NOT PRECEDENTIAL
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
_____________
Nos. 18-2116/2802
_____________
EDISON TORRES-JURADO,
Appellant
v.
ADMINISTRATOR OF BERGEN COUNTY JAIL; THOMAS R. DECKER,
New York Field Office, ERO, ICE, DHS; KIRSTJEN M. NIELSEN; US
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY
_______________
On Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of New Jersey
(D.C. No. 2-18-cv-02115)
District Judge: Hon. Kevin McNulty
_______________
Submitted Under Third Circuit LAR 34.1(a)
March 6, 2019
Before: JORDAN, KRAUSE, and RESTREPO, Circuit Judges.
(Filed April 9, 2019)
_______________
OPINION
_______________
This disposition is not an opinion of the full court and, pursuant to I.O.P. 5.7,
does not constitute binding precedent.
JORDAN, Circuit Judge.
Edison Torres-Jurado appeals the District Court’s denial of his request for
injunctive and declaratory relief as well as the denial of his emergency motion seeking to
ensure his presence in New Jersey during the pendency of his case. For the following
reasons, we will dismiss the appeals as moot and vacate our temporary stay of removal.
I. BACKGROUND
In January 2018, Torres-Jurado filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.1
According to his petition, as amended,2 he was ordered removed to Ecuador in 2005.
But, because Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) was unable to make the
necessary arrangements with Ecuador, the agency released him pursuant to an order of
supervision and granted him an indefinite stay of removal. For the next 12 years, Torres-
Jurado complied with the order of supervision and remained in the United States without
incident. Then, as he tells it, in November 2017, “[s]uddenly and without warning,
justification or any change in circumstances … ICE took [him] into custody during a
routine supervision appointment” and “detained him at the Bergen County Jail” in New
Jersey. (App. at 47.) ICE again sought to remove him and to obtain “identity and travel
documents to effectuate his removal.” (App. at 40.)
1
Torres-Jurado initially filed his petition in the United States District Court for the
Eastern District of New York. The case was ultimately transferred to the District of New
Jersey, with the parties’ consent.
Torres-Jurado filed an amended petition – the operative petition here – in
2
February 2018.
2
The amended petition named several respondents, in particular: Michael Saudino,
the Sheriff of Bergen County; Thomas R. Decker, an ICE official; Kirstjen Nielsen, the
Secretary of Homeland Security; and the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”). It
also requested several forms of relief, including: (1) “a writ of habeas corpus directing
the Respondents to immediately release [Torres-Jurado] from custody”; (2) an injunction
preventing “Respondents from transferring [Torres-Jurado] outside of [New Jersey]
pending litigation of this matter or his removal proceedings”; (3) “an order directing
Respondents to … comply with the DHS order granting [Torres-Jurado] an indefinite stay
of removal so that he does not face arbitrary arrest in the future”; and (4) a declaration
“that the revocation of the stay of removal was unlawful without a constitutionally
adequate, individualized hearing before an impartial adjudicator at which Respondents
bear the burden of establishing that revocations [sic] justified and, if justified, provide
[sic] the opportunity for a non-detained, orderly departure.” (App. at 53.)
The District Court conducted a preliminary review of the amended petition and
sua sponte dismissed the federal government parties, leaving the Bergen County Sheriff
as the sole respondent.3 In response, Torres-Jurado filed a motion asking the Court to
reconsider that dismissal. The Court did not immediately rule on the motion.
3
The District Court’s decision stated: “The sole proper respondent to [Torres-
Jurado’s habeas] petition … is Michael Saudino, the Sheriff of Bergen County.
Consequently, the petition will be dismissed as to respondents Thomas R. Decker and
Kirstjen Nielsen.” (App. at 110 (citation omitted).) Although the decision did not
mention DHS explicitly, its clear import was that all respondents other than the Sheriff
were dismissed, and, indeed, the District Court later characterized its decision as doing
just that. (See App. at 26 (“[Torres-Jurado] has filed a letter motion to [reconsider],
seeking vacatur of my earlier decision to dismiss all respondents other than Saudino.”));
3
About two months later, Torres-Jurado filed an emergency motion asserting that
ICE had transferred him from New Jersey to Louisiana “without warning or notice to his
attorneys,” in likely preparation for his imminent removal. (App. at 253.) The motion
requested “an Emergency Stay of Removal to allow [the District] Court the opportunity
to consider and rule on the merits of [Torres-Jurado’s] pending Petition for Writ of
Habeas Corpus” and “an Order to Show Cause why [Torres-Jurado] should [not]
immediately be returned to the jurisdiction of New Jersey, where his case is pending.”
