In the year ending on the date of the argument, different panels of this court reversed the Board of Immigration Appeals in whole or part in a staggering 40 percent of the 136 petitions to review the Board that were resolved on the merits. The corresponding figure, for the 82 civil cases during this period in which the United States was the appellee, was 18 percent. Our criticisms of the Board and of the immigration judges have frequently been severe. E.g.,
Dawoud v. Gonzales,
This tension between judicial and administrative adjudicators is not due to judicial hostility to the nation’s immigration poli
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cies or to a misconception of the proper standard of judicial review of administrative decisions. It is due to the fact that the adjudication of these cases at the administrative level has fallen below the minimum standards of legal justice.
Niam v. Ashcroft, supra,
In the present case, the Board has ordered an alien who is married to a U.S. citizen removed (deported) because he failed to produce a document that was both peripheral to his claim to be allowed to remain in this country by virtue of his marriage and already in the possession of the immigration authorities. Jellal Bensli-mane, a Moroccan, entered the United States on a visitor’s visa in 1998 and overstayed. The Immigration and Naturalization Service, as it then was — its functions have since been taken over by agencies in the Department of Homeland Security, which was created in 2003 — sought to remove him. In-February 2003, shortly before the department opened its doors, Benslimane appeared before an immigration judge, admitting removability but claiming that he had married an American citizen two months earlier and that she had filed a petition, Form 1-130, requesting that he be given a visa as a legal resident of the United States.
Besides the visa petition, Benslimane, to be allowed to remain in the United States, was required to file an application, Form 1-485, requesting that his status be adjusted from that of illegal immigrant to that of legal resident. 8 U.S.C. § 1255(a)(1); 285 C.F.R. § 245.2(a)(3)(h). Such an application states the ground for the adjustment sought and furnishes certain other information, see
In re Grand Jury Subpoena,
Meanwhile the proceedings to remove Benslimane went forward. At his initial removal hearing, conducted in February of 2003, the immigration judge noted that had Benslimane and his wife filed the visa petition and adjustment of status application forms jointly, he could have continued the removal proceeding until the visa petition was adjudicated.
Onyeme v. INS,
*831 At the resumed hearing, held in May of 2003 after the 90 days had expired, the government’s lawyer, who was from the agency in the Department of Homeland Security called Immigration and Customs Enforcement, reported that the wife’s visa petition was being handled by a different agency in DHS, Citizenship and Immigration Services. The lawyer added that she had no information about the status of the visa proceeding. The immigration judge, although told by Benslimane’s lawyer that the wife had filed Benslimane’s 1-485 application at the same time that she had filed her 1-130 petition, told Benslimane to submit his 1-485 application to the judge within 60 days.
Benslimane failed to do so, because his lawyer thought that an 1-485 form cannot be filed with the immigration authorities until the visa petition has been adjudicated. This was wrong, 8 C.F.R. § 245.2(a)(2)(i)(B), and also very peculiar, since the lawyer, unless he had forgotten, knew that the form had been filed. At any rate, he requested a further continuance to await the adjudication of the visa petition (the 1-130). The judge denied the request and ordered Benslimane removed, since adjustment of status was the only basis on which he was resisting removal. Bensli-mane appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals. By then, his lawyer had woken up and submitted a copy of the I-485 that Benslimane’s wife had filed. Nevertheless the Board affirmed the immigration judge’s denial of the motion for a continuance and the resulting order of removal, without mentioning that the original Form 1-485 had been filed long before the immigration judge had ordered Bensli-mane removed.
In effect, then, Benslimane has been ordered removed because he failed to submit a duplicate of the Form N485 that had been filed six months earlier, that (according to the government’s lawyer at the argument in our court) had not been lost, but that the government lawyer at the removal proceeding had no copy of. We have not been told why the mishandling of the matter by Benslimane’s original lawyer was not made the basis for a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel. The Board of Immigration Appeals allows such claims,
Pervaiz v. Gonzales,
The visa petition remains unadjudicated, though there is no suggestion of foot-dragging on the part of either Benslimane or his wife.
The final decision in this case is the order removing Benslimane, which is non-discretionary and therefore reviewable by us.
Subhan v. Ashcroft,
It is the same here. Benslimane had completed all the formalities required for an adjustment of his status, just like Su-bhan, but the immigration authorities had, through no fault of his or his wife’s, failed as -yet to act on his wife’s petition. In Subhan, the alien’s entitlement to a labor certificate hadn’t been determined; here the bona fides of the alien’s marriage hadn’t been determined. An immigration judge cannot be permitted, by arbitrarily denying a motion for a continuance without which the alien cannot establish a ground on which Congress has determined that he is eligible to seek to remain in this country, 8 U.S.C. §§ 1151(b)(2)(A)(i), 1255(a), to thwart the congressional design. The Board of Immigration Appeals so recognized in In re Garcia, supra, 16 I. & N. Dec. at 654: “We have examined our policy with respect to the disposition of motions to reopen for consideration of adjustment applications based upon as yet unadjudicated visa petitions in light of the present regulation permitting simultaneous filing. In order to give what we consider to be appropriate effect to the simultaneous filing provisions of 8 C.F.R. 245.2(a)(2), as amended, we shall hereafter generally reopen the deportation proceedings in such cases unless clear ineligibility is apparent in the record.”
Other courts have recognized an even broader scope of judicial review of denials of continuances. They have pointed out that section 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii) closes the door only to the review of rulings “the authority for which is specified under this subchapter to be in the discretion of the Attorney General,” and that rulings on motions for a continuance are not among those specified (that is, explicitly listed).
Zafar v. U.S. Attorney General,
At argument the government’s lawyer offered a remarkable interpretation of our decision in Subhan: that it permits judicial review of the denial of a continuance only if the immigration judge fails to give a reason for the denial. If he gives any reason, however outlandish — even if the reason he gives is that he does not grant continuances when the moon is full — there is no jurisdiction, the lawyer contended, to review the ruling. That would be a senseless distinction, and is not what Subhan is about.
When the Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed the order to remove Benslimane, it knew that he had complied with all the requirements for an adjustment of status and was merely awaiting action on his wife’s petition. Its decision that he nevertheless be removed forthwith flew in the face of its own decision in
Garcia,
as well as in the face of Congress’s “intent [in enacting 8 U.S.C. § 1255] that eligible aliens be able to adjust status without having to leave the United States, to re
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lieve the burden on the United States citizen with whom the aliens had the requisite family or other relationship, on the United States consulates abroad, and on the alien.”
Succar v. Ashcroft,
The Board’s action is intelligible, but not justifiable, only as punishment for a lawyer’s mistaken belief that the filing of the 1-485 form (which had already been filed!) would be premature. We are not required to permit Benslimane to be ground to bits in the bureaucratic mill against the will of Congress. And anyway punishment was not the rationale of the Board’s action, which appears to have been completely arbitrary.
The order of removal is vacated, and we direct the Board to stay removal pending the ruling on the visa petition and completion of the adjustment of status proceeding.
