RAY FULLER, Pеtitioner, v. MATTHEW G. WHITAKER, Acting Attorney General of the United States, Respondent.
No. 17-3176
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED NOVEMBER 1, 2018 — DECIDED JANUARY 23, 2019
On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals No. A077-811-635
Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and MANION and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.
I.
Our summary of the facts may be somewhat abbreviated, as this is the fourth time that Fuller’s case has come before us. We refer the reader to our two prior published
Fuller entered the country legally on a fiancé visa in 1999 and married an American citizen the following year. In 2004, he pleaded guilty to attempted criminal sexual assault and an Illinois court ordered him to serve a term of 30 months’ probation. After he later violated the terms of his probation, Fuller was re-sentenced to a prison term of four years.
Following Fuller’s release from prison in 2014, the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) initiated removal proceedings against him. The government charged, and the Board would later agree, that Fuller was removable from the United States pursuant to
Fuller instead sought deferral of his removal under the CAT, alleging that he was likely to be tortured as a bisexual were he returned to Jamaica. See
The IJ found that Fuller’s testimony was not credible; and because she disbelieved his testimony and also questioned the veracity of the letters he had submitted, the IJ concluded that Fuller had not established that he is bisexual and as such faces a likelihood of torture if he is forced to return to Jamaica. She consequently denied his request for relief under the CAT. A.R. 181–202. In finding that Fuller’s testimony was not credible, the IJ cited discrepancies both as to certain basic facts (including thе number and names of sisters, as well as confusing his sister with his mother in his testimony) and as to the details of the prior instances of violence he
[Fuller’s] credibility is seriously lacking in this case. He is unable to recall many of the most important details of the events that he claims … had an impact on his life, particularly with respect to his claim of being bisexual. He has failed to provide the Court with many documents that could have clarified many of these inconsistencies, suсh as medical records, police reports, corroborating letters of support or witnesses. The letters that he has pre-sented to the Court are given very little weight because the Court is unable to verify their authenticity and has not had an opportunity to cross-examine or to even hear testimony from any of the makers of these statements. The respondent has given very little corroborative evidence to evaluate his claim that he is in fact bisexual and that he was in fact harmed in Jamaica on account of his sexual orientation in the past.
A.R. 195.
In 2015, the Board affirmed the deniаl of CAT relief to Fuller based on the IJ’s adverse credibility findings. A.R. 61–62. “[Fuller] has shown no clear error in the Immigration Judge’s detailed findings of fact, to include the findings that the respondent did not credibly testify and did not establish that he has ever been bisexual. The respondent’s inconsistent statements and implausible explanations fully support an adverse credibility determination.” A.R. 62 (internal record citation omitted).
Fuller then appealed to this court, but we denied his petition for review in a divided opinion. Fuller I, 833 F.3d 866. We concluded in relevant part that the IJ’s adverse credibility determination, as affirmed by the Board, was supported by substantial evidence. Id. at 871–72. Although we acknowledged that some of the IJ’s stated reasons for disbelieving Fuller were off the mark (including, for example, the citation of his marriage to a woman and multiple other prior heterosexual relationships as a reason to think he was not bisexual), others were sound. The latter included the discrepancies between his written statement and his oral testimony as to when the Ocho Rios shooting had occurred, his confusion as to the number and names of his sisters (and mixing up his mother with his sister), and a material lie he had told government officials in 2001 in seeking permission to visit Jamaica. We were sаtisfied that the IJ’s adverse credibility finding was amply supported in these respects. Id. We added that if Fuller were able to gather new evidence demonstrating that the IJ was mistaken as to his sexual orientation, he could ask the IJ to sua sponte reopen the proceeding. Id. at 872. The dissent, unpersuaded that these discrepancies cast doubt on Fuller’s claims that he was bisexual and had suffered violence as a result, contended that the petition for review should have been granted. Id. at 872–74.
The Board denied Fuller’s motion in February 2017. A.R. 43. The Board noted both that the motion was untimely and that, although Fuller referenced new affidavits that were unavailable to him previously, “he has not submitted such evidence with the motion, nor has he shown that a different outcome may be warranted based on the new evidence.” A.R. 43.
