Passaro Frango v. John Ashcroft ( 2006 )


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  •                      United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 04-2663
    ___________
    Passaro Frango,                          *
    *
    Petitioner,                 *
    * Petition for Review of an
    v.                                 * Order of the Board of
    * Immigration Appeals.
    *
    Alberto R. Gonzales, Attorney            *
    General of the United States,            *
    *
    Respondent.                 *
    ___________
    Submitted: October 11, 2005
    Filed: February 8, 2006
    ___________
    Before ARNOLD, BOWMAN, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    ARNOLD, Circuit Judge.
    Passaro Frango petitions for review of a Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA)
    order upholding a decision of an immigration judge that Mr. Frango's asylum petition
    was frivolous. Because Mr. Frango did not raise his current arguments before the
    BIA, we deny his petition for review.
    I.
    In his application for asylum, Mr. Frango, a native of Mauritania, stated that he
    had been a member of a group that he called the FNLM. He contended that because
    of this membership he had suffered bodily harm and feared further retribution if
    forced to return to Mauritania. The IJ found that Mr. Frango's testimony at the asylum
    hearing was "inconsistent, misleading, and incredible," that there was no evidence to
    support either the FNLM's existence or Mr. Frango's membership in it, and that Mr.
    Frango made misrepresentations in his asylum application. As a result, the IJ held that
    the application for asylum was frivolous and noted that this holding would preclude
    Mr. Frango from receiving the benefits of other immigration laws. See 8 U.S.C.
    1158(d)(6).
    Mr. Frango appealed to the BIA. While that appeal was pending, the
    Immigration and Naturalization Service (before its functions were transferred to the
    Department of Homeland Security) approved what is called an I-130 petition for alien
    relative that Mr. Frango's wife, a United States citizen, had filed on his behalf.
    Generally, before an alien is considered for an adjustment of status based on his or her
    marriage to an American citizen, the citizen must file an I-130 petition supporting the
    existence of the marital relationship, see 8 U.S.C. §§ 1151(b)(2)(A)(i),
    1154(a)(1)(A)(i); 8 C.F.R. §§ 204.1(a)(1), 204.2(a), and an approved I-130 petition
    may serve as prima facie proof of a bona fide marriage to a citizen of the United
    States, see Patel v. Ashcroft, 
    375 F.3d 693
    , 696 (8th Cir. 2004). With the approved
    petition in hand, Mr. Frango asked the BIA to remand the case to the IJ for an
    adjustment of his status to that of a permanent resident. In his request for a remand,
    Mr. Frango noted that he had not filed a brief on the frivolousness issue within the
    time provided, and he described that issue as "moot" in light of the approved I-130
    petition. Although the BIA had not addressed the issue of frivolousness, it granted
    Mr. Frango's remand request.
    After the remand, Mr. Frango asked the IJ to adjust his status to that of a
    permanent resident based on the approved I-130 Petition. The INS opposed the
    request, arguing that Mr. Frango's frivolous asylum application made him ineligible
    for any such adjustment. No new evidence concerning the asylum application was
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    introduced. The IJ again held that the application was frivolous and summarily denied
    Mr. Frango's request. The BIA affirmed, concluding that the IJ's finding of
    frivolousness was not clearly erroneous, and this appeal followed.
    II.
    The Immigration and Nationality Act prohibits an alien who knowingly files a
    frivolous asylum application from receiving any benefits under that act. See 8 U.S.C.
    § 1158(d)(6); see also 8 C.F.R. 208.20. One such benefit is an adjustment of an
    alien's status to permanent residence because of a bona fide marriage to a United
    States citizen.
    Mr. Frango makes two distinct legal arguments here. The first is that the BIA,
    in remanding the case to the IJ, implicitly concluded that Mr. Frango's asylum
    application was not frivolous. This determination became the law of the case, the
    argument runs, so the IJ had no power to revisit the issue on remand. Mr. Frango also
    contends that he was deprived of due process because the IJ was biased against him
    and denied him a fair hearing.
