Misdemeanor Domestic Battery not a Crime of Violence, Flores v. Ashcroft, Seventh Circuit, November 2003


In Flores v. Ashcroft the Seventh Circuit held that a respondent
convicted under the Indiana Battery statute was not deportable for a
crime involving domestic violence because there was not a substantial
risk that the offense involved the use of force. November 26, 2003,
2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 24051

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PROCEDURAL POSTURE: Petitioner sought review of an order of the Board of
Immigration Appeals (BIA) which ordered petitioner removed under §
237(a)(2)(E) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C.S. §
1227(a)(2)(E), because he committed a "crime of domestic violence" under
18 U.S.C.S. § 16 and had a spouse or other domestic partner as a victim.

Petitioner pleaded guilty in Indiana to battery, a misdemeanor, defined
as any touching in a rude, insolent, or angry manner. Ind. Code §
35--42--2--1. The BIA determined that this offense qualified as a "crime
of domestic violence" under 18 U.S.C.S. § 16 and ordered petitioner
removed under § 237(a)(2)(E). Upon review, the court of appeals found
that the issue was how the offense created by Ind. Code § 35--42--2--1
should be classified for purposes of § 237(a)(2)(E). Although the police
report shows that petitioner attacked and beat his wife, the court of
appeals reasoned that § 16 provided that the statute's elements rather
than the petitioner's real activities were dispositive in misdemeanor
cases such that petitioner's conviction could not properly be classified
as a crime of violence. Specifically, the court of appeals found that
the elements of petitioner's battery conviction could not properly be
viewed as a "crime of violence" under § 16 involving a spouse or other
domestic partner as a victim, and thus concluded that petitioner was not
removable under § 237(a)(2)(E).

The order of removal was vacated, and the matter is remanded to the BIA
for further proceedings. 1(a)(1)(A).

________________

JOSE ERNESTO FLORES, Petitioner, v. JOHN ASHCROFT, Attorney
General of the United States, Respondent.

No. 02-3160

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SEVENTH CIRCUIT

2003 U.S. App. LEXIS 24051

September 18, 2003, Argued
November 26, 2003, Decided

PRIOR HISTORY: [*1] Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of
Immigration Appeals.

DISPOSITION: Vacated and remanded.

JUDGES: Before EASTERBROOK, DIANE P. WOOD, and EVANS, Circuit Judges. EVANS,
Circuit Judge, concurring.

OPINIONBY: EASTERBROOK

OPINION:

EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge.

Jose Ernesto Flores was ordered removed under § 237(a)(2)(E) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(E), because he
committed a "crime of domestic violence"- which means any offense that
is a "crime of violence" under 18 U.S.C. § 16 and has a spouse or other
domestic partner as a victim. The crime need not be defined in state law
as "domestic"; all aspects of the definition are federal. But
classification of a state crime under a federal definition can be
tricky, and Flores denies that his offense qualifies. We have
jurisdiction to determine whether Flores has committed a removable
offense, see Gill v. Ashcroft, 335 F.3d 574 (7th Cir. 2003); Yang v.
INS, 109 F.3d 1185, 1192 (7th Cir. 1997), but if he has done so then we
lack jurisdiction to review any other issues. See 8 U.S.C. §
1252(a)(2)(C); Calcano-Martinez v. INS, 533 U.S. 348, 150 L. Ed. 2d 392,
121 S. Ct. 2268 (2001).


Flores pleaded guilty in Indiana to battery, a misdemeanor, which in
that state is any touching in a rude, insolent, or angry manner. Ind.
Code § 35-42-2-1. He received a one-year sentence because bodily injury
ensued. Flores admitted at a removal hearing that the victim was his
wife. Although he now contends that he was not given sufficient time
before that admission to retain counsel, a removal proceeding is not a
criminal prosecution, and the Constitution does not of its own force
create a right to legal assistance at every stage. See Stroe v. INS, 256
F.3d 498 (7th Cir. 2001). The immigration judge's failure to grant
Flores additional continuances before asking questions about the charges
may have violated a regulation, but given § 1252(a)(2)(C) we lack
authority to vindicate regulation-based arguments by criminal aliens.
(Violation of a federal regulation differs from violation of the
Constitution. See United States v. Caceres, 440 U.S. 741, 59 L. Ed. 2d
733, 99 S. Ct. 1465 (1979).) By the time the hearing proper arrived,
Flores was represented by counsel, as he has been ever since. Lack of
legal assistance earlier [*3] could matter only to the extent it
affected the determination that he committed a crime of domestic
battery- and that would be possible only if, with the assistance of
counsel, Flores might have refused to make one of the concessions at the
earlier, uncounseled proceedings: that (a) he is the "Jose Ernesto
Flores " who pleaded guilty to the charge, and (b) the victim was his
wife. Yet Flores has never (with or without counsel) denied either of
these things. The issue at hand is entirely legal: how should the
offense created by Ind. Code § 35-42-2-1 be classified for purposes of §
237(a)(2)(E)? It would be pointless to debate whether, some years ago,
the immigration judge should have afforded Flores more time to hire a
lawyer. We move to the main event.

