United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 99-1064
SULAY JOBE,
Petitioner,
v.
IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE,
Respondent.
ON PETITION FOR REVIEW OF AN ORDER
OF THE BOARD OF IMMIGRATION APPEALS
Before
Torruella, Chief Judge,
Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
Selya, Boudin, Stahl, Lynch, and Lipez,
Circuit Judges.
Linda M. Sanchez, with whom Cooper & Sanchez were on brief
for petitioner.
Iris Gomez and Harvey Kaplan, with whom Kaplan, O'Sullivan
and Friedman, was on brief for Massachusetts Law Reform
Institute, Political Asylum Immigration Representation Project,
Greater Boston Legal Services, International Institute of
Boston, Community Legal Services and Counseling Center, Harvard
Immigration and Refugee Clinic, Boston College Immigration and
Asylum Project, National Immigration Project of the National
Lawyers Guild, and American Immigration Lawyers Association,
amici curiae.
Brenda E. Ellison, Senior Litigation Counsel, Office of
Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, United States Department
of Justice, with whom David W. Ogden, Acting Assistant Attorney
General, Civil Division, and David V. Bernal, Assistant
Director, Office of Immigration Litigation, were on brief, for
respondent.
January 30, 2001
OPINION EN BANC
______________________
STAHL, Circuit Judge. Petitioner Sulay Jobe failed to
appear at his deportation hearing and was ordered deported in
absentia. More than eight months later, Jobe filed a motion to
reopen asking that his deportation order be rescinded. In
support of the motion, Jobe alleged that ineffective assistance
of counsel had caused him to miss the deportation hearing. An
immigration judge ("IJ") denied the motion as untimely because,
by statute, such motions must be filed within 180 days of the
deportation order. Jobe appealed, contending that the same
attorney incompetence that caused him to miss his hearing also
caused him to miss the deadline for filing his motion to reopen.
The Board of Immigration Appeals ("BIA") dismissed the appeal.
Jobe then sought review of the BIA's decision in this court. On
May 24, 2000, a divided panel vacated the BIA's order and
remanded for a hearing to determine whether the running of the
180-day period for filing a motion to reopen should be equitably
tolled on the facts of this case. Thereafter, respondent
Immigration and Naturalization Service ("INS") petitioned for and
was granted en banc review of the panel's holding. We
simultaneously withdrew the panel opinion. We now dismiss Jobe's
petition for review.
I.
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In June 1994, Jobe, a native and citizen of Gambia,
entered the United States as a nonimmigrant visitor for business.
He was authorized to remain in the United States until July 18,
1994, but remained beyond that date without authorization from
the INS. On September 9, 1994, Jobe contacted the INS and filed
an application for political asylum. On February 6, 1996, the
INS informed Jobe that his application had been denied and his
case referred to an IJ for a hearing.
On February 14, 1996, the INS served Jobe with an order
to show cause ("OSC"), which charged him with remaining in the
United States longer than permitted, in violation of §
241(a)(1)(B) of the Immigration and Nationality Act ("INA"),
codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(1)(B) (1994).1 A hearing on the
1On September 30, 1996, Congress enacted the Illegal
Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996
("IIRIRA"), Pub. L. No. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009, 3009-546
(1996), which redesignated former INA § 241 as § 237,
transferred it to a different section of the United States Code,
and otherwise brought significant changes to the country's
immigration laws. But because petitioner was in deportation
proceedings before April 1, 1997 (IIRIRA's "Title III-A
effective date") and had his final order of deportation entered
more than 30 days thereafter, he is subject only to the IIRIRA's
so-called "transitional rules." See IIRIRA § 309(c)(1),(4) (as
amended) ("transitional rules"). And under the transitional
rules, the IIRIRA's permanent new rules do not apply unless a
case meets one of the enumerated exceptions set forth in IIRIRA
§ 309(c)(4). All agree that none of these exceptions applies to
this case. Thus, we evaluate Jobe's petition under the "old
rules," such as INA § 241(a)(1)(B), even though they have since
been repealed or redesignated.
