SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 19–863
_________________
AGUSTO NIZ-CHAVEZ, PETITIONER
v.
MERRICK B. GARLAND, ATTORNEY GENERAL
on writ of certiorari to the united states
court of appeals for the sixth circuit
[April 29, 2021]
Justice Kavanaugh, with whom The Chief Justice
and Justice Alito join, dissenting.
Agusto Niz-Chavez is a native and citizen of
Guatemala. In 2005, Niz-Chavez unlawfully entered the United States
through the southern border and eventually settled in Detroit. In
2013, the Government initiated removal proceedings against
Niz-Chavez. After the removal hearings, an Immigration Judge
ordered Niz-Chavez to either voluntarily depart from the United
States within 30 days or else be removed to Guatemala.
The Court today casts aside the Immigration
Judge’s order and allows Niz-Chavez to go back to immigration court
to seek cancellation of removal. Why? The Court says that
Niz-Chavez did not receive proper notice of his removal proceedings
because he received notice in two documents rather than one. The
Court so holds even though Niz-Chavez (i) received all the
statutorily required information about his removal proceedings,
including the time and place of the removal hearing; (ii) was not
prejudiced in any way by receiving notice in two documents rather
than one; and (iii) in fact appeared with counsel at his scheduled
removal hearing.
The Court’s decision contravenes Congress’s
detailed requirements for a noncitizen to obtain cancellation of
removal. When the Government seeks to remove a noncitizen such as
Niz-Chavez who is unlawfully in the country, it begins the process
by sending the noncitizen a notice to appear for removal
proceedings. 8 U. S. C. §1229(a)(1). In the subsequent
removal proceedings before an immigration judge, the noncitizen may
contest the grounds for removal and may also ask the immigration
judge to grant various forms of relief, including discretionary
cancellation of removal. §§1229b(a), (b)(1).
A noncitizen’s eligibility for cancellation of
removal depends in part on when the noncitizen received notice of
the removal proceeding. To be eligible, a noncitizen who is a
nonpermanent resident must have been continuously present in the
United States for at least 10 years. §1229b(b)(1)(A). The 10-year
clock stops, however, when the noncitizen is served “a notice to
appear” for the removal proceeding. §1229b(d)(1).
Because service of a notice to appear stops the
10-year clock and may make the noncitizen ineligible for
cancellation of removal, noncitizens who want to apply for
cancellation of removal (and courts) must know what constitutes a
notice to appear. Federal immigration law answers that question.
The relevant statute defines a notice to appear as “written
notice,” which must be served in person or by mail and which
provides certain required information, such as the alleged grounds
for removal and the time and place of the removal hearing.
§1229(a)(1); see
Pereira v.
Sessions, 585 U. S.
___, ___–___ (2018) (slip op., at 13–14) (§1229(a)(1) provides the
definition of a notice to appear for purposes of the 10-year
clock).
In this case, the United States commenced
removal proceedings against Niz-Chavez in 2013—eight years after he
entered the United States. The Government served two documents on
Niz-Chavez. In March 2013, Niz-Chavez received the first document,
which notified him that he was being charged as removable because
he was unlawfully in the country. It explained that he would have
to appear for a removal hearing at the immigration court in Detroit
at a time to be set in the future. Two months later, he received
the second document, which notified him that the removal hearing
would occur at the immigration court in Detroit on June 25, 2013,
at 8:30 a.m. The two documents together included all the
statutorily required information. See §1229(a)(1). Niz-Chavez
appeared with counsel at the scheduled hearing on June 25,
2013.
At the hearing, Niz-Chavez conceded that he was
removable because he was unlawfully in the country. Moreover,
Niz-Chavez did not request cancellation of removal or suggest that
he was eligible for cancellation of removal, presumably because he
received the notice to appear long before he had accrued 10 years
of continuous presence in the United States. After further
hearings, an Immigration Judge found Niz-Chavez removable as
charged and ordered Niz-Chavez to either voluntarily depart from
the United States within 30 days or else be removed to
Guatemala.