Section 16 says that "The term 'crime of violence' means-(a) an offense
that has as an element the use, attempted use, or threatened use of physical
force against the person or property of another, or (b) any other offense
that is a felony and that, by its nature, involves a substantial risk that
physical force against the person or property of another may be used in the
course of committing the offense. [*4] " Because the offense of which
Flores was convicted is a misdemeanor, only § 16(a) matters. It is limited
to crimes that have as an element the use of "physical force against the
person ...of another". Indiana law provides: "(a) A person who knowingly or
intentionally touches another person in a rude, insolent, or angry manner
commits battery, a Class B misdemeanor. However, the offense is: (1) a Class
A misdemeanor if: (A) it results in bodily injury to any other person". Ind.
Code § 35-42-2-1. Flores pleaded guilty to this "Class A" version of the
misdemeanor offense. The parties treat bodily injury as an "element" because
it increases the maximum punishment. There are two other elements: an
intentional touching, plus a rude, insolent, or angry manner. Rudeness has
nothing to do with force (though it increases the offense given by the
touching). But both touching and injury have a logical relation to the "use
of physical force" under § 16(a).

Flores observes that Indiana does not require much of either touching or
injury. Any contact counts as a "touch"- and this includes indirect as well
as direct contact, so a snowball, spitball, or paper airplane [*5]
qualifies if it hits the target. Indiana follows the common-law rule under
which any contact, however slight, may constitute battery. Hamilton v.
State, 237 Ind. 298, 145 N.E.2d 391 (1957); Seal v. State, 246 Ind. 353, 5
Ind. Dec. 451, 205 N.E.2d 823 (1965). Touching anything attached to someone
else, such as the person's glasses, is treated the same as touching the
body. Impson v. State, 721 N.E.2d 1275 (Ind. App. 2000). As for injury: a
bruise suffices, as does any physical pain even without trauma. Lewis v.
State, 438 N.E.2d 289 (Ind. 1982); Tucker v. State, 725 N.E.2d 894 (Ind.
App. 2000). Indiana's courts reached this conclusion because "serious"
bodily injury makes the offense a Class C felony. See Ind. Code §
35-42-2-1(a)(3). It follows, Indiana's judiciary concluded, that any
physical hurt satisfies § 35-42-2-1(a)(1)(A). So if the paper airplane
inflicts a paper cut, the snowball causes a yelp of pain, or a squeeze of
the arm causes a bruise, the aggressor has committed a Class A misdemeanor
(provided that the act was rude, angry, or insolent). It is hard to describe
[*6] any of this as "violence."

Now Flores did not tickle his wife with a feather during a domestic
quarrel, causing her to stumble and bruise her arm. That would not have
led to a prosecution, let alone to a year's imprisonment. The police
report shows that Flores attacked and beat his wife even though prior
violence had led to an order barring him from having any contact with
her. The contempt of court reflected in disobedience to this order, plus
the ensuing injury, likely explains the prosecution and sentence. The
immigration officials ask us to examine what Flores actually did, not
just the elements of the crime to which he pleaded guilty. The problem
with that approach lies in the language of § 16(a), which specifies that
the offense of conviction must have "as an element" the use or
threatened use of physical force. Section 16 adopts a charge-offense
rather than a real-offense approach, as is common to recidivist
statutes. See, e. g., Taylor v. United States, 495 U.S. 575, 109 L. Ed.
2d 607, 110 S. Ct. 2143 (1990). As we explained in United States v.
Howze, 343 F.3d 919 (7th Cir. 2003), it may be necessary even in
charge-offense systems to rely [*7] on some aspects of the defendant's
actual behavior, in order to know what he has been convicted of: when
one state-law offense may be committed in multiple ways, and federal law
draws a distinction, it is necessary to look behind the statutory
definition. See also United States v. Shannon, 110 F.3d 382, 384-85 (7th
Cir. 1997) (en banc). Howze was itself an example of this. State law
defined, as a single felony, theft from either a living person or an
embalmed body. The former is (we held) a crime of violence under 18
U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii) and the latter not, because only the former
poses a risk of a violent encounter between thief and victim. So in
Howze we examined the charging papers to learn that the victim had been
alive. Indiana's battery statute, by contrast, separates into distinct
subsections the different ways to commit the offense. Particularly
forceful touchings, or those that cause grave injuries, come under
subsections other than Ind. Code § 35-42-2-1(a)(1)(A). Thus it is
possible to focus on "the elements" of that crime, as § 16(a) requires,
without encountering any ambiguity, and thus without [*8] looking
outside the statutory definition. See also Bazan-Reyes v. United States,
256 F.3d 600, 606-12 (7th Cir. 2001) (drunk driving is not a crime of
violence under the elements approach of § 16, even if injury or death
ensues).

