Azize v. BCIS ( 2010 )


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  • 05-4315-ag
    Azize v. BCIS, et al.
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    August Term 2009
    Heard: August 26, 2009                                Decided: February 1, 2010
    Docket No. 05-4315-ag
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    WILLIAM AZIZE,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    BUREAU OF CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
    SERVICES, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
    SECURITY, and UNITED STATES ATTORNEY
    GENERAL,
    Respondents.
    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - -
    Before:          JACOBS, Chief Judge, NEWMAN, Circuit Judge, and
    TRAGER,* District Judge.
    Petition for review of an order of the Board of Immigration
    Appeals denying an application for cancellation of removal on the
    ground that the applicant was improperly denied an opportunity to
    complete an application for naturalization.
    Remanded for further proceedings to the District Court, from
    which a petition for a writ of habeas corpus had been transferred.
    Chief Judge Jacobs dissents with a separate opinion.
    *
    Honorable David G. Trager, of the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of New York, sitting by designation.
    Hagit M. Elul, Hughes Hubbard & Reed LLP,
    New York, N.Y., for Petitioner.
    F. James Loprest, Jr., Special Asst. U.S.
    Atty., New York, N.Y. (Lev L. Dassin,
    Acting U.S. Atty., Sarah S. Normand,
    Asst. U.S. Atty., New York, N.Y., on the
    brief), for Respondents.
    JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.
    This petition to review an order for removal entered by the Board
    of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) presents a novel claim concerning an
    allegedly improper denial of naturalization.             William Daneris Azize
    seeks review of an October 10, 2001, order of the BIA summarily
    affirming a September 8, 2000, decision of an Immigration Judge
    (“IJ”).    The IJ’s decision denied an application for cancellation of
    removal and ordered Azize removed to the Dominican Republic.                 The
    removal petition was referred to this Court by the District Court for
    the Southern District of New York (Sidney H. Stein, District Judge)
    after Azize filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in the
    District Court.
    Azize contends that two applications for his naturalization were
    improperly denied in 1987 and 1989.           He seeks relief from the removal
    order     or,   alternatively,   nunc     pro    tunc   determination   of   his
    applications for naturalization.              The Government has commendably
    informed this Court that “it does not oppose [P]etitioner’s request
    for a remand to the district court of the petition to the extent that
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    it relates to Azize’s claim for equitable relief pertaining to his
    naturalization applications . . . should the Court deem such a remand
    appropriate.” Letter from F. James Loprest, Jr., to Catherine O’Hagan
    Wolfe (October 7, 2009).      Having concluded that such a remand is
    appropriate under the unusual circumstances of this case, we remand to
    the District Court.
    Background
    Facts concerning Azize.1 Azize, now 44 years old, was born in the
    Dominican Republic in 1965.    He came to the United States with his
    mother when he was five years old and has lived here since then.     He
    became a legal permanent resident in 1971 and received a Resident
    Alien Receipt Card, known as a “green card.”        He enlisted in the
    military in 1984 and was honorably discharged in 1990.     He lives in
    Florida with his elderly mother, who is a United States citizen.     He
    has three children and three brothers, all of whom are United States
    citizens.
    Naturalization proceedings.    In 1987, Azize filed an Application
    to File Petition for Naturalization, Form N-400, with the Immigration
    and Naturalization Service (“INS”).      He stated, among other things,
    that he could write and speak English, that his last tax return was
    1
    The facts, which we assume are true for purposes of this appeal,
    are taken from Azize’s petition and other papers filed in the District
    Court.
    -3-
    filed in 1986,2 and that he was willing to bear arms on behalf of the
    United     States.    He   was   administered     and   passed     a    citizenship
    examination and was issued a notice for a preliminary naturalization
    hearing, which was held on February 26, 1988.           At that hearing, an INS
    officer requested that Azize turn in his green card, stating that he
    would not need it any more.         Azize explained that his green card had
    been stolen and that he had applied for a replacement card.                    A not
    entirely    legible    photocopy    of   that   application   is   in    the   joint
    appendix for this appeal.3         Azize told the INS officer that she could
    locate his application for a replacement card in the INS files and put
    a stop on it, and that she should “swear me in,” by which he
    presumably meant that the officer should attest that he had sworn to
    the truth of the application.            The INS officer told Azize that he
    should wait for the replacement card to be mailed to him and come back
    when he received it.
    Form N-400 contains two blank lines at the bottom of the form.
    The first follows the printed words “Non Filed,” and the second
    follows the printed word “Reasons.” On Azize’s 1987 application form,
    2
    He answered “No” to the question “Since becoming a permanent
    resident of the United States, have you failed to file an income tax
    return because you regarded yourself as a nonresident?”.