(App. at 253.) The District Court denied the motion, concluding that 8 U.S.C. § 1252(g)
deprived it of subject matter jurisdiction over the request for a stay of removal.4
cf. Ford Motor Co. v. Summit Motor Prods., Inc., 930 F.2d 277, 286 (3d Cir. 1991)
(“Court orders must ordinarily be interpreted by examination of only the four corners of
the document. Should there be any ambiguity or obscurity or if the judgment fails to
express the rulings in the case with clarity or accuracy, reference may be had to the
findings and the entire record for the purpose of determining what was decided. … In
making these determinations, it is our responsibility to construe a judgment as to give
effect to the intention of the court, not to that of the parties.” (citations and internal
quotation marks omitted)).
We also observe that the captions of Torres-Jurado’s notices of appeal listed
Naeem Williams, an ICE official, as a respondent instead of Decker. That is odd
because, although Williams was listed as a party in the original petition, she was not
named in the amended petition. In any event, after the amended petition was filed, the
District Court dismissed all defense parties other than the Sheriff. The presence of
Williams’s name in the notices of appeal therefore does not affect the analysis herein.
4
That statutory subsection provides: “Except as provided in this section and
notwithstanding any other provision of law (statutory or nonstatutory), including section
2241 of Title 28, or any other habeas corpus provision, and sections 1361 and 1651 of
such title, no court shall have jurisdiction to hear any cause or claim by or on behalf of
any alien arising from the decision or action by the Attorney General to commence
proceedings, adjudicate cases, or execute removal orders against any alien under this
chapter.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(g).
4
Torres-Jurado filed an interlocutory appeal of that decision on May 17, 2018 and
promptly moved, in this Court, for an emergency stay of removal. We granted that
motion on a temporary basis, pending further briefing. We later referred the appeal to the
merits panel and ruled that the temporary stay would remain in place until further notice.
While the interlocutory appeal progressed, Torres-Jurado’s case continued in the
District Court. In an opinion and order entered on July 12, 2018, the District Court ruled
on Torres-Jurado’s amended habeas petition and his motion to reconsider the dismissal of
the federal government parties. As to the amended petition, the District Court granted
habeas relief and ordered Torres-Jurado released from custody subject to certain
conditions. It denied his request for injunctive and declaratory relief, however,
explaining that, “[h]istorically, courts have consistently refused to review, upon habeas
corpus, questions which do not concern the lawfulness of the detention.” (App. at 26 n.3
(citations and internal quotation marks omitted).) As to the motion to reconsider, the
District Court denied it as moot because it had granted Torres-Jurado’s release, which it
considered to be the only relief available to a habeas petitioner.
Torres-Jurado then appealed the July 12 decision, which was the final decision of
the District Court. His notice of appeal was drafted narrowly, saying, in relevant part,
that he:
appeals to the United States Court of Appeals for the Third
(3rd) Circuit in part from the Memorandum & Order entered
and served in this action on the 12th day of July, 2018
granting in part [his] application for a Writ of Habeas Corpus
challenging his unlawful detention, and denying in part his
Due Process Clause and Constitutional violation [sic],
particularly from the Court’s ruling: “[t]o the extent that the
5
amended petition also seeks other injunctive and declaratory
relief[], it is denied”.
(App. at 4 (emphasis added).) Importantly, the notice of appeal mentioned neither the
District Court’s decision to dismiss the federal government parties, nor the portion of the
July 12 ruling denying as moot Torres-Jurado’s motion to reconsider the dismissal
decision.
We consolidated both of Torres-Jurado’s appeals – the interlocutory one from
May 17, 2018, and the one from the July 12 final order.
II. DISCUSSION
Torres-Jurado’s appeals are moot and, accordingly, must be dismissed. Before
explaining why, we first briefly review the principles governing mootness. We have
described those principles as follows:
Under Article III of the United States Constitution, the
exercise of judicial power depends upon the existence of a
case or controversy. Mootness derives from Article III’s
prohibition against federal courts issuing advisory opinions.
