Shouchen Yang v. Lynch, No. 12-71773 (9th Cir. 2016)
Annotate this CaseThis court has held that an immigration judge may use the maxim falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus—“false in one thing, false in everything”—to find that a witness who testified falsely in one respect at a removal hearing is also not credible in other respects. The court concluded that the BIA may not do the same thing when considering a motion to reopen removal proceedings. The court explained that, in contrast to an immigration judge, the BIA is not a finder of fact, so it cannot make the kind of credibility determination inherent in a decision to apply the falsus maxim. The court granted the petition for review in this case because the BIA applied the falsus maximu in denying petitioner's motion to reopen. The falsus maxim cannot render petitioner’s affidavit “inherently unbelievable,” because the falsus maxim is discretionary rather than mandatory.
Court Description: Immigration. The panel granted a petition for review of the denial of a motion to reopen removal proceedings, concluding that the Board of Immigration Appeals erred when it applied the maxim falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus—“false in one thing, false in everything”— to reject as not credible petitioner’s new claim for asylum relief, based on a prior adverse credibility determination in underlying removal proceedings. The panel explained that unlike an immigration judge, the Board may not make findings of fact, and must instead credit evidence supporting a motion to reopen unless that evidence is inherently unbelievable. The panel stated that the falsus maxim cannot render an affidavit inherently unbelievable because the maxim is discretionary, not mandatory, and the Board as an appellate body is limited to reviewing the IJ’s factual findings for clear error, rather than making factual determinations in the first instance. Dissenting, Judge Schroeder agreed that the Board is prohibited from making credibility determinations in considering a motion to reopen, but she does not view the Board’s denial in this case to be premised on credibility, but rather petitioner’s failure to meet the heavy burden of showing that the result in this case would change if the case was reopened. YANG V. LYNCH 3
The court issued a subsequent related opinion or order on May 19, 2016.
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