The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (Reform Act)
amended the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) creating,
inter alia, a "Special Agricultural Workers" (SAW) amnesty
program for specified alien farmworkers. The Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) determined SAW status eligibility
based on evidence presented at a personal interview with each
applicant. Section 210(e)(1) of the INA barred judicial review "of
a determination respecting an application" except in the context of
judicial review of a deportation order, a review conducted by the
courts of appeals. Respondents, the Haitian Refugee Center and
unsuccessful individual SAW applicants, filed a class action in the
District Court, alleging that the initial application review
process was conducted in an arbitrary manner in violation of the
Reform Act and the applicants' due process rights under the Fifth
Amendment. While recognizing that individual aliens could not
obtain judicial review of denials of their SAW status applications
except in deportation proceedings in the courts of appeals, the
District Court accepted jurisdiction because the complaint did not
challenge any individual determination of any application for SAW
status, but rather contained allegations about the manner in which
the entire program was being implemented. The court found that a
number of INS practices violated the Reform Act and were
unconstitutional, and the Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: The District Court had federal question
jurisdiction to hear respondents' constitutional and statutory
challenges to the INS procedures. Pp.
498 U. S.
491-499.
(a) There is no clear congressional language mandating
preclusion of jurisdiction. Section 210(e)(1)'s language
prohibiting judicial review "
of a determination respecting an
application" refers to the process of direct review of
individual denials of SAW status, not to general collateral
challenges to unconstitutional practices and policies used by the
INS in processing applications. The reference to "a determination"
describes a single act, as does the language of § 210(e)(3),
which provides for "judicial review of such a denial." Section
210(e)(3)(B), which specifies that judicial review is to be based
on the administrative record, and that factual
Page 498 U. S. 480
determinations contained in such a record shall be conclusive
absent a showing of an abuse of discretion, supports this reading.
A record emerging from the administrative appeals process does not
address the kind of procedural and constitutional claims
respondents have brought, and the abuse-of-discretion standard does
not apply to constitutional or statutory determinations, which are
subject to
de novo review. Limiting judicial review of
general constitutional and statutory challenges to the provisions
set forth in § 210(e) therefore is not contemplated. Moreover,
had Congress intended the limited review provisions of §
210(e) to encompass challenges to INS procedures and practices, it
could easily have used broader statutory language. Pp.
498 U. S.
481-494.
(b) As a practical matter, the individual respondents would be
unable to obtain meaningful judicial review of their application
denials or of their objections to INS procedures if they were
required to avail themselves of the INA's limited judicial review
procedures. Under the statutory scheme, review of an individual
determination would be limited to the administrative record, which
respondents have alleged is inadequate; aliens would have to
surrender themselves for deportation in order to receive any
judicial review, which is tantamount to a complete denial of such
review; and a court of appeals reviewing an individual
determination would most likely not have an adequate record as to a
pattern of allegedly unconstitutional practices, and would lack a
district court's factfinding and record-developing capabilities.
Given this Court's well settled presumption favoring
interpretations of statutes that allow judicial review of
administrative action, the Court cannot conclude that Congress so
intended to foreclose all forms of meaningful judicial review of
SAW application denials and general collateral challenges to INS
procedures. This case is therefore controlled by
Bowen v.
Michigan Academy of Family Physicians, 476 U.
S. 667, which interpreted the Medicare statute to permit
individuals to challenge a payment regulation's validity even
though the statute barred judicial review of individual claims for
payment under the regulation.
Heckler v. Ringer,
466 U. S. 602,
distinguished. Pp.
498 U. S.
494-499.
872 F.2d 1555 (CA 11 1989), affirmed.
STEVENS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, O'CONNOR, KENNEDY, and SOUTER, JJ., joined, and
in Parts I, II, III, and IV of which WHITE, J., joined. REHNQUIST,
C.J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which SCALIA, J., joined,
498 U. S.
499.
Page 498 U. S. 481
Justice STEVENS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (Reform Act)
[
Footnote 1] constituted a
major statutory response to the vast tide of illegal immigration
that had produced a "shadow population" of literally millions of
undocumented aliens in the United States.
On the one hand, Congress sought to stem the tide by making the
plight of the undocumented alien even more onerous in the future
than it had been in the past; thus, the Reform Act imposed criminal
sanctions on employers who hired undocumented workers [
Footnote 2] and made a number
Page 498 U. S. 482
of federally funded welfare benefits unavailable to these
aliens. [
Footnote 3] On the
other hand, in recognition that a large segment of the shadow
population played a useful and constructive role in the American
economy, [
Footnote 4] but
continued to reside in perpetual fear, [
Footnote 5] the Reform Act established two broad
Page 498 U. S. 483
amnesty programs to allow existing undocumented aliens to emerge
from the shadows.
The first amnesty program permitted any alien who had resided in
the United States continuously and unlawfully since January 1,
1982, to qualify for an adjustment of his or her status to that of
a lawful permanent resident.
See 100 Stat. 3394,
as
amended, 8 U.S.C. § 1255a. The second program required
the Attorney General to adjust the status of any alien farmworker
who could establish that he or she had resided in the United States
and performed at least 90 days of qualifying agricultural work
during the 12-month period prior to May 1, 1986, provided that the
alien could also establish his or her admissibility in the United
States as an immigrant. The Reform Act required the Attorney
General first to adjust the status of these aliens to "Special
Agricultural Workers" (SAW) lawfully admitted for temporary
residence,
see 100 Stat. 3417,
as amended, 8
U.S.C. § 1160(a)(1), and then eventually to aliens lawfully
admitted for permanent residence,
see §
1160(a)(2).
