Goncalves v. INS ( 1993 )


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  • September 28, 1993
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 92-1122
    No. 92-2272
    JOSE MANUEL GONCALVES,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE,
    Respondent.
    ON PETITIONS FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER OF
    THE BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS
    Before
    Breyer, Chief Judge,
    Selya and Stahl, Circuit Judges.
    David Yavner for petitioner.
    Donald  Keener, Acting  Assistant Director,  with whom  Stuart  M.
    Gerson, Assistant  Attorney General,  Civil Division, Anne  C. Arries,
    Attorney, Office of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, Department
    of  Justice, and David  M. McConnell, Attorney,  Office of Immigration
    Litigation,  Civil Division, Department of  Justice, were on brief for
    respondent.
    BREYER, Chief  Judge.   The  Board of  Immigration
    Appeals has a general procedural rule that says it "may  . .
    . reopen or reconsider any case  in which it has rendered  a
    decision."   8 C.F.R.   3.2  (1993).  In a  series of cases,
    however,  the  Board  has  developed an  exception  to  this
    procedural rule.  The exception relates to a certain kind of
    Board  decision:   whether  or not  to grant  "discretionary
    relief" which would permit an alien, otherwise "deportable,"
    nonetheless to remain in the United States.  Immigration and
    Nationality  Act  (INA)      212(c),  8  U.S.C.     1182(c).
    According to  the procedural  exception, once the  Board has
    denied   the   alien's   initial    "discretionary   relief"
    application (and thus the Board has finally found the  alien
    "deportable"), the alien may not ask the Board to reopen his
    deportation  proceedings for  further  consideration of  his
    application.  See,  e.g., Matter of  Cerna, Int. Dec.  3161,
    slip op. at 3-4 (BIA Oct. 7, 1991).
    This  appeal requires  us  to  decide whether  the
    Board's "no reopening" exception to its ordinary "reopening"
    rule is lawful.  The Third and Fifth Circuits have held that
    it is  lawful.  See  Katsis v. INS,  
    997 F.2d 1067
      (3d Cir.
    1993);  Ghassan v. INS, 
    972 F.2d 631
    , 637  (5th Cir. 1992),
    cert. denied, 
    113 S. Ct. 1412
     (1993); see also Cerna v. INS,
    