    As part of its response, the government points out that neither the law-of-the-
    case argument nor the due-process argument was raised below. Because these issues
    were not presented to the BIA, the government contends that we should refrain from
    considering them here. We agree. We conclude that Mr. Frango should have first put
    these issues before the agency for adjudication. His failure to raise them at the agency
    level precludes our review of them at this stage.
    Section 1252(d)(1) of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant
    Responsibility Act of 1996 requires a petitioner, as a condition to judicial review, to
    have "exhausted all administrative remedies available to the alien as of right."
    8 U.S.C. § 1252(d)(1). After considering the manner in which the courts had
    interpreted the same exhaustion language in the previous version of the judicial-
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    review provision, see 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(c) (1994), we concluded in Etchu-Njang v.
    Gonzales, 
    403 F.3d 577
    , 581-83 (8th Cir. 2005), that Congress likely intended by
    enacting § 1252(d)(1) to continue to require that an alien not only pursue all stages of
    administrative review, but also raise all issues before the agency.
    Regardless of whether § 1252(d)(1) precludes us from addressing unexhausted
    issues, a court-imposed exhaustion requirement is appropriate here. See 
    id. at 583.
    The strongest case for imposing an exhaustion requirement exists where the
    administrative proceedings closely resemble a trial. Sims v. Apfel, 
    530 U.S. 103
    , 109-
    110 (2000). As we noted in 
    Etchu-Njang, 403 F.3d at 583
    , "removal proceedings
    before the [agency] generally are adversarial and employ many of the same procedures
    used in Article III courts." Here the proceeding before the IJ and the BIA was an
    adversarial one in which Mr. Frango was represented by counsel.
    We are aware that courts may craft exceptions to judicially-created exhaustion
    requirements "where injustice might otherwise result, to consider questions of law
    which were neither pressed nor passed upon by the ... administrative agency below."
    Hormel v. Helvering, 
    312 U.S. 552
    , 557 (1941). We may, for instance, excuse a
    failure to exhaust where other parties raised the issue, see Natural Res. Def. Council,
    Inc. v. EPA, 
    824 F.2d 1146
    , 1150-51 (D.C. Cir. 1987), or where the party failed to
    raise an issue because to do so would have been futile, City Bank Farmers' Trust Co.
    v. Schnader, 
    291 U.S. 24
    , 34 (1934). There is little reason to think that these limited
    exceptions would undermine the parties' respect for the administrative proceeding or
    impair the efficiency of the agency's operations. They would, however, help ensure
    that justice was done.
    But the facts here strongly counsel an adherence to our general exhaustion rule.
    No other party presented the issues to the BIA, and Mr. Frango has not shown that it
    would have been futile for him to do so. Nor has he offered us another reason to
    exempt him from the general exhaustion requirement, and we see nothing in the record
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    that prevented him from pressing before the agency the arguments that he now asks
    us to address, cf. Pyles v. United Air Lines, Inc., 
    79 F.3d 1046
    , 1052-53 (11th Cir.
    1996).
    Once the BIA remanded the case to the IJ, Mr. Frango had the opportunity to
    argue to the IJ that the BIA had implicitly concluded that his asylum claim was
    nonfrivolous, and that this ruling bound the IJ as the law of the case. If the IJ rejected
    this argument, Mr. Frango could have pressed the issue in his appeal to the BIA.
    Similarly, it was to the BIA, not to this court, that Mr. Frango should have first raised
    his allegations that the IJ deprived him of a fair hearing. Even though we would not
    defer to the BIA were these matters of law properly before us, see Al Khouri v.
    Ashcroft, 
    362 F.3d 461
    , 463-64 (8th Cir. 2004), presenting these issues first to the BIA
    would have served "very practical notions of judicial efficiency," and the exhaustion
    requirement serves to preserve the autonomy and effectiveness of federal agencies.
    McKart v. United States, 
    395 U.S. 185
    , 195 (1969); see also 
    Hormel, 312 U.S. at 556
    .
    III.
    For the reasons stated above, we deny the petition for review.
    ______________________________
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