Niz-Chavez now argues that he in fact should be
eligible for cancellation of removal. He emphasizes that the
continuous-presence clock stops upon service of “
a notice to
appear.” §1229b(d)(1). That language, according to Niz-Chavez,
means that, to stop the 10-year clock, the Government must provide
all the required information
in one document, rather than
two. The Government responds that the statute includes no such
requirement and that the Government may serve a notice to appear
in two documents, with the time and place of the hearing
coming in the second document and the 10-year clock stopping
then.
The Court today agrees with Niz-Chavez that, in
order to stop the 10-year clock, the Government must provide
written notice in one document, not two. I find the Court’s
conclusion rather perplexing as a matter of statutory
interpretation and common sense. I therefore respectfully
dissent.
I
A
This is not the Court’s first case involving a
notice to appear for removal proceedings. In
Pereira v.
Sessions, the Court held that a notice that does not provide
the time and place of the hearing does not stop the 10-year
continuous-presence clock. 585 U. S. ___, ___ (2018) (slip
op., at 2). Before
Pereira, the Government (in some
Circuits) could send two documents as it did in this case and stop
the clock when it served the first, incomplete document. See
id., at ___–___, and n. 4 (slip op., at 7–8, and n. 4).
In the wake of
Pereira, however, service of the first
document no longer stops the clock. The clock does not stop until
the Government also provides the time and place of the hearing.
In
Pereira, the Court did not address the
distinct question whether the Government may serve a notice to
appear in two documents instead of one, with the time and place of
the hearing coming in the second document and the clock then
stopping upon service of the second document. We must decide that
question here.
After
Pereira, why would the Government
still provide notice in two documents instead of one comprehensive
document? Simple. When the Government wants to inform the
noncitizen that it is initiating removal proceedings, the
Government may not yet know exactly when the hearing will occur. So
the Government sometimes will first inform the noncitizen of the
charges, and only later provide the exact time and place of the
hearing.
After
Pereira, the Government gains no
advantage by providing notice in two documents, because the 10-year
continuous-presence clock does not stop until the noncitizen has
also been served the statutorily required time and place
information. See
id., at ___ (slip op., at 2). If anyone
gains an advantage from two-document notice after
Pereira,
it is noncitizens. They can learn of the removal proceedings and
begin preparing a defense even before they receive notice of the
time and place of the hearing. So receiving notice in two documents
can benefit noncitizens.
Even though receiving notice in two documents
would benefit noncitizens as a group by giving them more time to
prepare for hearings, Niz-Chavez understandably seeks to advance
his own interests in not having the 10-year clock stopped in his
individual case. Niz-Chavez says that to stop the 10-year clock,
the Government must provide a single document with all the
statutorily required information, because the statute requires
“
a notice to appear.”
B
The Court agrees with Niz-Chavez, resting its
conclusion almost entirely on the word “a” in the statutory phrase
“a notice to appear.” As the Court notes, Congress provided that
the 10-year continuous-presence clock stops when the noncitizen is
served “a notice to appear” for removal proceedings. 8
U. S. C. §1229b(d)(1).[
1] The Court says that the article “a” means that the
10-year continuous-presence clock stops only if the Government
serves a single document with all the required information to
initiate the removal proceedings, not two documents with all the
required information. In my respectful view, the Court’s textual
interpretation contains two independent flaws, either of which
suffices to defeat the Court’s conclusion.
First, the Court’s analysis disregards
the statutory definition of a notice to appear.
When a statute defines a term, we ordinarily
follow the statutory definition.
Digital Realty Trust, Inc.
v.
Somers, 583 U. S. ___, ___ (2018) (slip op., at 9);
Burgess v.
United States,
553
U.S. 124, 129–130 (2008). Here, the statute defines a notice to
appear in a somewhat oddly worded way. The definition is located in
the statutory provision that specifies how the Government must
initiate removal proceedings. That provision states: “
written
notice (in this section referred to as a ‘notice to appear’)
shall be given in person to the alien (or, if personal service is
not practicable, through service by mail to the alien or to the
alien’s counsel of record, if any) specifying” 10 categories of
information relevant to the removal proceedings. §1229(a)(1)
(emphasis added); see also
Pereira, 585 U. S., at
___–___ (slip op., at 13–14) (§1229(a)(1) provides the definition
of a notice to appear for purposes of the 10-year clock).[
2]
In other words, the statute provides that the
10-year continuous-presence clock stops upon service of “a notice
to appear,” and then goes on to define a notice to appear as
“written notice.” The statute nowhere says that written notice must
be provided in a single document. Rather, the statute lists three
essential requirements for the Government to notify a noncitizen of
removal proceedings: (i) the notice must be “written notice”; (ii)
it must be “given in person,” if practicable, or else by mail; and
(iii) the notice must include the required information, such as the
grounds for removal and the time and place of the hearing.