    3
    The Government asserts that the application for a replacement
    card was approved on July 16, 1987, but make no representation as to
    whether a replacement card was ever mailed to Azize.
    -4-
    the    line   following   the   printed   words   “Non   Filed”   contains   some
    undecipherable letters, which the Government believes are the INS
    officer’s initials, and the date “2/26/88.”              The line following the
    printed word “Reasons” is not filled in.
    On April 7, 1989, Azize submitted a second application for
    naturalization.      On this application he gave all of the same answers
    as on his 1987 application, with one difference, which might be
    pertinent to his pending appeal.          To the question asking, “When was
    your last federal income tax return filed?” he answered “none.”                On
    the lines after the printed words “Non Filed and “Date, reasons” the
    following appears: “Does not have PP. - never filed taxes 87-87
    elected not to file” followed by what appears to be the initials of
    the INS officer and the date of 7/17/89.            The Government interprets
    “PP” to mean “passport” and contends that “elected not to file” refers
    to Azize’s decision not to file the second Form N-400.
    Criminal convictions.        Several years after his unsuccessful
    second attempt to become a citizen, Azize became addicted to drugs
    and, in the words of his counsel, “entered a dark period of his life.”
    On September 17, 1997, he was sentenced to six months’ imprisonment
    upon    his   plea   of   guilty   to   attempted   seventh    degree   criminal
    possession of a controlled substance in violation of New York Penal
    Law § 220.03 (McKinney 2008).       While free on bail prior to sentencing,
    Azize was arrested for another narcotics offense, attempted third
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    degree sale of a controlled substance in violation of New York Penal
    Law § 220.39, for which he was sentenced to one year’s imprisonment.
    Azize was also convicted in the District of Columbia of selling the
    substance known as “ecstacy” in violation of 
    21 U.S.C. § 841
    (a)(1),
    (b)(1)(C). See     United States v. Azize, 
    88 Fed. Appx. 416
     (D.C. Cir.
    2004).
    Removal proceedings.      In 1998 the INS began removal proceedings
    based    on   Azize’s   September   17,   1997,   conviction.   He   conceded
    removability and requested cancellation of removal pursuant to section
    240A of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1229b.            In
    September 2000, an IJ denied cancellation on the ground that Azize’s
    second conviction was for an aggravated felony, which disqualified him
    from cancellation. See 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(a)(3). The IJ ordered removal
    to the Dominican Republic.          In October 2001, the BIA summarily
    affirmed.
    After serving time for his federal drug offense, Azize was placed
    in detention by INS authorities.            His counsel represents that he
    rehabilitated himself while in detention, completed a substance abuse
    program, and earned the praise of detention personnel for his help to
    detention staff and inmates.         In November 2006, he was placed on
    supervised release and has been living and working in Florida since
    then.
    Habeas corpus proceedings. In December 2004, Azize, proceeding
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    pro se, initiated a habeas corpus proceeding in the District Court for
    the Southern District of New York.            He styled his papers “Nunc Pro
    Tunc Petition for Naturalization Status” and sought relief including
    (1) cancellation of his removal order on the ground that the INS had
    violated   its   regulations     in   connection      with   his    naturalization
    application and (2) an order directing the Bureau of Citizenship and
    Immigration Services to grant his application for citizenship nunc pro
    tunc.
    In August 2005, the District Court transferred the petition to
    this Court “to the extent it challenges the order to remove” Azize,
    stayed removal pending further order of this Court, and retained
    jurisdiction over Azize’s application for release on bail.                  Transfer
    of the challenge to removal was required by the REAL ID Act of 2005,
    Pub. L. No. 109-13, 
    119 Stat. 231
     (May 11, 2005).             The District Court
    subsequently appointed counsel for Azize. The application for release
    apparently    became   moot   when    the    United   States       Immigration    and
    Enforcement voluntarily released Azize in November 2006.                   This Court
    appointed as pro bono counsel Hagit M. Elul, Esq., who has very ably
    represented Azize.
    Discussion
    Azize    primarily   contends     that    his    initial      application    for
    citizenship   was   improperly    denied,     that    but    for    this    allegedly
    improper denial he would have become a naturalized citizen, and that,
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    as a citizen, he would not have been subject to removal proceedings.
    He frames his legal position as asserting both (1) a denial of the
    constitutional right to have the Government follow its own procedures,
    see Morton v. Ruiz, 
    415 U.S. 199
    , 235 (1974), which he contends
    applies in the immigration context, see Montilla v. INS, 
    926 F.2d 162
    ,
    164 (2d Cir. 1991), and (2) an estoppel against the Government, see
    Thom v. Ashcroft, 
    369 F.3d 158
    , 165 n.13 (2d Cir. 2004).