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OSC was scheduled in Boston on May 22, 1996. The OSC
specifically advised Jobe that, if he failed to appear for his
hearing and his deportability were established, he would be
deported in absentia. The OSC also advised Jobe that, if were
deported in absentia, he could not have the order rescinded
except that he "may file a motion to reopen the hearing within
180 days after the date of the [deportation] order if [the alien
is] able to show that [his] failure to appear was because of
exceptional circumstances . . . ."2 In March or early April of
1996, Jobe moved to New York City to live with his friend,
Sulayman Bah. Jobe does not write or speak English, and thus
used Bah as an intermediary to retain attorney Earl S. David to
represent him.
The crucial facts of this case, which we derive from
Jobe's own submissions during the administrative proceedings, are
as follows. On April 12, 1996, Attorney David wrote to the
2
The OSC also advised Jobe of his entitlement to file a
motion to reopen an in absentia deportation order
at any time if [the alien] can show that [he] did not
receive written notice of [the hearing on the OSC] and
[he] had provided [his] address and telephone number
(and any changes of [his] address and telephone
number) as required . . . and did not appear at [his]
hearing through no fault of [his] own.
In the administrative proceedings, Jobe claimed that he received
inadequate notice of the hearing on his OSC, but he has
abandoned that claim in this court.
-5-
Immigration Court in Boston, requesting a change in venue to New
York because Jobe now lived there. Subsequently, Jobe, again
using Bah as an intermediary, contacted Attorney David to inform
him that he would be unable to attend the May 22 hearing because
of a back injury. According to affidavits submitted by Bah and
Jobe (and disputed by Attorney David), David informed Bah that
the case already had been transferred to New York and that Jobe
would be contacted when the court set a new hearing date. The
case never was transferred. Neither Jobe nor David attended the
May 22 hearing, and Jobe was ordered deported in absentia. In
his brief, Jobe suggests that he only learned that he had been
ordered deported in absentia when he received a December 4, 1996
notice from the INS denying his application to renew his
employment authorization. At that time, the 180-day statutory
window for seeking rescission on the basis of exceptional
circumstances – a statutory window of which Jobe had been advised
in the OSC – had closed, but only by a couple of weeks.
Nonetheless, Jobe failed to take any action until
February 11, 1997, when, acting through new counsel, he moved to
reopen and stay the deportation proceedings. Insofar as is here
relevant, he argued that his failure to appear was the result of
"exceptional circumstances" – i.e., ineffective assistance of
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counsel3 – and that his deportation order thus should be
rescinded. See INA § 242B(c)(3)(A), codified at 8 U.S.C.
§ 1252b(c)(3)(A) (1994)4 (permitting the rescission of an in
absentia deportation order "only . . . upon a motion to reopen
filed within 180 days after the date of the order of deportation
if the alien demonstrates that the failure to appear was because
of exceptional circumstances (as defined in subsection (f)(2) of
this section)").5 On February 12, 1997, an IJ denied the motion
as untimely, noting that it was brought well outside the 180-day
window provided in the statute. On March 10, 1997, Jobe appealed
3Because deportation proceedings are civil, the Sixth
Amendment guarantee of effective counsel in criminal proceedings
is inapplicable. Nonetheless, we have recognized that "there is
a due process violation if [a deportation proceeding] was so
fundamentally unfair that the alien was prevented from
reasonably presenting his case." Bernal-Vallejo v. INS, 195
F.3d 56, 63 (1st Cir. 1999) (collecting cases). It is in this
sense that the phrase "ineffective assistance of counsel" has
made its way into immigration cases, and it is in this sense
that we use the term in this opinion.
4
Although INA § 242B(c)(3)(A), codified at 8 U.S.C.
§ 1252b(c)(3)(A) (1994), has been repealed, Congress replaced
the provision with one that is in all respects identical except
that what formerly was called "deportation" is now referred to
as "removal." See INA § 240(b)(5)(C)(i), codified at 8 U.S.C.
§ 1229a (b)(5)(C)(i).
5
Former INA § 242B(f)(2), codified at 8 U.S.C. §
1252b(f)(2), provided: "The term 'exceptional circumstances'
refers to exceptional circumstances (such as serious illness of
the alien or death of an immediate relative of the alien, but
not including less compelling circumstances) beyond the control
of the alien."