While the Supreme Court has spoken of the “flexible
character of the Article III mootness doctrine,” it applies
where interim events remove the effects of the violation that
prevent the appellate court from granting any relief.
To avoid mootness, a claim must (1) present a real
legal controversy, (2) genuinely affect an individual, and (3)
have sufficiently adverse parties. If the parties have an
interest in the outcome of the litigation, regardless of size, we
have found a live case or controversy exists. Thus, the case
will be moot only if it is “impossible for the court to grant any
effectual relief.”
Cinicola v. Scharffenberger, 248 F.3d 110, 118-19 (3d Cir. 2001) (citations omitted).
6
Turning first to Torres-Jurado’s appeal of the final decision of the District Court,
that appeal is moot because the sole defending litigant is the Bergen County Sheriff, and
the only relief being sought that is even potentially still available to Torres-Jurado does
not involve the Sheriff at all.
The federal government parties are no longer in the case. The District Court
dismissed them, and Torres-Jurado did not appeal that ruling. It is well-established that,
when a notice of appeal references only “a specified judgment” or “a part of a specified
judgment, the court of appeals acquires thereby no jurisdiction to review other judgments
or portions thereof not so specified or otherwise fairly to be inferred from the notice as
intended to be presented for review on the appeal.” Lusardi v. Xerox Corp., 975 F.2d
964, 972 (3d Cir. 1992) (citation omitted). Based on that principle, we can only exercise
appellate jurisdiction over an unspecified order if several requirements are satisfied, one
of which is that “the intention to appeal the unspecified order [must be] apparent[.]” Id.
(citation omitted).
Here, Torres-Jurado’s notice of appeal did not mention the District Court’s
dismissal of the federal government parties or the Court’s refusal to reconsider that
dismissal. On the contrary, the notice expressed an intention to cabin the appeal solely to
the portion of the July 12 ruling denying injunctive and declaratory relief, saying that
Torres-Jurado was appealing “particularly from” that part of the District Court’s decision.
(App. at 4.) Furthermore, Torres-Jurado does not once mention the dismissal of the
federal government parties in his opening brief. Cf. Satterfield v. Johnson, 434 F.3d 185,
191 (3d Cir. 2006) (“The Commonwealth’s intention to appeal the issue of timeliness was
7
‘clearly manifest’ from its first brief.”). And, this is not a case in which “it is easy to
infer [an] intention to appeal” an unspecified order from the close connection between it
and a specified order, Trzaska v. L’Oreal USA, Inc., 865 F.3d 155, 163 (3d Cir. 2017),
because the District Court did not premise its denial of injunctive and declaratory relief
on the dismissal of the federal government parties or even suggest that those issues are
related. Under the circumstances, we can discern no intent – let alone an “apparent”
one – to appeal the dismissal of the federal government parties. Lusardi, 975 F.2d at 972
(citation omitted). That dismissal is thus beyond the scope of our appellate jurisdiction.5
Because of that, the Bergen County Sheriff is the sole remaining defense party
before us. Accordingly, the existence of an active case or controversy between Torres-
Jurado and the Sheriff is necessary to sustain our jurisdiction. See North Carolina v.
Rice, 404 U.S. 244, 246 (1971) (per curiam) (“[The Supreme Court] has frequently
repeated that federal courts are without power to decide questions that cannot affect the
rights of litigants in the case before them.” (emphasis added)); cf. Jordan v. Sosa, 654
F.3d 1012, 1029-33 (10th Cir. 2011) (considering the named defendants only in
evaluating whether a case was moot).
5
Torres-Jurado argues that “[t]he notice of appeal clearly states that it is
challenging all of the Court’s rulings that impact and effect [sic] the injunctive and
declaratory relief, including the Court’s order denying [his] motion to [reconsider] as
moot”; that his “intention to appeal the denial of the motion to [reconsider] was apparent
from his notice of appeal”; and that both dismissal decisions “were thoroughly addressed
in [his] opening brief.” (Torres-Jurado’s Supp. Br. at 2, 4.) There is, however, no
support for any of that in the record. Torres-Jurado’s protestations are thus perplexing, to
say the least.