This case relates only to the SAW amnesty program. Although
additional issues were resolved by the District Court and the Court
of Appeals, the only question presented to us is whether §
210(e) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), which was
added by § 302(a) of the Reform Act and sets forth the
administrative and judicial review provisions of the SAW program,
see 8 U.S.C. § 1160(e), precludes a federal district
court from exercising general federal question jurisdiction over an
action alleging a pattern or practice of procedural due process
violations by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) in
its administration of the SAW program. We hold that, given the
absence of clear congressional
Page 498 U. S. 484
language mandating preclusion of federal jurisdiction and the
nature of respondents' requested relief, the District Court had
jurisdiction to hear respondents' constitutional and statutory
challenges to INS procedures. Were we to hold otherwise and instead
require respondents to avail themselves of the limited judicial
review procedures set forth in § 210(e) of the INA, meaningful
judicial review of their statutory and constitutional claims would
be foreclosed.
I
The Reform Act provided three important benefits to an applicant
for SAW status. First, the mere filing of a "nonfrivolous
application" entitled the alien to a work authorization that would
remain valid during the entire period that the application was
being processed.
See 8 U.S.C. § 1160(d)(2)(B).
Second, regardless of the disposition of the application, the
Reform Act expressly prohibited the Government from using any
information in the application for enforcement purposes. Thus, the
application process could not be used as a means of identifying
deportable aliens; rather, the initiation of a deportation
proceeding had to be based on evidence obtained from an independent
source.
See § 1160(b)(6). Third, if SAW status was
granted, the alien became a lawful temporary resident,
see
§ 1160(a)(1), and, in due course, could obtain the status of a
permanent resident,
see § 1160(a)(2).
In recognition that the fear of prosecution or deportation would
cause many undocumented aliens to be reluctant to come forward and
disclose their illegal status, the Reform Act directed the Attorney
General to enlist the assistance of a variety of nonfederal
organizations to encourage aliens to apply and to provide them with
counsel and assistance during the application process. These
"Qualified Designated Entities" (QDE), which included private
entities such as farm labor organizations and associations of
agricultural
Page 498 U. S. 485
employers as well as qualified state, local, and community
groups, were not allowed to forward applications for SAW status to
the Attorney General unless the applicant consented.
See
§§ 1160(b)(2), (b)(4).
The Reform Act provided that SAW status applications could be
filed with a specially created Legalization Office (LO), or with a
QDE, which would forward applications to the appropriate LO, during
an 18-month period commencing on June 1, 1987.
See §
1160(b)(1)(A). Regulations adopted by the INS to administer the
program provided for a personal interview of each applicant at an
LO.
See 8 CFR § 210.2(c)(2)(iv) (1990). In the
application, the alien had to prove by a preponderance of the
evidence that he or she worked the requisite 90 days of qualifying
seasonal agricultural services.
See § 210.3(a),
(b)(1). To meet the burden of proof, the applicant was required to
present evidence of eligibility independent of his or her own
testimony.
See § 210.3(b)(2). The applicant could
meet this burden through production of his or her employer's
payroll records,
see 8 U.S.C. § 1160(b)(3)(B)(ii), or
through submission of affidavits
"by agricultural producers, foremen, farm labor contractors,
union officials, fellow employees, or other persons with specific
knowledge of the applicant's employment."
See 8 CFR § 210.3(c)(3) (1990). At the conclusion
of the interview and of the review of the application materials,
the LO could deny the application or make a recommendation to a
regional processing facility that the application be either granted
or denied.
See id. at § 210.1(q). A denial, whether
at the regional or local level, could be appealed to the
legalization appeals unit, which was authorized to make the final
administrative decision in each individual case.
See
§ 103.3(a)(2)(iii).
The Reform Act expressly prohibited judicial review of such a
final administrative determination of SAW status except as
authorized by § 210(e)(3)(A) of the amended INA.
Page 498 U. S. 486
That subsection permitted "judicial review of such a denial only
in the judicial review of an order of exclusion or deportation."
[
Footnote 6] In view of the
fact that the courts of appeals constitute the only fora for
judicial review of deportation orders,
see 75 Stat. 651,
as amended, 8 U.S.C. § 1105a, the statute plainly
foreclosed any review in the district courts of individual denials
of SAW status applications. Moreover, absent initiation of a
deportation proceeding against an unsuccessful applicant, judicial
review of such individual determinations was completely
foreclosed.
Page 498 U. S. 487
II
This action was filed in the District Court for the Southern
District of Florida by the Haitian Refugee Center, the Migration
and Refugee Services of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Palm Beach,
[
Footnote 7] and 17
unsuccessful individual SAW applicants. The plaintiffs sought
relief on behalf of a class of alien farmworkers who either had
been or would be injured by unlawful practices and policies adopted
by the INS in its administration of the SAW program. The complaint
alleged that the interview process was conducted in an arbitrary
fashion that deprived applicants of the due process guaranteed by
the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. Among other charges, the
plaintiffs alleged that INS procedures did not allow SAW applicants
to be apprised of or to be given opportunity to challenge adverse
evidence on which denials were
Page 498 U. S. 488
predicated, that applicants were denied the opportunity to
present witnesses on their own behalf, that non-English speaking
Haitian applicants were unable to communicate effectively with LOs
because competent interpreters were not provided, and that no
verbatim recording of the interview was made, thus inhibiting even
any meaningful administrative review of application denials by LOs
or regional processing facilities.
See App. 44-45;
Haitian Refugee Center, Inc. v. Nelson, 694 F.
Supp. 864, 867 (SD Fla.1988).
