Davila-Bardales v. Immigration & Naturalization Service , 27 F.3d 1 ( 1994 )


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    [FOR COPIES OF OPINION WITH APPENDIX, CONTACT CLERK'S OFFICE FOR
    THE FIRST CIRCUIT COURT OF APPEALS. APPENDIX IS NOT FOUND ON
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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    _________________________

    No. 93-2124

    RICARDO DAVILA-BARDALES,
    Petitioner,

    v.

    IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE,
    Respondent.

    _________________________

    ON PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF
    THE BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS

    ________________________

    Before

    Breyer,* Chief Judge.
    ___________
    Torruella and Selya, Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    _________________________

    Victoria Lewis with whom Greater Boston Legal Services was
    ______________ ______________________________
    on brief for petitioner.
    Iris Gomez, Massachusetts Law Reform Institute, on brief for
    __________ __________________________________
    Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition, Anthony
    _______
    J. DeMarco on brief for Children's Law Center of Massachusetts,
    __________
    Maureen O'Sullivan, Kaplan, O'Sullivan and Friedman, on brief for
    __________________ _______________________________
    National Immigration Project, American Immigration Lawyers
    Association, and Texas Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under
    Law, amici curiae.
    Donald E. Keener, Attorney, Office of Immigration
    ____________________
    Litigation, Civil Division, Department of Justice, with whom
    Frank W. Hunger, Assistant Attorney General, Civil Division, and
    _______________
    Robert Kendall, Jr., Assistant Director, were on brief for
    _____________________
    respondent.

    ________________________
    June 23, 1994
    ________________________

    ____________
    *Chief Judge Stephen Breyer heard oral argument in this matter
    and participated in the drafting of the opinion, but did not














    participate in issuance of the panel's opinion. The remaining
    two panelists therefore issue this opinion pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
    46(d).

































































    SELYA, Circuit Judge. Ricardo Davila-Bardales asks us
    SELYA, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    to review a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) in

    which the BIA affirmed an Immigration Judge's (IJ's) deportation

    order. The parties agree that the BIA's decision rests upon the

    IJ's finding that in late July of 1989 Davila-Bardales, then age

    15, entered this country unlawfully, without inspection by an

    immigration officer. See 8 U.S.C. 1251(a)(1)(B) (1988 & Supp.
    ___

    IV 1992). The parties also agree that rules of the Immigration

    and Naturalization Service (INS) require "clear, unequivocal and

    convincing" evidentiary support for such a finding. 8 C.F.R.

    242.14(a) (1993). They disagree about whether the INS, under its

    own rules and practices, could properly consider the evidence

    that showed unlawful entry in this case evidence that consists

    primarily of Davila-Bardales's own statements and admissions.

    The proof before the IJ featured petitioner's answers

    to questions that the IJ posed directly to petitioner (and

    several other individuals then before the judge) at the

    immigration hearing. These questions were all based on

    information in the Order to Show Cause (the OSC), a form

    indicating that Davila-Bardales was deportable.1 The IJ asked

    the petitioner whether he was a "native and citizen of Peru,"

    whether he "entered the United States near Laredo, Texas, on or

    about July 27, 1989," and whether he did so "through the river,

    through the fence, or conceal[ing] [him]self in some way without

    presenting [him]self to an Immigration Officer" for inspection.

    ____________________

    1The OSC is reproduced in Appendix A hereto.

    3














    Davila-Bardales answered all these questions affirmatively.

    The problem with this evidence is that Davila-Bardales,

    then under the age of 16, was not represented by counsel, nor was

    a guardian, relative, or friend present to advise him at the

    hearing. An INS regulation says that an IJ

    shall not accept an admission of
    deportability from an unrepresented
    respondent who is . . . under age 16 and is
    not accompanied by a guardian, relative or
    friend . . . .

    8 C.F.R. 242.16(b). And, as the INS concedes, this regulation

    removes the sting from these particular admissions.

    A second set of evidentiary items contained in the

    record of the immigration hearing consists of the petitioner's

    answers to further questions that the IJ asked after he (the

    judge) realized that petitioner's age and lack of representation

    created a potential legal problem. At that point, the IJ showed

    Davila-Bardales a form, called a form I-213,2 which is

    apparently a record of an officer's interview of Davila-Bardales,

    made soon after the Border Patrol apprehended him near Laredo on

    the evening of his alleged entry. After handing Davila-Bardales

    a copy of the form, the IJ pointed out that it said that Davila-

    Bardales was "a native and citizen of Peru," who "last entered

    the United States on July 27, 1989, near Laredo," and was "not

    inspected at that time." In response, Davila-Bardales said that

    "everything is correct."