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the IJ's decision to the BIA. He argued that the IJ erred in
denying his motion to reopen because his failure to file the
motion within the 180-day statutory period was caused by the same
ineffective assistance of counsel that caused him to miss his
deportation hearing in the first instance. On December 15, 1998,
the BIA dismissed Jobe's appeal because Jobe was "statutorily
barred [by the 180-day statutory window] from rescinding the
deportation order on the basis of exceptional circumstances."
Jobe then petitioned us to review the BIA's order. In
his brief, Jobe argued that the BIA violated his due process
rights by applying the 180-day statutory period in circumstances
where the same ineffective assistance of counsel that caused him
to miss his hearing also caused him to miss the deadline for
filing his motion to reopen. A divided panel of this court
granted the petition. The majority construed Jobe's brief as
setting forth an argument that the 180-day time period prescribed
in INA § 242B(c)(3)(A) is subject to equitable tolling, and,
after noting that the issue has split the circuits,6 agreed with
6
Compare Anin v. Reno, 188 F.3d 1273, 1278 (11th Cir. 1999)
(holding that INA § 242B(c)(3)(A) sets forth a "mandatory and
jurisdictional" time bar) with Lopez v. INS, 184 F.3d 1097, 1100
(9th Cir. 1999) (holding that INA § 242B(c)(3)(A)'s time bar is
not jurisdictional and thus subject to equitable tolling); cf.
Iavorski v. INS, 232 F.3d 124 (2d Cir. 2000) (holding that the
equitable tolling doctrine applies to the 90-day period provided
in 8 C.F.R. § 3.23(b)(1)(2000) for filing motions to reopen
based on "new facts").
-8-
Jobe's argument on the merits. The majority also determined that
Jobe's submissions were sufficient to warrant further inquiry, at
the agency level, into whether the statute should be equitably
tolled in the circumstances of this case. The dissent argued,
inter alia, that the majority should not have decided whether the
statute is subject to equitable tolling because, even if it were,
Jobe had failed to establish possible entitlement to equitable
relief. Thereafter, the INS sought and was granted rehearing en
banc, and the panel opinion was withdrawn.
II.
In its petition for rehearing en banc, the INS makes a
powerful argument that INA § 242B(c)(3)(A) should be regarded as
mandatory and jurisdictional and thus not subject to equitable
tolling – an argument that is skillfully countered not only by
our dissenting brothers, but also by the Massachusetts Law Reform
Institute, which filed a well argued amicus brief on behalf of
itself and the following interested parties: the Political Asylum
Immigration Representation Project; Greater Boston Legal
Services; the International Institute of Boston; the Community
Legal Services and Counseling Center; the Harvard Immigration and
Refugee Clinic; the Boston College Immigration and Asylum
Project; the National Immigration Project of the National Lawyers
Guild; and the American Immigration Lawyers Association. We
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appreciate the importance of the issue and the effort that has
been expended in framing it for us in a most helpful way. But
because Jobe has not made a prima facie showing of entitlement to
equitable tolling or otherwise convinced us that application of
INA § 242B(c)(3)(A)'s time limit violates his due process rights
on the facts of this case, we dismiss the petition without
deciding whether the equitable tolling doctrine may apply to this
statutory provision.
Even when it applies, equitable tolling is a
"sparingly" invoked doctrine. Irwin v. Dep't of Veterans
Affairs, 498 U.S. 89, 96 (1990). We have identified five factors
that should guide courts in evaluating a claimant's entitlement
to such tolling: (1) a lack of actual notice of a time limit; (2)
a lack of constructive notice of a time limit; (3) diligence in
the pursuit of one's rights; (4) an absence of prejudice to a
party opponent; and (5) the claimant's reasonableness in
remaining ignorant of the time limit. See Benitez-Pons v.
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, 136 F.3d 54, 61 (1st Cir. 1998)
(deciding whether to toll the running of a statute of
limitations) (citing Kale v. Combined Ins. Co., 861 F.2d 746, 752
(1st Cir. 1988)). The fundamental principle is that equitable
tolling "is appropriate only when the circumstances that cause a
[party] to miss a filing deadline are out of his hands." Salois
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v. Dime Savings Bank, 128 F.3d 20, 25 (1st Cir. 1997) (citation
and internal quotation marks omitted). For this reason,
"[e]quitable tolling is unavailable where a party fails to
exercise due diligence." Benitez-Pons, 136 F.3d at 61.
