BURRIS

15 I. & N. Dec. 676
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1976
DocketID 2494
StatusPublished

This text of 15 I. & N. Dec. 676 (BURRIS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Board of Immigration Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
BURRIS, 15 I. & N. Dec. 676 (bia 1976).

Opinion

Interim Decision #2494

MATTER OF BURRIS

In Visa Petition Proceedings A-20964032 Decided by Board June 2, 1976 Beneficiary was born in the United States and became a citizen of Canada thereby expatriating himself. Under section 202(b)(3) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, beneficiary is considered to be a native of Canada, an independent foreign country of the Western Hemisphere, for immigration purposes and thus a special immigrant as defined by section 101(a)(27)(A) of the Act. Therefore, beneficiary is ineligible for fifth prefer- ence classification under section 203(a)(5) of the Act, and the visa petition filed by his United States citizen brother on his behalf to accord him such classification was denied . ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER: ON BEHALF OF SERVICE: Charles Gordon, Esquire Paul C. Vincent 931 Investment Building Appellate Trial Attorney 1511 K Street, N.W. Washington, P. C. 20005

The United States citizen petitioner applied for preference status for the beneficiary as his brother under section 203(a)(5) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. In a decision dated January 25, 1975 the district director denied the petition. The petitioner has appealed. The appeal will be dismissed. The beneficiary was born in the United States. After engaging in business for several years in Canada, he became a Canadian citizen, thereby losing his United States citizenship. Now he wishes to receive an immigrant visa, make his home once more in the United States and eventually regain his United States citizenship. The issue is whether the beneficiary, who is now a citizen of Canada, is eligible for a preference under section 203(a)(5) of the Act, as a brother of a United States citizen. The district director concluded that under section 202(b)(3) of the Act, the beneficiary must be treated as though he were a Canadian by birth. As such, he would be eligible only for a "special immigrant" visa under section 101(4(27)(A). Counsel for the petitioner contends that neither section 202 nor section 101(a)(27) is applicable to the case. We turn first to section 202. That section provides in pertinent part that- 676 Interim Decision #2494 Sec. 202(a) No person shall receive any preference or priority or be discriminated against in the issuance of an immigrant visa because of his race, sex, nationality, place of birth, or place of residence, except as specifirally provided in section 101(a)(27), section 201(b), and section 203: Provided, That the total number of immigrant visas and the number of conditional entries made available to natives of any single foreign state under paragraphs (1) through (8) of section 203(a) shall not exceed 20,000 in any fiscal year . . . (b) Each independent country . . . other than the United States and its outlying possessions shall be treated as a separate foreign state for the purposes of the numerical limitation set forth in the proviso to subsection (a) of this section when approved by the Secretary of State. All other inhabited lands shall be attributed to a foreign state specified by the Secretary of State. For the purposes of this Act the foreign state to which an immigrant is chargeable shall be determined by birth within such foreign state except that . . . (3) an alien born in the United States shall be considered as having been born in the country of which he is a citizen or subject, or if he is not a citizen or subject of any country then in the last foreign country in which he had his residence as determined by the consular officer. [Emphasis added.] According to the petitioner's counsel, section 202 is concerned solely with the issue of limiting to 20,000 per year the allocation of visas for each single foreign state within the annual worldwide quota of 170,000.' Since the beneficiary has never been a citizen or subject of a country subject to the 20,000 limitation, counsel concludes that section 202(b)(3) is irrelevant in determining his immigration status. As a corollary, counsel contends that since section 202 has no bearing on the issue, we cannot consider the beneficiary as "having been born" in Canada as provided in section 202(b)(3). Therefore, although presently a citizen of Canada, the beneficiary does not fall within the "special immigrant" category 2 because he was not born in any independent foreign country of the Western Hemisphere as required by section 101(a)(27)(A). He was born in the United States. Moreover, according to counsel, arbitrarily assigning the beneficiary to the Western Hemisphere as a "special immigrant" on the basis of a statutory provision not intended to have that effect, ignores a funda- mental purpose of the statute, the reunion of families. Finally, counsel insists that since there are no specific provisions in the Act which settle the beneficiary's immigration status, he should fall within the general provisions of the statute, specifically, section 201(a). As noted earlier, that section includes within its 170,000 annual limita- tion all aliens except "special immigrants" and "immediate relatives." 3 The 170,000 annual limitation is contained in section 201(a) of the Act. This limitation applies to all categories of aliens except "special immigrants" and "immediate relatives." 2 Under section 101(a)(27)(A), the term "special immigrant" means—"an immigrant who was born in any independent foreign country of the Western Hemisphere or in the Canal Zone and the spouse and children of any such immigrant, if accompanying, or following to join him . . Section 201(b) defines "immediate relative" as "the children, spouses, and parents of a citizen of the United States . . ." Since the petitioner in this case is the brother of the beneficiary, this category obviously has no applicability here. 677 Interim Decision #2494 Inasmuch as the beneficiary makes no claim to immediate relative status and since he should not be categorized as a "special immigrant", counsel concludes that he is eligible for a preference within the worldwide quota limitation under section 203. Although section 202(a) mandates that each alien accorded such a preference shall also be charged to a spec. Nc foreign state within the Eastern Hemisphere, counsel urges us to by-pass this requirement and to simply charge the beneficiary to the overall 170,000 limitation. We have concluded that counsel's argument has surface plausibility but is not acceptable. The language of section 202(b) which immediately precedes the rules on chargeaAity begins with the words, "For the purposes of this Act . ." and not with the language, ."For the purposes of section 202(a) . . ." (Emphasis added.) As counsel has noted, this phrase ap- pears to have been lifted, without modification, from the prior statute. See section 12(a) of the "Immigration Act of 1924" (43 Stat. 153; 8 U.S.C. § 2C1). Therefore, it is possible that the Congress intended no change in the effect of this language. Thus under the prior statute, a United States citizen who took on Canadian citizenship and thereby expatriated, was attributable to Canada for all purposes, including his designation as a nonquota immigrant. Giving an analogous scope to the phrase, "For the purposes of this Act" in the present immigration statute would also assign such an expatriate to Canada. As a conse- quence, he would share with all other Canadian citizens the status of "special immigrant" as defined by section 101(a)(27)(A). Even if we were to accept, for the sake of argument, counsel's conten- tion that the Act as written does not cover the beneficiary's particular situation, we must rely on general principles of statutory construction in determining what Congress may have intended in this statutory vac- uum. 4 As counsel points out, the statutory scheme no longer contemplates a numerical allocation of visas per country.

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Related

PONCE DE LEON
14 I. & N. Dec. 106 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1972)
ASCHER
14 I. & N. Dec. 271 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
15 I. & N. Dec. 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burris-bia-1976.