    We are not certain whether the INS means to rely upon

    ____________________

    2This form is reproduced in Appendix B hereto.

    4














    this statement ("everything is correct") as itself showing

    deportability. In any event, the INS cannot do so due to the

    very same regulation that prevents it from relying on

    petitioner's responses to the OSC. Courts should not exalt form

    over substance without compelling reason, particularly when

    important rights are at stake. So it is here: we perceive no

    functional difference between asking petitioner whether the

    allegations in the OSC are true and asking him whether identical

    allegations in the form I-213 are true; and, moreover, we

    perceive no compelling reason for making an artificial

    distinction. Hence, petitioner's statement, considered as

    substantive evidence, would seem "an admission of deportability"

    made to the IJ by an "unrepresented respondent . . . under

    age 16" who was "not accompanied by a guardian, relative, or

    friend," 8 C.F.R. 242.16(b), and, thus, not admissible as

    evidence at the hearing. Simply asking Davila-Bardales whether

    the same allegations are accurate, but reading them from a

    different piece of paper, does not cure the basic legal defect

    that mars the initial questioning.

    Little daunted, the INS points to a third kind of

    evidence admitted at the hearing: the I-213 form itself. That

    form purports to memorialize an interview between Davila-Bardales

    and a Border Patrol officer. According to petitioner, this

    interview took place sometime after midnight at the "frontier" on

    the day he entered this country, before an official who "spoke

    little Spanish," and who (petitioner says) "hit" him "in the


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    face."

    We agree with the INS that the regulation we have

    quoted does not explicitly apply to this evidence. After all,

    the regulation, in context, seems to refer to the immigration

    hearing and the IJ's acceptance of an "admission" of

    deportability at that hearing. It says nothing about admissions
    ________________

    made at other times and under other circumstances. See 8 C.F.R.
    ___

    242.16(b).3

    Nonetheless, the BIA, in its case law, has expressed

    considerable skepticism about the admissibility of similar

    statements made to Border Patrol officers by persons who are both

    unrepresented and under the age of sixteen. By way of


    ____________________

    3The regulation provides in pertinent part:

    The special inquiry officer shall require the
    respondent to plead to the order to show
    cause by stating whether he admits or denies
    the factual allegations and his deportability
    under the charges contained therein. If the
    respondent admits the factual allegations and
    admits his deportability under the charges
    and the special inquiry officer is satisfied
    that no issues of law or fact remain, the
    special inquiry officer may determine that
    the deportability as charged has been
    established by the admissions of the
    respondent. The special inquiry officer
    shall not accept an admission of
    deportability from an unrepresented
    respondent who is incompetent or under age 16
    and is not accompanied by a guardian,
    relative, or friend . . . . When, pursuant
    to this paragraph, the special inquiry
    officer may not accept an admission of
    deportability, he shall direct a hearing on
    the issues.

    8 C.F.R. 242.16(b).

    6














    illustration, it has said the following about such "statements

    made to an arresting officer during a custodial interrogation":

    On its face, 8 C.F.R. 242.16(b) does
    not bar statements made during custodial
    interrogation. However, where the Service at
    the deportation hearing seeks to meet their
    burden of proof by introducing an admission
    of deportability made by an unaccompanied
    minor under 16 during his custodial
    interrogation, to allow admission of these
    statements circumvents the underlying intent
    of the above-quoted regulation. If, pursuant
    ____________
    to 8 C.F.R. 242.16(b), an admission of
    _____________________________________________
    deportability by an unrepresented minor made
    _____________________________________________
    with all the procedural protections that
    _____________________________________________
    exist in a formal hearing before [an
    _____________________________________________
    immigration judge] lacks sufficient
    _____________________________________________
    trustworthiness to be admissible, then
    _____________________________________________
    statements made to an arresting officer
    _____________________________________________
    during a custodial interrogation are at least
    _____________________________________________
    of comparable untrustworthiness. Moreover,
    ________________________________
    the regulation recognizes that an
    unaccompanied minor under 16 lacks sufficient
    maturity to appreciate the significance of an
    interrogation by a Service official and lacks
    the capacity to evaluate the foreseeable
    consequences of any responses provided, and
    this recognition should be applicable even
    during the initial stages of the Service's
    investigative process.