On receipt of the Board’s order denying his motion, Fuller filed what he styled as a “Statement of Notice to Appeal (motion to reopen).” A.R. 22. In that statement, Fuller challenged the Board’s declaration that he had not submitted the new evidence referred to in his motion to reopen, observing, “The new evidence was the cornerstone of my motion so there is no way that it would not be sent in with the motion. I think that this was a clerical mishap that caused this and I am now making sure the new pieces of evidence are inсluded.” A.R. 22. Fuller went on to summarize briefly his basis for asking the Board to reopen his removal proceeding (and on what grounds he was seeking deferral of removal), and concluded his statement with the following: “I have new evidence to submit to the court to help to prove my case. I pray that I will be given the chance to prove my credibility in court with the help of the new evidence, and garner a positive outcome to my situation.” A.R. 22. He attached to the statement copies of the three letters referred to in his prior motion to reconsider and/or reopen.
The Board treated Fuller’s “statement” as a second motion to reopen, and denied that motion. A.R. 3–4. The Board noted in the first instance that the motion was barred in both number and untimeliness, and that Fuller had not identified any applicable exception to those limits. Nor, in the Board’s view, had Fuller demonstrated that the circumstances of his case were so exceptional as to warrant the exercise of the Board’s authority to sua sponte reopen the proceedings. A.R. 3. The Board explained:
Even accepting [Fuller’s] argument that he previously submitted his proffered letters of support, we find no basis on which to alter our October 27, 2015 dismissal of his appeal or our previous denial of his motion to reopen. [Fuller’s] motion does not challenge our conclusions regarding his credibility or his eligibility for deferral of removal, and we do not find that his letters of support
would materially alter these findings. …
A.R. 3 (internal record citations omitted).
Fuller then filed the instant petition for review of the Board’s order, along with a request that we stay his removal pending resolution of the merits of his petition. After first denying Fuller a stay, see Fuller II, 879 F.3d 265, we ultimately agreed to stay his removal and appointed counsel to represent him. With the benefit of briefing and argument, we now proceed to the merits of Fuller’s petition for review.
II.
We begin by addressing the limits of our jurisdiction. With exceptions not applicable here, a petitioner is limited to one motion to reopen filed within 90 days of the Board’s final administrative decision. See
Fuller charges the Board with two legal errors in disposing of his motion to reopen. He contends first that the Board misapprehended the thrust of his motion to reopen and the significance of the additional letters of support he submitted in support of the motion. The Board understood
Because we agree with Fuller that the Board mischaracterized the basis for his motion, and because we can have no confidence that its error did not taint the exercise of its discretion as to the merits of the motion, we will rеmand the matter to the Board on that basis, without deciding whether the Board, absent that error, was obligated to say more than it did in denying Fuller’s request that it reopen the removal proceeding sua sponte.
We should note at the outset that we regard Fuller’s “Statement of Notice to Appeal (motion to reopen),” which the Board treated as a second motion to reopen sua sponte, simply as an effort to supplement the record with the three new letters of support that were somehow missing from Fuller’s prior motion. The “Statement,” as we read it, did not purport to make any new arguments in favor of reoрening or even to address the Board’s rationale in denying his prior motion, beyond tendering the letters that the Board had said were missing from Fuller’s prior submission. Certainly it was within the Board’s authority to characterize Fuller’s “Statement” as a second motion to reopen; we do not mean to suggest otherwise. But, in determining whether the Board committed any legal error, we shall evaluate the Board’s order disposing of that second motion in light of the arguments Fuller advanced both in his “Statement” and in his first motion to reopen, which were of one piece.