    Azize bases his claim of improper denial of his application for
    citizenship on what he alleges was the INS’s termination of the
    processing of his first application upon his failure to surrender his
    green card, which he had informed the INS officer had been stolen and
    for which an application for a replacement card was pending.           This
    action,   Azize   contends,   violated   the   INS   regulation   concerning
    surrender of a green card, 
    8 CFR § 338.14
     (1988).          That regulation
    states:
    No certificate of naturalization shall be delivered by
    the clerk of the court in any case in which the
    representative of the Service in attendance at the final
    naturalization hearing notifies the clerk of court that the
    naturalized   person   has   not   surrendered   his   alien
    registration receipt card.     Upon subsequent receipt of
    notice from the district director that he has waived the
    surrender of the card or that the card has been surrendered,
    the certificate shall be delivered by the clerk of court.
    
    Id.
    This regulation, Azize contends, makes it clear that failure to
    surrender a green card is not a basis to terminate a naturalization
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    proceeding, much less to deny the applicant the opportunity to take
    the oath of citizenship and thereby become a citizen, but is at most
    only a bar to receiving from a court clerk the formal certificate of
    naturalization.       And even this bar, Azize further alleges, is not
    absolute,    since    the    District   Director   may     waive    the    surrender
    requirement.    Thus, Azize contends, the INS officer should not have
    terminated the naturalization proceeding for failure to surrender the
    green card, but should have completed all the steps in the process,
    except for notifying the court clerk after naturalization had occurred
    that   the   card    had    been   surrendered.    These    steps    include:    the
    applicant swears to or affirms the application, see 
    8 CFR § 332.11
    ,
    the INS officer signs the application, see 
    id.,
     the applicant files a
    petition for naturalization (Form N-405) with a district court, see
    
    id.
     § 334.13, An INS employee recommends for or against granting the
    petition, see id. § 335.12, and notifies the applicant of the date and
    place of the final hearing, see id. § 335.13.                 Upon the court’s
    granting of the petition, the applicant takes an oath of allegiance to
    the United States in open court. See id. § 337.1. See Boromeo Escaler
    v. United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, 
    582 F.3d 288
    ,
    289-90(2d Cir. 2009).
    If it is established that the INS officer terminated Azize’s
    first naturalization proceeding because he did not surrender his green
    card, termination on that basis would have been improper.                 It does not
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    follow, however, that Azize would have successfully completed the
    naturalization process and become a citizen.             Apart from any factual
    circumstances that the Government might yet be able to develop that
    would have precluded naturalization in 1988, there is on the current
    record the notation on Azize’s second application that as of April 7,
    1989, when he signed that application, he had not filed any income tax
    returns.      If he had not filed any required returns, he might not have
    been eligible for citizenship. See 8 CFR 316.10(b)(3)(iii) (applicant
    lacks required good moral character if the applicant has “[c]ommitted
    unlawful acts that adversely reflect upon the applicant’s moral
    character.”)      However, the circumstances concerning his tax return
    record   is    placed    in   some   doubt   by   his   response   on   his   first
    application that he had filed his last (1986) return, and by the
    notation of the INS officer on his second application of the curious
    entry “87-87" after the words “never filed taxes.”
    With such an important matter as citizenship potentially at
    stake, we think        the facts should be ascertained.       We will therefore
    remand to the District Court to make the factual determinations
    necessary for an adjudication of Azize’s claims and, if those facts
    are found in favor of Azize, to proceed to the legal issues on which
    his claims for relief depend.           Without attempting to circumscribe the
    District Court’s inquiry, we think those factual issues include: the
    circumstances     of    Azize’s   tax    return   filings,   whether    his   first
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    naturalization proceeding was terminated for failure to surrender his
    green card,4 and if a premature termination occurred, whether Azize
    would have proceeded to the point in the process where he would have
    become eligible to take the oath of allegiance.     The legal issues
    include the nature of the relief to which Azize might now be entitled,
    both with respect to his quest for naturalization and his effort to
    resist removal.5   Since only this Court has jurisdiction to consider
    the merits of the challenge to the removal order, we will request the
    District Court to conduct appropriate fact-finding, resolve whatever
    legal issues appear to be within its jurisdiction, and, if it believes
    any relief from removal is warranted, recommend, in the capacity of a
    special master, such relief to this Court.
