Abida Pervaiz, a Pakistani, came to the United States in 1991 on a tourist visa, overstayed, and eventually applied for asylum or alternatively for withholding of removal. On January 31, 2002, the immigration service informed her lawyer that the hearing on Pervaiz’s claim of asylum would be held on January 24, 2003, at 1 p.m. On May 15, 2002, the service sent the lawyer a letter stating that the time of the hearing had been changed from 1 p.m. to 9 a.m. January 24, 2003, arrived, and Pervaiz and her lawyer showed up for the hearing — at 1 p.m. — only to be told that because she had failed to appear at 9, her claim for asylum had been deemed abandoned and she had been ordered, in absentia, removed.
On May 8, 2003, her lawyer filed a motion to reopen the asylum proceeding and set aside the in absentia removal order. 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(b)(5)(C)(ii). The motion stated that the lawyer hadn’t received notice of the change in the time of the hearing, but it cited no statutory or other basis for rescinding the order of removal on this ground. The immigration judge denied the motion on June 13, 2003, stating cryptically (but the motion had been cryptic) that “counsel for [Pervaiz] has failed to establish that notice upon her was defective, and the presumption of adequate notice has not been rebutted. Based on the foregoing, her motion to reopen must be denied.”
Pervaiz retained another lawyer, who on April 15, 2004, filed, this time with the Board of Immigration Appeals, before which the appeal from the June 13 ruling was pending, another motion to reopen. The ground was that the ruling should not have been issued had it not been for ineffective assistance by her first lawyer. Although the constitutional doctrine of ineffective assistance of counsel, being an
*490
interpretation of the Sixth Amendment’s right to counsel in criminal cases, is inapplicable to civil litigation — including removal,
Stroe v. INS,
On July 1, 2004; the Board of Immigration Appeals both affirmed the immigration judge’s ruling of June 13 on the ground that notice to Pervaiz’s lawyer of the change in the time of the hearing was all the notice that was required, and denied the second motion to reopen on the ground that it had been filed after the 180-day statutory deadline for motions to reopen in absentia proceedings. The first ruling was correct, at least in the sense that mailing notice of a hearing date to the alien’s lawyer at his correct address is notice to the alien, even if the notice doesn’t arrive. 8 U.S.C. § 1229(a)(2)(A);
Wijeratne v. INS,
The 180-day deadline is not, as the Board believed, jurisdictional.
Borges v. Gonzales,
But the test for equitable tolling, both generally and in the immigration context, is not the length of the delay in filing the complaint or other pleading; it is whether the claimant could reasonably have been expected to have filed earlier.
Williams v. Sims,
But to pursue this route required Per-vaiz to find another lawyer, who in turn had to research the facts and the law before he could file a second motion to reopen. All this should not have taken nine months. But bearing in mind that Pervaiz is a foreigner who may, therefore, have more than the average difficulty in negotiating the shoals of American law, and that the second motion to reopen was filed while the appeal from the denial of the first motion was pending before the Board of Immigration Appeals and could be and was consolidated with the earlier motion, so that the delay in filing the second motion caused little or no inconvenience, let alone prejudice, to anyone, we cannot say as a matter of law that the Board could not find that the deadline had been tolled, as has been found in other cases. See, e.g.,
Borges v. Gonzales, supra,
at 401;
Singh v. Ashcroft,
A remand would be futile were it clear that Pervaiz’s claim of ineffective assistance of counsel must fail. But it is not. Her first lawyer led the immigration judge and Board of Immigration Appeals into error by failing to distinguish between the
adequacy
of notice of a hearing and the
receipt
of the notice, an elementary distinction. As we explained in
Joshi v. Ashcroft, supra,
The petition for review is granted and the case remanded to the Board of Immigration Appeals for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
