Uriostegui, Margarit v. Gonzales, Alberto R.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 15, 2005
Docket03-3748
StatusPublished

This text of Uriostegui, Margarit v. Gonzales, Alberto R. (Uriostegui, Margarit v. Gonzales, Alberto R.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Uriostegui, Margarit v. Gonzales, Alberto R., (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________

No. 03-3748 MARGARITA URIOSTEGUI, Petitioner, v.

ALBERTO R. GONZALES, Attorney General of the United States, Respondent. ____________ Petition for Review of a Decision of the Board of Immigration Appeals. No. A70-560-275 ____________ ARGUED OCTOBER 5, 2004—DECIDED JULY 15, 2005 ____________

Before POSNER, KANNE, and WOOD, Circuit Judges. WOOD, Circuit Judge. Margarita Uriostegui, a 32-year-old Mexican national, entered the United States illegally before the end of 1990. The following year, her father, who was lawfully in the United States, applied on her behalf for an immigrant visa then available to unmarried children of lawful permanent residents. Years passed. Finally, in July 2000, while Uriostegui continued to wait for the final word on her 1991 visa application, the then-INS commenced removal proceedings. Uriostegui was scheduled to appear at 2 No. 03-3748

two master hearings in 2001, but she obtained continuances both times. She failed to appear at the third scheduled hearing, however, which was set for June 2002, and the Immigration Judge (IJ) accordingly entered an in absentia removal order. The judge later denied her timely motion to reopen, and she appealed that decision to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA). While the appeal was pending, she filed an original motion with the BIA asking that her case be re- manded to an IJ so that new evidence could be considered. The BIA summarily affirmed the IJ’s decision denying her motion to reopen, without adding any reference to her sep- arate motion to remand. Uriostegui now petitions this court for review. Although we conclude that the BIA acted within its discretion to reject her motion to reopen, we have no way of reviewing on this record the agency’s disposition (if there was one) of her motion to remand. We therefore grant her petition to that limited extent and return this matter to the BIA for further proceedings.

I Uriostegui was born in Mexico in December 1972, but she has been living in the United States ever since she entered without inspection some time before the end of 1990. (On her immigration documents, she has given the year of entry as both 1988 and 1990. It seems that she may have re- turned to Mexico briefly in 1989 and then re-entered the United States for good in 1990. The precise date makes no difference for our purposes.) Her parents also made their way to the United States. Her father, Alvaro Uriostegui, received lawful permanent resident status in December 1990, and her mother, Francisca Uriostegui, did so in August 1996. Uriostegui herself attempted to follow in her father’s footsteps. In October 1991, her father applied on her behalf No. 03-3748 3

for an immigrant visa that would allow her, as his unmar- ried child, to take advantage of his legal status. INS cor- respondence identifies Uriostegui’s preference category as “LB” (child of a legalization beneficiary) in early 1992, and as “F2B” (unmarried child of a permanent resident) in late 1999. It seems, therefore, that she was not making any effort to keep her presence in the United States a secret from the authorities. Nothing much seems to have happened with Mr. Uriostegui’s application between 1991 and 1999. In February 1999, however, Uriostegui rocked the boat by applying for a change in status. It is difficult to discern the basis for her request from the nearly illegible application copy in the record, but it seems that she checked a box indicating “married” on the form and that she stated that she had two children, one born in 1992 and the other in 1993. This application was denied in September 1999, and that action prompted the INS in July 2000 to send Uriostegui a Notice to Appear formally initiating removal proceedings, on the ground that she was an alien “present in the United States without being admitted or paroled.” See Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) § 212(a)(6) (A)(i), 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(6)(A)(i). Uriostegui received notice by mail of her first master hearing, which was scheduled for April 4, 2001. She ap- parently attended that hearing, and the IJ granted her a continuance to October 3, 2001. Her counsel then filed a “Motion to Extend Filing Date of Adjustment of Status Application,” which requested a continuance of the October hearing to give Uriostegui “time to file her application for adjustment status based on an approved I-130 with a pri- ority date of 10/31/91.” Counsel later received notice, again by mail, that the October hearing was rescheduled for December 19, 2001. Uriostegui appeared at that hearing and received another continuance; her lawyer was per- sonally served at that time with a new Notice to Appear 4 No. 03-3748

instructing Uriostegui that her hearing date was June 12, 2002. The record does not reveal whether Uriostegui herself received personal service of that notice. Boilerplate in the Notice to Appear indicates that she would have been told about its contents orally in Spanish, her native language. June 12 arrived, but Uriostegui did not show up at the hearing. Ready to resolve the case, the IJ entered an in absentia order of removal, designating Mexico as the coun- try of removal. See INA § 240(b)(5)(A); 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(b)(5)(A). Immediately after the removal order was entered, Uriostegui began the process of trying to undo its effects. In July 2002, she timely filed a “Motion to Vacate In Abstentia [sic] Order of Removal” with the IJ. She did not dispute the fact that she had been notified orally, in Spanish, about the June 12 hearing date. Instead, she asserted that she had misheard the word “junio” (June, in Spanish) and thought that the speaker had said “julio” (July). She did not claim, however, that her lawyer had failed to give her the written notice of the June hearing date. At almost the same time, on June 24, 2002, Uriostegui filed an “Application for Cancellation of Removal and Adjustment of Status” with the Executive Office for Immi- gration Review, which is the component of the Department of Justice that encompasses the BIA and immigration court. See Balogun v. Ashcroft, 374 F.3d 492, 494 n.1 (7th Cir. 2004). The application claims that Uriostegui’s removal to Mexico will “result in exceptional and extremely unusual hardship” to her parents and children. The only reason for this assertion was that her children would not return with her to Mexico. As Uriostegui put it, “[m]y children are U.S. Citizens. They can receive better education and health care in here, than in a place that I may be deprted [sic] to.” The record does not disclose what happened to this application. The IJ decided to treat Uriostegui’s motion to vacate as a motion to reopen the proceedings. On that assumption, he No. 03-3748 5

denied it. Uriostegui’s “misunderstanding of the date of her final hearing,” he concluded, did not amount to the excep- tional circumstances required to justify reopening her case. See INA § 240(b)(5)(C)(i), 8 U.S.C. § 1229a(b)(5)(C)(i). Uriostegui filed an appeal to the BIA in October 2002 from the IJ’s order denying her motion to reopen; she did not appeal from the order of removal itself. In March 2003, while the appeal was pending, she also presented a motion to the BIA seeking a remand to the IJ on the ground of new evidence. She was referring to the fact that after her removal order was entered, the State Department had an- nounced that it was still processing F2B visas with priority dates both before and after hers (which, recall, was in 1991).

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