In this case, the evidence submitted by Jobe in support
of his equitable tolling argument7 undermines his claim to have
been sufficiently diligent to warrant an equitable tolling of the
statute. In paragraph 4 of his August 4, 1997 affidavit, Bah
largely corroborates the allegation which is at the heart of
Jobe's claim that attorney dereliction caused him to miss the May
22, 1996 deportation hearing:
Attorney David promised to transfer the case
to New York. Attorney David told me that he
had written for the case to be transferred
from Boston to New York. I believed him and
told [petitioner] to disregard the hearing
date scheduled for Boston. I told
[petitioner] that Immigration will inform him
of his new Court date in New York.
But then, in paragraph 5 of the same affidavit, Bah states: "The
next letter addressed to Sulay Jobe was a ruling from the
Immigration Court that was done in Sulay’s absence. I advised
Sulay of this letter and told him to see an Attorney
immediately." (Emphasis added.). Moreover, in his September 11,
7
For purposes of this analysis, we shall assume arguendo
that Jobe has presented a preserved and sufficiently developed
argument in favor of equitably tolling the running of the 180-
day time period in INA § 242B(c)(3)(A).
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1997 sworn "correction" to his August 4 affidavit, Bah makes
clear two crucial facts: (1) the notice of the IJ’s in absentia
deportation order was in Bah's hands within a month of the IJ's
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ruling;8 and (2) Bah " immediately" told Jobe about the arrival of
8In his sworn correction, Bah states: "When the notice of
decision came to the New York address, on or about May - June,
1997, I received the notice of decision from the Court at 933 E.
224th Street, Bronx, NY 10466." It is clear from context,
however, that Bah intended to state that the notice of decision
arrived in May - June 1996.
First, both Bah's affidavit (in paragraph 6) and his sworn
correction to the affidavit state that Bah told Jobe about the
notice from the Immigration Court prior to Jobe's arrest. The
exact date of Jobe's arrest is not in the record, but Jobe's
March 10, 1997 appeal to the BIA quite clearly indicates that
Jobe was detained at that time. It is thus evident that Bah
received the notice well before the May-June 1997 time-frame
referenced in the sworn correction.
Second, throughout these proceedings, there never has been
any suggestion that the notice of deportation was lost in the
mail for nearly a year and arrived at a time when the BIA
already had under advisement Jobe's appeal of the denial of the
motion to reopen. Indeed, there never has been a suggestion
that the arrival of the notice was in any way untimely, as there
surely would have been had that in fact been the case. Thus,
already knowing (as we do) that (1) Bah's sworn correction is
mistaken insofar as it refers to May-June 1997; and (2) notice
of a ruling handed down in Boston on May 22, 1996 is likely to
reach New York by mail sometime around May-June 1996, the
logical inference is that Bah (who swore out the correction in
September 1997) inadvertently substituted "1997" for the
intended "1996."
Third, and perhaps most importantly, Jobe bears the burden
of making a prima facie showing of entitlement to equitable
tolling, and therefore of filling in any gaps in the record
regarding whether his is a case warranting equitable relief. On
this point, we regard it as particularly telling that Jobe has
failed throughout these proceedings to offer any explanation for
the discrepancy between the date of the in absentia deportation
order and the dates referenced in Bah's sworn correction to his
affidavit, even in the face of (1) our request that he address
his factual entitlement to equitable tolling in our solicitation
of supplemental briefs following the granting of the petition
for rehearing en banc; and (2) the dissent from the now-
withdrawn panel opinion, which argued that Bah's sworn
correction obviously substituted "1997" for the intended "1996."
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the notice.
Thus, even if we assume that "exceptional
circumstances" caused Jobe to miss his hearing, and even if we
credit the unsworn statement in Jobe's brief which suggests that
Jobe did not actually ascertain that he had been ordered deported
until December 1996, we are left with Bah's two uncontradicted
sworn statements, put in the record by Jobe himself, which
combine to establish that, in May or June of 1996, several months
before the expiration of the 180-day time period set forth in INA
§ 242B(c)(3)(A), Jobe learned that an IJ had taken some action on
his asylum application and was advised to consult an attorney
immediately. Despite this knowledge and advice, Jobe took no
action to protect his rights for more than half a year. In our
view, this fact conclusively establishes that Jobe was
insufficiently diligent in pursuing his asylum application to
warrant the provision of any equitable relief that might be
available under the statute. So too does this fact fatally
undermine the premise of the as-applied due process argument Jobe
presses in his appellate brief: that his counsel's
ineffectiveness was the cause of his failure to file a timely
motion to reopen his deportation proceedings and rescind the
deportation order.