The Board said in its order that Fuller was not challenging its prior conclusions regarding his credibility or his eligibility for deferral of removal; but that declaration cannot be reconciled with either the letter or the spirit of Fuller’s request for relief. Nowhere in either his motion to reopen or in his follow-up “Statement” did Fuller purport to forgo a challenge to the IJ’s finding (as sustained by the Board) that he was not credible as to his sexual orientation and history of persecution in Jamaica and that, consequently, he could not claim eligibility for deferral of removal under the CAT as a bisexual who was likely to be tortured. Indeed, considering that the Board’s 2015 order had deemed Fuller inеligible for deferral of removal on the strength of the IJ’s finding that he was not credible as to his purported sexual orientation, it would be surprising if Fuller’s motion did not challenge the Board’s conclusions as to his credibility and, in turn, his eligibility for deferral of removal. It is true that Fuller made statements in his motion to reopen to the effect that the IJ’s adverse credibility determination “cannot and does not preclude him from being a bisexual” and “does not change the fact that [t]he Respondent is bisexual.” A.R. 51. But such statements cannot reasonably be construed as accepting, even for the sake of argument, the IJ’s credibility finding. Thе entire thrust of the motion to reopen was that Fuller is, in fact, bisexual and has in fact, experienced violence in Jamaica as a result of his sexual orientation; that the IJ’s rationale in discrediting him on these points was suspect; and that the new letters of support tendered in support of his request to reopen would eliminate any doubt as to the likelihood that he will be tortured if forced to return to Jamaica. If Fuller did not say so expressly, it was nonetheless clear from the
So the Board’s understanding of Fuller’s motion to reopen—and of what challenges he was purportedly forgoing—was erroneous. And to the extent that misunderstanding necessarily affected how the Board exercised its discretion as to the merits of his motion, it amounts to a legal error that entitles him to relief. We have repeatedly said that the Board commits a legal error within our jurisdiction to address when it ignores, misapplies, or fails to meaningfully consider the evidence an alien has submitted in support of his motion to reopen sua sponte. See Arej v. Sessions, 852 F.3d 665, 667 (7th Cir. 2017); Ni v. Holder, 715 F.3d 620, 630 (7th Cir. 2013); Moosa v. Holder, 644 F.3d 380, 386 (7th Cir. 2011). Contrary to the government’s suggestion, our ability to recognize such an error is not dependеnt on the particular reasons why an alien is asking the Board to exercise its sua sponte authority, be it a subsequent change in the law, see In re G– D–, supra, 22 I. & N. Dec. at 1135, or (as here) the availability of new evidence supporting the alien’s claim for relief. When the Board mischaracterizes the evidence tendered or misapprehends the purpose for which it is offered, it has not complied with its duty to recognize and consider the basis on which the alien has asked the Board to exercise its regulatory authority to reopen the proceedings sua sponte. See Arej, 852 F.3d at 667.
We acknowledge that the Board, after stating that Fuller was not challenging its findings as to his credibility and eligibility for deferral оf removal, added that “we do not find that his letters of support would materially alter these findings,” (A.R. 3); but that addition does not convince us that we should deny Fuller’s petition for review. Having misapprehended or mischaracterized what findings Fuller was or was not challenging in his motion to reopen, we cannot be confident that the Board’s additional half-sentence as to the import of Fuller’s new evidence represents an independent and well-considered alternative ground for the Board’s judgment. We might have more assurance in that regard had the Board said something more about the letters of support and why the Board did not think they would materially alter its assessment of whether he is entitled to deferral of removal. But the Board’s failure to elaborate on this point leaves us with no assurance that the Board’s exercise of discretion was unaffected by its error in appreciating the purpose of Fuller’s new evidence. To be clear, our point is not that the Board must say enough to convince us that the Board exercised its discretion “correctly” on Fuller’s motion to reopen; the merits of its ruling are of course beyond the limited scope of our review. But in the immediate wake of a grave mischaracterization of the basis for Fuller’s motion, the Board’s additional boilerplate observation that Fuller’s new letters would not materially alter its prior adverse findings cannot eradicate doubt as to whether the Board actually considered
The merits of Fuller’s case for the sua sponte reopening of his removal proceeding are for the Board and the Board alone to judge. Nothing in our opinion should be construed as a signal that we believe Fuller is entitled to reopening; our views on that question are, in any event, irrelevant. Suffice it to say that the Board in this case plainly misapprehended the basis for Fuller’s motion and then dispensed with the merits of the motion in a perfunctory half-sentence, giving us no assurance that it genuinely exercised its discretiоn as to what Fuller was actually arguing. The Board’s legal error compels us to return the matter to the Board for reconsideration.
III.
We GRANT the petition for review and REMAND the case to the Board for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
MANION, Circuit Judge, dissenting. The court’s opinion admirably attempts to toe the thin line between reviewing a decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals to ensure it exercised its discretion and reviewing the Board’s exercise of discretion itself. But it strays from the former into the latter. Therefore, I respectfully dissent.