§1229(a)(1). Nothing more. But the Court today nonetheless imposes
a fourth, atextual single-document requirement for the notice to
stop the 10-year clock.
If Congress actually wanted to require a single
document to stop the 10-year clock, Congress easily could have (and
surely would have) said so. After all, the statute supplies
comprehensive and detailed instructions about how the Government
must serve a notice to appear and what information must be
included. But the statute never says that all the required
information must appear in a single document.
Notice delivered in two installments can readily
satisfy all the requirements of a notice to appear. Consider the
notice served on Niz-Chavez in this case. It was written notice. It
was properly served. It contained all the statutorily required
information, including the time and place of the hearing. The
statute contemplates nothing more of a notice to appear.
Instead of applying that clear statutory
definition of a notice to appear as written notice, the Court
dismisses the definition’s relevance on a novel basis not raised by
Niz-Chavez, not advanced by any
amicus brief, and not
adopted by any lower courts—the placement of a quotation mark. The
Court reasons that the quotation marks in the statutory definition
appear around only the words “notice to appear,” rather than around
“
a notice to appear.” On that basis, the Court insists that
the phrase “written notice” defines only the three words “notice to
appear”—without the “a.” And substituting “written notice” for
“notice to appear” in the statutory provision addressing the
10-year clock would still require “a” written notice, which the
Court interprets to mean a single document.
According to the Court, Congress thus imposed a
single-document requirement for stopping the 10-year clock not by
actually saying that a single document is required, but rather by
placing quotation marks around the words
a “notice to
appear” rather than
“a notice to appear” in the
statutory definition. There is a good reason that Niz-Chavez did
not raise this argument, that no
amicus brief advanced this
argument, and that no court has adopted it. The Court’s theory is
mistaken and implausible. If Congress wanted to require a single
document in order to stop the 10-year clock, it is hard to imagine
a more obscure way of doing so. Although “the meaning of a statute
will typically heed the commands of its punctuation,” “a purported
plain-meaning analysis based only on punctuation is necessarily
incomplete and runs the risk of distorting a statute’s true
meaning.”
United States Nat. Bank of Ore. v.
Independent
Ins. Agents of America, Inc.,
508 U.S.
439, 454 (1993). The Court has declined to rely on “the
deployment of quotation marks” when “all of the other evidence from
the statute points the other way.”
Id., at 455.
So it is here. The Court’s quotation-mark theory
contravenes the statutory text and structure. The text and
structure make clear that the notice that initiates removal
proceedings is the same notice that stops the 10-year clock. See
§§1229(a)(1), 1229b(d)(1). But the Court’s interpretation treats
them as different by imposing different requirements for a notice
that stops the 10-year clock and for a notice that initiates
removal proceedings. To reiterate, to initiate removal proceedings,
the Government must provide the noncitizen with “written notice.”
The Court does not dispute (and cannot dispute) that the Government
can initiate removal proceedings by providing written notice in
more than one document, so long as the notice encompasses all the
statutorily required information. Nonetheless, for that written
notice to also stop the 10-year clock, the Court says that the
written notice must be provided in a single document rather than
two documents because the 10-year clock provision requires
“
a notice to appear.” Stated otherwise, under the Court’s
novel theory, the Government may use two documents to initiate
removal proceedings, but the Government must use a single document
if it also wants to stop the continuous-presence clock—even though
Congress explicitly linked the notice that stops the clock to the
notice that initiates removal proceedings. Put simply, the Court’s
argument based on the placement of a quotation mark contravenes the
straightforward statutory structure and makes little sense.