After an evidentiary hearing, the District Court ruled that it
had jurisdiction, that the case should proceed as a class action,
and that a preliminary injunction should issue. The court
recognized that individual aliens could not contest the denial of
their SAW applications "unless and until the INS institut[ed]
deportation proceedings against them," but accepted jurisdiction
because the complaint
"does not challenge any individual determination of any
application for SAW status, but rather attacks the manner in which
the entire program is being implemented, allegations beyond the
scope of administrative review. [
Footnote 8]"
On the merits, the District Court
Page 498 U. S. 489
found that a number of INS practices violated the Reform Act and
were unconstitutional, [
Footnote
9] and entered an injunction requiring the INS to vacate large
categories of denials, [
Footnote
10] and to modify its practices in certain respects. [
Footnote 11]
The Court of Appeals affirmed. On the merits, it upheld all of
the findings and conclusions of the District Court, and it
Page 498 U. S. 490
also rejected each of the Government's jurisdictional arguments.
Relying on earlier Circuit precedent, it held that the statutory
bar to judicial review of individual determinations was
inapplicable:
"In
Jean v. Nelson, 727 F.2d 957 (11th Cir.1984) (in
banc),
aff'd, 472 U. S. 846 (1985), we
reaffirmed that section 106 of the INA (codified at 8 U.S.C. §
1105a) does not deprive district courts of jurisdiction to review
allegations of systematic abuses by INS officials.
Jean,
727 F.2d at 980. We explained that to postpone"
"judicial resolution of a disputed issue that affects an entire
class of aliens until an individual petitioner has an opportunity
to litigate it on habeas corpus would foster the very delay and
procedural redundancy that Congress sought to eliminate in passing
§ 1105a."
"
Id. In this action, appellees do not challenge the
merits of any individual status determination; rather . . . they
contend that defendants' policies and practices in processing SAW
applications deprive them of their statutory and constitutional
rights."
Haitian Refugee Center, Inc. v. Nelson, 872 F.2d 1555,
1560 (CA11 1989).
In their certiorari petition, petitioners did not seek review of
the District Court's rulings on the merits or the form of its
injunctive relief. Our grant of certiorari is therefore limited to
the jurisdictional question.
III
We preface our analysis of petitioners' position with an
identification of matters that are not in issue. First, it is
undisputed that SAW status is an important benefit for a previously
undocumented alien. This status not only protects the alien from
deportation; it also creates job opportunities that are not
available to an alien whose application is denied. Indeed, the
denial of SAW status places the alien in an even worse position
than he or she was in before the Reform Act was passed, because
lawful employment opportunities are no
Page 498 U. S. 491
longer available to such persons. Thus, the successful applicant
for SAW status acquires a measure of freedom to work and to live
openly without fear of deportation or arrest that is markedly
different from that of the unsuccessful applicant. Even
disregarding the risk of deportation, the impact of a denial on the
opportunity to obtain gainful employment is plainly sufficient to
mandate constitutionally fair procedures in the application
process. At no time in this litigation have petitioners asserted a
right to employ arbitrary procedures, or questioned their
obligation to afford SAW status applicants due process of law.
Nor, at this stage of the litigation, is there any dispute that
the INS routinely and persistently violated the Constitution and
statutes in processing SAW applications. Petitioners do not deny
that those violations caused injury in fact to the two
organizational plaintiffs as well as to the individual members of
the plaintiff class. Although it does not do so explicitly,
petitioners' argument assumes that the District Court would have
federal question jurisdiction over the entire case if Congress had
not, through the Reform Act, added § 210(e) to the INA. The
narrow issue, therefore, is whether § 210(e), which bars
judicial review of individual determinations except in deportation
proceedings, also forecloses this general challenge to the INS's
unconstitutional practices.
IV
Petitioners' entire jurisdictional argument rests on their view
that respondents' constitutional challenge is an action seeking
"judicial review of a determination respecting an application for
adjustment of status," and that district court jurisdiction over
the action is therefore barred by the plain language of §
210(e)(1) of the amended INA.
See 8 U.S.C. §
1160(e)(1). [
Footnote 12]
The critical words in § 210(e)(1),
Page 498 U. S. 492
however, describe the provision as referring only to review "of
a determination respecting an
application" for
SAW status (emphasis added). Significantly, the reference to "a
determination" describes a single act, rather than a group of
decisions or a practice or procedure employed in making decisions.
Moreover, when § 210(e)(3),
see 8 U.S.C. §
1160(e)(3), further clarifies that the only judicial review
permitted is in the context of a deportation proceeding, it refers
to "judicial review of
such a denial" -- again referring
to a single act, and again making clear that the earlier reference
to "a determination respecting an application" describes the denial
of an individual application. We therefore agree with the District
Court's and the Court of Appeals' reading of this language as
describing the process of direct review of individual denials of
SAW status, rather than as referring to general collateral
challenges to unconstitutional practices and policies used by the
agency in processing applications.
Page 498 U. S. 493
This reading of the Reform Act's review provision is supported
by the language in § 210(e)(3)(B) of the INA, which provides
that judicial review
"shall be based solely upon the administrative record
established at the time of the review by the appellate authority
and the findings of fact and determinations contained in such
record shall be conclusive unless the applicant can establish abuse
of discretion or that the findings are directly contrary to clear
and convincing facts contained in the record considered as a
whole."
8 U.S.C. § 1160(e)(3)(B). This provision incorporates an
assumption that the limited review provisions of § 210(e)
apply only to claims that have been subjected to administrative
consideration and that have resulted in the creation of an adequate
administrative record. However, the record created during the SAW
administrative review process consists solely of a completed
application form, a report of medical examination, any documents or
affidavits that evidence an applicant's agricultural employment and
residence, and notes, if any, from an LO interview -- all relating
to a single SAW applicant. Because the administrative appeals
process does not address the kind of procedural and constitutional
claims respondents bring in this action, limiting judicial review
of these claims to the procedures set forth in § 210(e) is not
contemplated by the language of that provision.
