VICTOR MEJIA-PADILLA, Petitioner, v. MERRICK B. GARLAND, Attorney General of the United States, Respondent.
No. 20-1720
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Argued December 2, 2020 — Decided June 29, 2021
Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals. No. A200-558-095
Before EASTERBROOK, RIPPLE, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.
I.
Mejia, a native and citizen of Mexico, entered the U.S. without inspection in 2005 and has lived here continuously since that time. He is married to a Mexican national who like him has no legal status in the U.S.; together, they have two children who were born here and are thus U.S. citizens. In 2011, he was placed in removal proceedings. The initial notice to appear that was served on Mejia did not include the date and time of the initial immigration hearing and thus did not comply with the governing statute,
In June 2018, the Supreme Court held in Pereira that a notice to appear which fails to specify the time and place at which a removal proceeding will take place, as expressly required by the governing statute,
Within 30 days after the Supreme Court decided Pereira, Mejia filed with the immigration court what he styled as a motion to reconsider, see
Shortly after Mejia filed his motion, the Board of Immigration Appeals held in Matter of Bermudez-Cota, 27 I. & N. Dec. 441, 447 (B.I.A. 2018), that the required components of a notice to appear need not be set forth in a single document, and so long as a second notice fills in the details as to the time and place of a removal proceeding that were missing from the
The immigration judge denied Mejia’s motion to reconsider and reopen on the basis of Bermudez-Cota. In a one-line order, the judge noted that Mejia had not addressed the BIA’s decision in that case.
Mejia then filed a second motion to reconsider, this time addressing the Board’s decision in Bermudez-Cota and asking the immigration judge to rethink her adverse ruling on his underlying motion to reconsider or reopen the removal proceeding.
The immigration judge denied Mejia’s request, indicating that he had not meaningfully distinguished Bermudez-Cota. Mejia appealed the denial of his motion to reconsider or reopen the removal proceeding to the BIA.
The Board dismissed Mejia’s appeal. The Board in the first instance noted that Mejia’s (second) motion to reconsider was barred both in time (it was filed more than 30 days after he was ordered removed) and number (the statute allows only one motion to reconsider, but Mejia had filed two, the second of which addressed the immigration judge’s reliance on Bermudez-Cota). As to the merits of the motion, the Board, citing a line of this court’s post-Pereira cases beginning with Ortiz-Santiago v. Barr, 924 F.3d 956, 963–64 (7th Cir. 2019), noted that the statutory requirement that a notice to appear include the date, time, place of a removal hearing is not a jurisdictional requirement but rather a claim-processing rule that must be raised in a timely manner in order to warrant dismissal of the proceeding. “[Mejia] does not claim that he made a timely
II.
Mejia’s petition for review of the Board’s decision is focused on his request to reopen the removal proceeding so that he could pursue cancellation of removal. Mejia does not challenge the Board’s rejection of his request for reconsideration, which was premised on the notion that the omissions in the notice to appear deprived the immigration court of jurisdiction over the removal proceeding. As the Board correctly recognized, and as our discussion below elucidates, our post-Pereira cases foreclose that line of argument. So Mejia is left to argue that the immigration judge, and in turn the Board, erred in deciding that he is not entitled to reopening of the proceeding in order to pursue cancellation of removal, now that he has met the eligibility threshold for seeking such relief. In this respect, Mejia does not challenge the Board’s decision insofar as it concerned sua sponte reopening, a decision that was rendered on the merits of Mejia’s request and is beyond our purview to review. See Fuller v. Whitaker, 914 F.3d 514, 519 (7th Cir. 2019). Rather, he challenges the Board’s rejection of his statutory motion to reopen, which the Board did not explicitly address but which the immigration judge rejected on the strength of the Board’s decision in Bermudez-Cota.