The Court’s novel interpretation also creates
another inconsistency. Section 1229a(b)(5) explains that a
noncitizen who fails to attend a removal hearing may be removed in
absentia if he had previously been provided with “written notice”
under §1229(a)(1). Under the Court’s interpretation, it is hard to
see why such notice would need to be provided in a single
document—there are no dangling uses of “a” to latch onto in that
provision. It makes no sense that two-document notice could justify
removal in absentia but could not stop the continuous-presence
clock.
In sum, the Court’s theory for disregarding the
statutory definition is both novel and unpersuasive. The Court’s
quotation-mark argument fails because it distorts the “statute’s
true meaning.”
United States Nat. Bank of Ore., 508
U. S., at 454. When the statutory definition of a notice to
appear as “written notice” is correctly applied, instead of
sidestepped, it readily resolves what should have been a very
simple statutory case.
Second, even if there were no definition
in this statute and we therefore had to focus solely on the term “a
notice to appear” in isolation, the Court’s interpretation of that
phrase would still fail.
Ordinary meaning and literal meaning are two
different things. And judges interpreting statutes should follow
ordinary meaning, not literal meaning. See,
e.g.,
McBoyle v.
United States,
283 U.S.
25, 26 (1931) (in ordinary speech, “vehicle” does not cover an
aircraft, even though “etymologically it is possible to use the
word” that way); see also A. Scalia, A Matter of Interpretation 24
(1997) (a “good textualist is not a literalist”). The Court here,
however, relies heavily on literal meaning: The Court interprets
the word “a” in the phrase “a notice to appear” to literally
require the Government to serve one (and only one) document. In the
Court’s words, “a notice” requires “ ‘a’ single document
containing the required information.”
Ante, at 5.
As a matter of ordinary parlance, however, the
word “a” is not a one-size-fits-all word. As relevant here, the
word “a” is sometimes used to modify a single thing that must be
delivered in one package, but it is sometimes used to modify a
single thing that can be delivered in multiple installments, rather
than in one installment. Context is critical to determine the
proper meaning of “a” in a particular phrase. Consider some
examples. A car dealership that promises to ship “a car” to a
customer has not fulfilled its obligation if it sends the customer
one car part at a time. By contrast, it is common to submit “a job
application” by sending a resume first and then references as they
are available. When the final reference arrives, the applicant has
submitted “a job application.” Similarly, an author might submit
chapters of a novel to an editor one at a time, as they are ready.
Upon submission of the final chapter, the author undoubtedly has
submitted “a manuscript.” “A contract” likewise can be “established
by multiple documents.”
Secretary of U. S. Air Force v.
Commemorative Air Force, 585 F.3d 895, 901 (CA6 2009). The
list goes on.
As those examples demonstrate, and as the Court
acknowledges, the article “a” can be perfectly consistent with
delivery in installments. And in this case, the better reading of
the article “a” is that it does not require delivery in only one
installment. A notice to appear for a removal hearing is more like
a job application, a manuscript, and a contract than it is like a
car. A notice to appear conveys information, like a job
application, a manuscript, and a contract. And unlike a car, a
notice to appear is easy for the recipient to assemble from its
constituent installments.
The Court prefers a different analogy. To
buttress its interpretation, the Court analogizes the notice to
appear to legal documents that initiate criminal cases, like
indictments. The Court reasons that “an indictment” traditionally
provides all the required information in a single document, so “a
notice to appear” must do so as well.
Ante, at 7–8.
But that analogy is misplaced. An indictment
generally provides charging information. By contrast, a notice to
appear provides charging information
and logistical
calendaring information that is not always knowable at the time of
charging. As the Court said in
Pereira, a notice to appear
is more than just a charging document because it serves “another
equally integral function: telling a noncitizen when and where to
appear.” See 585 U. S., at ___, n. 7 (slip op., at 13,
n. 7). In other words, a notice to appear is akin to a
charging document
plus a calendaring document. It is
therefore easy to understand why a notice to appear might require
two installments while an indictment requires only one. The analogy
to an indictment actually cuts strongly
against the Court’s
interpretation.