8
The inquiry into whether there is a live dispute here turns on whether any available
relief could be effectual. Cinicola, 248 F.3d at 118-19. Given that the District Court
granted Torres-Jurado’s request for a writ of habeas corpus, the only relief sought in the
amended petition and potentially obtainable at this stage would be an injunction
preventing “Respondents from transferring [Torres-Jurado] outside of [New Jersey]”; “an
order directing Respondents to … comply with the DHS order granting [Torres-Jurado]
an indefinite stay of removal”; and a declaration “that the revocation of the stay of
removal was unlawful[.]” (App. at 53.)
For Torres-Jurado to show that ordering such relief would be effectual, he has to
explain how the Sheriff could actually do what would be ordered or be affected by what
is declared. Jordan, 654 F.3d at 1029-33; see also Parkell v. Danberg, 833 F.3d 313, 332
(3d Cir. 2016) (“In seeking a prospective injunction against the implementation of an
unconstitutional state policy, Parkell is required to name an official or officials ‘who can
appropriately respond to injunctive relief.’” (citations omitted)). He cannot do so. The
only action the Sheriff could take with respect to Torres-Jurado would be to release him,
if he were still in custody, but Torres-Jurado has already been released. The Sheriff can
do nothing at this point to prevent Torres-Jurado’s transfer outside of New Jersey or to
comply with the order granting a stay of removal or to respond to a declaration that the
revocation of the stay of removal was unlawful. The Sheriff is in no way “actually
situated to effectuate any prospective relief that this court might afford [Torres-Jurado].”
Jordan, 654 F.3d at 1030; cf. Saravia v. Sessions, 280 F. Supp. 3d 1168, 1190-91 & n.12
9
(N.D. Cal. 2017) (observing that a custodian for purposes of habeas relief was not a
proper defendant for injunctive and declaratory relief).
Because it would be “impossible for the court to grant any effectual relief[,]”
Torres-Jurado’s appeal of the final decision of the District Court is moot.6 Cinicola, 248
F.3d at 119 (citations omitted).
Torres-Jurado’s interlocutory appeal is likewise moot. His emergency motion
sought to ensure his presence in New Jersey during the pendency of his case. That case is
now over because the District Court issued a final decision and Torres-Jurado’s appeal of
6
Both Torres-Jurado and the Sheriff argue that injunctive and declaratory relief
remains available notwithstanding the dismissal of the federal government parties,
reasoning that a non-party can be bound by prospective relief granted against a party
under certain circumstances applicable here. One may wonder why the Sheriff adopts
that position – which seems plainly at odds with his interests – particularly given that he
also characterizes the law in this area as “unclear[.]” (Bergen County Sheriff’s Supp. Br.
at 6.) Perhaps it is because the Sheriff is represented by the same attorney who is
representing the federal government parties, and their interests may not be perfectly
aligned. In any event, the constitutional prohibition against advisory opinions does not
yield to the desires of attorneys or non-parties.
More to the point, the parties’ argument is wrong. As explained above, mootness
occurs when there is no case or controversy between the parties before us. E.g., Jordan,
654 F.3d at 1029-33. Thus, regardless of whether properly issued prospective relief
could bind non-parties, a claim for such relief is moot where, as here, the relief sought
would not affect the conduct of the defending litigants. Id.
Finally, the mere fact that a named defendant is arguably not responsible for the
harm alleged – such that relief might ultimately not issue against that defendant – does
not deprive a court of jurisdiction. Cf. Davis v. Wells Fargo, 824 F.3d 333, 348 (3d Cir.
2016) (“If for no other reason, a case or controversy exists to determine whether Davis is
suing the right insurance company and, even if he should have sued ASIC, whether he
may pierce the corporate veil and hold Assurant accountable for the alleged misconduct
of ASIC.”). That is because, if the named defendant were found to be responsible and
relief were to issue, it would directly affect the conduct of that defendant. Here,
however, the relief sought could not at all affect the actions of the defending litigant.
10
that decision is moot. Thus, no effectual relief related to the interlocutory appeal could
issue.
That resolves both of Torres-Jurado’s appeals. Because no portion of his case
remains before us, we will vacate our temporary stay of removal.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we will dismiss Torres-Jurado’s appeals as moot and
vacate the temporary stay of removal.
11