I.
An immigration judge (IJ) found Ray Fuller lacked credibility and denied him relief undеr the Convention Against Torture. The Board affirmed the decision, concluding Fuller failed to show clear error concerning the IJ’s credibility determination. A.R. 62 (“[Fuller’s] inconsistent statements and implausible explanations fully support an adverse credibility determination.”). We denied Fuller’s petition for review. See Fuller v. Lynch (Fuller I), 833 F.3d 866, 872 (7th Cir. 2016). In accord with the deferential standard of review we apply in these cases, we too concluded there was sufficient evidence to support the IJ’s credibility determination. Specifically, we considered “Fuller’s inability to recall significant details” of his alleged shooting (such as the decаde in which it occurred), his confusion concerning his sisters and his mother, the suspiciousness of his letters of support, and his lie on his 2001 immigration application. Id. at 869–71.
Fuller then asked the Board to exercise its sua sponte authority to reopen his removal proceedings, claiming he had attached new evidence to the motion. See
II.
Appellate review of the Board’s decisions concerning its sua sponte authority is severely limited. We have jurisdiction only to review for legal or constitutional errors. Anaya-Aguilar v. Holder, 697 F.3d 1189, 1190 (7th Cir. 2012); see also Arej v. Sessions, 852 F.3d 665, 668 (7th Cir. 2017) (Sykes, J., concurring in the judgment) (“[W]e lack jurisdiction to review how the [Board] evaluated and weighed [the petitioner’s] evidence or to test its decision for abuse of discretion; we may review its decision only for errors of law and constitutional infirmities.”). We have defined “legal error” to include the Board’s failure “to exercise discretion at all by completely ignoring an argument.” Iglesias v. Mukasey, 540 F.3d 528, 530–31 (7th Cir. 2008).
And that is the legal error the court finds here. The court grants Fuller’s petition because of the Board’s statement that Fuller was not challenging the Board’s “conclusions regarding his credibility or his eligibility for deferral.” The court calls this “a grave mischaracterization” that “cannot be reconciled with either the letter or the spirit of Fuller’s request for relief.” Majority Op. at 12, 15. I disagree.
First, Fuller’s second motion1 did not clearly challenge the Board’s conclusions. Fuller’s pro se motion (his “State-
ment”) contains three paragraphs. In the first paragraph, Fuller asserts he attached the letters to the first motion and states there must have been а clerical error. The second paragraph reiterates what he has said all along in these proceedings (he says he is bisexual, that he has experienced violence in Jamaica, and that he will experience more if he returns) and asks the Board to overturn the judgment in his case. The final paragraph asks for an opportunity “to present [his] case to the immigration court” and to “be given the chance to prove [his] credibility in court with the help of the new evidence.” A.R. 22. Apart from that last statement, Fuller never mentions his credibility and never directly addresses his credibility issues, which were the basis for the denial of his petition for deferral of removal. For instance, he does not explain why his assertions should be trusted when he could not keep straight whether he got shot in the 1980s or the 1990s or when he has previously lied on an immigration application. Neither does the restatement of his allegations necessarily amount to a “challenge” to the Board’s earlier determinations. The IJ found Fuller did not testify credibly, and the Board concluded there was no clear error in that finding. The Board was not required to treat Fuller’s restatement of a summary of his own testimony as a “challenge” to thаt conclusion. Cf. Anderson v. Hardman, 241 F.3d 544, 545–46 (7th Cir. 2001) (dismissing a pro se appeal where the appellant “offer[ed] no articulable basis for disturbing the district court’s judgment” and “simply repeat[ed] certain allegations of his complaint and cite[d] one irrelevant case”).
So Fuller’s motion is ambiguous about whether it “challenges” the Board’s determinations, and this brings me to my next point: we should not be in the business of interpreting “the spirit” of motions made to the Board. The resolution of ambiguities
III.
The court returns this case to the Board for it to exercise its discretion in resolving the merits—the court acknowledges it has no authority to direct how the Board should exercise that discretion. I completely agree with that descriрtion of our power. However, as I conclude the Board has already demonstrated it exercised its discretion in resolving Fuller’s motion, I respectfully dissent.