In addition, interpreting “a notice to appear”
to allow delivery in two documents makes much more sense in context
here because it allows the Government to alert the noncitizen of
the charges well before a time and place have been set for the
hearing. That affords the noncitizen more time to prepare a
defense. And a noncitizen suffers no prejudice from receiving
notice in two documents rather than one, as Niz-Chavez’s case amply
demonstrates. In short, a noncitizen gains something and loses
nothing meaningful from receiving all the information in two
documents. (The same cannot be said for receiving a car in two
installments, for example.)
The Court’s interpretation, by contrast, spawns
a litany of absurdities. For example, under the Court’s
interpretation, the 10-year clock does not stop if the noncitizen
receives the two separate documents
on the same day but
in different envelopes. But the clock does stop if the
noncitizen receives the two documents in one envelope. What sense
does that make? Moreover, if a noncitizen receives a first document
without a time and place and a second document with only the time
and place, that does not stop the clock under the Court’s rule. But
if a noncitizen receives a first document with all the information
including the time and place and then a second document with all
the information and a
new time and place, that first
document does stop the clock under the Court’s rule. What sense
does that make?
Indeed, the Court deems Niz-Chavez to have never
received proper notice of the hearing even though he received all
the statutorily required information and
actually appeared with
counsel at the hearing. Again, what sense does that make?
The Court blames those absurdities on Congress
and says that Congress would have chosen to omit the article “a” if
it wanted to allow two documents. The Court’s apparent theory is
that Congress deliberately employed the word “a” to obliquely
impose an additional procedural obligation on the Government when
the Government initiates removal proceedings against a noncitizen
and wants to stop the 10-year clock. That theory is no more
plausible than the Court’s first theory that Congress used the
placement of a quotation mark to impose a new procedural
obligation. Once again, if Congress wanted to require the
Government to send a notice to appear in one document rather than
two documents in order to stop the 10-year clock, Congress easily
could have said so, and undoubtedly would have said so. But it did
not. The bottom line is that this new single-document requirement
comes from this Court, not Congress. The Court’s attempt to deflect
blame is unpersuasive.
In sum, the Court’s interpretation of the
statutory text is wrong for two independent reasons, either of
which suffices to defeat the Court’s conclusion. First, the
statutory definition of a notice to appear as “written notice”
establishes that “a notice to appear” can be delivered in two
installments. Second, even if there were no statutory definition,
the best reading of “a notice to appear” in this context is that
the notice can be provided in two installments.
C
The Court seeks to support its textual
analysis with additional arguments based on structure, statutory
history, and post-enactment regulatory history. Those arguments do
not help.
First, start with structure. The Court
says that three other statutory provisions—§§1229(e)(1),
1229a(b)(7), and 1229(a)(2)—imply that a notice to appear is a
single document.
Ante, at 9–11. But none of the three
provisions actually requires the Government to serve a notice to
appear in a single document. Moreover, the language in all three
provisions is consistent with a two-document notice to appear.
The first provision, §1229(e)(1), addresses the
Government’s notice obligations when it seizes a noncitizen at a
domestic violence shelter or other location as a precursor to
removal proceedings. In those cases, §1229(e)(1) says that “the
Notice to Appear shall include” a statement that the Government has
complied with certain protections for noncitizens. The Court says
that the phrase “the Notice” implies a single document because it
pairs an article with a singular noun.
Ante, at 9–10. But
the reference in §1229(e)(1) to “the Notice to Appear” does not
require or even contemplate a single document. Like the article
“a,” the article “the” can be used with a thing delivered in
constituent installments—consider “the job application,” “the
manuscript,” or “the contract.” Section 1229(e)(1) simply requires
the Government to include the necessary statement of compliance in
one of the documents constituting the notice to appear.
The second provision, §1229a(b)(7), concerns
noncitizens who fail to appear at removal proceedings and are
ordered removed in absentia. Section 1229a(b)(7) says that a
noncitizen in that situation is ineligible for certain kinds of
relief from removal for 10 years if the noncitizen was provided
oral notice “at the time of ” the written notice to appear.
§1229a(b)(7). The Court argues that the provision’s reference to
“the time of ” the written notice implies that the written
notice is necessarily delivered at one particular moment, and
therefore in one single document.