III.
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For the reasons stated, we do not decide whether the
equitable tolling doctrine applies to INA § 242B(c)(3)(A) but
rather dismiss Jobe's petition because he is not factually
entitled to equitable tolling and because application of the
statute in these circumstances does not deprive him of due
process.
Petition dismissed. Dissenting opinion follows.
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BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge, with whom LIPEZ, Circuit
Judge, joins (dissenting). I dissent for two reasons. First,
I do not think there is a sufficient basis to find that Jobe had
notice of the IJ decision to deport him in absentia well before
the expiration of the 180-day time period set forth in
INA § 242B(c)(3)(A). Second, even if Jobe received such notice,
that fact alone does not establish that the running of the 180-
day period for filing a motion to reopen should not be equitably
tolled. The majority says Jobe was insufficiently diligent in
pursuit of his rights. That diligence analysis requires
consideration of other factors, particularly Jobe's alleged
reliance on an attorney who may have represented him
ineffectively. Without further fact-finding, we cannot know the
circumstances surrounding Jobe's untimely motion to reopen, and
so cannot fairly dispose of his case. Regrettably, the majority
does the fact-finding here. That is not a proper appellate
function.
I.
The majority finds “that in May or June of 1996,
several months before the expiration of the 180-day time period
set forth in INA § 242B(c)(3)(A), Jobe learned that an IJ had
taken some action on his asylum application and was advised to
consult an attorney immediately. Despite this knowledge and
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advice, Jobe took no action to protect his rights for more than
half a year.” I do not think the majority's reasoning withstands
scrutiny. It depends in large part upon the interpretation of
two affidavits of a presumed friend of Jobe, Sulayman Bah. The
first affidavit is dated 4/August/1997. There are no dates in
the body of the affidavit. It states as follows:
AFFIDAVIT OF SULAYMAN BAH
I, SULAYMAN BAH, having been duly sworn
upon oath, do hereby depose and say:
1. My name is Sulayman Bah and I live at
933 E. 224th Street, #1A, Bronx, New York
10466.
2. I served as a mediator between Sulay
Jobe and Attorney Earl David.
3. Sulay Jobe asked me if I knew of any
New York Attorneys because attorneys in Rhode
Island are extremely expensive. I introduced
Sulay Jobe to Earl David. Attorney David
charged Sulay Jobe $600.00 for his legal
services.
4. Attorney David promised to transfer
the case to New York. Attorney David told me
that he had written for the case to be
transferred from Boston to New York. I
believed him and told Sulay Jobe to disregard
the hearing date scheduled for Boston. I
told Sulay Jobe that Immigration will inform
him of his new Court date in New York.
5. The next letter addressed to Sulay
Jobe was a ruling from the Immigration Court
that was done in Sulay’s absence. I advised
Sulay of this letter and told him to see an
Attorney immediately.
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6. I found out shortly thereafter that
Sulay had been arrested by Immigration.
The second affidavit is to “correct the record in
the matter of Sulay Jobe.” It was executed on
September 11, 1997. It states:
I, Sulaman Bah, being duly sworn, deposes and
states the following under penalty of
perjury: I would like to correct the record
in the matter of Sulay Jobe. I told Mr. Jobe
to disregard the hearing date since I was
told by Mr. David that he wrote a letter to
transfer the file. When the notice of
decision came to the New York address, on or
about May - June, 1997, I received the notice
of decision from the Court at 933 E. 224th
Street, Bronx, NY 10466. I immediately
contacted Mr. Jobe regarding this notice. I
then left the country and later on heard that
Mr. Jobe was arrested.
X /s/ Sulaman Bah
Sulaman Bah
The majority makes the rather remarkable finding: “It
is clear from context, however, that Bah intended to state that
the notice of decision arrived in May - June 1996.” Majority Op.
at 11.
