I. Background
A. Singh I
Yadvender Singh’s case initially came before our Court following the BIA’s refusal “to remand his case so that he could apply ... for an extreme hardship waiver of the ordinary requirement that a conditional permanent resident file a joint petitiоn with his spouse to remove the conditional designation of his residency status.”
Singh v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
The central issue in Singh I was how we should define the period during which events may be considered relevant for thе showing of “extreme hardship” necessary to obtain a waiver. The applicable regulation states that “[i]n considering an application for a waiver based upon an alien’s claim that extreme hardship would result from the alien’s remоval from the United States, the director shall take into account only those factors that arose subsequent to the alien’s entry as a conditional permanent resident.” 8 C.F.R. § 1216.5(e)(1) (emphasis added). 1 The regulation provided a beginning date (the date of entry as a conditional permanent resident), but no end date. The statute, on the other hand, directed the Attorney General to “consider circumstances occurring only during the period that the alien was admitted for permanent residence on a conditiоnal basis.” 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(4) (emphasis added). It contained both a beginning and an end date.
We held:
*152 To our knowledge, neither the BIA, nor any Court of Appeals, has addressed the conflict between the statute and the regulation. And commentators have, without discussion, referred to both formulations in describing the state of the law. To decide the case before us, however, we need not, and hence do not, seek to resolve the conflict. This is because, in deciding the instant case, the BIA has disregarded its own regulations, and that it cannot do.
Singh I,
Because the basis of [Singh’s] proposed application “arose subsequent to [his] entry as a conditional permanent resident,” [there] were, under the governing regulations, permissible considerations on which his waiver request could be grounded. The BIA panel’s holding to the contrary contravenes regulations issued by the INS. If the agency wishes to rescind or revise these regulations to render them fаcially consistent with the relevant statute, it has the authority and the means to do so.
Id. at 296 (footnotes omitted). “Because the reasoning of the BIA’s decision contradicted] the plain language of its own regulations, and because petitionеr’s motion to remand was premised on evidence that was previously unavailable,” we concluded that the BIA erred in denying the motion, we granted the petition for review and remanded the case to the BIA for further proceedings. Id. at 292.
B. The BIA’s Decision on Remand
On remand from оur Court, the BIA once again denied Singh’s motion to remand, this time on three separate grounds. In re Singh, 24 I. & N. Dec. 331 (BIA 2007).
First, the BIA, now in a three-person precedential opinion, revisited the language of the regulation, which we had earlier said was in “clear conflict” with thе statute.
Singh I,
II. Discussion
A. Our Jurisdiction over this Case
As it often does in immigration cases, the government argues that we have no jurisdiction to consider this сase. We write specifically to dispel the notion that decisions of the immigration courts can be entirely insulated from appellate review simply' by being labeled “discretionary.”
Section 1186a(c)(4) of the Immigration and Nationality Act permits the Attorney General “to remove the conditions on an alien’s permanent-resident status once the alien demonstrates one of three conditions.”
Atsilov v. Gonzales,
But as we attempted to clarify in
Singh I,
this case did not — and still does not — involve an appeal from the discretionary denial of a hardship waiver application: “To be clear, this appeal does
not
contain a challenge to a denial by the BIA of a hardshiр waiver application. Rather, it is an appeal only of the BIA’s refusal to remand a case so that the agency might consider such an application in the first place.”
Singh I,
The language of the BIA’s opinion — “we would deny the
motion
as a matter of discretion,”
In re Singh,
24 I.
&
N. Dec. at 335 (emphasis added) — clearly confirms that it was ruling only on the motion to reоpen, not on the extreme hardship determination. Of course, as the BIA correctly noted, “[t]he Board has broad discretion to deny a motion to reopen.”
Id.
at 334-35 (citing
INS v. Doherty,
Were it otherwise, the BIA could flout
any
remand order from this Court, and insulate its refusal to comply with our mandate from further review simply by saying that its decision not to reopen was “discretionary.” Significantly, this Court has frequently reviewed, for abuse of discretion, the BIA’s denial of motions to reopen.
See, e.g., Kaur v. Bd. of Immigration Appeals,
B. The Board’s Construction of the Regulation
Singh’s central argument is that our pri- or opinion issued a definitive interpretation of 8 C.F.R. § 1216.5(e)(1) — the regulation governing applications for waiver based on hardship — and that the BIA violated our mandate by intеrpreting it differently. But our prior opinion did not construe the regulation. In fact, we explicitly
avoided
resolving the issue: “To our knowledge, neither the BIA, nor any Court of Appeals, has addressed the conflict between the statute and the regulation.... To decide the case before us, however, we need not, and hence do not, seek to resolve the conflict.”
In re Singh,
On remand, the BIA harmonized the statute and regulation by adopting the limitations period identified in the statute.
In re Singh,
24 I. & N. Dec. at 334. This interpretation of the regulation is acceptable, particularly in light of the deference we give to agencies’ interpretations of their own regulations.
See Auer v. Robbins,
C. Whether the Board Abused Its Discretion in Denying Singh’s Motion to Reopen
There are at least three independent grounds on which the Board might
*155
deny a motion to reopen.
Mariuta v. Gonzales,
Here, the Bоard denied Singh’s motion based on the second and third grounds identified in Mariuta. We need only consider the second. Since we have determined that the Board properly harmonized the regulation and statute by adopting the statute’s language that “[i]n determining extrеme hardship the Attorney General shall consider circumstances occurring only during the period that the alien was admitted for permanent residence on a conditional basis,” 8 U.S.C. § 1186a(c)(4) (emphasis added), it was not compelled to consider еvidence relating to circumstances occurring after the end of Singh’s conditional residency period. That is, it did not have to consider his second wife’s naturalization or the copies of his children’s birth certificates (which showed that he and his wife hаd a second child after the proceedings were closed). Absent this evidence, the BIA did not abuse its discretion in determining that Singh had failed to present previously unavailable material evidence.
III. Conclusion
This is not a case in which the BIA has exercised unrеviewable discretion, and we therefore reject the government’s suggestion that we lack jurisdiction to consider the case. But what discretion the BIA has, it has not abused, and we therefore Deny Singh’s petition for review.
Notes
. In Singh I, we mistakenly referred to 8 C.F.R. § 216.5(e)(1), which applies to the Department of Homeland Security. 8 C.F.R. § 1216.5(e)(1) is an identical provision that applies to the BIA and is applicable to the BIA’s consideration of Singh’s motion to remand.
. As we noted in
Singh I,
Singh’s motion to remand "is analyzed under the substantive standards applicable to motions to reopen” because the motion seeks to rely on previously unavailable, material evidence.
Singh I,