Moreover, the "abuse of discretion" standard of judicial review
under § 210(e)(3)(B) would make no sense if we were to read
the Reform Act as requiring constitutional and statutory challenges
to INS procedures to be subject to its specialized review
provision. Although the abuse-of-discretion standard is appropriate
for judicial review of an administrative adjudication of the facts
of an individual application for SAW status, such a standard does
not apply to constitutional or statutory claims, which are reviewed
de novo by the courts. The language of § 210(e)(3)(B)
thus lends substantial credence to the conclusion that the Reform
Act's review provision
Page 498 U. S. 494
does not apply to challenges to INS's practices and procedures
in administering the SAW program.
Finally, we note that, had Congress intended the limited review
provisions of § 210(e) of the INA to encompass challenges to
INS procedures and practices, it could easily have used broader
statutory language. Congress could, for example, have modeled
§ 210(e) on the more expansive language in the general grant
of district court jurisdiction under Title II of the INA by
channeling into the Reform Act's special review procedures "all
causes . . . arising under any of the provisions" of the
legalization program. 66 Stat. 230, 8 U.S.C. § 1329. It
moreover could have modeled § 210(e) on 38 U.S.C. §
211(a), which governs review of veterans' benefits claims, by
referring to review "on all questions of law and fact" under the
SAW legalization program.
Given Congress' choice of statutory language, we conclude that
challenges to the procedures used by INS do not fall within the
scope of § 210(e). Rather, we hold that § 210(e) applies
only to review of denials of individual SAW applications. Because
respondents' action does not seek review on the merits of a denial
of a particular application, the District Court's general federal
question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 to hear this
action remains unimpaired by § 210(e).
V
Petitioners place their principal reliance on our decision in
Heckler v. Ringer, 466 U. S. 602
(1984). The four respondents in
Ringer wanted to establish
a right to reimbursement under the Medicare Act for a particular
form of surgery that three of them had undergone and the fourth
allegedly needed. They sought review of the Secretary's policy of
refusing reimbursement for that surgery in an original action filed
in the District Court, without exhausting the procedures specified
in the statute for processing reimbursement claims. The District
Court dismissed the case for lack of jurisdiction because the
essence of the complaint was a claim of entitlement to payment for
the surgical procedure. With respect
Page 498 U. S. 495
to the three respondents who had had the surgery, we concluded
that "it makes no sense" to construe their claims "as anything more
than, at bottom, a claim that they should be paid for their BCBR
[bilateral carotid body resection] surgery,"
id. at
466 U. S. 614,
since success in their challenge of the Secretary's policy denying
reimbursement would have the practical effect of also deciding
their claims for benefits on the merits. "Indeed," we noted,
"the relief that respondents seek to redress their supposed
'procedural' objections is the invalidation of the Secretary's
current policy and a 'substantive' declaration from her that the
expenses of BCBR surgery are reimbursable under the Medicare
Act."
Ibid. Concluding that respondents' judicial action was
not "collateral" to their claims for benefits, we thus required
respondents first to pursue their administrative remedies. In so
doing, we found it significant that respondents, even if
unsuccessful before the agency,
"clearly have an adequate remedy in § 405(g) for
challenging [in the courts] all aspects of the Secretary's denial
of their claims for payment for the BCBR surgery."
Id. at
466 U. S. 617.
[
Footnote 13]
Unlike the situation in
Heckler, the individual
respondents in this action do not seek a substantive declaration
that they are entitled to SAW status. Nor would the fact that they
prevail on the merits of their purportedly procedural objections
have the effect of establishing their entitlement to SAW status.
Rather, if allowed to prevail in this action, respondents would
only be entitled to have their case files reopened and their
applications reconsidered in light of the newly prescribed INS
procedures.
Page 498 U. S. 496
Moreover, unlike in
Heckler, if not allowed to pursue
their claims in the District Court, respondents would not as a
practical matter be able to obtain meaningful judicial review of
their application denials or of their objections to INS procedures,
notwithstanding the review provisions of § 210(e) of the
amended INA. It is presumable that Congress legislates with
knowledge of our basic rules of statutory construction, and, given
our well settled presumption favoring interpretations of statutes
that allow judicial review of administrative action,
see Bowen
v. Michigan Academy of Family Physicians, 476 U.
S. 667,
476 U. S. 670
(1986), coupled with the limited review provisions of §
210(e), it is most unlikely that Congress intended to foreclose all
forms of meaningful judicial review.
Several aspects of this statutory scheme would preclude review
of respondents' application denials if we were to hold that the
District Court lacked jurisdiction to hear this challenge.
Initially, administrative or judicial review of an agency decision
is almost always confined to the record made in the proceeding at
the initial decisionmaking level, and one of the central attacks on
INS procedures in this litigation is based on the claim that such
procedures do not allow applicants to assemble adequate records. As
the District Court found, because of the lack of recordings or
transcripts of LO interviews and the inadequate opportunity for SAW
applicants to call witnesses or present other evidence on their
behalf, the administrative appeals unit of the INS, in reviewing
the decisions of LOs and regional processing facilities, and the
courts of appeals, in reviewing SAW denials in the context of
deportation proceedings, have no complete or meaningful basis upon
which to review application determinations.
Additionally, because there is no provision for direct judicial
review of the denial of SAW status unless the alien is later
apprehended and deportation proceedings are initiated, most aliens
denied SAW status can ensure themselves review in courts of appeals
only if they voluntarily surrender themselves for deportation.
Quite obviously, that price is tantamount
Page 498 U. S. 497
to a complete denial of judicial review for most undocumented
aliens.
Finally, even in the context of a deportation proceeding, it is
unlikely that a court of appeals would be in a position to provide
meaningful review of the type of claims raised in this litigation.