Although § 16(a) directs attention to the statutory elements, §
237(a)(2)(E) of the immigration laws departs from that model by making the
"domestic" ingredient a real-offense characteristic. Thus it does not matter
for purposes of federal law that the crime of battery in Indiana is the same
whether the victim is one's wife or a drinking buddy injured in a barroom.
The injury to a "domestic partner" is a requirement based entirely on
federal law and may be proved without regard to the elements of the state
crime. See Sutherland v. Reno , 228 F.3d 171, 177-78 (2d Cir. 2000).
Substantial evidence, independent of Flores's admission, shows that the
victim was his wife. When classifying the state offense of battery for
purposes of § 16(a), however, the inquiry begins and ends with the elements
of the crime.

According to the immigration officials, we should grant Chevron deference
to the Board's decision that Ind. Code § 35-42-2-1(a)(1)(A) [*9] satisfies
the federal definition. An earlier decision reached this conclusion, after
extended analysis, with respect to a Connecticut law similar to Ind. Code §
35-42-2-1(a)(1)(A), see Matter of Martin, 23 I.&N. Dec. 491 (B. I.A. 2002),
and in Flores's case the Board relied on Martin. Yet Chevron deference
depends on delegation, see United States v. Mead Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 150 L.
Ed. 2d 292, 121 S. Ct. 2164 (2001), and § 16(a) does not delegate any power
to the immigration bureaucracy (formerly the Immigration and Naturalization
Service, now the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services), or to the
Board of Immigration Appeals. Section 16 is a criminal statute, and just as
courts do not defer to the Attorney General or United States Attorney when §
16 must be interpreted in a criminal prosecution, so there is no reason for
deference when the same statute must be construed in a removal proceeding.
Any delegation of interpretive authority runs to the Judicial Branch rather
than the Executive Branch. Cf. Adams Fruit Co. v. Barrett, 494 U.S. 638, 108
L. Ed. 2d 585, 110 S. Ct. 1384 (1990). One [*10] law has one meaning, and a
given state conviction a single classification, whether the subject arises
in removal or in a recidivist prosecution in federal court. Although the
agency's interpretation in Martin may have persuasive force, and we must
give it careful consideration, it has no binding effect along Chevron's
lines.

Martin is not persuasive. Besides starting with legislative history
rather than the text of § 16- the Board saw great significance in a
footnote to the Senate Report, though this footnote did not purport to
disambiguate any statutory language and thus lacks weight on the Supreme
Court's view of legislative history's significance- the Board made two
logical errors. It relied on decisions such as United States v. Nason,
269 F.3d 10 (1st Cir. 2001); United States v. Ceron-Sanchez, 222 F.3d
1169 (9th Cir. 2000); and United States v. Smith, 171 F.3d 617 (8th Cir.
1999), which hold that state laws penalizing battery with intent to
injure are crimes of violence under § 16 (or similar statutes, such as §
924(e)(2)). The Board concluded that this approach is equally applicable
to laws such as Ind. Code § 35-42-2-1(a) (1)(A) [*11] . The first error
is equating intent to cause injury (an element of the state laws at
issue in those decisions) with any injury that happens to occur. It may
well be that acts designed to injure deserve the appellation "violent"
because the intent makes an actual injury more likely; it does not
follow that accidental hurts should be treated the same way. Indiana's
battery law does not make intent to injure an element of the offense;
intent to touch must be established, but not intent to injure. The
Board's second error was failure to appreciate the difference between
felony and misdemeanor convictions. When the prior offense is a felony,
then any criminal conduct that involves a "substantial risk" of physical
force may be classified as a crime of violence under § 16(b) or §
924(e)(2)(B)(ii). (Howze involved a prior felony, which is why we looked
to the risk of an altercation breaking out between thief and victim.)
But when the conviction is for a misdemeanor, then physical force must
be an element under § 16(a) or § 924(e)(2) (B)(i).