This affidavit was given “to correct the record in the
matter of Sulay Jobe.” How do we know that Bah intended to state
that the notice of decision arrived in May-June 1996? The only
dates given in his affidavit are “on or about May-June 1997.”
How can the majority be so sure that the dates Bah gave in his
corrected affidavit were wrong? We know nothing about Bah except
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what he states in his affidavits. His deposition was not taken.
We have no way of judging either his credibility or competence.
The dates of the receipt of the notice found by the
majority must be established by a preponderance of the evidence.
The court attempts to meet this burden by stating
Thus, already knowing (as we do) that
(1) Bah’s sworn correction is mistaken
insofar as it refers to May-June 1997; and
(2) notice of a ruling handed down in Boston
on May 22, 1996 is likely to reach New York
by mail sometime around May-June 1996, the
logical inference is that Bah (who swore out
the correction in September 1997)
inadvertently substituted “1997" for the
intended “1996.”
Majority Op. at 11. But we do not know in the true sense of the
word anything but what is stated in the affidavit. Bah may have
been mistaken about the dates he stated in the affidavit but we
do not know that he was.
It seems significant that the only substantive
difference between Bah's first and second affidavit is the
inclusion of dates. If the affidavit was amended to clarify the
timing of events, which seems to have been the intent, this makes
it more likely that the May-June 1997 date is correct. If
providing a date was the purpose of the amendment, we can presume
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that particular attention was given to the accuracy of the
reported date.1
It should also be noted that Bah's second affidavit
states that he received notice of the decision at 933 E. 224th
Street, Bronx, NY 10466. His first affidavit confirms this
address, but includes an apartment number, #1A. Attorney David's
venue change request states that Jobe lived at the New York
address, but at apartment #1. We do not know whether the correct
address was the one with apartment #1, the one with apartment
#1A, or the one without any apartment number. It is, at least,
possible that these variant addresses might have affected the
date Bah received the order.
The majority also states: “Indeed there never has been
a suggestion that the arrival of the notice was in any way
untimely, as these surely would have been had that in fact been
the case.” Majority Op. at 11. This, of course, ignores that
there is only one date given in Bah’s two affidavits. The second
affidavit states that “the notice of decision came to the New
York address, on or about May-June 1997.” The decision of the
1
We do not even know that the same person made out both
affidavits. The name of the affiant in the first affidavit is
given as Sulayman Bah; in the second the first name is Sulaman.
I do not think it fair to make a finding that results in
deportation of an individual by changing dates in a sworn
affidavit which may have been executed by two different
affiants.
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court assumes that there is always an orderly and logical
sequence to a chain of events. Such a belief is natural to
judicial thinking and analysis. But as Justice Holmes pointed
out: “The life of the law is not logic but experience.” And
experience teaches that many things happen that cannot be
explained by logical analysis. There are at least three
explanations that might account for the dates mentioned in Bah's
affidavits: a late mailing by the INS, a late delivery by the
post office, or a delivery to a wrong address.
I do not think that the affidavits can or should be
used for finding, as the court does, that “Jobe took no action to
protect his rights for more than half a year.” Majority Op. at
12. It constitutes appellate findings of facts based on
inferences and unsubstantiated assumptions. The only way to
determine the facts in this case is to have a hearing before the
Immigration Court.
II.
Aside from the uncertainty about the date on which Jobe
received notice of the IJ's decision, the facts here do not
establish Jobe's ineligibility for equitable tolling. The
majority relies exclusively upon one "fact," based on one of
Bah's affidavits, to conclude that Jobe was insufficiently
diligent in pursuing his asylum application, and hence he would
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not be entitled to equitable relief. That one fact is Bah's
assertion that he advised Jobe of the IJ's decision immediately
after he received it and told Jobe to see an attorney. But that
one fact does not exhaust the reasonable diligence inquiry when
the record strongly suggests Jobe's dependence on others to
protect his rights, including an attorney who may have been
consistently ineffective in protecting Jobe's rights prior to the
May 22, 1996 hearing, and subsequent to the issuance of the in
absentia deportation order.
