By David A. Isaacson
In my October 2014 post The Walking Dead: Why Courts of Appeals Should Not Defer to BIA or Attorney General Precedent Decisions that Have Already Been Vacated by Another Court of Appeals, I discussed why such vacated “zombie precedents” should not be given deference under Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984), by Courts of Appeals that address subsequent unpublished BIA decisions purporting to rely on them. Recent decisions of the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) provide additional support for that suggestion.
On April 9, 2015, the Court of Appeals
for the Second Circuit issued its opinion in Lugo v. Holder. In that case, Ms. Lugo disputed whether her
2005 conviction for misprision of a felony under 18 U.S.C. §4 constituted
a crime involving moral turpitude (“CIMT”).
She had been found barred from cancellation of removal based on the
Immigration Judge’s ruling that misprision was indeed a CIMT, as the BIA had
held in Matter of Robles-Urrea, 24 I&N
Dec. 22 (BIA 2006). The BIA had affirmed
the Immigration Judge’s ruling in an unpublished decision.
As the Second Circuit discussed in Lugo, the BIA had originally held in
Matter of Sloan, 12 I&N Dec. 840
(A.G. 1968; BIA 1966) that misprision of felony was not a CIMT. In Matter of Robles-Urrea, however, the
BIA agreed with the decision of the Eleventh Circuit in Itani v. Ashcroft, 298 F.3d 1213
(11th Cir. 2002), to the effect that misprision of felony under 18 U.S.C. §4 was in
fact a CIMT, and overruled Matter of Sloan in relevant part. Subsequently, the Court of Appeals for the
Ninth Circuit vacated Matter of Robles-Urrea in Robles-Urrea v. Holder, 678 F.3d 702 (9th Cir. 2012), and held
that misprision of felony was not categorically a CIMT. (The complicated history of the case law regarding whether misprision of felony is a CIMT was also
discussed in Cyrus D. Mehta’s March 2014 post on this blog, Was
the Attorney Really Ineffective in Kovacs
v. United States?.)
The Second Circuit therefore held in Lugo that it was “left to wonder
whether, going forward, the Board wishes to adopt the Ninth Circuit’s rule or
the Eleventh Circuit’s.” Lugo, slip op. at 3-4. It concluded that “it is desirable for the
Board to clarify this matter in a published opinion.” Lugo, slip op. at 4. The Second Circuit remanded to the BIA to
enable to answer both this question and a related question regarding
retroactivity: that is, whether Matter of Robles-Urrea could
appropriately be applied to Ms. Lugo even if the BIA otherwise wished to follow
it, given that Ms. Lugo had pled guilty prior to the issuance of that published
opinion.
One way to look at what the Second
Circuit did in the first portion of its remand in Lugo is as an admirable refusal to
defer to a zombie precedent. Having been
vacated by the Ninth Circuit in Robles-Urrea v. Holder, the BIA decision in Matter of Robles-Urrea fits the
description of a zombie precedent as discussed in my post The
Walking Dead. It had been cancelled,
rescinded, by a competent court, and thus, since “vacatur dissipates
precedential force,” In re: Bernard Madoff Inv. Securities LLC,
721 F.3d 54, 68 (2d Cir. 2013), it was properly seen as “not precedent.” Asgeirsson v. Abbott, 696 F.3d 454,
459 (5th Cir. 2012). The non-precedent
decision in Lugo’s own case, meanwhile, was not entitled to deference because,
as the Second Circuit had previously held, in Rotimi v. Gonzales, 473 F.3d 55, 56
(2d Cir. 2007), “a nonprecedential decision by a single member of the BIA
should not be accorded Chevron deference.” The Second Circuit therefore properly vacated
the nonprecedential decision in Lugo’s case and remanded to the BIA for the
issuance of a precedential decision.
