Ofir Palacios Sanchez v. Merrick Garland
This text of Ofir Palacios Sanchez v. Merrick Garland (Ofir Palacios Sanchez v. Merrick Garland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
NOT FOR PUBLICATION FILED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS JUN 30 2023 MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK U.S. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
OFIR PALACIOS SANCHEZ, Nos. 20-72965 21-70750 Petitioner, Agency No. A206-855-969 v.
MERRICK B. GARLAND, Attorney MEMORANDUM* General,
Respondent.
On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals
Argued and Submitted May 18, 2023 Phoenix, Arizona
Before: NGUYEN and COLLINS, Circuit Judges, and KORMAN,** District Judge. Concurrence by Judge KORMAN.
Ofir Palacios Sanchez appeals the denial of his motion to file a late appeal
and his subsequent motion for reconsideration and to reopen by the Board of
Immigration Appeals (“BIA”). He contends that the BIA erred in concluding that
* This disposition is not appropriate for publication and is not precedent except as provided by Ninth Circuit Rule 36-3. ** The Honorable Edward R. Korman, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of New York, sitting by designation. 1 he failed to exercise diligence in filing his appeal. We deny in part and dismiss in
part the petition.
1. Palacios Sanchez seeks review of the BIA’s decision declining to
certify his case for consideration on appeal. We lack jurisdiction to review the
BIA’s certification decision, which is committed to the agency’s discretion. Idrees
v. Barr, 923 F.3d 539, 543 (9th Cir. 2019). Thus, we dismiss the petition insofar as
it challenges the certification decision.
2. The BIA properly determined that Palacios Sanchez, through his
counsel, failed to exercise diligence in timely filing his appeal.1 As a preliminary
matter, the BIA correctly addressed counsel’s diligence, which is one element of
the equitable tolling analysis. See Holland v. Florida, 560 U.S. 631, 649 (2010).
In fact, it seems the BIA charitably construed Palacios Sanchez’s motions as
presenting an equitable tolling claim even though such tolling was not explicitly
raised. This was not error. We have held that the BIA’s 30-day appeal filing
deadline is not jurisdictional, which makes it “subject to equitable exceptions.”
Irigoyen-Briones v. Holder, 644 F.3d 943, 947–48 (9th Cir. 2011). The BIA’s
equitable tolling diligence analysis was therefore appropriate.
1 We need not determine whether, as Palacios Sanchez contends and as the Fourth Circuit has held, “the BIA’s decision to deny equitable tolling presents a mixed question we must review de novo.” Williams v. Garland, 59 F.4th 620, 639 (4th Cir. 2023). Even assuming that de novo review applies, we conclude that the BIA did not err in rejecting Palacios Sanchez’s initial motion to file a late appeal. 2 The BIA correctly concluded that Palacios Sanchez’s counsel fell short of
his duty to exercise due diligence. In his initial motion to file a late appeal,
Palacios Sanchez argued only that counsel acted diligently in re-filing after
discovering FedEx’s error. In his motion for reconsideration and to reopen, he
added that the COVID-19 pandemic circumstances excused counsel’s months-long
delay in discovering FedEx’s error and that the BIA had accepted a late appeal in a
similar case.
Counsel filed Palacios Sanchez’s appeal nearly five months late. No doubt,
counsel was diligent in his initial attempt to file the notice of appeal, which he sent
via FedEx overnight mail on January 31, 2020, to meet a filing deadline of
February 21, 2020. And, no doubt, that FedEx lost the package in the mail
justified some delay in filing the appeal. But diligent counsel would have had a
system in place alerting him to the fact that he never received confirmation from
the BIA, which is sent shortly after the agency receives a notice of appeal. Instead,
counsel remained in the dark for months.
The BIA did not err by rejecting Palacios Sanchez’s initial motion, as it
provided no explanation for counsel’s failure to discover FedEx’s error for months.
Nor did the BIA abuse its discretion by rejecting counsel’s later explanation that
staffing disruptions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic excused the lengthy filing
delay. To start, staffing disruptions do not excuse counsel from implementing
3 basic case management strategies that are not particularly labor intensive. And at
the least, after realizing that FedEx had failed to deliver one notice of appeal,
diligent counsel would have investigated the status of his other appeals to ensure
they had been properly filed.
Our decision in Irigoyen-Briones is not to the contrary. There, the court
commented that mailing an appeal to the BIA overnight for guaranteed delivery on
the due date is “all that reasonable diligence requires.” Irigoyen-Briones, 644 F.3d
at 950. The appeal in that case arrived just one day late. Id. at 945. Counsel’s
misstep in this case was not reliance on a mail carrier’s shipping time promise
resulting in a minor delay, but rather a failure to inquire about an appeal for
months despite never receiving confirmation of filing. We do not think that filing
through a reliable mail service absolves counsel of the duty to rectify a filing error
within a reasonable time frame, nor does Irigoyen-Briones stand for that
proposition.
Finally, Palacio Sanchez notes that the BIA accepted a late appeal through
certification in a related case. Counsel sent three appeals in the same January 2020
package that FedEx lost. In one of those cases, counsel filed a late appeal on June
1, 2020, and the BIA effectively accepted it by invoking its discretion to certify the
appeal to itself. As we have stated, we lack jurisdiction to review the BIA’s
decision not to similarly invoke certification in Palacios Sanchez’s case.
4 Moreover, the different facts in the other case, in which FedEx’s error was detected
and corrected more quickly, provide no basis for concluding that the BIA erred in
concluding that equitable tolling was inapplicable in Palacios Sanchez’s case.
PETITION DENIED IN PART and DISMISSED IN PART.
5 Palacios Sanchez v. Garland (20-72965+) FILED KORMAN, District Judge, concurring: JUN 30 2023 MOLLY C. DWYER, CLERK U.S. COURT OF APPEALS I concur in the memorandum disposition. I agree with the majority that we
lack jurisdiction to review the BIA’s certification decision, that the BIA did not err
in rejecting petitioner’s initial motion to file a late appeal, and that the BIA did not
abuse its discretion in denying petitioner’s motion to reconsider. But I write
separately because the failure by petitioner’s counsel to file a timely appeal in this
case raises a serious question of ineffective assistance of counsel. Indeed, the
result of the decision in this case is to allow removal of a man who has been in this
country since 1995 – and who has two U.S. citizen children, born in 2005 and 2014
– with no real opportunity to appeal the immigration judge’s decision. All because
of the incompetence of petitioner’s lawyer.
The majority rightly concludes that diligent counsel would have recognized
the fact that the FedEx package had not arrived at the BIA long before petitioner’s
counsel did in this case. And it is clear from the record that counsel should have
known about the FedEx failure at least several weeks before he purports to have
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