From the time his hearing before the IJ was scheduled,
Jobe relied upon his friend Bah, as well as Attorney David, for
guidance in his immigration proceedings. Jobe states in his
affidavit (drafted by a translator fluent in both English and
Jobe's native Wolof), "I do not read, write or speak the English
language." Jobe sought the assistance of Bah in obtaining
counsel, and the two of them met with Attorney David in New York
with Bah acting as translator. The nature of the attorney-client
relationship established at their initial meeting is unclear.
Jobe's affidavit suggests his understanding that David would
represent him in his asylum claim generally: "I retained Attorney
Earl S. David to represent me in my asylum proceedings." This
understanding would have been reasonable, based on the fact that
David represented Bah in the immigration proceedings resulting in
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his successful asylum claim. Guided by Bah, Jobe would likely
seek the same service from David. Nevertheless, David's letter
of justification to the Board of Immigration Appeals defending
himself against charges of ineffective assistance of counsel
suggests that he was retained exclusively to obtain a change of
venue for Jobe's asylum hearing, a seemingly minimal task for the
$600 fee that Bah says David received. Thus, at the beginning of
the attorney-client relationship, there may have been
miscommunications between Jobe and David.
With Bah's assistance, Jobe requested that David obtain
a transfer of his Boston-based immigration court hearing to his
new home, New York. As he recalls, "Attorney David told me that
he would be transferring his case to New York." Bah corroborates
this account, while David denies it, saying that "[u]nder no
circumstances did I promise to transfer the file as the power to
do so arises from the government, not this office."
Prior to the May 22nd hearing date, Jobe says he again
contacted David, through Bah, to say he would be unable to make
the Boston court appearance due to a back injury. According to
Jobe, "Attorney David told [Bah] that [the] case had already been
transferred to New York and that a new hearing date would be
set," a communication that David again claims never happened.
Indeed, David says he told Jobe through Bah that he would have to
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attend the hearing on May 22, 1996 in Boston regardless of the
outcome of the change of venue request.
In reality, David's request for a change of venue,
submitted on April 12, 1996 with no supporting evidence or
affidavits, was never adequate to win a transfer. A change of
venue request may be granted by an IJ for "good cause." 8 C.F.R.
3.20. In seeking a change of venue, "the mere fact that an
applicant allegedly resides . . . in another city, without a
showing of other significant factors associated with such
residence, is insufficient." Matter of Rahman, 20 I & N Dec. 480
(BIA 1992). Yet that residence in another city is all David
offered to the IJ to support the change of venue request.
Furthermore, it is difficult to credit David's insistence that he
told Jobe he had to appear in Boston on May 22 under any
circumstances, ready, apparently, to represent himself, after
Jobe had retained David to represent him in his asylum
proceedings. Jobe hired David because he could not effectively
represent himself. Yet Attorney David did not attend the May
22nd sitting in Boston. Moreover, if David was so sure that the
May 22 hearing would take place, and he told Jobe to be there
without David's representation, did he give Jobe any advice on
what he had to do to protect his interests? Apparently not.
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David says he just told Jobe to be there, an ineffective
contribution even on David's version of the facts.
David characterizes the events surrounding the transfer
request and missed hearing as "an unfortunate miscommunication."
Indeed, it was an unfortunate miscommunication, depriving Jobe of
the opportunity to present his asylum claim and resulting in the
issuance of an in absentia deportation order. It was also
another miscommunication that seemed to plague the David-Jobe
attorney-client relationship.
We also do not know from this record what Jobe
understood about the information given to him by Bah concerning
the decision of the IJ after Jobe failed to appear in Boston on
May 22. In his affidavits, Bah only indicates that he "contacted
Mr. Jobe regarding this notice," and states his impression that
"a ruling from the Immigration Court . . . was done in Sulay's
absence." Bah does not say that he told Jobe of his imminent
deportation. In addition, it is not clear from the record that
Jobe ever took possession of the correspondence. The best
evidence that Jobe did not understand the effect of the order is
that he sought out the Immigration Office in December regarding
his employment authorization, a risk an immigrant would be
unlikely to take if he understood his deportation was imminent.
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If Jobe did not actually receive notice of the IJ's in absentia
decision, he then learned of his deportation status only on
December 4, 1996 when he sought employment. The timespan between
this notification and the February 11, 1997 filing of motions to
reopen and to stay deportation cannot be characterized as a
failure to take action, as the majority suggests.
