisdictional implications, but something more like a docketing rule, providing for "the orderly administration of proceedings, including deportation proceedings, before the immigration judges."
2.
Our conclusion that § 1003.14(a) is not a jurisdictional rule by itself forecloses Cortez's attack on his 2011 removal order: Even if there were a defect in the notice to appear that was filed with the immigration court, that court did not lack adjudicatory authority to issue its order. But Cortez also cannot succeed in his attack for a second and independent reason: The notice to appear in question was not in fact defective.
As previewed above, the question here boils down to whether a notice to appear filed with an immigration court to commence proceedings under
The government disagrees, and maintains that § 1003.14(a) is satisfied by a notice to appear that complies with the separate regulatory definition set out in
Many courts have considered this question since
Periera
was decided in 2018, and they overwhelmingly have adopted the government's position. Our sister circuits, with one exception, have agreed that the required contents of the notice to appear that commences removal proceedings under
We agree with the substantial majority of courts to address this issue, as well as the district court here: It is the regulatory definition of "notice to appear," and not § 1229(a) 's definition, that controls in determining when a case is properly docketed with the immigration court under
Both text and structure compel the conclusion that it is this separate regulatory definition of "notice to appear," and not the statutory definition in § 1229(a), that "control[s] when and how," J.A. 17, a case is commenced before an immigration judge for purposes of § 1003.14(a). First, the regulatory definition, codified at
Our reading of the statute and regulations is consistent not only with the decisions of the many courts listed above, but also with the position taken by the Board of Immigration Appeals. In a precedential decision issued shortly after the Supreme Court ruled in
Pereira
, the Board found that it is the regulatory definition in § 1003.15(b) - (c) that controls the required content of a "notice to appear" to initiate proceedings before an immigration judge.
In re Bermudez-Cota
,
Cortez's contrary argument relies primarily on the Supreme Court's decision in
Pereira
, holding that the requirements of
At issue in
Pereira
was a distinct statutory question at the intersection of two INA provisions. Under the first, providing for the so-called "stop-time" rule, the period of a noncitizen's continuous presence in the United States - which governs eligibility for certain forms of relief from removal - is "deemed to end ... when the alien is served
a notice to appear under section 1229(a)
." 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(d)(1) (emphasis added). And " section 1229(a)" is the by-now familiar statutory section specifying that a "notice to appear" must include, among other information, "[t]he time and place at which [removal] proceedings will be held."
That reasoning has no application here. As highlighted above, the regulatory definition of "notice to appear" in § 1003.14(a), unlike the stop-time provision at 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(d)(1), does
not
cross-reference "a notice to appear
under section 1229(a)
." The "glue that bond[ed]" the stop-time rule to § 1229(a) 's requirements in
Pereira
,
Cortez has one final argument: Even if not mandated by Pereira , we should read "notice to appear" under the regulations to require the same content as a "notice to appear" under § 1229(a), either because the agency did not intend to create a system with two different and distinct "notices to appear," or because whatever the agency's intent, it lacked authority to bypass the statutory specifications for a "notice to appear." We disagree.
With respect to the agency's intent, Cortez points to regulatory history suggesting, he says, that the definition at
Cortez's argument fares no better when it comes to the agency's authority. According to Cortez, a regulatory definition for a "notice to appear" that does not incorporate § 1229(a) 's date and time requirement conflicts with the INA and is therefore void. But there is no conflict because, as we have explained, the regulations in question and § 1229(a) speak to different issues - filings in the immigration court to initiate proceedings, on the one hand, and notice to noncitizens of removal hearings, on the other - and the INA "says nothing about" how a case is to be docketed with the immigration court.
Karingithi
,
Accordingly, we hold that it is the regulatory definition of a "notice to appear" - not the definition at
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED
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