NURADIN AHMED, Petitioner, v. JOHN ASHCROFT, Attorney General of the United States, Respondent.
No. 03-2620
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED OCTOBER 1, 2004—DECIDED OCTOBER 26, 2004
Petition to Review an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. No. A 77 654 519
Before FLAUM, Chief Judge, and BAUER and POSNER, Circuit Judges.
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
An immigration judge ordered Nuradin Ahmed removed (deported). He appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals, which affirmed without an opinion. Rather than petition for judicial review Ahmed moved the Board to rеconsider its decision.
The Board‘s explanation for denying the petition for reconsideration leaves something to be desired; indeed, it appears to be a piece of boilerplate mindlessly affixed to a case to which it‘s irrelevant. The Board having affirmed the immigration judge without issuing аn opinion and thus without giving any reason for its action, Ahmed could hardly have “specifically identif[ied] any error, either factual or legal, in [the Board‘s] prior decision [i.e., the affirmance оf the immigration judge],” other than to repeat the arguments in his appeal brief. Maybe the Board meant by its “prior decision” the immigration judge‘s decision. But, if so, it was mistaken. Although it had affirmed that decision without issuing an opinion and by doing so had, as it stated in its order, made his decision the “final agency determination,” this was not an adoption of the immigration judge‘s decision. “Such an order approves the result reached in the decision below; it does not necessarily imply approval of all of the reasoning of that decision, but does signify the Board‘s conclusion that any errors in the decision of the immigration judge or the Service were harmless or nonmaterial.”
Despite the Board‘s bobble, no useful purpose would be served by vacating the denial of reconsideratiоn and re-
To be within а mile of being granted, a motion for reconsideration has to give the tribunal to which it is addressed a reason for changing its mind. Such a motion “is a request that the Board reexamine its decision in light of аdditional legal arguments, a change of law, or perhaps an argument or aspect of the case which was overlooked.” In re Cerna, 20 I. & N. Dec. 399, 402 n. 2 (BIA 1991); see also Zhang v. INS, supra, 348 F.3d at 293. Therefore it “shall state the reasons for the motiоn by specifying the errors of fact or law in the prior Board decision and shall be supported by pertinent authority.”
This is not a special rule for immigration cases; it is the rule governing motions for rеconsideration in general. A motion that merely republishes the reasons that had failed to convince the tribunal in the first place gives the tribunal no reason to change its mind. It‘s as if the movant, when he appealed, had filed two copies of his appeal brief, and when his appeal was rejected asked us to read the second copy. “Reconsideration is nоt an appropriate forum for rehashing previously rejected arguments or arguing matters that could have been heard during the pendency of the previous motion.” Caisse Nationale de Credit Agricole v. CBI Industries, Inc., 90 F.3d 1264, 1270 (7th Cir. 1996). “The repetition оf previous arguments is not sufficient to prevail.” United States v. $23,000 in U.S. Currency, 356 F.3d 157, 165 n. 9 (1st Cir. 2004).
Ahmed has made no effort to convince us that the Board of Immigration Appeals acted unreasonably in denying the petition for reconsidеration. His brief reads as if the order that he is asking us to review were not the denial of re-
At oral argument Ahmed‘s lawyer suggested that the basis for the motion for reconsideration was the Board‘s action in affirming the immigration judge‘s removal order without any statement of reasons. But it is quite common for an appellate tribunal to affirm the decision of the first-line adjudicator without issuing an opiniоn explaining its reasons. There is no impropriety in a “blind” affirmance, especially by a tribunal such as the Board of Immigration Appeals that is overwhelmed by cases. And so there is no basis for rеconsideration of such a decision unless there has been a change in law or material new evidence not reasonably discoverable earlier has come to light, though in the сase of an affirmance that is accompanied by an opinion another possible basis of reconsideration is that the opinion shows that the tribunal misunderstood the facts, or the issues, or the parties’ arguments.
Ahmed might have argued that because the decision that he is asking us to reconsider was a blind affirmance, he is perforce limited to pointing out the errors in the deсision that the tribunal affirmed. That is incorrect; for something
What is true is that a blind affirmance gives the losing party less of a hook on which to hang a motion for reconsideration because he cannot point to errors made in an opinion, just as a jury‘s general verdict provides less of a hook оn which to hang an appeal than a judge‘s findings of fact and conclusions of law issued pursuant to
It is true that “a motion for reconsideration, even if it raises no new grounds but ‘simply rehashes arguments heard at trial‘, may be made under
All this is not to say that the Board lacks jurisdiction to reconsider a decision on the basis of a motion to reconsider that consists simply of the movant‘s original appeal brief. Like any tribunal it can reconsider its decisions within a reasonable time even if no one asks it to and there has been no change in law or other compelling ground for reconsider-
The petition to review the denial of the petition for reconsideration is therefore
DENIED.
A true Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