Meanwhile, having advised Jobe "to see an Attorney
immediately," Bah, Jobe's only liaison to his attorney, leaves
the country. As noted, Jobe states in his affidavit that he was
relying on Attorney David to represent him in his asylum
proceedings. David apparently had a more limited view of his
obligation to Jobe, possibly leaving Jobe to rely on an attorney
who felt no obligation to help him even after the issuance of the
in absentia deportation order. There is some evidence that David
himself learned of the deportation order. He writes that,
apparently after issuance of the IJ decision: "I tried to reach
my client by mail and by the number I had in my file but it was
to no avail." While David had failed to file a EOIR-28 "Notice
of Entry of Appearance" form with the INS,2 another suggestion of
ineffective representation, the fact that David's address appears
2
The BIA Practice Manual indicates that an entry of
appearance must be filed upon "the first appearance of an
attorney or representative," as well as with the filing of an
appeal, a motion to reconsider, a motion to reopen, and when
there is a change of business address.
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prominently on the request for change of venue may have been
enough for him to be listed as the attorney of record in Jobe's
immigration court proceedings. If David did know of the in
absentia deportation order, there is no evidence that he made any
effort to file a motion to reopen in a timely fashion, despite
his apparent awareness that an "unfortunate miscommunication"
between himself and Jobe contributed to Jobe's failure to appear
in Boston.
Without clarification of David's obligation to protect
Jobe after the issuance of the in absentia deportation order, and
David's apparent inaction despite any such obligation, a real
issue of ongoing ineffective assistance during this critical
period exists, which would further account for Jobe's delay in
seeking relief from the in absentia deportation order.
In summary, without the support of Bah to comprehend
the English language, and perhaps without the support of a
reliable attorney who Jobe thought was protecting his interests,
it may have been difficult for Jobe to understand his peril and
to press his claim more diligently. Yet the majority sees no
relationship between these facts and the equitable tolling
doctrine. Whether a party is reasonably diligent in ascertaining
their claim is a matter of fact. See Salois v. Dime Sav. Bank,
128 F.3d 20, 26 (1st Cir. 1997). In this case, there has been no
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fact-finding on the diligence issue because the BIA concluded
that the 180-day time limit was not subject to equitable tolling.
As a legal proposition, that conclusion is wrong. See Lopez v.
INS, 184 F.3d 1097, 1100 (9th Cir. 1999). Equitable tolling does
apply to the 180-day time limit. There is conflicting and
inadequate evidence as to Jobe's notice of the IJ decision, his
capacity to pursue a timely motion to reopen, and the burdens
imposed by ongoing ineffective assistance of counsel. There has
been no chance for Jobe to make a showing as to his diligence,
and the case should not be disposed of on the basis of one fact
which, upon fair examination, may show little about Jobe's
reasonable diligence in pursuing his rights.
III.
I think it important to focus on the situation that led
to this case. Jobe was a native and citizen of Gambia where he
had been employed as a chauffeur for a deposed president's
Minister of Education and Agriculture. According to the record,
Jobe claimed that he had reason to fear that he would be hurt
and/or killed if he were to return to Gambia. Jobe overstayed
his visa and though he was undetected by the INS, he presented
himself and sought political asylum. When the INS received this
request, they denied the request for political asylum and put him
into deportation proceedings. The INS issued an Order to Show
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Cause and told him that he could request political asylum at his
deportation hearing. We know the rest: he failed to appear at
his May 22 hearing and was ordered deported. Therefore he never
had the opportunity to request political asylum at a deportation
hearing; his ultimate goal when he presented himself before the
INS.
I do not think it fair or just to deport an individual
and put his life in danger on the basis of appellate fact-
finding. We should rule, as the panel did originally, that the
180-day time limit for reopening is subject to equitable tolling,
that ineffective assistance of counsel may provide a basis for
the application of the equitable tolling doctrine, and that there
should be a hearing by the IJ to determine whether the running of
the 180-day period for filing a motion to reopen should be
equitably tolled on the facts of this case. If so, there should
be a hearing on Jobe's motion to reopen, giving him an
opportunity to make the case that he should be given a new
hearing on his asylum application.
For the foregoing reasons, I respectfully dissent.
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