Section 16(a) refers to the "use of physical force". Every battery
entails a touch, and it is impossible to touch someone without applying
[*12] some force, if only a smidgeon. Does it follow that every battery
comes within § 16(a)? No, it does not. Every battery involves "force" in the
sense of physics or engineering, where "force" means the acceleration of
mass. A dyne is the amount of force needed to accelerate one gram of mass by
one centimeter per second per second. That's a tiny amount; a paper airplane
conveys more. (A newton, the amount of force needed to accelerate a kilogram
by one meter per second per second, is 100,000 dynes, and a good punch packs
a passel of newtons.) Perhaps one could read the word "force" in § 16(a) to
mean one dyne or more, but that would make hash of the effort to distinguish
ordinary crimes from violent ones. How is it possible to commit any offense
without applying a dyne of force? Section 16(a) speaks of "physical force
against the person or property of another" (emphasis added). Cashing a check
obtained by embezzlement requires lots of dynes to move the check into an
envelope for mailing. Suppose someone finds a set of keys that the owner
dropped next to his car and, instead of taking them to a lost and found,
turns the key in the lock and drives away. One would suppose [*13] that to
be a paradigm non-violent offense, yet turning the key in the lock requires
"physical force" (oodles of dynes) directed against the property (the auto)
of another.

To avoid collapsing the distinction between violent and non-violent
offenses, we must treat the word "force" as having a meaning in the legal
community that differs from its meaning in the physics community. The way to
do this is to insist that the force be violent in nature- the sort that is
intended to cause bodily injury, or at a minimum likely to do so. We have
already drawn just that line. See Solorzano-Patlan v. INS, 207 F.3d 869, 875
n. 10 (7th Cir. 2000); Xiong v. INS, 173 F.3d 601, 604-05 (7th Cir. 1999).
Otherwise "physical force against" and "physical contact with" would end up
meaning the same thing, even though these senses are distinct in law. This
is not a quantitative line ("how many newtons makes a touching violent?")
but a qualitative one. An offensive touching is on the "contact" side of
this line, a punch on the "force" side; and even though we know that
Flores's acts were on the "force" side of this legal line, the elements of
his offense are on the [*14] "contact" side. Because §
16(a) tells us that the elements rather than the real activities are
dispositive in misdemeanor cases, this conviction cannot properly be
classified as a crime of violence, and the basis for Flores's removal has
been knocked out- along with any obstacle to our jurisdiction.

The order of removal is vacated, and the matter is remanded to the Board.

CONCURBY: EVANS

CONCUR: EVANS, Circuit Judge, concurring. Although it's debatable whether
expending dynes (to say nothing about newtons) pressing the keys of my
wordprocessor to concur in this case is worth the effort, I do so because
the result we reach, though correct on the law, is divorced from common
sense. For one thing, people don't get charged criminally for expending a
newton of force against victims. Flores actually beat his wife- after
violating a restraining order based on at least one prior beating- and got a
one-year prison sentence for doing so.

If it is permissible to look to Flores' "real conduct" to determine if
the person he beat was his wife rather than some stranger, why does it not
make perfectly good sense to allow an immigration judge to look at what he
really did in other respects as well, rather [*15] than restrict the judge
to a cramped glance at the "elements" of a cold statute? The more
information upon which the judge acts, the better. A common-sense review
here should lead one to conclude that Flores committed a "crime of domestic
violence." Simply put, by any commonly understood meaning of that term,
that's exactly what he did, and that should be the end of the story. We, and
the IJ as well in this case, should be able to look at what really happened.
We recently observed that critics of our system of law often see it as "not
tethered very closely to common sense." United States v. Cranley, 2003 U.S.
App. LEXIS 23573, (2003 WL 22718171, decided November 19, 2003). This case
is a good example of why that observation hits the nail on the head.
Nevertheless, Judge Easterbrook is correct in applying the law so I join his
persuasive (as usual) and colorful- snowballs, spitballs, and paper
airplanes et al.- opinion. However, I do not applaud the result we reach.
And one final point: Whether doing what Flores actually did should cause him
to be removed from the country is a question we are without jurisdiction to
answer. For better or worse, that's a matter for the executive branch as
[*16] it attempts to implement the will of Congress.

http://callyourlawyers.com/pdfcaselaw/flores_v_ashcroft_7th.pdf

Posted: Wed - November 26, 2003 at 03:35 PM          


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