News From the Courts
Gutierrez
v. Ashcroft
2003
US Dist LEXIS 19421
Petitioner
Luis Gutierrez came to the United States as a legal resident at age seven.
He later committed five burglaries and was imprisoned for his actions.
While in prison, Gutierrez was served with Notice to Appear in Removal
Proceedings. In 1998, an
Immigration Judge ordered Gutierrez removed and deemed him ineligible for any
relief from removal. The Board of
Immigration Appeals, by a 3-2 vote, denied Gutierrez’s request that he be
found eligible for discretionary relief under §212(c) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act. The BIA relied on
the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 to hold that
aggravated felons were ineligible for such relief.
Then, in 2001, the Supreme Court held that such retroactive denial of an
INA §212(c) hearing to be unconstitutional in INS v. St. Cyr.
INS v. St. Cyr, 533 U.S. 289.
The
United States District Court in New Jersey found after his removal that
Gutierrez had conveyed to his attorney to pursue all possible appeal options.
While his attorney did represent to Gutierrez that he had filed a habeas
petition, the only appeal option available, the attorney in fact did not file
any appeals. Gutierrez filed a
habeas petition after removal, but the U.S. District Court denied the request
and dismissed the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because Gutierrez
was not in custody at the time he filed the appeal.
In
the present action, Gutierrez filed a Motion to Make New Findings and to Alter
or Amend the Judgment on the basis of Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 52(b) and
59(e). Gutierrez’s attorney only had one business day to file a habeas claim
before Gutierrez was removed. The
attorney claimed to be awaiting the outcome of a habeas appeal in another
similar case and when that case was decided in the negative, the attorney
decided that it was not worthwhile to file the habeas petition for Gutierrez -
without telling his client. The
Court found that the evidence “strongly negated” any inference that
Gutierrez had instructed his attorney to not proceed with the appeal.
In fact, the Court found that the evidence, including testimony from
Gutierrez’s wife and mother, weighed in favor of Gutierrez believing that the
habeas petition was pending.
The
Court found that the attorney misled Gutierrez and misrepresented to Gutierrez
that he had filed a habeas petition. The
Court ruled that Gutierrez was clearly prejudiced by ineffective assistance of
counsel due to his attorney’s failure to file for §212(c) relief while
holding out to Gutierrez and his family that he had in fact filed the necessary
paperwork. The Court also held that
the attorney understood that the Gutierrez family believed that an appeal was in
the process and never attempted to correct them.
The Court also found that if the attorney had filed a habeas petition, Gutierrez would have had a strong chance of success following the St. Cyr case. The Court granted Gutierrez’s motion and ruled that the only relief that prevented substantial injustice was to deem Gutierrez’s habeas petition to have been filed prior to his deportation since this was when he believed the petition had been filed. The Judge also ordered that Gutierrez be provided with a §212(c) hearing.
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