Yes, because you are making this much harder then you have to.
You have the equation:
2NOCl(g) ---> 2NO(g) + Cl2(g)
You are also told at Equilibrium you have 0.032 Mol/L of NO. You get twice as much NO gas as you do Cl2 gas in this reaction, so therefor you must have 0.032/2 = 0.016 mols/L of Cl2 gas. Yes?
But you also know 2 NOCl turned into 2 NO, or in other words, for every mol of NO produced a mol of NOCl was used up, yes? So if you started with 1 Mol/L of NOCl, and convert 0.032 Mol/L into NO gas, how much is left?
Make the math simpler for you. You started with 2 mols in 2 L.
2 mol/ 2L = 1 mol/ 1L