    979 F.2d 212
    ,  213 (11th Cir.  1992) (table), aff'g  without
    opinion  Matter of Cerna, Int. Dec. 3161 (BIA Oct. 7, 1991).
    The Second and Ninth Circuits have held that it is not.  See
    Butros  v. INS,  
    990 F.2d 1142
     (9th  Cir. 1993)  (en banc);
    Vargas v.  INS, 
    938 F.2d 358
      (2d Cir. 1991).   We, like the
    latter two circuits, do not understand the basis for the "no
    reopening" exception.    In  our view,  the  Board  has  not
    properly explained why it will consider motions to reopen in
    most  cases   but  not   in  the  particular   circumstances
    illustrated  here.  We therefore hold that the Board may not
    invoke this  exception as  grounds for refusing  to consider
    the  petitioner's motion  to  reopen in  this  case, and  we
    remand the case  to the Board  for further consideration  of
    that motion.
    I
    A.  Legal Background
    To understand the issue before us, the reader must
    keep in mind the following legal background.  First, the INA
    lists a host of  grounds for excluding or  deporting aliens,
    including  conviction of a drug-related crime.  See, e.g., 8
    U.S.C.           1182(a)(2)    (exclusion),    1251(a)(2)(B)
    (deportation).   The Act also  says that a  certain class of
    these "deportable" aliens  -- those who have  lived here for
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    seven years  as  aliens  "lawfully  admitted  for  permanent
    residence" -- can ask the Attorney General (i.e., the Board,
    see 8 U.S.C.    1103(a);  8 C.F.R.     3.0, 3.1(a),  (b)(3),
    212.3(a)(2), (e)(3) (1993)) to  exercise a kind of equitable
    discretion that would permit them to remain here even though
    they  have,  for example,  committed a  drug  crime.   INA
    212(c), 8 U.S.C.   1182(c) (see Appendix for text).  The Act
    defines the class of those eligible for this relief as those
    who, for seven years,
    hav[e]   been   lawfully  accorded   the
    privilege of residing permanently in the
    United   States   as  an   immigrant  in
    accordance  with  the immigration  laws,
    such status not having changed.
    8 U.S.C.     1101(20) (emphasis  added) (defining  "lawfully
    admitted for permanent residence").
    Second,  an Immigration  Judge (IJ)  normally will
    make  the initial decision as  to whether a particular alien
    is "deportable,"  8  C.F.R.    242.8(a) (1993),  and if  so,
    whether  he   is  eligible  to  apply   for  section  212(c)
    "discretionary relief."   Id.    212.3(a)(2), (e).   If  the
    alien is eligible, the IJ will further decide whether, given
    the "equities," the Attorney General will grant that relief.
    Id.;  Matter of Marin, 16 I. &  N. Dec. 581, 584 (BIA 1978);
    see   generally  3   Charles  Gordon   &   Stanley  Mailman,
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    Immigration Law and Procedure    74.01[2][a]-[b] (1993).  If
    dissatisfied  with the result,  the alien may  appeal to the
    Board  of  Immigration  Appeals,   8  C.F.R.      3.1(b)(3),
    212.3(e)(3) (1993), which may  hold a hearing, take evidence
    and  decide the issues  de novo.   Hazzard v. INS,  
    951 F.2d 435
    , 440 n.4 (1st Cir. 1991); Matter of Lok, 18 I. & N. Dec.
    101,   106  (BIA  1981);  1   Gordon  &  Mailman,  supra,
    3.05[5][b].  If the Board  reaches a negative decision,  the
    regulations (while phrased negatively, see infra pp. 9 - 10)
    indicate that the alien normally may ask the Board either to
    reconsider its decision or to reopen the proceeding in light
    of  "circumstances  which  have  arisen  subsequent  to  the
    hearing."  8  C.F.R.   3.2  (1993).  The  Supreme Court  has
    pointed out that the  regulation governing motions to reopen
    "does  not affirmatively  require  the Board  to reopen  the
    proceedings under any particular condition."  INS v. Jong Ha
    Wang, 
    450 U.S. 139
    ,  144 n.5 (1981) (per curiam).  The issue
    before  us, however,  concerns  not whether  the Board  must
    grant the motion, but whether it must consider it.
    Third,  despite these  regulations, the  Board has
    held  in  a series  of cases  that  an alien,  resident here
    lawfully for seven years but under an administratively final
    deportation  order,  may  not  ask the  Board  to  reopen  a
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    proceeding   ordering   deportation   to    obtain   further
    consideration  of  "discretionary   relief"  under   section
    212(c).   The Board has  based these holdings  on the theory
    that a final Board  decision ordering deportation means that
    the  alien's "status"  has "changed."   He  is therefore  no
    longer  "lawfully admitted for  permanent residence,"  see 8
    U.S.C.   1101(20),  and thus falls  outside the category  of
    those whom  section 212(c) permits to  ask for discretionary
    relief.   And  since the  alien would  now be  ineligible to
    apply for section 212(c) relief in  the first instance, see,
    e.g., Rivera  v. INS, 
    810 F.2d 540
    , 541 (5th Cir. 1987), the
    Board  reasons that  he  also  may  not  move  to  reopen  a
    previously  decided section 212(c)  application.  See, e.g.,
    Katsis, 
    997 F.2d at 1069
    ; Butros, 
    990 F.2d at 1143
    .   The
    Board  does not, however, deny  the alien the  right to move
    for   reconsideration  of   the   earlier   section   212(c)
