Strict Compliance with Lozada: Disciplinary Complaint Alone Is Not “Notice” – Comment on Tarlochan Singh v. Bondi (7th Cir. 2025)
1. Introduction
In Tarlochan Singh v. Pamela J. Bondi, the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit revisited the thorny issue of motions to reopen immigration proceedings predicated on ineffective assistance of counsel. Although the controlling framework—Matter of Lozada, 19 I. & N. Dec. 637 (BIA 1988)—is decades old, Singh argued that a mail-delivery mishap and his attorney’s non-admission to the Seventh Circuit justified reopening and re-issuance of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) decision denying him asylum, withholding of removal, and CAT protection.
The Seventh Circuit rejected Singh’s petition, holding that:
- All three procedural prongs of Lozada must be satisfied;
- Mere filing of a bar or disciplinary complaint does not meet the separate “notice to counsel” requirement; and
- Failure to comply with the Lozada protocol—standing alone—permits the BIA to deny a motion to reopen without reaching the merits of the underlying ineffective-assistance claim.
This decision solidifies a strict-compliance approach within the Seventh Circuit and clarifies an ambiguity that frequently confuses practitioners: whether service of a bar complaint can double as “notice” to prior counsel. The Court’s answer is an unequivocal “no.”
2. Summary of the Judgment
Chief Judge Sykes and Judges Kirsch and Jackson-Akiwumi (authoring) unanimously denied Singh’s consolidated petitions for review.
- Standard of Review – The Court applied abuse-of-discretion review to the BIA’s denial of motions to reopen / reconsider.
- Core Holding – Because Singh failed to meet the first two Lozada requirements (detailed attorney-client agreement and notice/opportunity to respond), the BIA acted within its discretion in denying reopening. The Court expressly declined to reach the third prong.
- Waiver – Singh’s separate challenge to an intervening BIA order was deemed waived for lack of argumentation.
3. Analysis
3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence
- Matter of Lozada, 19 I. & N. Dec. 637 (BIA 1988) – Established the tripartite procedural prerequisites for bringing an ineffective-assistance motion before the BIA.
- Conti v. INS, 780 F.2d 698 (7th Cir. 1985) – Earlier Seventh Circuit recognition that failure to comply with procedural requirements justifies denial of reopening.
- Patel v. Gonzales, 496 F.3d 829 (7th Cir. 2007) – Factually analogous; the Court had faulted Patel for not clarifying the scope of representation and for failing to notify counsel directly.
- Jiang v. Holder, 639 F.3d 751 (7th Cir. 2011) – Restated the three-part Lozada test.
- Lopez-Garcia v. Barr, 969 F.3d 749 (7th Cir. 2020) – Reaffirmed abuse-of-discretion standard and limits of judicial review under 8 U.S.C. § 1252.
- Statutory anchor: 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(1) (30-day petition for review deadline).
By leaning heavily on Patel, the panel underscored that the defects in Singh’s submissions were not trivial variations but the very same omissions that have led to denials in prior cases. Consistency, not novelty, drove the result.
3.2 Legal Reasoning
The Court’s reasoning operated in three concentric circles:
- Gatekeeping Function of Lozada – The panel reiterated that Lozada is designed to (a) safeguard the integrity of immigration proceedings, (b) filter out spurious claims, and (c) create an evidentiary record adequate for judicial review. Therefore, non-compliance automatically undermines the purpose of the motion to reopen.
- Requirement-by-Requirement Assessment –
- First prong: Singh’s affidavit lacked a concrete retainer/engagement description; without knowing what counsel was hired to do, one cannot measure deficient performance.
- Second prong: Serving a bar complaint—without furnishing proof that counsel actually received it—does not equal “notice” or offer “an opportunity to respond.” The Court aligned with Patel to emphasize that direct notification is indispensable.
- Third prong: The Court expressly bypassed analysis, noting that non-compliance with either of the first two prongs suffices for denial.
- Abuse-of-Discretion Lens – Because the BIA’s denial rested on a well-established procedural predicate, the Court found no irrationality, policy departure, or impermissible motive. Therefore, abuse-of-discretion review compelled affirmance.
3.3 Impact on Future Litigation and Immigration Practice
The precedential force of this case, though cabined to the Seventh Circuit, is significant:
- Clarifies Notice Requirement – Practitioners can no longer assume that a disciplinary complaint “subs in” for direct notice. Separate documentation of service upon prior counsel is essential.
- Encourages Written Engagements – The Court’s focus on contractual clarity incentivizes written (or at least detailed) retainer agreements in immigration matters.
- Limits Equitable Forgiveness – Even sympathetic facts (a pro se litigant, political persecution, mailing delays) will not override formal prerequisites. This re-asserts procedure over equity in the reopening context.
- Influences Circuit Splits – Some circuits show flexibility with Lozada. The Seventh Circuit’s rigidity may widen existing interpretive gaps, inviting eventual Supreme Court resolution.
4. Complex Concepts Simplified
- Motion to Reopen – A request that the BIA (or immigration judge) re-examine a case because of new facts or circumstances. Strict filing deadlines usually apply (90 days from final order unless exceptions apply).
- Motion to Reconsider – Asks the tribunal to re-evaluate its prior decision based on legal error, not new facts.
- Ineffective Assistance of Counsel (IAC) – In immigration, there is no Sixth-Amendment right to counsel, but due process concerns permit reopening when counsel’s deficient performance prejudiced the outcome.
- Lozada Framework – A three-step procedural checklist (agreement, notice, disciplinary complaint) that must accompany IAC-based motions.
- Abuse-of-Discretion Review – A deferential appellate standard; reversal occurs only when the agency’s decision is irrational, arbitrary, or contrary to law.
- Number Bar – Only one motion to reopen is generally permitted; a second motion is “number barred” unless an exception applies (e.g., changed country conditions).
5. Conclusion
Tarlochan Singh v. Bondi fortifies the Seventh Circuit’s unwavering adherence to the procedural dictates of Matter of Lozada. The Court made three critical pronouncements:
- Every Lozada element is mandatory and independently sufficient for denial if unmet;
- Filing a bar complaint does not, by itself, satisfy the obligation to alert prior counsel and solicit a response; and
- The merits of an ineffective-assistance claim are irrelevant when procedural thresholds are not crossed.
For practitioners, the message is unmistakable: draft explicit engagement agreements, formally serve prior counsel, and document disciplinary filings. For respondents, the case serves as a cautionary tale that procedural missteps—even when blameless—can extinguish otherwise colorable claims for humanitarian relief. In the broader legal landscape, the decision cements a formalistic, rule-based approach to reopening, reinforcing procedural regularity over equitable leniency in immigration practice.
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