    We appreciate that the Government has presented substantial
    4
    The dissent contends that the citizenship proceeding was not
    terminated for lack of a green card, but only interrupted until a
    replacement card was produced. This is an issue that ought not to be
    resolved against Azize until appropriate fact-finding has occurred,
    and any relevant legal issues, based on the facts as found, have been
    adjudicated.
    5
    The dissent misinterprets this opinion as contemplating a court
    ordered grant of citizenship nunc pro tunc.       Not so.   We simply
    believe that Azize’s factual and legal claims deserve plenary
    consideration to determine what relief, if any, he may be entitled to.
    Moreover, we do not accept the dissent’s premise that such an order is
    the only relief that could prevent removal. Just as the Government
    has decided not to oppose a remand, it might well elect not to press
    ahead with removal if exploration of the facts indicates that Azize
    should have been permitted to proceed with his application for
    citizenship up to the point of taking the oath.
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    procedural and substantive arguments against any relief for Azize.
    Nevertheless, we accept the Government’s invitation to determine
    whether a remand is “appropriate,” a characterization we believe we
    may make without adjudicating at this point any of the Government’s
    legal arguments.         The equities that Azize has asserted persuade us to
    exercise the broad authority set forth in 
    18 U.S.C. § 2106
    ,6 and, in
    light       of   the   Government’s   decision   not   to   oppose   a   remand,   to
    determine that such a remand is “appropriate” under the circumstances
    of this case.
    Accordingly, the case is remanded to the District Court for
    further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.                    From any
    final order of the District Court, either party may restore our
    jurisdiction by prompt notice to the Clerk of this Court, in which
    event the case will be returned to this panel. See United States v.
    Jacobson, 
    15 F.3d 19
     (2d Cir. 1994).              The stay of removal will be
    continued unless and until terminated by order of this Court.
    6
    The dissent marshalls factors that it contends weigh against any
    equitable relief.    Omitted are the factors that weigh in Azize’s
    favor, such as his United States citizen children, his United States
    citizen mother, his financial support for his mother, his commendable
    assistance to INS detention staff, and the length of time that the
    Government has permitted him to remain in the United States since the
    BIA ordered his removal. Whether or not all of the equities, taken
    together, weigh in favor of ultimate relief for Azize, we believe they
    at least weigh in favor of a remand.
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    Dennis Jacobs, Chief Judge, dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent.
    William Azize, an alien born in the Dominican Republic,
    accumulated three drug dealing convictions over a seven year
    period, 1997-2004.        Unless Mr. Azize is exceedingly unlucky,
    his record evidences a busy and persistent career as a drug
    dealer.     Under 
    8 U.S.C. § 1227
    (a)(2)(B)(I), the then--INS duly
    convened proceedings in 1998 to remove him from this country.
    In 2000, an Immigration Judge ruled that Azize was ineligible
    for relief from removal and directed that he be removed to the
    Dominican Republic.       In 2001, the Board of Immigration Appeals
    affirmed.      I   see   no    impediment     to    his    removal,    and   the
    majority opinion offers no convincing reason for derailing the
    process of removal.
    The majority opinion designates the district court as a
    special master to find out whether, more than 20 years ago, an
    immigration officer suspended Azize’s citizenship proceedings
    because he could not produce his green                     card (which Azize
    contended had been stolen).           Even accepting Azize’s account as
    true, he took no steps to appeal or reopen–-or to come forward
    with    a   replacement       green   card.        Then,    sometime   in    the
    intervening twenty years after the application was marked non-
    filed, the proceedings were terminated.                     Rather than come
    forward   with    the   replacement      green   card   and   continue   the
    application--or appeal, or take some other step--Azize simply
    filed another application for citizenship more than a year
    later.     Again, Azize failed          to appear with the necessary
    paperwork; again, he never remedied his omission; again, he
    did not become a citizen.        In any event, there is no basis for
    the majority’s repeated statement that the proceedings were
    allegedly “terminated” for failure to produce the green card.
    All that Azize alleges is that “[t]he INS informed him that he
    could not proceed with Mr. Azize’s naturalization application
    until he received a replacement card.”            Failure to produce his
    green    card    did    not   cause    termination,     as    the   majority
    implicitly      acknowledges      when      it   characterizes       Azize’s
    allegation as “[t]he INS officer told Azize that he should
    wait for the replacement card to be mailed to him and come
    back when he received it.”            He was told to come back, not to
    go away (or to reapply).