    While we acknowledge that the
    regulations do not specifically require that
    ___
    a minor be accompanied by a "guardian,
    relative or friend" during a custodial
    interview, we do find that any admissions or
    _________________
    confessions allegedly made by an
    _____________________________________________
    unaccompanied minor under 16 during his
    _____________________________________________
    interview will be treated as inherently
    _____________________________________________
    suspect. This does not mean that in a proper
    _______
    case a minor's own admissions are not binding
    upon him. If a minor is of sufficient age
    and discretion to make him a competent
    witness, then he is competent to tell the
    truth against himself in court, and also
    competent to tell the truth by making
    admissions against himself outside of court.

    In re Hernandez-Jimenez, No. A29-988-097, slip op. at 6 (BIA Nov.
    _______________________


    7














    8, 1991) (emphasis supplied; citations omitted).

    What is more, on the very day the BIA decided this

    case, it stated in the course of deciding a different case that,

    if the INS seeks to admit an I-213 form against a juvenile,

    the circumstances surrounding the Service's
    preparation of the Form I-213 must be
    _________
    carefully examined to insure that alienage
    ___________________
    has been properly established.

    The BIA added that,

    where the Service seeks to establish alienage
    based on alleged admissions during the
    interrogation of an unaccompanied minor, the
    ___
    Service should present evidence from the
    _____________________________________________
    arresting officers in order to demonstrate
    ___________________
    that the interview was conducted in a non-
    coercive environment and that the respondent
    was competent to respond to the questions
    posed to him.

    In re Garcia, No. A70-006-067, slip op. at 3, 5 (BIA Aug. 17,
    _____________

    1993) (emphasis supplied).

    We do not see how the BIA can reconcile these

    statements, made in other cases, with its position in this case.

    The matter at hand seems to present exactly the sort of

    circumstances that the BIA, in those other cases, addressed. It

    involves a midnight Border Patrol investigation, an underage

    suspect, an absence of legal representation, and an allegation of

    physical abuse. Yet, here, the INS presented no evidence from

    the arresting officers. Its records do not indicate that it

    carefully examined the circumstances surrounding the preparation

    of form I-213. Nor did the IJ, in the words the BIA used in

    Hernandez-Jimenez, treat the admissions made by Davila-Bardales
    _________________

    (an unaccompanied minor) as "inherently suspect." And as a

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    crowning blow, the BIA's opinion in this case, albeit stating in

    a conclusory fashion that petitioner understood the questions and

    answers at the hearing, does not discuss the integrity or

    reliability of the Border Patrol's interrogation.

    Though the law does not require that all officials of a

    large agency "react similarly or interpret regulations

    identically" in every case, Puerto Rican Cement Co. v. EPA, 889
    _______________________ ___

    F.2d 292, 299 (1st Cir. 1989), it does prohibit an agency from

    adopting significantly inconsistent policies that result in the

    creation of "conflicting lines of precedent governing the

    identical situation." Shaw's Supermarkets, Inc. v. NLRB, 884
    __________________________ ____

    F.2d 34, 37 (1st Cir. 1989) (citation omitted). The purpose of

    this doctrine, as we have explained before, is "to prevent the

    agency itself from significantly changing [its] policies without

    conscious awareness of, and consideration of the need for,

    change." Puerto Rican Cement Co., 889 F.2d at 299.
    _______________________

    This is not to say that an agency, once it has

    announced a precedent, must forever hew to it. Experience is

    often the best teacher, and agencies retain a substantial measure

    of freedom to refine, reformulate, and even reverse their

    precedents in the light of new insights and changed

    circumstances. See Rust v. Sullivan, 500 U.S. 173, 186-87
    ___ ____ ________

    (1991); Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins.
    _________________________ __________________________

    Co., 463 U.S. 29, 42 (1983). However, the law demands a certain
    ___

    orderliness. If an administrative agency decides to depart

    significantly from its own precedent, it must confront the issue


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    squarely and explain why the departure is reasonable. See
    ___

    Congreso de Uniones Industriales de Puerto Rico v. NLRB, 966 F.2d
    _______________________________________________ ____

    36, 39 (1st Cir. 1992); Shaw's Supermarkets, 884 F.2d at 41.
    ___________________

    The question of how the BIA will treat border patrol

    interrogation and any consequent admissions made by underage,

    unrepresented persons is important. In adjudicating Davila-

    Bardales's status, the BIA appears to have blazed a new trail

    that veers significantly from its own prior precedent. This

    zigzag course is not open to an agency when, as now, the agency

    has failed to explain why it is changing direction (or even to

    acknowledge in the later decision that it is detouring from a

    beaten path). See Shaw's Supermarkets, 884 F.2d at 36. In light
    ___ ___________________

    of the unavowed, unexplained deviation, we shall remand this case

    to the BIA so that it may focus upon the matter and either adhere

    to its position in Hernandez-Jimenez and Garcia, or relate the
    _________________ ______

    reasons that make an alteration in that position appropriate.