As an initial matter, we may take it as a given that Mejia is now eligible to seek cancellation of removal. He has lived in this country without interruption since he entered without inspection in 2005. Had the notice to appear issued in 2011 contained the date and time of the initial hearing along with all of the other statutorily required information, that notice would have triggered the stop-time rule and left Mejia short of the 10 years’ presence necessary for him to seek cancellation of removal. But the notice did not include the date and time of the hearing, and Pereira makes plain that it was therefore insufficient to stop the clock on Mejia’s cognizable presence in the United States. The Board’s decision in Bermudez-Cota posited that a follow-up notice including date and time information can nonetheless cure the problem and trigger the stop-time rule, but the Supreme Court’s more recent decision in Niz-Chavez v. Garland, 141 S. Ct. 1474 (2021), scotches that notion.3
Nonetheless, Mejia faces two insurmountable obstacles to reopening: the untimeliness of his motion to reopen, and his forfeiture of the defect in the notice to appear. Mejia was required to file any statutory motion to reopen within 90 days after he was ordered removed.
In Ortiz-Santiago v. Barr, supra, 924 F.3d 956, for example, the petitioner argued that because the notice to appear originally sent to him lacked the requisite time and date information, subject matter jurisdiction never vested in the immigration court and he was never properly placed in removal proceedings. This court concluded that the statutory
Similarly, in United States v. Manriquez-Alvarado, 953 F.3d 511 (7th Cir. 2020), the defendant in a 2018 illegal re-entry prosecution sought to collaterally attack the removal order that formed the predicate for his prosecution on the ground that the original notice to appear in his 2008 removal proceeding did not include a date for his first hearing, rendering the entire proceeding and the order of removal invalid. The ability to attack the removal order collaterally depended in part on him showing that there was no available remedy in 2008 for the defect in the notice to appear. Id. at 513. Manriqez-Alvarado argued that it would have been “futile” for him to
Finally, in circumstances closer to those presented here, this court concluded that Pereira did not permit an alien to reopen her removal proceeding in order to belatedly seek cancellation of removal. Chen v. Barr, 960 F.3d 448 (7th Cir. 2020). Chen was placed in removal proceedings by way of a defective notice to appear in 2010. She did not challenge the defect in the notice, nor did she seek cancellation of removal, although as a factual matter she had been present in the U.S. for 10 continuous years by the time her protracted removal proceeding came to a close: her removal order became final in 2017, before Pereira was decided. After Pereira was decided the following year, Chen sought to reopen the proceeding, arguing that the defect in the notice to appear, as laid bare by
Mejia argues that the claim-processing rationale of Ortiz-Santiago and follow-on cases ought not to apply to the stop-
Mejia has also attempted to distinguish Chen on the ground that unlike Chen, who reached the 10-year eligibility threshold for cancellation of removal while her removal proceeding was still pending, his own removal proceeding began and ended long before he reached the 10-year mark. This is a distinction without a difference. Chen may have had more of an incentive to pursue any argument that might have opened the door to cancellation of removal once she reached the 10-year mark, but the point of the court’s holding is that she never timely challenged the defect in the notice to appear, period. See 960 F.3d at 451, 452 (noting that Chen could have raised the defect in the notice to appear in the years before she attained eligibility for cancellation of removal). That is just as true with respect to Mejia as it was with Chen. Mejia had every reason in 2011 and 2012 to challenge the validity of the removal proceeding commenced by the faulty notice to appear. For that matter, although he was not yet eligible to seek cancellation of removal, he had a comparable incentive to keep the clock running on his continuous presence in the United States so that he might become eligible. And just as in Chen, had Mejia made a timely challenge to the notice, the government could have immediately corrected the problem and removed all doubt as to whether the clock on Mejia’s presence in the U.S. stopped running.
III.
An objection to the defect in the notice to appear served on Mejia was one that was available to him from the outset of his removal proceeding based on the plain language of the statute. He forfeited the objection by not bringing it to the attention of the immigration judge at that time. He has not shown cause for the forfeiture, nor has he shown that he was prejudiced by the defect in the notice. He is thus foreclosed from relying on that defect now to ask the Board to reopen the removal proceeding years after the proceeding closed in order to seek cancellation of removal, for which he has since become eligible. We reject Mejia’s argument for equitable tolling of the deadlines for pursing reopening of his removal proceeding on the same basis. Mejia’s petition for review of the Board of Immigration’s order sustaining the denial of his motion to reopen is DENIED.