Ante, at 10–11. On the
contrary, the reference in §1229a(b)(7) to “the time of ” the
written notice is entirely consistent with two-document notice.
Notice qualifies as “a notice to appear” only when it includes the
time and place of the removal hearing.
Pereira, 585
U. S., at ___, ___ (slip op., at 2, 9). So when the Government
uses two documents to serve a notice to appear, “the time of ”
the written notice is the time when the noncitizen is served the
second installment that provides the time and place of the
hearing.
The third provision, §1229(a)(2), supplies a
procedure for changing the time or place of a removal hearing. It
requires the Government to give a noncitizen “a written notice” of
the new time and place. The Court concludes that the reference to
“
a written notice” requires a single document, and so
“
a notice to appear” must as well.
Ante, at 11. As a
practical matter, the Government may need only one document to
change the time or place of the hearing. But the word “a” in the
phrase “a written notice” does not
require the Government to
use a single document, just as the word “a” in the phrase “a notice
to appear” does not. Section 1229(a)(2), like the other two
provisions, is entirely consistent with the Government’s reading of
the statute.
Second, the Court also invokes statutory
history to support its interpretation. But the statutory history
does not advance the Court’s argument. Before 1996, the immigration
statute required the Government to serve an “order to show cause”
rather than a notice to appear. 8 U. S. C. §1252b(a)(1)
(1994 ed.). Back then, the statute allowed the Government to notify
a noncitizen of the time and place of the removal hearing either
“in the order to show cause or otherwise.” §1252b(a)(2)(A) (1994
ed.). The pre-1996 statute similarly defined an order to show cause
as “written notice”—a broad term that does not require one
document. §1252b(a)(1) (1994 ed.). In 1996, Congress made some
significant changes. Congress replaced suspension of deportation
with cancellation of removal. Illegal Immigration Reform and
Immigrant Responsibility Act, §§304(a), 308(b)(7), 110Stat.
3009–587, 3009–615 (codified at 8 U. S. C. §1229b).
Congress extended the continuous-presence requirement to 10 years
for nonpermanent residents. 110Stat. 3009–594 (codified at
§1229b(b)(1)(A)). Congress also changed the order to show cause to
a notice to appear, and required the Government to provide the time
and place information in that notice to appear. 110Stat. 3009–588
(codified at §1229(a)(1)(G)(i)). And Congress also provided for the
first time that service of the notice to appear would stop the
continuous-presence clock. 110Stat. 3009–595 (codified at
§1229b(d)(1)).
But amid all those changes, Congress never
required that a notice to appear include all the required
information in a single document. The Court nonetheless speculates
that a “rational Congress easily could have thought” it sensible to
peg the end of the continuous-presence clock to a single document.
Ante, at 11. Maybe so. But a rational Congress also could
have declined to impose a single-document requirement. What matters
is that the
actual Congress declined to impose a
single-document requirement in 1996, just as it had declined to do
before 1996.
Third, the Court turns to post-enactment
regulatory history. According to the Court, language in the
preamble to a 1997 notice of proposed rulemaking issued jointly by
the Immigration and Naturalization Service and the Executive Office
for Immigration Review suggests that those agencies once believed
that a single document was required.
Ante, at 12; see 62
Fed. Reg. 449. Even assuming that this executive agency
interpretation (found in a preamble to a notice of proposed
rulemaking) could alter the otherwise-best interpretation of the
statute, the proposed rule that follows the preamble undercuts the
Court’s characterization of the agencies’ 1997 position. The 1997
proposed rule stated that the Government would include the time and
place of the removal hearing in the initial charging document
“
where practicable.”
Id., at 457 (emphasis added).
And the proposed rule gave alternative instructions for when time
and place information “is not contained” in the initial document.
Ibid. That formulation does not reflect a single-document
interpretation of the statute. So post-enactment regulatory history
does not help the Court any more than statutory history; indeed,
the post-enactment regulatory history appears in significant
tension with the Court’s reading.
In the end, the Court’s arguments based on
structure and history all fail to answer a very simple question: If
Congress wanted all the information to be included in one document
in order to stop the 10-year clock, why did Congress not say that
all the information must be included in one document?