    We mention a few other points. For one thing,

    Hernandez-Jimenez and Garcia apparently are unpublished decisions
    _________________ ______

    and, thus, not formally in the category of "selected decisions

    designated by the Board," so they do not constitute "precedent"

    in the technical sense. See 8 C.F.R. 3.1(g) (1993); see also
    ___ ___ ____

    Leal-Rodriguez v. INS, 990 F.2d 939, 946 (7th Cir. 1993).
    ______________ ___

    However, the INS has not mentioned that point in this appeal, nor

    does it argue that it may adopt inconsistent positions in its

    unpublished decisions; instead, it spends five pages of its brief

    attempting (in our view, with a complete and utter lack of


    10














    success) to distinguish Hernandez-Jimenez and Garcia on the
    _________________ ______

    facts. Because the INS has chosen not to rely on this argument,

    we will not adopt it as a basis for sustaining the BIA's

    decision. See, e.g., Sandstrom v. Chemlawn Corp., 904 F.2d 83,
    ___ ____ _________ ______________

    86 (1st Cir. 1990) (holding that arguments not raised in the

    briefs are waived).

    We note, moreover, that even if Hernandez-Jimenez and
    _________________

    Garcia are not "precedent" in the technical sense, the prospect
    ______

    of a government agency treating virtually identical legal issues

    differently in different cases, without any semblance of a

    plausible explanation, raises precisely the kinds of concerns

    about arbitrary agency action that the consistency doctrine

    addresses (at least where the earlier decisions were not summary

    in nature, but, rather, contained fully reasoned explications of

    why a certain view of the law is correct). Put bluntly, we see

    no earthly reason why the mere fact of nonpublication should

    permit an agency to take a view of the law in one case that is

    flatly contrary to the view it set out in earlier (yet

    contemporary) cases, without explaining why it is doing so.4

    Hence, we do not believe that the BIA, in the circumstances at

    hand, can take refuge behind the determination not to publish


    ____________________

    4In this vein, we note that the Leal-Rodriguez court, while
    ______________
    stating that it would "not bind the BIA with a single non-
    precedential, unpublished decision," also observed that the
    unpublished decision there at issue was not, in fact,
    inconsistent with the BIA's position in the case before it, and
    that, therefore, the unpublished ruling "would not help"
    petitioner even if it had precedential value. Leal-Rodriguez,
    ______________
    990 F.2d at 946 & n.9. That is not the situation here.

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    Hernandez-Jimenez and Garcia.
    _________________ ______

    Finally, the INS argues, for the first time on this

    appeal, that further proceedings are pointless because the

    petitioner has admitted his unlawful entry once again in an

    asylum petition and other related materials. We are uncertain,

    however, about the circumstances surrounding the preparation of

    these materials; we are also uncertain as to the extent to which

    the materials are admissible. See, e.g., 8 C.F.R. 242.17(e)
    ___ ____

    (stating that an asylum application "shall not be held to

    constitute a concession of alienage or deportability in any case

    in which the respondent does not admit his alienage or

    deportability"). Consequently, we think that the course of both

    fairness and prudence is to leave this aspect of the matter open.

    Cf. Unemployment Comp. Comm'n v. Aragon, 329 U.S. 143, 155 (1946)
    ___ _________________________ ______

    ("A reviewing court usurps the agency's function when it sets

    aside the administrative determination upon a ground not

    theretofore presented and deprives the [agency] of an opportunity

    to consider the matter, make its ruling, and state the reasons

    for its action."); Sullivan v. CIA, 992 F.2d 1249, 1256 (1st Cir.
    ________ ___

    1993) (refusing to consider newly emergent ground for possible

    relief from agency action not considered below). The INS remains

    free to raise it, or to present additional evidence relevant to

    Davila-Bardales's deportability, on remand.

    We need go no further. For the reasons set forth

    herein, we grant the petition for review, vacate the BIA's

    decision, and remand the case for further proceedings consistent


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    with this opinion.

    So ordered.
    So ordered.
    __________


















































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Document Info

Docket Number: 93-2124

Citation Numbers: 27 F.3d 1, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 15507, 1994 WL 269810

Judges: Breyer, Torruella, Selya

Filed Date: 6/23/1994

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/4/2024