Headman Law Group represents Federal-Court Litigation clients in San Jose — for Silicon Valley engineers and entrepreneurs. U.S. immigration law is federal, so we guide San Jose-area clients through the same proven process we use nationwide — most steps handled by video and secure document exchange, with no need to visit an office.
What Is Immigration Litigation in Federal Court?
Sometimes the government does not act, or acts unlawfully, and the administrative process offers no remedy. In those situations, a lawsuit in federal district court can be the most effective tool. The two most common immigration claims are a writ of mandamus, which asks the court to compel an agency to decide a case it has unreasonably delayed, and a claim under the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), which challenges agency action that is arbitrary, capricious, or contrary to law.
A mandamus action does not ask the court to approve your case — only to make the agency decide it. In practice, filing suit often prompts the agency to act. APA litigation, by contrast, can ask the court to set aside an unlawful decision. We assess whether the delay or decision in your case warrants federal litigation.
What Federal Litigation Can Achieve
- Compel a decision on a case stuck far beyond normal processing times.
- Challenge a denial or action that violates the law.
- Hold the government to its own rules and timelines.
- Often prompt agency action simply by filing suit.
- Provide a remedy when the administrative process has run out.
- Preserve rights while other options are pursued.
When Federal Litigation Fits
Federal court is a powerful but specific tool. These factors signal it may be the right move.
Unreasonable Delay
Your application has been pending far longer than the agency's own normal processing times, with no decision in sight.
A Clear Legal Duty
The agency has a non-discretionary duty to act on your case — the basis for a mandamus claim to compel a decision.
Unlawful Agency Action
For an APA claim, the decision or action was arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise contrary to law.
Exhausted or Unavailable Remedies
Administrative options have been used up or do not provide an adequate remedy for the harm.
Proper Jurisdiction
The claim fits within the jurisdiction of the federal district court, considering the limits on reviewing some immigration decisions.
The Litigation Process
Federal litigation follows the rules of civil procedure and moves on the court's schedule.
Case Evaluation
We review the delay or decision, the processing data, and the law to confirm a viable mandamus or APA claim and the right court.
Demand & Complaint
We may first put the agency on notice, then prepare and file a complaint in federal district court naming the proper government defendants.
Government Response
The government has a set time to respond. Many delay cases resolve at this stage, with the agency adjudicating the case to avoid continued litigation.
Resolution
If the case does not settle, we litigate through motions and, if necessary, to judgment, seeking an order compelling action or setting aside the unlawful decision.
What a Federal Case Draws On
Litigation relies on the agency record and proof of delay or error.
Case Record
- Receipt notices and case-status history
- The application or petition at issue
- Any decision, RFE, or correspondence
Proof of Delay or Error
- Published agency processing times
- Records of inquiries and non-responses
- Evidence of harm caused by the delay or decision
Frequently Asked Questions
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