To establish the unfairness of the INS practices, respondents in
this case adduced a substantial amount of evidence, most of which
would have been irrelevant in the processing of a particular
individual application. Not only would a court of appeals reviewing
an individual SAW determination therefore most likely not have an
adequate record as to the pattern of INS' allegedly
unconstitutional practices, but it also would lack the factfinding
and record-developing capabilities of a federal district court. As
the American Bar Association, as
amicus, points out,
statutes that provide for only a single level of judicial review in
the courts of appeals
"are traditionally viewed as warranted only in circumstances
where district court factfinding would unnecessarily duplicate an
adequate administrative record -- circumstances that are not
present in 'pattern and practice' cases where district court
factfinding is essential [given the inadequate administrative
record]."
Brief for American Bar Association as
Amicus Curiae 7.
It therefore seems plain to us, as it did to the District Court and
the Court of Appeals, that restricting judicial review to the
courts of appeals as a component of the review of an individual
deportation order is the practical equivalent of a total denial of
judicial review of generic constitutional and statutory claims.
Decision in this case is therefore supported by our unanimous
holding [
Footnote 14] in
Bowen, supra. In that case we rejected the Government's
contention that two sections of the Social Security Act, 42 U.S.C.
§ 301
et seq. (1982 ed.), barred judicial review of
the validity of a regulation governing the payment of Medicare
benefits. We recognized that review of
Page 498 U. S. 498
individual determinations of the amount due on particular claims
was foreclosed, but upheld the collateral attack on the regulation
itself, emphasizing the critical difference between an individual
"amount determination" and a challenge to the procedures for making
such determinations:
"The reticulated statutory scheme, which carefully details the
forum and limits of review of 'any determination . . . of . . . the
amount of benefits under part A,' 42 U.S.C. § 1395ff(b)(1)(C)
(1982 ed., Supp. II), and of the 'amount of . . . payment' of
benefits under Part B, 42 U.S.C. § 1395u(b)(3)(C), simply does
not speak to challenges mounted against the
method by
which such amounts are to be determined, rather than the
determinations themselves. As the Secretary has made
clear, 'the legality, constitutional or otherwise, of any provision
of the Act or regulations relevant to the Medicare Program' is not
considered in a 'fair hearing' held by a carrier to resolve a
grievance related to a determination of the amount of a Part B
award. As a result, an attack on the validity of a regulation is
not the kind of administrative action that we described in
[U.S. v.] Erika [Inc., 456 U.S.
456 U. S.
201] as an 'amount determination' which decides 'the
amount of the Medicare payment to be made on a particular claim'
and with respect to which the Act impliedly denies judicial review.
456 U.S. at
456 U. S. 208."
476 U.S. at
476 U. S.
675-676 (emphasis in original). Inherent in our analysis
was the concern that, absent such a construction of the judicial
review provisions of the Medicare statute, there would be
"no review at all of substantial statutory and constitutional
challenges to the Secretary's administration of Part B of the
Medicare program."
Id. at
476 U. S.
680.
As we read the Reform Act and the findings of the District
Court, therefore, this case is controlled by
Bowen, rather
than by
Heckler. The strong presumption in favor of
judicial review of administrative action is not overcome either by
the
Page 498 U. S. 499
language or the purpose of the relevant provisions of the Reform
Act.
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
* Justice WHITE joins only Parts I, II, III, and IV of this
opinion.
[
Footnote 1]
Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986, Pub.L. 99 603, 100
Stat. 3359.
[
Footnote 2]
Prior to November 6, 1986, the enactment date of the Reform Act,
the employment of undocumented aliens did not violate federal law.
See 66 Stat. 228,
as amended, 8 U.S.C. §
1324(a) (1982 ed.) (providing that "for the purposes of this
section [criminalizing the bringing in and harboring of aliens not
lawfully entitled to enter and reside in the United States]
employment (including the usual and normal practices incident to
employment) shall not be deemed to constitute harboring"). Section
101 of the Reform Act, however, authorized both civil and criminal
penalties against employers who hire unauthorized aliens either
knowingly or without complying with specified verification
requirements.
See 8 U.S.C. § 1324a.
[
Footnote 3]
Section 121 of the Reform Act amended several federal programs
to deny benefits to aliens who could not verify their lawful
status.
See Pub.L. 99-603, 100 Stat. 3384-3394.
[
Footnote 4]
The House Committee noted the purpose behind the legalization
programs in the Reform Act:
"The United States has a large undocumented alien population
living and working within its borders. Many of these people have
been here for a number of years, and have become a part of their
communities. Many have strong family ties here which include U.S.
citizens and lawful residents. They have built social networks in
this country. They have contributed to the United States in myriad
ways, including providing their talents, labor and tax dollars.
However, because of their undocumented status, these people live in
fear, afraid to seek help when their rights are violated, when they
are victimized by criminals, employers or landlords or when they
become ill."
"Continuing to ignore this situation is harmful to both the
United States and the aliens themselves. However, the alternative
of intensifying interior enforcement or attempting mass
deportations would be both costly, ineffective, and inconsistent
with our immigrant heritage."
"The Committee believes that the solution lies in legalizing the
statuts [
sic] of aliens who have been present in the
United States for several years, recognizing that past failures to
enforces [
sic] the immigration laws have allowed them to
enter and to settle here."
"This step would enable INS to target its enforcement efforts on
new flows of undocumented aliens and, in conjunction with the
proposed employer sanctions programs, help stem the flow of
undocumented people to the United States. It would allow qualified
aliens to contribute openly to society, and it would help to
prevent the exploitation of this vulnerable population in the
workplace."