    application.  Cerna, slip op. at 5.
    B.  Factual Background
    The case before us involves a resident alien, Jose
    Manuel Goncalves, who entered the United States as a baby in
    1968 and  who has lived  here ever since.   He has committed
    serious crimes, including  drug crimes.   In late 1989,  the
    INS began  deportation proceedings.  Goncalves conceded that
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    he  was  deportable.    Goncalves then  asked  the  Attorney
    General to exercise equitable  discretion in his favor under
    section 212(c).  An IJ rejected this request on May 21, 1991
    and ordered him deported.  On January  8, 1992, the Board of
    Immigration Appeals, after weighing the various equities for
    and  against  Goncalves,  also rejected  the  "discretionary
    relief"  request   and  affirmed  the   IJ,  thus  rendering
    Goncalves'  deportation order  "final."   8  C.F.R.    243.1
    (1993).   Goncalves  then  moved to  reopen the  deportation
    proceeding  so   that  he  could  present   letters  and  an
    employment  record  that,  in  his  view,  amounted  to  new
    evidence  of  his rehabilitation  sufficient  to  change the
    outcome of the Board's "discretionary" calculus.
    After a  series of proceedings  not here relevant,
    the Board, on October  8, 1992, denied the motion  to reopen
    on the sole ground that Goncalves, his "status . . .  having
    changed" by virtue of  the Board's "final" deportation order
    of  January 8, 1992,  was no  longer "lawfully  admitted for
    permanent residence" and therefore "[could]  not establish a
    prima facie case for relief."  The Board did not address the
    merits  of his request to reopen.  Goncalves now appeals the
    Board's denial  of his motion to reopen.  He argues that the
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    law requires the Board at least  to consider it.  We believe
    he is correct.
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    II
    Analysis
    The  Board's  refusal  to  allow  aliens  to  make
    certain "reopening" motions is, in essence, a detail of  its
    procedure.   In deciding the lawfulness of such a detail, we
    recognize that  Congress  intended the  Attorney General  to
    have  considerable   leeway  in  working   out  the  precise
    procedures  for  determining  contested  issues  related  to
    deportation  and   "discretionary  relief."    8  U.S.C.
    1103(a), 1182(c).   The  Attorney General has  delegated the
    authority  to  work out  such procedures  to  the Board.   8
    U.S.C.   1103(a); 28 C.F.R.     0.115-0.117 (1991); 8 C.F.R.
    3.0, 3.1(a), 3.1(d)(3) (1993).  We therefore must respect
    the Board's judgment  in such  matters.  See,  e.g., FCC  v.
    Pottsville Broadcasting Co., 
    309 U.S. 134
    , 143 (1940); Union
    of Concerned  Scientists v.  Nuclear Regulatory Comm'n,  
    920 F.2d 50
    , 54 (D.C.  Cir. 1990); American  Trucking Ass'ns v.
    United  States,  
    627 F.2d 1313
    ,  1320-21  (D.C. Cir.  1980)
    (deferring to agency  regulations governing intervention  on
    ground that "procedural regulations are generally within the
    discretion of  the agency");  Wagner Seed  Co. v.  Bush, 
    946 F.2d 918
    , 920  (D.C. Cir.  1991), cert. denied,  
    112 S. Ct. 1584
      (1992).   The Administrative  Procedure  Act provides,
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    however, that the Board  may not act arbitrarily  or "abuse"
    its "discretion."  5  U.S.C.   706(2)(A).  And,  even though
    we  give  the  Board  considerable  leeway,  we  nonetheless
    conclude that it has acted arbitrarily in this instance.  We
    reach this conclusion for the following three reasons, taken
    together.
    First, one of  the Board's procedural  regulations
    strongly suggests that it will  permit motions to reopen  in
    cases of this sort.   The regulation first makes  clear that
    "[t]he Board  may . .  . reopen  or reconsider  any case  in
    which it has rendered a decision" (unless the motion is made
    after the alien has left the United States).  8 C.F.R.   3.2
    (1993)  (emphasis  added).   The  regulation  then says  the
    following:
    Reopening or reconsideration of any case
    in which a decision has been made by the
    Board, whether  [or not] . . . requested
    by the  party affected by  the decision,
    shall be only upon written motion to the
    Board.  Motions to reopen in deportation
    proceedings shall not be  granted unless
    it  appears to  the Board  that evidence
    sought to be offered is material and was
    not  available and  could not  have been
    discovered  or  presented at  the former
    hearing;  nor shall any motion to reopen
    for the  purpose of affording  the alien
    an opportunity to apply  for any form of
    discretionary  relief  be granted  if it
    appears that the  alien's right to apply
    for  such relief was  fully explained to
    him and an opportunity to apply therefor
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    was afforded him  at the former  hearing
    unless the relief is sought on the basis
    of   circumstances  which   have  arisen
    subsequent to the hearing.  A  motion to
    reopen . .  . shall not be made by . . .
    a  person   who   is  the   subject   of
    deportation  proceedings  subsequent  to
    his departure from the United States.
    
