C-S

9 I. & N. Dec. 670
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1962
Docket1218
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 9 I. & N. Dec. 670 (C-S) 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
C-S, 9 I. & N. Dec. 670 (bia 1962).

Opinion

MATTER or C—S---

In DEPORTATION Proceedings

A-12269404

Board Dociaione Dcocrnbeir 26, 1961, and March. 7, 1969 Decided by Attorney General May 24, 1962 Expatriation—Section 349(a)(5)—Voting in foreign election while unaware of United States citizenship. (1) A native of Cuba who acquired United States citizenship at birth in 1933 through his father and who resided in Cuba until 1960 did not become ex- patriated when he voted in a Cuban political election in 1958 while unaware of his United States Citizenship. (2) The presumption contained in section 349(b) of the 1952 Act is addressed only to the question whether the asserted act of expatriation was commit- ted voluntarily or under duress, and has no application to acts which were performed voluntarily but without knowledge of United States citizenship. CHARGE : Order : Act of 1952—Section 241(a) (1) [8 U.S.C. 1251(a) (1)1—Excludable at time of entry—No valid visa.

BEFORE THE BOARD (December 26, 1961) DISCUSSION: The special inquiry officer terminated proceedings and ordered the case certified to the Board for final decision. Brief has been submitted by the examining officer requesting that the re- spondent be ordered deported. The issue is one of alienage. The respondent claims that he was a United States citizen at birth. The Service does not contest the possibility but argues that citizenship was lost when the respondent voted in a political election in Cuba. The respondent was born on May 31, 1933, in Cuba. His father was born in the United States. The respondent's mother was born in Cuba. The respondent's fa- ther lived in the United States for about a year after birth and then was taken to Cuba. He died when the respondent was four years of age. There is no evidence that he had lost United States nation- ality prior to the birth of the respondent. It appears that the re- spondent had a colorable claim to United States citizenship at birth

670 under section 1993 of the Revised Statutes (see, Matter of L—G--J-- and C—I—P—, 3--206). The respondent's uncontradicted testimony, accepted by the spe- cial inquiry officer, was that he voted in an election in Cuba on No- vember 3, 1958, when his father-in-law, the mayor of the city, was running for the national senate of Cuba ; that prior to October 1959, he had made an application for a visa to come to the United States for permanent residence; that he received a letter with instructions telling him that if he considered himself an American citizen he should not apply for a visa ; that in October 1959, in connection with an application he had made for a visa, he learned for the first time that he had a possible claim to American citizenship by birth. The special inquiry officer was of the belief that Rogers v. Patokoski, 271 F.2d 858 (C.A. 9,'1959), required a decision in favor of the respond- ent because the respondent had no knowledge that he had a claim -

to United States citizenship when he voted. The examining officer, in a capable brief, raises a question as to the applicability of Pato- koski because of his belief that section 349(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1481) raises a conclusive presumption that the act of expatriation was voluntary. In Matter of C—A—, 9 182 (Oct. 17, 1961), which was decided subsequent to the decision of the special inquiry offier in the instant case, we held, on the basis of Patokos1i and other cases there men- tioned, that a citizen of the United States could not lose United States citizenship by committing an act which would otherwise he, the basis for a loss of citizenship, if, at the time the act was committed, he had no knowledge that he had a claim to United States citizenship. The respondent's expatriation is alleged to have occurred under section 349(a) (5) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1481) which provides for loss of citizenship by voting in a political election in a foreign state. Section 349(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (8 U.S.C. 1481) provides as follows: Any person who commits or performs any act specified in subsection (a) of this section shall be conclusively -presumed to have done so voluntarily and without having been subjected to duress of any kind, if such person at the time of the act was a national of the state in which the act was performed and had been physically present in such state for a period or periods totaling ten years or more immediately prior to such act. Despite the existence of section 349(b), we have found that an act which would otherwise accomplish expatriation will not do so if the act was done in the belief that a claim to United States citizenship does not exist and such belief is based on the claim of a responsible United States official (Matter of 8—, 8-266 ; Matter of S—, 8-221). Here too where action was taken without knowledge that United

671 States citizenship existed, the circumstances under which the presump- tion was intended to operate do not exist. The record fails to establish that the respondent is an alien. Termination of proceedings is proper. ORDER: It is ordered that proceedings be and the same are hereby terminated. BEFORE THE BOARD (March 7, 1962) DISCUSSION: On December 26, 1961, the Board ordered proceed- ings terminated. The Service now moves that the Board withdraw its order and enter one of deportation on the charge stated above. Respondent has submitted a letter asking that no change be made in the Board's order. The motion will be denied. The facts have been fully stated in the Board's previous order. Respondent, a native of Cuba, became a United States citizen at birth. He was physically present in Cuba for a period of ten years or more prior to voting there in a political election in 1958. At the time he voted, he did not know that he was a citizen of the United States. The issue is whether he lost United States citizenship un- der section 349(a) (5) of the Act, 8 U.S.C. 1481(a) (5). 1 The Board's order of termination is based upon Matter of C--A—, 9 482, holding that a United St; tes citizen did not expatriate him- self by committing an act which would normally result in loss of United States citizenship, if, at the time the act was committed, he did not know that he was a United States citizen. Matter of C—A, supra, is based upon Rogers v. Patokoski, 271 F.2d 858 (C. A. 9, 1959), which holds that one who committed acts of an expatriating nature without knowledge of his United States citizenship did so involuntarily. As we read the motion, it does not take issue with Matter of C—A-- or Patokoski, but attempts to distinguish each from the case before us on the ground that section 340(b) of the Act did not apply to either but does here and establishes a conclusive pre- smnption tha,, the voting was voluntary. We agree that section 349(b) of t'te Act could not have been applied in either Patokoski or Matter of c -A—; however, we find that'the section does not apply to the instant situation. 2 Therefore, the rule stated in the two prec- edents controls here.

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Related

RUSSO
11 I. & N. Dec. 12 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1965)
CUNNEY
10 I. & N. Dec. 484 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1964)
GRAHAM
10 I. & N. Dec. 533 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1964)

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9 I. & N. Dec. 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-s-bia-1962.