Mezo v. Holder

615 F.3d 616, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 15945, 2010 WL 2993325
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 2, 2010
Docket09-3336
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 615 F.3d 616 (Mezo v. Holder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mezo v. Holder, 615 F.3d 616, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 15945, 2010 WL 2993325 (6th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

BOYCE F. MARTIN, JR., Circuit Judge.

Rania Mezo claims that she received ineffective assistance of counsel and seeks review of the Board of Immigration Appeals’ denial of her motion to reopen. Because the Board abused its discretion in finding that Mezo did not show due diligence, we VACATE and REMAND the Board’s decision for further fact-finding to determine the truth of Mezo’s allegations. If the Board finds that she received inef *618 fective assistance of counsel and that Mezo was prejudiced by the ineffective assistance, equitable tolling would apply, the motion to reopen would be timely, and the Board would then rule on the motion to reopen on its merits. If the Board finds that she did not receive ineffective assistance of counsel, equitable tolling would not apply, the motion to reopen would not be timely and the Board would lack jurisdiction to hear her motion to reopen.

I.

A. Background 1

Mezo is a native of the United Arab Emirates and a citizen of Iraq. She is a Catholic of Chaldean nationality, 2 which are religious and ethnic minorities in the Middle East. When Saddam Hussein’s regime occupied Kuwait in 1991, her family moved to Syria to escape retaliatory actions against Iraqis living in the United Arab Emirates. Mezo alleges that she was persecuted throughout her childhood and early adulthood by her teachers and classmates because she was not Muslim and refused to join the Ba’ath party. Mezo claims that, between April 6, 1997 and May 18, 2005, when she fled to the United States, she was investigated, threatened, interrogated, imprisoned, tortured, and raped by members of the Syrian Security Administration on multiple occasions.

Mezo arrived in the United States on May 18, 2005, on a non-immigrant-fiancee-of-a-United-States-citizen visa, with authorization to remain in the United States until no later than August 17, 2005. However, she stayed beyond that time without authorization. On September 19, 2005, within one year of her arrival, she filed an Application for Asylum and Withholding of Removal with the Chicago Asylum Office of the Department of Homeland Security, but it denied her request and referred her to an evidentiary hearing before an immigration judge. On December 22, 2005, the Department of Homeland Security served Mezo with a Notice to Appear, charging her with removability under the Immigration and Nationality Act § 237(a)(1)(B), 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(1)(B), for having remained in the United States longer than permitted.

On, July 26, 2007, Mezo applied for asylum, withholding of removal, and protection under the Convention Against Torture, Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, 21 U.S.T. 77, 595 U.N.T.S. 261 (ratified by the United States on Nov. 24, 1969), in a hearing held before an immigration judge. In an oral decision, the immigration judge denied Mezo’s applications for asylum, withholding of removal under the Act with respect to the United Arab Emirates and Iraq, and protection under the Convention with regard to the United Arab Emirates, Syria, and Iraq. The judge granted Mezo’s application for withholding of removal under the Act with regard to Syria. The judge then ordered that Mezo be deported to Iraq, or in the alternative, to the United Arab Emirates, specifying orally and in writing that Mezo’s appeal was due by August 27, 2007.

B. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel

On August 23, 2007, Mezo retained attorney Patricia Sullivan to file her appeal. Mezo made a partial attorney’s fee payment and paid the filing fee of six-hundred and ten dollars to Sullivan that day. Be *619 cause Sullivan chose to mail the appeal via United States regular mail, 3 the appeals office did not receive the notice of appeal until September 4, 2007. 4 On October 11, 2007, the Board denied the appeal because the notice of appeal was filed after the August 27, 2007 deadline, and the Board stated that it therefore lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeal. The record reflects that Sullivan sent Mezo a letter on September 11, 2007, stating that the notice of appeal was filed with the appeals office on September 4, 2007. Mezo alleges that Sullivan never informed her that the appeal was subsequently denied, although Mezo called Sullivan several times to inquire about the appeal. Instead, Sullivan told Mezo that “everything was taken care of’, to “wait for a decision”, and “that she needed more time and that [Mezo] should not worry.” (App’x at 18.) Mezo stated that she believed that Sullivan “took care of the matter and properly processed her appeal.” (Id.)

In June 2008, approximately ten months after Sullivan filed the appeal, Mezo consulted attorney Faten Tina Shuker about her case. According to Mezo, it was only then that she discovered that her appeal had been dismissed because it was untimely filed. Mezo also learned that Sullivan had filed a motion to reconsider on her behalf on November 20, 2007. However, this motion was due within thirty days of the October 1, 2007 decision. The Board, therefore, dismissed the motion to reconsider as untimely on March 21, 2008.

Mezo, with Shuker’s aid, worked to obtain her file from Sullivan. She then filed a grievance against Sullivan with the State of Michigan Attorney Grievance Commission on July 24, 2008, and she served a copy of the grievance on Sullivan the next day in compliance with the requirements for asserting a viable claim of ineffective assistance of counsel described in Matter of Lazado, 19 I & N Dec. 637, 639 (BIA 1988). 5 Mezo also filed a motion to reopen on July 25, 2008, claiming that she was denied due process of law because Sullivan’s errors and misrepresentations rendered her assistance ineffective. Mezo further contended that she was eligible to reopen her asylum case based on changed country conditions in Iraq and recent legislation, the National Defense Authorization Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(c)(7) (2008), allowing certain Iraqis who were denied asylum after March 1, 2003, for, inter alia, changed country conditions, to reopen their cases.

In March 2009, the Board denied Mezo’s motion to reopen, finding that she failed to establish that she exercised due diligence in both hiring an attorney to file her initial appeal only four days before the due date of her original appeal and in filing her motion to reopen four months after the Board’s decision dismissing the motion to reconsider. Mezo timely appealed, arguing that the Board abused its discretion when it refused to apply equitable tolling to excuse her failure to timely file and denied her motion to reopen.

*620 II.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hemwall v. Douglas
E.D. Michigan, 2025
Jin Yin Zhou v. Pamela Bondi
134 F.4th 946 (Sixth Circuit, 2025)
Simpson v. Deters
S.D. Ohio, 2024
Joseph Ebu v. Commonwealth of Kentucky
Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2022
Gilberto Pablo Lorenzo v. William Barr
929 F.3d 379 (Sixth Circuit, 2019)
Wissam Al-Saka v. Jefferson Sessions
904 F.3d 427 (Sixth Circuit, 2018)
Watson v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Correction
690 F. App'x 885 (Sixth Circuit, 2017)
State v. Bravo
2017 Ohio 272 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2017)
Santos Calderon v. Loretta Lynch
655 F. App'x 417 (Sixth Circuit, 2016)
Natividad Mendoza v. Loretta E. Lynch
646 F. App'x 458 (Sixth Circuit, 2016)
Ramirez-Matias v. Lynch
631 F. App'x 339 (Sixth Circuit, 2015)
Roman Alvarez-Mejia v. Loretta Lynch
628 F. App'x 388 (Sixth Circuit, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
615 F.3d 616, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 15945, 2010 WL 2993325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mezo-v-holder-ca6-2010.