H.R.Rep. No. 99-682, pt. 1, p. 49 (1986), U.S.Code Cong. &
Admin.News 1986, pp. 5649, 5653.
[
Footnote 5]
Senator Simpson, one of the sponsors of the Reform Act,
described the vulnerability of this
"subculture of human beings who are afraid to go to the cops,
afraid to go to a hospital, afraid to go to their employer, who
says 'One peep out of you, buster, and you are down the road.'"
132 Cong.Rec. 33222 (1986).
[
Footnote 6]
The full text of § 210(e) of the INA, as set forth in 8
U.S.C. § 1160(e), reads as follows:
"(e) Administrative and judicial review"
"(1) Administrative and judicial review"
"There shall be no administrative or judicial review of a
determination respecting an application for adjustment of status
under this section except in accordance with this subsection."
"(2) Administrative review"
"(A) Single level of administrative appellate review"
"The Attorney General shall establish an appellate authority to
provide for a single level of administrative appellate review of
such a determination."
"(B) Standard for review"
"Such administrative appellate review shall be based solely upon
the administrative record established at the time of the
determination on the application and upon such additional or newly
discovered evidence as may not have been available at the time of
determination."
"(3) Judicial review"
"(A) Limitation to review of exclusion or deportation"
"There shall be judicial review of such a denial only in the
judicial review of an order of exclusion or deportation under
section 1105a of this title."
"(B) Standard for judicial review"
"Such judicial review shall be based solely upon the
administrative record established at the time of the review by the
appellate authority and the findings of fact and determinations
contained in such record shall be conclusive unless the applicant
can establish abuse of discretion or that the findings are directly
contrary to clear and convincing facts contained in the record
considered as a whole."
[
Footnote 7]
The complaint alleges that this respondent has the following
interest in the litigation:
"Plaintiff MIGRATION AND REFUGEE SERVICES OF THE ROMAN CATHOLIC
DIOCESE OF PALM BEACH ('RCDPB') is a component of the Roman
Catholic Diocese of Palm Beach. Its principle [
sic] place
of business is West Palm Beach, Florida. Many members of parishes
within the diocese of Palm Beach are foreign agricultural workers
who worked at least 90 man-days in the 1985 and 1986 season, and
are therefore potentially eligible for the SAW program. In
addition, Plaintiff MIGRATION AND REFUGEE SERVICES OF THE RCDPB has
been designated by Defendant INS as a 'Qualified Designated Entity'
(QDE) under IRCA. QDE's are authorized to provide counseling to
aliens about the legalization program, to assist them in filing out
applications and obtain documentation, and receive applications for
adjustment to temporary resident status. Under IRCA, applications
filed with a QDE are deemed to have been filed as of the same date
with INS to whom the QDE's forward the applications for processing.
QDE's are authorized to receive fees from applicants and
reimbursement from INS for counseling and filing services. The
actions of Defendants complained of in this case discourages
otherwise eligible SAW applicants from seeking counseling and
filing of their applications by Plaintiffs MIGRATION AND REFUGEE
SERVICES OF THE RCDPB, and prevents them from fulfilling its basic
mission of assisting aliens to qualify under IRCA."
App. 24.
[
Footnote 8]
Haitian Refugee Center, Inc. v. Nelson, 694 F.
Supp. 864, 873 (SD Fla. 1988). The District Court also found
that both of the organizational plaintiffs had standing. It
explained:
"HRC has alleged that the"
"[d]efendants' refusal to recognize that such persons [HRC's
members] are eligible under IRCA both directly and indirectly
injures HRC. It directly injures the organization because it makes
HRC's work of assisting the Haitian refugee community more
difficult and results in the diversion of HRC's limited resources
away from members and clients having other urgent needs."
"Complaint at � 17. HRC also alleges an indirect injury
through the adverse effect upon its members.
Id. The
plaintiff MRS is a QDE under IRCA authorized to provide counseling
to aliens about the legalization process and to assist them in
obtaining documentation. It also receives applications and fees
from aliens and is reimbursed by the INS for counseling and filing
services. MRS alleges that the defendants' behavior has discouraged
otherwise eligible SAW applicants from seeking counseling and/or
filing their claims and MRS is prevented from fulfilling its basic
mission of assisting aliens to qualify under IRCA."
Id. at 875.
[
Footnote 9]
Although many employers did not maintain payroll records for
seasonal workers, some LOs routinely denied applications that were
not supported by such records. The District Court found that the
INS maintained a secret list of employers whose supporting
affidavits were routinely discredited, without giving applicants an
opportunity to corroborate the affiants' statements.
See
id. at 871-872. The District Court, moreover, found that
interpreters were not provided at LO interviews, even though many
Haitian applicants spoke only Creole and no personnel in a
particular LO understood that language, and that no recordings or
transcripts of LO interviews were made, despite the fact that the
interview "is the only face-to-face encounter between the applicant
and the INS allowing the INS to assess the applicant's
credibility."
See id. at 869.
[
Footnote 10]
The preliminary injunction provides in part:
"(3) In those cases which the INS denied based in whole or in
part on the fact that the applicant failed to submit payroll
records or piecework receipts, the INS shall vacate the denials and
reconsider the cases in light of the proper standard of proof which
will require the government to present evidence to negate the just
and reasonable inference created by the affidavits and other
documents submitted by the applicant;"
"(4) The INS shall vacate those denials issued by the
Legalization Offices during the period June 1, 1987, to March 29,
1988, unless the government can show that the applications were
clearly frivolous based upon the documentation submitted by the
applicant or that the applicant admitted fraud or misrepresentation
in the application process."
Id. at 881.