That is, the Second Circuit did in Lugo essentially what I had
suggested in The
Walking Dead, and earlier in Burning
Down the House: The Second and Third Circuits Split on Whether Arson Not
Relating to Interstate Commerce is an Aggravated Felony, that it should
have done in Luna Torres v. Holder, No. 13-2498
(August 20, 2014). Hopefully, this may
be the start of a trend of Courts of Appeals not deferring to zombie
precedents, but instead remanding to the BIA for further precedential analysis
of whether the BIA wishes to follow in the footsteps of a prior precedent
decision vacated by another Court of Appeals, or instead wishes to accede to
the Court of Appeals decision which vacated that prior precedent.
The Second Circuit’s decision in Lugo is not the only recent
development that I would submit gives support to my previously expressed views
regarding zombie precedents. As
discussed in my prior post, the BIA has been known to reverse course and
abandon a precedent following its rejection by one or more Courts of
Appeals. Earlier examples included Matter of Silva, 16 I&N Dec. 26
(BIA 1976), where the BIA acquiesced in the Second Circuit’s decision in Francis
v. INS, 532 F.2d 268 (2d Cir. 1976) (regarding the availability of
relief under former INA §212(c)) rather than insisting on its own contrary
decision in Matter of Arias-Uribe, 13 I&N
Dec. 696 (BIA 1971), and Matter of Marcal Neto, 25 I&N
Dec. 169 (BIA 2010), where the BIA overruled Matter of Perez Vargas, 23 I&N
Dec. 829 (BIA 2005) (regarding the exercise of portability under INA §204(j) in
immigration court proceedings), after its rejection by several Courts of
Appeals, including the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in Perez-Vargas v. Gonzales, 478 F.3d
191 (4th Cir. 2007). I acknowledged in The
Walking Dead that the BIA has in some instances made a precedential choice
to reaffirm the reasoning of a prior precedent even after its rejection by
multiple circuits, and gave as an example Matter of E.W. Rodriguez, 25 I&N
Dec. 784 (BIA 2012): in that case, the BIA reaffirmed Matter of Koljenovic, 25 I&N
Dec. 219 (BIA 2010), after its holding regarding the ineligibility of certain
Lawful Permanent Residents for waivers of inadmissibility under INA
§212(h) had been rejected by multiple Courts of Appeals, and indicated that
Koljenovic would continue to be
followed in circuits that had not rejected it.
The BIA has now changed its mind on that point.
In Matter of J-H-J-, 26 I&N Dec.
563 (BIA 2015), decided on May 12, the BIA withdrew E.W. Rodriguez and Koljenovic in light of the rejection
of the theory underlying them by nine Courts of Appeals. The immigration court
proceedings in Matter of J-H-J- had taken place within the jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals
for the Eighth Circuit, which had, in Roberts v. Holder, 745 F.3d 928 (8th
Cir. 2014), accepted the BIA’s reasoning in E.W. Rodriguez and Koljenovic as a
reasonable interpretation of the statute.
Thus, the BIA was free to reaffirm E.W. Rodriguez and Koljenovic in the case
if it so wished. However, given
“the overwhelming circuit court authority,” Matter of J-H-J-, 26 I&N Dec. at
564, and the importance of “uniformity in the application of the immigration
laws”, id. at 565 (citing Matter of Small, 23 I&N Dec.
448, 450 (BIA 2002)), the BIA instead held that “section 212(h) . . . only
precludes aliens who entered the United States as lawful permanent residents
from establishing eligibility for a waiver on the basis of an aggravated felony
conviction.” Matter of J-H-J-, 26 I&N Dec. at
565.
Strictly speaking, E.W. Rodriguez and Koljenovic were not
zombie precedents as I have defined that term, never having been themselves
vacated by a court. However, the BIA’s
overruling of those precedents in Matter of J-H-J- is,
like Matter of Silva and Matter of Marcal Neto before it, an
example of the BIA’s willingness to reconsider its own precedent in light of
contrary appellate case law from outside the circuit having
appellate jurisdiction over the case at hand.
Against this
background, it makes increasingly little sense for courts to implicitly assume
that the BIA would necessarily insist on following in the footsteps of a
precedent decision which has already been vacated by a Court of Appeals. Rather than giving deference to a zombie
precedent, the Courts of Appeals should remand to the BIA for reconsideration
of whether it wishes to follow in the footsteps of that precedent, as the
Second Circuit did in in Lugo.
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