II
The Court concludes its opinion by suggesting
that its decision will rein in the Federal Government and produce
policy benefits for noncitizens. But the Court’s decision will not
meaningfully benefit noncitizens going forward, and it will
ultimately benefit few if any noncitizens who have already been
notified of their removal proceedings. Meanwhile, the Court’s
decision will impose significant costs on the immigration system,
which of course means more backlog for
other noncitizens
involved in other immigration cases.
To be clear, demonstrating that the Court is
wrong to predict policy benefits from its decision is not ignoring
a “statutory command” in favor of policy views.
Ante, at 15.
Rather, the point here is that the Court’s opinion both errs as a
matter of statutory interpretation
and will not meaningfully
help noncitizens, contrary to the Court’s prediction.
Start with the supposed policy benefit that the
Court identifies: The Court suggests that its decision will help
noncitizens by stopping the Government from sending numerous
documents (more than two) to noncitizens over a period of months or
even years, perhaps in an effort to confuse them. But the Court
does not point to any examples of the Government
actually
serving a notice to appear in more than two documents, or over a
period of years. After all, why would the Government do so, absent
a need to reschedule a hearing? It would make no sense. Under the
statute as interpreted in
Pereira, the Government cannot
stop the continuous-presence clock until it provides the time and
place of the removal hearing. And the immigration court cannot
commence the removal hearing until the Government does so. So
wasting years and sending multiple documents to serve a notice to
appear would only work to the Government’s disadvantage because it
would delay the hearing. The supposed “benefit” of the Court’s
decision, then, is simply to prevent the Government from doing
something that it has no incentive to do in the first place. The
Court’s opinion cures a problem of its own imagination.
In fact, the Court’s decision will not alter the
delivery of notice in any meaningful way. Going forward, when the
Government wants to initiate the process of removing a noncitizen
before it knows with certainty the time and place of the
noncitizen’s initial removal hearing, the Government can comply
with today’s decision in one of three ways. None of the three
alternatives provides meaningful benefits for noncitizens as
compared to the Government’s current practice of sometimes using
two documents, and two of the options are worse for
noncitizens.
The first way that the Government can comply
with today’s decision is simply to do what it did in Niz-Chavez’s
case, with one minor change. The Government can still send an
initial document that informs the noncitizen of all relevant
information except the time and place of the hearing, and then a
second document that supplies the time and place of the hearing.
All that the Government needs to do to comply with today’s decision
and still stop the 10-year clock is to repeat all the information
from the first document in the second document, or alternatively to
provide a copy of the first document when it serves the second.
Delivered together, the two attachments will form a single,
complete notice to appear even under the Court’s strained
interpretation, and therefore will stop the 10-year clock. (Counsel
for Niz-Chavez forthrightly conceded all of this at oral argument.
Tr. of Oral Arg. 24.) The Court insists that this change in
practice will still help noncitizens, but it fails to explain how.
The first document sent to Niz-Chavez in this case informed him
that he was required to carry the document with him at all times.
Especially in light of that obligation, it is hard to see any
meaningful benefit in the Government’s resending the same initial
document to a noncitizen once the hearing has been scheduled.
But even if that first possible method of
complying with today’s decision would benefit noncitizens in some
minimal way, it is not clear that the Government will actually
choose that option. Instead, the Government can comply with today’s
decision in other ways that will leave noncitizens
worse
off. As a second option, for example, the Government may stop
sending the first document at all and just wait until it can
provide all the information in one comprehensive
document—necessarily closer to the date of the hearing. That would
indisputably comply with today’s decision but would disadvantage
noncitizens by affording them less time to prepare for removal
hearings.
The third possible option is no better for
noncitizens. When the Government is ready to initiate removal
proceedings but does not know the time and place of a hearing, it
could comply with the Court’s decision by sending a document with a
placeholder time and place of the hearing and then later serve a
second document with the actual time and place of the hearing. As
counsel for Niz-Chavez conceded at oral argument, doing so would
comply with the statute and allow the Government to stop the
continuous-presence clock upon service of the
initial
document rather than the second document.