[
Footnote 11]
The preliminary injunction entered by the District Court ordered
the INS to institute the following procedures:
"(6) The Legalization Offices shall maintain competent
translators, at a minimum, in Spanish and Haitian Creole, and
translators in other languages shall be made available if
necessary;"
"(7) The INS shall afford the applicants the opportunity to
present witnesses at the interview including but not limited to
growers, farm labor contractors, co-workers, and any other
individuals who may offer testimony in support of the
applicant;"
"(8) The interviewers shall be directed to particularize the
evidence offered, testimony taken credibility determinations, and
any other relevant information on the form I-696."
Ibid.
[
Footnote 12]
As petitioners state in their brief:
"The Act declares in all-encompassing terms:"
"There shall be no administrative or judicial review of a
determination respecting an application for adjustment of status
under this section except in accordance with this subsection."
"8 U.S.C. 1160(e)(1). In the following paragraphs, the
subsection spells out the precise procedures intended to provide
the exclusive method of review. The subsection requires the
establishment of a 'a single level of administrative appellate
review of such a determination,' and unequivocally states that"
"[t]here shall be judicial review of such a denial [of a SAW
application] only in the judicial review of an order of exclusion
or deportation under section 1105a of this title."
"8 U.S.C. 1160(e)(2)(A) and (e)(3)(A). Section 1105a(a), in
turn, provides that a petition for review in the court of appeals
'shall be the sole and exclusive procedure for[] the judicial
review of all final orders of deportation,' while exclusion orders
are reviewable exclusively in habeas corpus proceedings. 8 U.S.C.
1105a(b). Congress could hardly have chosen clearer or more
forceful language to express its intention to preclude any judicial
review of a 'determination respecting an application' for SAW
status other than in the specified review proceedings applicable to
individual deportation or exclusion orders."
"In light of IRCA's clear directions, district courts are not
free to draw on their federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C.
1331, or on their jurisdiction granted under the immigration laws,
8 U.S.C. 1329, to entertain collateral attacks on procedures used
to adjudicate SAW applications. The exercise of either source of
general power is barred by the precise and specific language of
IRCA."
Brief for Petitioners 11-13 (footnotes omitted).
[
Footnote 13]
The Court in
Heckler also concluded that the fourth
respondent's claim was "essentially one requesting the payment of
benefits for BCBR surgery, a claim cognizable only under §
405(g)," 466 U.S. at
466 U. S. 620,
and held that the
"claim for future benefits must be construed as a 'claim arising
under' the Medicare Act because any other construction would allow
claimants substantially to undercut Congress' carefully crafted
scheme for administering the Medicare Act."
Id. at 621.
[
Footnote 14]
Justice REHNQUIST did not participate in the case.
Chief Justice REHNQUIST, with whom Justice SCALIA joins,
dissenting.
Congress has carefully limited the judicial review available
under the Immigration Control and Reform Act of 1986 (Reform Act)
in language which "he who runs may read." The Court, with
considerable and obvious effort, finds a way to avoid this
limitation, because to apply the statute as written could bar
judicial review of respondents' constitutional claims. The statute
as written is, in my view, constitutional, and there is therefore
no need to rewrite it.
I
The relevant provisions of the Reform Act dealing with
administrative and judicial review are found in 8 U.S.C. §
1160(e):
"(1) Administrative and judicial review"
" There shall be no administrative or judicial review of a
determination respecting an application for adjustment of status
under this section except in accordance with this subsection."
"(2) Administrative review"
" (A) Single level of administrative appellate review"
" The Attorney General shall establish an appellate authority to
provide for a single level of administrative appellate review of
such a determination"
"
* * * *"
"(3) Judicial review"
" (A) Limitation to review of exclusion or deportation"
" There shall be judicial review of such a denial only in the
judicial review of an order of exclusion or deportation under
section 1105a of this title. "
Page 498 U. S. 500
The first of the quoted sentences states, as clearly as any
language can, that judicial review of a "determination respecting
an application for adjustment of status under this section" may not
be had except in accordance with the provisions of the subsection.
The plain language of subsection (3)(A) provides that judicial
review of a denial may be had only in connection with review of an
order of exclusion or deportation. The Court chooses to read this
language as dealing only with
"direct review of individual denials of SAW status, rather than
as referring to general collateral challenges to unconstitutional
practices and policies used by the agency in processing
applications."
Ante p.
Page 498 U. S. 500
492. But the accepted view of judicial review of administrative
action generally -- even when there is no express preclusion
provision as there is in the present statute -- is that only "final
actions" are reviewable in court. The Administrative Procedure Act
provides:
"[F]inal agency action for which there is no other adequate
remedy in a court [is] subject to judicial review. A preliminary,
procedural, or intermediate agency action or ruling not directly
reviewable is subject to review on the review of the final agency
action."
5 U.S.C. § 704.
The Court's reasoning is thus a classic non sequitur. It reasons
that, because Congress limited judicial review only of what were in
effect final administrative decisions, it must not have intended to
preclude separate challenges to procedures used by the agency
before it issued any final decision. But the type of judicial
review of agency action which the Court finds that Congress failed
to preclude is a type not generally available, even without
preclusion. In the light of this settled rule, the natural reading
of "determination respecting an application" in § 1160(e)
encompasses both final decisions and procedures used to reach those
decisions. Each of respondents' claims attacks the process used by
Immigration and
Page 498 U. S. 501
Naturalization Service (INS) to make a determination respecting
an application.
We have on several occasions rejected the argument advanced by
respondents that individual plaintiffs can bypass restrictions on
judicial review by purporting to attack general policies, rather
than individual results. For instance, in
United States v.
Erika, Inc., 456 U. S. 201
(1982), we found that, in the context of the "precisely drawn
provisions" of the Medicare statute, the provision of judicial
review for awards made under Part A of the statute, coupled with
the omission of judicial review for awards under Part B, "provides
persuasive evidence that Congress deliberately intended to
foreclose further review of such claims."
