CHARTIER

16 I. & N. Dec. 284
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1977
DocketID 2602
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 16 I. & N. Dec. 284 (CHARTIER) 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
CHARTIER, 16 I. & N. Dec. 284 (bia 1977).

Opinion

Interim Decision #2602

MATTER OF CHARTIER In Deportation Proceedings A-20927428 Decided by Board August 3, 1977

(1) Respondent, a native and citizen of Canada was employed in Canada by the subsidiary of a United States corporation located in Michigan. Respondent worked directly for that company, which had no subsidiary or branch office in Canada. Respondent was admitted to the United States in 1974 as an intra-company transferee under section 101(a)(15)(L) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. In 1976 respondent filed an application for labor certification and the Service instituted an investigation which culminated in deportation proceedings under section 241(a)(1) of the Act predicated on the ground that the respondent was not entitled to L-1 classification. (2) Section 101(a)(15)(L) of the Act does not expressly require the employer to have a subsidiary or other legal entity abroad. In the context of a deportation proceeding, such a requirement should riot be implied. (3)An alien may be admitted into the United States as an intra-company transferee under section 101(a)(15)(L) of the Act even though the petitioning employer has no subsidiary or other legal entity abroad. CHARGE: Order: Act of 1952—Section 241(a)(1) [8 U.S.C. 1251(a)(1)]--Excludable at time of entry under section 212(a)(26)—Nonimmigrant not in possession of valid nonimmigrant visa Act of 1952—Section 241(a)(1) (8 U.S.C. 1251(a)(1))--Excludable at time of entry under section 212(a)(20)—Immigrant not in possession of immi- grant visa ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENT: ON BEHALF OF SERVICE: Daniel N. King, Esquire George Indelicate McClintock, Donovan, Carson & Roach Apellate Trial Attorney 2150 Guardian Building- Detroit, Michigan 48226 BY: Milhollan, Chairman; Wilson, Maniatis, Appleman, and Maguire, Board Members

In a decision dated November 18, 1976, the respondent was found deportable upon the charges contained in the Order to Show Cause, but granted the privilege of departing voluntarily in lieu of deportation. The immigration judge has certified his decision to us for review, in accor- dance with the provisions of 8 C.F.R. 3.1(e). We have decided to reverse the immigration judge's decision. The respondent is a 52 year old native and citizen of Canada. Im- mediately preceding the time of his application for admission to the

284 Interim Decision #2602 United States, the respondent had been employed in Canada, as Cana- dian Manager of Technical Services, by Grow Chemical Company, a Michigan corporation. Grow Chemical Company is a wholly owned subsidiary of Grow Chemi- cal Corporation, headquartered in New York City. The parent corpora- tion had sales of $92.8 million in 1975. The Michigan company forms part of the Automotive Group of the parent corporation. Other subsidiaries, which are part of this Automotive Group, are located in California and Thalginm Grow Chemical Company manufactures and sells high efficiency thin- ners, solvents and specialty coatings for industrial applications. Its principal customers are manufacturers of automobiles, trucks and au- tomotive parts in the United States, Canada and Western Europe. Grow Chemical Company's sales to Canadian customers are approxi- mately one million dollars a year. Despite this substantial Canadian business, the company has never established a Canadian subsidiary or even an office in Canada. Nor is the company officially licensed to do business in Canada. However, the company has stated that it intends to establish a Canadian sales and service subsidiary at some point, when market conditions and the supply of raw materials permit this. When the respondent was employed by Grow in Canada, he worked out of his home. His job involved visiting automotive assembly plants on a regular basis to make sure that Grow's' paint products were being applied properly.' In 1974, Grow decided to transfer the respondent to the United States, in order to perform similar services here. The company filed a visa petition to classify the respondent as an intra-company transferee under section 1O1(a)(15)(L) of the Immigra- tion and Nationality Act. The petition was approved by the District Director in Detroit, Michigan. The respondent entered the United States on June 14, 1974, with an L-1 nonimmigrant visa. He received extensions of stay, in the same status, until May 18, 1976. On Sep- tember 17, 1974, the respondent brought his wife and four children from Etibicoke, Ontario, to Walled Lake, Michigan, to join him. In July, 1975, the respondent filed an application for a labor certifica- tion from the Department of Labor. This event precipitated an investi- gation into the respondent's immigation status by the. Immigration and Naturalization Service office in Detroit. ' In his affidavit of December 12, 1975, Leslie Stott, Vice-President and General Sales Manager of Grow Chemical Company, stated: "The painting of an automobile is an extremely complex process, and our technical service representative is required to know the process in detail, to know the chemical and other properties of the material being' coated, and the coating materials as well as the conditions under which paints and lacquers are prepared and applied in the automotive plants."

285 Interim Decision #2602

The District Director now decided that he had made a mistake in approving an L-1 visa petition in behalf of the respondent. The respon- dent was informed that he was not qualified for L-1 nonimmigrant status, and that he would be required to leave the United States. The respondent contested the District Director's interpretation of the law, and refused to leave the country voluntarily. An Order to Show Cause was issued on November 14, 1975. In it, the Service charged that the respondent was not entitled to his L-1 visa classification because he was "not the representative of a foreign sub- sidiary or entity conducting business in Canada." By this inartful language, what the Service meant to say was that the respondent's company did not have a subsidiary or affiliate in Canada, and that therefore he did not qualify as an intra-company transferee. The wording of the Order to Show Cause did not, however, cause any confusion. Because he did not,qualify as an intra-company transferee, continued the Order to Show Cause, the respondent was deportable under section 241(a)(1) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, in that, at the time of his entry he was within one or more of the classes of aliens excludable by the law, to wit, aliens who are nonimmigrants not in possession of a valid nonimmigrant visa, as described in section 212(a)(26) of the Act. The Order to Show Cause also charged that the respondent was excludable under section 212(0(20) of the Act as an hinnigrinit not hi possession of a valid, unexpired immigrant visa. In charging that the respondent entered the United States as an immigrant, the Service was alleging, somewhat redundantly, that, at the time of his entry, the respondent did not come within any of the defined classes of nonimmi- grants set out in section 101(a)(15) of the Act. That same section of the Act defines the term "immigrant" as every alien who does not come within one of the defined classes of nonimmigrants. The respondent denied deportability, claiming that, under a correct interpretation of section 101(a)(15)(L), he did qualify as an intra- company transferee.

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23 I. & N. Dec. 390 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 2002)
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