    Id.
      We recognize that the regulation is phrased in negative
    terms, which  means that  it does not  explicitly grant  any
    right  to  anyone  ever  to  ask  to  reopen  a  proceeding.
    Nonetheless, consider the words
    nor  shall any motion  to reopen for the
    purpose  of  affording   the  alien   an
    opportunity  to apply  for  any form  of
    discretionary  relief be  granted .  . .
    unless the relief is sought on the basis
    of   circumstances  which   have  arisen
    subsequent to the hearing.
    
    Id.
      (emphasis added).   Coupled  with the  Board's explicit
    authority to reopen  any case, what  could those words  mean
    but  that the alien does have  a right to move for reopening
    to  ask for  "discretionary relief  . .  .  on the  basis of
    circumstances   which  have   arisen   subsequent   to   the
    rehearing"?  See  Butros v.  INS, 
    990 F.2d 1142
    , 1144  (9th
    Cir. 1993) (en banc) ("Board's regulations do say[] that you
    may have a second round").  But cf. Katsis v.  INS, 
    997 F.2d 1067
    , 1073 n.6 (3d Cir.  1993) (arguing that the  emphasized
    language is "hardly a  rousing encouragement for or approval
    of" using "evidence  manufactured after  the fact .  . .  to
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    support a motion  to reopen").   An agency,  of course,  has
    every  right to interpret its  own rules.   E.g., Stinson v.
    United  States, 
    113 S. Ct. 1913
    ,  1919  (1993); Bowles  v.
    Seminole Rock &  Sand Co., 
    325 U.S. 410
    ,  414 (1945).   But
    there are limits, set  by what is "reasonable."   Ford Motor
    Credit  Co.  v.  Milhollin,  
    444 U.S. 555
    ,  565-66  (1980);
    Commonwealth of  Massachusetts, Dept. of  Public Welfare  v.
    Secretary of Agriculture, 
    984 F.2d 514
    , 524  (1st Cir. 1993)
    ("an   administrative  agency   enjoys  great   latitude  to
    interpret its own rules as long as those interpretations are
    reasonable") (emphasis  added).  And the  agency must follow
    its own rules,  as reasonably  interpreted. Arizona  Grocery
    Co. v. Atchison,  T. & S.F.  Ry. Co., 
    284 U.S. 370
    ,  389-90
    (1932).
    Second,  the   Board,  while  claiming   that  its
    exception   is  a   reasonable   "interpretation"   of   its
    regulation,  reached  that  interpretation  by  following  a
    complicated logical  syllogism that, in our  view, is either
    irrelevant or erroneous.   The syllogism runs  approximately
    as follows:
    (1) The  INA allows section  212(c) "discretionary
    relief" only upon the  request of a resident alien
    whose "status" has not "changed."  See 8 U.S.C.
    1101(20), 1182(c); supra pp. 3 - 4.
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    12
    (2)  The  INA does  not  say just  when,  during a
    deportation proceeding, the alien's "status  . . .
    change[s]."
    (3) The  Board thus has considerable  legal leeway
    in interpreting  the statute with  respect to  the
    precise  time  when  "status  .  .  .  change[s]."
    Chevron  U.S.A.  v.   Natural  Resources   Defense
    Council,  
    467 U.S. 837
      (1984); Matter  of Cerna,
    Int.  Dec. 3161, slip op. at 10 (BIA Oct. 7, 1991)
    (citing Chevron).
    (4)  In Matter of  Lok, 18 I.  & N.  Dec. 101, 106
    (BIA 1981), and later cases, the Board held that a
    "status change" takes place  at the time the Board
    enters a final  deportation order.  E.g.,  Nwolise
    v.  INS, No. 91-1173, slip  op. at 4,  7 (4th Cir.
    Sept.  3, 1993); Perez-Rodriguez  v. INS,  No. 92-
    3081, slip op. at  5, 7 (7th Cir. Aug.  25, 1993);
    Rivera v. INS, 
    810 F.2d 540
     (5th Cir. 1987); cases
    cited supra pp. 2 - 3,
    (5) Once that final deportation  order is entered,
    then, since  the  alien's "status"  has  "changed"
    (see step  (4)), the  alien must be  ineligible to
    ask for discretionary relief.
    (6) A motion  to reopen amounts  to a request  for
    discretionary relief.
    Therefore,  (7)  an  alien whom  the  Board orders
    deported  cannot  ask  the  Board  to  reopen  the
    proceeding to request discretionary relief.
    The flaw in this  syllogism is that step (4)  does
    not  lead to step (5).  The  law permits the Board to decide
    (within reason) when  a "change of status" takes  place, but
    it also permits the Board  to decide that moment differently
    for  different purposes.    Cf.  Butros,  
    990 F.2d at 1145
    (discussing the  "fallacy of . .  . the belief that  what is
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    final for  certain administrative purposes is  final for all
    purposes").  In Lok  (the source of the problem),  the Board
    considered a substantive question,  namely, whether or not a
    person  ordered  deported after  less  than  seven years  of
    lawful residence  could continue to accrue  time towards the
    magic  "seven  years"  while  his deportation  case  was  on
    appeal.  Lok, 18 I. & N. Dec. at 102-05.  The Board sensibly
    held  that the "seven  year" clock stopped  ticking once the
    Board  ordered  deportation.   It  found  that his  "status"
    "changed" at that moment  for the purpose of  accruing time.
    See  Vargas, 
    938 F.2d at 361