Id. at 208
(citations omitted). Similarly, in
Heckler v. Ringer,
466 U. S. 602
(1984), we addressed a challenge to a ruling issued by the
Secretary of Health and Human Services that precluded payment under
Medicare for a particular medical procedure. The Medicare Act
permits judicial review of "any claim arising under" the Act, 42
U.S.C. §§ 405(g), (h), only after a claimant seeks
payment and exhausts administrative remedies. The plaintiffs
contended that their lawsuits challenging the Secretary's refusal
to reimburse the procedure at issue were permissible without
exhausting administrative remedies because they challenged only the
Secretary's "
procedure' for reaching her decision," not the
underlying decision on their particular claims. 466 U.S. at
466 U. S. 614.
We rejected this distinction, finding that
"it makes no sense to construe the claims . . . as anything more
than, at bottom, a claim that they should be paid for their . . .
surgery."
Ibid. This holding was based on the recognition that a
contrary result would allow claimants
"to bypass the exhaustion requirements of the Medicare Act by
simply bringing declaratory judgment actions in federal court
before they undergo the medical procedure in question."
Id. at 621. We expressly rejected the contention --
also urged by the respondents here -- that
"simply because a claim somehow can be construed
Page 498 U. S. 502
as 'procedural,' it is cognizable in federal district court by
way of federal question jurisdiction."
Id. at 614.
It is well settled that, when Congress has established a
particular review mechanism, courts are not free to fashion
alternatives to the specified scheme.
See United States v.
Fausto, 484 U. S. 439,
484 U. S.
448-449 (1988);
Whitney National Bank v. Bank of New
Orleans & Trust Co., 379 U. S. 411,
379 U. S.
419-422 (1965). In creating the Reform Act and the SAW
program, Congress balanced the goals of the unprecedented amnesty
programs with the need "to insure reasonably prompt determinations"
in light of the incentives and opportunity for ineligible
applicants to delay the disposition of their cases and derail the
program. The Court's ponderously reasoned gloss on the statute's
plain language sanctions an unwarranted intrusion into a carefully
drafted congressional program, a program which placed great
emphasis on a minimal amount of paperwork and procedure in an
effort to speed the process of adjusting the status of those aliens
who demonstrated their entitlement to adjustment. "If the balance
is to be struck anew, the decision must come from Congress, and not
from this Court."
Ringer, supra, 466 U.S. at
466 U. S.
627.
II
The Court bases its conclusion that district courts have
jurisdiction to entertain respondents' pattern and practice
allegations in part out of "respect [for] the
strong
presumption that Congress intends judicial review of administrative
action.'" Ante at
498 U. S. 498 (quoting Bowen v. Michigan Academy of
Family Physicians, 476 U. S. 667,
476 U. S. 670
(1986)). This presumption, however, comes into play only where
there is a genuine ambiguity as to whether Congress intended to
preclude judicial review of administrative action. In this case,
two things are evident: first, in drafting the Reform Act, Congress
did not preclude all judicial review of administrative action; as
detailed earlier, Congress provided for judicial review of INS
action in the courts of appeals in deportation proceedings, and in
the district courts in orders of exclusion. Second, by
enacting
Page 498 U. S. 503
such a scheme, Congress intended to foreclose all other avenues
of relief. Therefore, since the statute is not ambiguous, the
presumption has no force here.
The Court states that this presumption of judicial review is
particularly applicable in cases raising constitutional challenges
to agency action.
Ante at
498 U. S.
496-499. I believe that Congress intended to preclude
judicial review of such claims in this instance, and that, in this
context, it is permissible for it to do so.
In the Reform Act, Congress enacted a one-time amnesty program
to process claims of illegal aliens, allowing them to obtain status
as lawful residents. Congress intended aliens to come forward
during the limited, 12-month eligibility period because "[t]his is
the first call and the last call, a one-shot deal." 132 Cong.Rec.
33217 (1986) (remarks of Sen. Simpson). If an alien failed to file
a legalization application within the 12-month period, the
opportunity was lost forever. To further expedite this unique and
unprecedented amnesty program and to minimize the burden on the
federal courts, Congress provided for limited judicial review.
Given the structure of the Act and the status of these alien
respondents, it is extremely doubtful that the operation of the
administrative process in their cases would give rise to any
colorable constitutional claims.
"'An alien who seeks political rights as a member of this Nation
can rightfully obtain them only upon terms and conditions specified
by Congress. Courts are without authority to sanction changes or
modifications; their duty is rigidly to enforce the legislative
will in respect of a matter so vital to the public welfare.'"
INS v. Pangilinan, 486 U. S. 875,
486 U. S. 884
(1988) (quoting
United States v. Ginsberg, 243 U.
S. 472,
243 U. S. 474
(1917)).
Respondents are undoubtedly entitled to the benefit of those
procedures which Congress has accorded them in the Reform Act. But
there is no reason to believe that administrative appeals as
provided in the Act -- which simply have not been resorted to by
these respondents before suing in the
Page 498 U. S. 504
District Court -- would not have assured them compliance with
statutory procedures. The Court never mentions what colorable
constitutional claims these aliens, illegally present in the United
States, could have had that demand judicial review. The most that
can be said for respondents' case in this regard is that it is
conceivable, though not likely, that the administrative processing
of their claims could be handled in such a way as to deny them some
constitutional right, and that the remedy of requesting deportation
in order to obtain judicial review is a burdensome one. We have
never held, however, that Congress may not, by explicit language,
preclude judicial review of constitutional claims, and here, where
that body was obviously interested in expeditiously processing an
avalanche of claims from noncitizens upon whom it was conferring a
substantial benefit, I think it may do so.