    In ordering the district court to find out whether the
    1987 citizenship proceedings were terminated for failure to
    produce the green card, the majority concludes that such a
    termination would have been improper.             Unless the government
    can show another reason why Azize would not have been entitled
    -2-
    to    citizenship,     the    majority      apparently    plans    to   order
    citizenship for Azize, and to do so nunc pro tunc (as that is
    the   only    relief   that    could     prevent    his   removal).       The
    following are among the most serious defects in the majority’s
    approach.
    Even if it were found that an INS employee at Azize’s
    preliminary February 26, 1988 hearing asked him to present his
    green card,     this would not constitute a violation of INS
    regulations.      The INS had no regulation precluding employees
    from asking for an alien’s green card; the most Azize argues
    is that the regulations do not expressly require presentation.
    The   INS’s   standard       notice   for    the   hearing,    which    Azize
    received, stated that aliens “must bring” their green card to
    the hearing.      Asking for proof of a green card during the
    naturalization process serves the statutory requirement that
    an alien must prove five years of continuous, legal residency
    before   filing    a   naturalization        application.      
    8 U.S.C. § 1427
    (a); see also INS v. Pangilinan, 
    486 U.S. 875
    , 886 (1988)
    (holding that the burden of demonstrating every aspect of
    eligibility for citizenship is on the alien).                 So it was not
    inappropriate to ask Azize to produce his green card as proof
    of lawful residence and compliance with the immigration laws.
    -3-
    See, 8 U.S.C. 1304(e) (requiring legal aliens above 18 years
    of age to carry green card at all times).
    Accordingly, even if (as Azize alleges) he was prevented
    from further pursuit of citizenship at that time, that would
    have been in accordance with the law.          The majority apparently
    would   have   allowed      the   INS   to   ask    for   the    green    card
    (indisputably, the applicant must demonstrate his eligibility
    and identity), but would place no legal consequence on the
    failure to produce the green card that the hearing notice
    required him to bring--not even a temporary suspending of the
    proceeding     while   he    gets   it.      Such    a    reading    of    the
    regulations, which would require the INS to make someone a
    citizen in such instances before ensuring that they had a
    green card, is improper.
    The majority’s apparent purpose for remanding is to see
    if there is a factual predicate for the majority to intervene
    to compel the grant of citizenship upon Azize.                  The majority
    opinion does not convince me that this Court has the power to
    confer citizenship on anyone.           “[T]he power to make someone a
    citizen of the United States has not been conferred upon the
    federal courts, like mandamus or injunction, as one of their
    generally applicable equitable powers. . . .               Rather, it has
    -4-
    been given [to] them as a specific function to be performed in
    strict compliance with the terms of an authorizing statute
    which says that ‘[a] person may be naturalized . . . in the
    manner and under the conditions prescribed in this subchapter,
    and not otherwise.’ 8 U.S. C. § 1421 (d).”        INS v. Pangilinan,
    
    486 U.S. 875
    , 883-884 (1988) (emphasis in original).            Absent
    statutory authorization, there is no reason to believe that
    the federal courts have the power to grant citizenship--which
    is what the majority says is “potentially at stake” here.
    Finally, none of this would do Azize the slightest good
    unless citizenship is conferred upon him nunc pro tunc--that
    is, as of 1987, before the first of his serial convictions as
    a drug dealer.    A great flaw in this approach is that the
    grant of relief nunc pro tunc is an equitable remedy.          Edwards
    v. INS, 
    393 F.3d 299
    , 308 (2d Cir. 2004); Iavorski v. INS, 
    232 F.3d 124
    , 130 n.4 (2d Cir. 2000).        For several reasons, this
    is no case for the exercise of equity:
    •    Azize could have taken steps more than 20 years ago
    to pursue the relief that he now seeks nunc pro
    tunc.
    •    Azize   did   in   fact   commence   a   second   citizenship
    proceeding, which he abandoned rather than satisfy
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    the documentary burden placed upon him by law.
    •    Azize commenced an active career as a drug dealer
    more than a decade ago and persisted notwithstanding
    repeated convictions and incarcerations.
    •    The last offense for which he was convicted occurred
    while     a   removal   order     was    pending,     conduct   that
    reflects a contempt for the laws of this country,
    and   a   fixed    intent   to    continue      his   drug   dealing
    career.
    •    To    support     the   idea    that    Azize    is   no   longer   a
    dealer, the majority cites no better authority than
    Azize’s appellate brief, which characterizes Azize’s
    lengthy drug-dealing career “a dark period in his
    life.”        But the bare assertion of counsel does not
    constitute record support.
    These equitable considerations all militate against granting
    citizenship nunc pro tunc for             the    purpose of eliding the
    salient fact that Azize has been a drug dealer.                     For these
    reasons, I would deny Azize’s petition for review.
    -6-