      ("Matter of  Lok, therefore,
    stands only for the proposition  that an alien cannot become
    eligible for discretionary relief through subsequent accrual
    of  time  towards  the  seven-year threshold,  once  he  has
    conceded  that he is deportable."); Lok v. INS, 
    681 F.2d 107
    (2d Cir. 1982); Lok, 18 I. & N. Dec. at 105.
    Lok  does  not  mean, however,  that  the  alien's
    "status"  must   also  "change"  for  the   purpose  of  his
    eligibility  to  ask for  reopening.   After all,  the Board
    itself agrees  that the  alien remains eligible  to ask  for
    reconsideration.   8 C.F.R.    3.2 (1993); Matter  of Cerna,
    Int.  Dec. 3161,  slip op. at  5 (BIA  Oct. 7,  1991).  Even
    after entry  of the  Board's "final" deportation  order, the
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    alien can call to the Board's  attention evidence already in
    the record  in an effort to show  that the Board's denial of
    discretionary  relief  is  unlawful  or to  convince  it  to
    exercise its  "discretion" differently.  Cerna,  slip op. at
    5-6.   Moreover, the alien remains free to appeal the denial
    of discretionary relief  to the  courts.  The  entry of  the
    Board's final order  does not "change" his "status" for this
    purpose  (if it did, it  would moot the  appeal by making it
    impossible for the alien  to receive "discretionary  relief"
    even if he wins).   See Butros, 
    990 F.2d at 1145
    .  In short,
    Lok's  substantive  conclusion may  or  may  not permit  the
    procedural exception to the Board's reopening regulations at
    issue here, but it certainly does not require it.
    Either the  Board understands that  step (4)  does
    not compel step (5) (i.e., that Lok and  other "substantive"
    change  of  status  precedents  do not  legally  compel  its
    present position  on  motions to  reopen),  or it  does  not
    understand  that.  If  it does  not, then  it has  based its
    procedural exception upon a legal misunderstanding, in which
    case it must reconsider the matter.   See Camp v. Pitts, 
    411 U.S. 138
    , 143 (1973) (per curiam); SEC v. Chenery Corp., 
    318 U.S. 80
    , 93-95  (1943) (where  agency's decision  rests, in
    significant part,  upon an  incorrect view  of what  the law
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    requires, court should set forth the correct view and remand
    the  case for new agency  decision).  If  it does understand
    that  its procedural  exception does  not follow  inevitably
    from Lok, then it has failed to  explain why it adopted that
    exception, for its  opinions on the matter,  and its efforts
    to justify the exception  in court, rely in large  part upon
    Lok  and a  syllogism that  is basically  irrelevant.   That
    syllogism --  based upon the substantive  "change of status"
    statute, 8  U.S.C.   1101(20)  -- is irrelevant  because the
    Board  does  not need  to refer  to  the "change  of status"
    statute to  justify its procedural "no  reopening" exception
    if  that  exception  is  reasonable, and  reference  to  the
    statute cannot help the Board justify the exception if  that
    exception  is not  reasonable.   The basic  question is  the
    reasonableness of  the exception, not the  intricate maze of
    relationships between  it and the substantive  statute.  And
    the reasonableness  of the  exception seems  doubtful, given
    the fact  that its finely-spun distinctions  (e.g., allowing
    reconsideration  but  not   reopening)  have  virtually   no
    explanation apart from  those based on the syllogism.   See,
    e.g., Cerna, slip op. at 5-7.
    Third, we say  "virtually" because the  Board does
    offer one practical consideration in an effort to answer the
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    question  "why is the 'no reopening' exception reasonable?."
    It says  that the  exception is reasonable  because it  will
    prevent aliens  from "stringing out" their  claims, i.e., by
    removing  the  possibility  of  the  alien's  asking  for  a
    reopening, the exception also removes the alien's temptation
    to  withhold  some evidence  initially  in  order to  obtain
    reopening  after  an adverse  decision.    Some courts  have
    accepted this justification.  See, e.g., Katsis, 
    997 F.2d at 1072, 1074
    .   We cannot  do so,  however, both  because the
    Board seems to  rely more  upon its  logical syllogism  than
    upon this  practical justification,  see, e.g.,  Cerna, slip
    op. at 3-7, and because the explanation itself raises fairly
    obvious questions that the Board has not yet answered.
    Why,  for  example,  isn't  the   Board's  printed
    regulation  -- limiting  reopenings to  those sought  on the
    "basis of  circumstances that have arisen  subsequent to the
    hearing,"  see  supra  p.  10 --  sufficient  to  remove the
    temptation to withhold evidence,  thus obviating the Board's
    practical  concern?   Why  is  the  "stringing out"  problem
    greater  where "discretionary  relief" involving  seven year
    resident aliens is at issue than in other deportation cases?
    Why  is the  "stringing out" problem  greater in  such cases
    than where  other "discretionary relief" matters,  such as a