Id., at 15. That
option would give noncitizens
less time to accrue continuous
presence than when the Government includes the time and place only
in the second document. Moreover, that approach—sending the
noncitizen two different times or places—is a recipe for
confusion.
In short, the Court’s conclusion today will not
necessarily help noncitizens or constrain the Government going
forward.[
3]
But
looking backwards, will the Court’s
decision at least supply a benefit to some noncitizens such as
Niz-Chavez who
previously received a notice to appear in two
documents? To begin with, any noncitizen who becomes eligible for
cancellation of removal notwithstanding the noncitizen’s receipt of
all the required information in writing before 10 years of
continuous presence would receive a windfall based on the thinnest
of technicalities. Consider Niz-Chavez himself. He received all the
required information before the 10-year clock had run, he showed up
at the hearing with counsel, and he suffered zero prejudice from
receiving notice in two documents rather than one.
But in any event, that eligibility windfall is
unlikely to translate to any real-world benefit for many
noncitizens in Niz-Chavez’s position. To be sure, today’s decision
means that some noncitizens in Niz-Chavez’s position will now
become
eligible for cancellation of removal. But that does
not mean that those noncitizens will actually
receive
cancellation of removal as a result of today’s decision.
Cancellation of removal is discretionary. §§1229b(a), (b)(1). In
other words, today’s decision means only that immigration judges
have discretion to grant cancellation of removal for some
noncitizens who received notice in two documents.
And there is another apparent catch. Subject to
a few exceptions not relevant here, the number of noncitizens who
may receive cancellation of removal is capped by statute at only
4,000 per year. §1229b(e)(1). Those 4,000 spots are “coveted and
scarce”—so scarce, in fact, that in recent years, “according to the
Executive Office for Immigration Review, 3,500 cancellation of
removal slots have been filled on the first day” of the year.
Matter of Castillo-Perez, 27 I. & N. Dec. 664,
669 (Atty. Gen. 2019). “The other 500 slots are set aside to be
granted to detained aliens throughout the year.”
Ibid.
Perhaps a small handful of the noncitizens who receive an
eligibility windfall as a result of today’s decision will
ultimately also receive cancellation of removal. But that is far
from clear.
Meanwhile, the Court’s decision will impose
substantial costs and burdens on the immigration system, as the
Government has detailed. Tr. of Oral Arg. 52–54. Because today’s
decision means that many more people who have been in removal
proceedings may be eligible for cancellation of removal, presumably
many more people will apply. And processing all of those extra
applications for cancellation of removal will impose costs on the
immigration system and create backlogs and delays for other
noncitizens trying to get their day in court. More than 1.2 million
cases are currently inching their way through the immigration
courts. Dept. of Justice, Executive Office for Immigration Review
Adjudication Statistics, Pending Cases, New Cases, and Total
Completions (Jan. 7, 2021). If even a small portion of the
noncitizens with pending removal cases become eligible for
cancellation of removal solely because of today’s decision, and
then apply for cancellation of removal, the immigration courts will
need to expend substantial resources to timely consider those
applications for relief, even though many of them are likely to be
denied.
In sum, the Court’s statutory conclusion in this
case will not necessarily help noncitizens. The Court’s statutory
interpretation is not likely to create meaningful benefits for many
noncitizens going forward, and it is not likely to create benefits
for many noncitizens looking backwards. And it will impose serious
administrative burdens on an immigration system that is already
overburdened, thereby harming other noncitizens.
* * *
As a matter of policy, one may reasonably
debate the circumstances under which a noncitizen who is unlawfully
in the country should be removed and should be eligible for
cancellation of removal. But those policy choices are for the
political branches. Our job is to follow the law passed by Congress
and signed by the President.
The statute here requires the Government to
serve the noncitizen with written notice of the charges and other
required information, including the time and place of the hearing.
In this case, Niz-Chavez received written notice of the charges and
all the required information, including the time and place of his
hearing. Niz-Chavez appeared with counsel at his hearing in Detroit
on June 25, 2013. Because he received written notice to appear
before he had accumulated 10 years of continuous physical presence,
he is not eligible for cancellation of removal. I respectfully
dissent.