Wescley Fonseca Pereira, a native and citizen of Brazil, entered the United States in 2000 on a visitor visa and overstayed. In 2006, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) personally served him with a Notice to Appear (NTA) initiating removal proceedings, but the NTA did not specify the date or time of his hearing; instead, it stated that these details would be provided later. In 2007, the immigration court mailed a separate Notice of Hearing with the specific date and time to an address Pereira contends he did not reliably receive, and he failed to appear; the immigration judge ordered him removed in absentia. After a 2013 traffic stop, DHS detained Pereira, and the immigration court later reopened his case upon learning he had not received proper notice of the prior hearing. Pereira applied for non–lawful permanent resident (non-LPR) cancellation of removal under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(b)(1), which requires, among other criteria, ten years of continuous physical presence. The government argued that the 2006 NTA triggered the stop-time rule in § 1229b(d)(1)(A), ending his accrual of presence. Relying on BIA precedent, particularly Matter of Camarillo, 25 I. & N. Dec. 644 (BIA 2011), the immigration judge and the BIA agreed that the defective NTA sufficed to trigger the stop-time rule. The First Circuit denied Pereira's petition for review. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve whether an NTA that omits time and place can trigger the stop-time rule.
Does service of a notice to appear that omits the time or place of the removal hearing trigger the stop-time rule under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(d)(1)(A)?
Under 8 U.S.C. § 1229b(d)(1)(A), the stop-time rule is triggered when the noncitizen is served "a notice to appear under section 1229(a)." Section 1229(a) defines a "notice to appear" as a written notice specifying, among other things, the "time and place at which the proceedings will be held." Accordingly, service of an NTA that fails to include the time or place of the hearing does not constitute service of a "notice to appear under § 1229(a)" and does not trigger the stop-time rule. Because the statute is unambiguous, no deference to contrary agency interpretations is warranted.
No. A notice to appear that does not include the time or place of the removal hearing is not a "notice to appear under § 1229(a)" and therefore does not trigger the stop-time rule for cancellation of removal.
The Court, in an opinion by Justice Sotomayor, grounded its analysis in the statutory text. Section 1229b(d)(1)(A) provides that the accrual of continuous physical presence "shall be deemed to end . . . when the alien is served a notice to appear under section 1229(a)." Section 1229(a)(1) in turn defines a "notice to appear" and lists as required content "the time and place at which the proceedings will be held." By cross-referencing § 1229(a), Congress used "notice to appear" as a term of art, importing all elements of the definition, including time and place. Thus, a document that omits those particulars is not a notice to appear under the statute's plain terms. The government's proposal to treat later hearing notices as functionally sufficient to trigger stop-time was rejected because the text ties the stop-time event to service of "a notice to appear" under § 1229(a), not to some cumulative set of later communications. The Court refused to rewrite the statute to accommodate administrative convenience or chronic docketing issues. The majority noted that practical and contextual cues confirm the textual reading. Other provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) depend on accurate time-and-place information (for example, "in absentia" removal requires notice with time and place), underscoring Congress's view that such information is integral to the NTA. Moreover, Congress's choice to define "notice to appear" in § 1229(a) would be superfluous if agencies could trigger significant legal consequences with a skeletal notice lacking critical information. Because the statute is clear, Chevron deference did not apply, and BIA precedent (such as Matter of Camarillo) could not supplant Congress's command. Justice Kennedy concurred to question the judiciary's reflexive invocation of deference doctrines in the face of clear statutory text. Justice Alito dissented, arguing that the majority's interpretation was overly rigid and failed to account for the realities of immigration court scheduling and the broader statutory scheme.
Pereira reset the baseline for what constitutes a valid "notice to appear" for purposes of the stop-time rule and, by extension, eligibility for non-LPR cancellation of removal. In immediate practice, it invalidated a widespread DHS and EOIR practice of issuing NTAs that left time and place "to be set," prompting motions to reopen, challenges to prior stop-time determinations, and adjustments to charging practices. For law students, the case is a vivid illustration of textualism, term-of-art cross-references, the limits of agency deference when statutory language is unambiguous, and the interplay between procedural formality and substantive eligibility consequences in immigration law. It also laid groundwork for subsequent litigation, culminating in Niz-Chavez v. Garland (2021), which further clarified that a single document must contain all statutorily required information to trigger the stop-time rule.
Pereira v. Sessions is a pivotal case at the crossroads of immigration procedure and statutory interpretation. By insisting that the term-of-art "notice to appear" incorporates the time-and-place requirement of § 1229(a), the Court curtailed an entrenched administrative practice and realigned the stop-time analysis with Congress's text. The opinion exemplifies the power of definitional cross-references and the judiciary's role in policing statutory clarity against agency gloss.