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    request for  suspension of  deportation under INA    244(a),
    are  at  issue?    See  8  U.S.C.     1254(a);  8 C.F.R.
    3.1(b)(2),  242.8(a), 242.22,  242.21(a), 244.1   (1993);  3
    Gordon & Mailman, supra,    74.07[5][e], [7].  Why  does the
    Board  absolutely  forbid motions  to reopen  section 212(c)
    discretionary  relief applications?   Does it really believe
    that circumstances could never  change enough, that even the
    most heroic, public  spirited, self-sacrificing action  by a
    seven  year resident  alien, after  the  "final" deportation
    order, could not alter the outcome of the "equity" calculus?
    We  do  not  say  that  no  satisfactory  answers  to  these
    questions exist, but  we do say that the Board  seems not to
    have asked them.
    We  stress,  and  we  well  understand,  that  the
    exigencies of  the practical world  in which the  Board must
    work  require that we  do not, and  we will not,  expect the
    Board   to  answer   every  potentially   relevant  question
    regarding its  procedures.  Here, however,  the problem goes
    beyond the fact  that the Board  has left obvious  questions
    unanswered.   More fundamentally, the Board  has not focused
    directly  on  the  basic  question of  whether  or  not  the
    particular  procedure before  us  is desirable,  nor has  it
    clearly  explained its  position.   Further, it  has instead
    -18-
    18
    unnecessarily  relied  on a  logical  syllogism involving  a
    theoretical analysis of its own cases interpreting a statute
    of  only  marginal relevance  to  the  problem, rather  than
    squarely  facing  the  practical  question  of  whether  the
    procedural  exception is good or bad.  Finally, it has acted
    in the face  of a  regulation that seems  rather clearly  to
    authorize the very kind of "reopening" motion that its cases
    then deny.  Taking all these circumstances together, we find
    the practice insufficiently justified.   That is to say,  we
    find no legally  adequate explanation of  why the Board  has
    departed from  the rule set forth in its own regulation.  We
    therefore  conclude  that the  Board's  departure  from that
    regulation is "arbitrary," and we set it aside.
    III
    Relief
    Having   set  aside  the  Board's  exception  that
    absolutely  forbids   motions  to  reopen,  we   remand  for
    consideration of the petitioner's motion to reopen his case.
    We  shall  not decide  petitioner's  further  appeal of  the
    Board's basic decision to deport him until the Board decides
    the motion to reopen.
    We  also have  a suggestion.   The  circuit courts
    have now split three to two  about the lawfulness of the "no
    -19-
    19
    reopening" exception.  Obviously,  the Board will be tempted
    to  ask  for Supreme  Court review.    There is,  however, a
    simpler way.  Why  does the Board not consider  amending its
    procedural regulations  to reach  the procedural  result for
    which it argues here?   Cf. Butros,  
    990 F.2d at 1144
      ("The
    Board could, no doubt, alter this regulation . . . ."), 1146
    (Fernandez, J., concurring) ("If the INS now wishes to adopt
    different regulations, that route is available to it.").  If
    its exception makes sense,  and it explains why that  is so,
    all  courts would respect the result.  If the exception does
    not make sense, the Board  will not adopt it, and  that will
    be  the end  of  the matter.   This  suggestion  is not,  of
    course, legally binding, and there may be sound reasons  not
    to follow it.   Yet it seems to us to  offer a fairly simple
    way  out of  what has  become something  of a  legal morass,
    involving five courts of appeals threading their way through
    minor procedural details of a highly complex subject.
    The  petition in  No.  92-2272 for  review of  the
    Board of  Immigration Appeals' decision is  granted, and the
    case is  remanded  for further  proceedings consistent  with
    this  opinion.  We do not  reach the issues presented in No.
    92-1122.
    So ordered.
    -20-
    20
    APPENDIX
    INA     212(c), 8  U.S.C.A.     1182(c)  (West Supp.  1993),
    provides in pertinent part:
    Aliens   lawfully   admitted    for
    permanent resident [sic] who temporarily
    proceeded  abroad  voluntarily  and  not
    under an order  of deportation, and  who
    are returning to a lawful unrelinquished
    domicile of seven consecutive years, may
    be  admitted  in the  discretion  of the
    Attorney General without  regard to  the
    provisions  of  subsection  (a) of  this
    section (other than  paragraphs (3)  and
    (9)(C)).
    Although on its face  this section applies only  to resident
    aliens  who have temporarily left the United States and seek
    readmission,  case  law  has  extended  its  application  to
    resident  aliens who have not  left the United  States.  See
    Joseph  v. INS,  
    909 F.2d 605
    ,  606  n.1 (1st  Cir.  1990);
    Francis  v.  INS, 
    532 F.2d 268
      (2d  Cir. 1976);  Matter of
    Silva, 16 I. & N. Dec. 26, 30 (BIA 1976).
    -21-
    21
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 92-1122

Filed Date: 9/28/1993

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2014

Authorities (18)

Tim Lok v. Immigration and Naturalization Service , 681 F.2d 107 ( 1982 )

union-of-concerned-scientists-v-united-states-nuclear-regulatory , 920 F.2d 50 ( 1990 )

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Samuel Fils Joseph v. Immigration and Naturalization Service , 909 F.2d 605 ( 1990 )

Ernest Francis v. Immigration and Naturalization Service , 532 F.2d 268 ( 1976 )

Ronald Hazzard v. Immigration and Naturalization Service , 951 F.2d 435 ( 1991 )

Naim Butros v. United States Immigration and Naturalization ... , 990 F.2d 1142 ( 1993 )

Ibrahim Fez Ghassan v. Immigration and Naturalization ... , 972 F.2d 631 ( 1992 )

Federal Communications Commission v. Pottsville ... , 60 S. Ct. 437 ( 1940 )

Stavros Katsis v. Immigration & Naturalization Service , 997 F.2d 1067 ( 1993 )

Stinson v. United States , 113 S. Ct. 1913 ( 1993 )

Immigration & Naturalization Service v. Jong Ha Wang , 101 S. Ct. 1027 ( 1981 )

Simon B. Vargas v. Immigration & Naturalization Service , 938 F.2d 358 ( 1991 )

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