HASSAN

16 I. & N. Dec. 16
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1976
DocketID 2531
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 I. & N. Dec. 16 (HASSAN) 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
HASSAN, 16 I. & N. Dec. 16 (bia 1976).

Opinion

Interim Decision #2531

MATTER OF HASSAN

In Visa Petition Proceedings

A4258751

Decided by Board September 9, 1976

(1) In order for a child to confer immediate relative status upon a parent under the provisions of section 201(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, the petitioning child must be a United States citizen at least 21 years of age, and qualify as a "child" as defined in section 101(b) of the Act. (2) Beneficiary, the natural father of a United States citizen petitioner, obtained a divorce in 1950 at the Royal Egyptian Consulate located in New York. Notwithstanding the fact that the divorce occurred in a foreign consulate in the United States, it was not a foreign divorce. Therefore, the principle of international comity is not involved, and the divorce is subject to the requirements of full faith and credit. Since this divorce was not obtained in accordance with applicable New York statutory provisions it was invalid in the State of New York, was not entitled to full faith and credit in any other jurisdiction, and was invalid for immigration purposes. (3) Since the beneficiary's divorce was invalid in the United States (notwithstanding the fact it was valid in Egypt). beneficiary was not free to contract a valid marriage with petitioner's mother in the United States so as to legitimate the petitioner and enable him to confer immediate relative status on his father. Under the circumstances revoca- tion of the approval of the visa petition was proper. (4) Matter of 6 I. & N. Dec. 470 (BIA 1954) reaffirmed. ON BEHALF Or PlartiONER: ON BEHALF OF SERVICE: Arlene Tuck Ulman, Esquire George Indelicato 3730 Rhode Island Avenue N.W. Appellate Trial Attorney 'Washington, D.C. 20036

The United States citizen petitioner applied for immediate relative status for the beneficiary as his father under section 201(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. The petition was initially approved; however, after due notice to the petitioner, the approval was revoked by' the District Director in a decision dated January 15, 1975. The petitioner has appealed. The appeal will be dismissed. The issue in this case is whether the beneficiary, the natural father of th e petitioner, is entitled to immediate relative status under section 2001(b) of the Act, as the "parent" of an adult United States citizen. Counsel has offered two alternative arguments in support of the peti- tion. In the first argument, counsel assumes that the petitioner must once have been the "child" of the beneficiary within the statutory definition,

16 Interim Decision #2531

in order to confer immediate relative status, under section 201(b), upon the beneficiary as a "parent." See sections 101(b)(1) and (2). She con- tends that the petitioner, although born out of wedlock, was legitimated according to the requirements of section 101(b)(1)(C). Counsel's alterna- tive argument is that even if the petitioner was not legitimated, there is no congressional directive that the petitioner must have qualified as the "child" of the beneficiary in order to confer benefits, as an adult, upon his parent. Moreover, counsel contends that the intent of Congress to unite families would be subverted if that requirement is read into section 201(b). We turn first to counsel's contention that the petitioner is the legitimated son of the beneficiary. The beneficiary, Mr. Hassan, is a native and citizen of Egypt. He entered the United States in 1948 as the servant of an official assigned to the Egyptian Embassy in Washington, D.C. The beneficiary's wife, whom he had married in 1946 in Cairo, Egypt, did not accompany him to the United States. On December 4, 1950, the beneficiary went to the. Royal Egyptian Consulate in New York City and obtained an irrevocable divorce from his Egyptian wife. One year later, he married a United States citizen in the State of Maryland. A petition to accord him immediate relative status was filed by his American wife in 1952. It was denied by the District Director on the ground that the beneficiary's consular divorce was not valid for immigration purposes and that he was not free, therefore, to marry in the United States. The petitioner appealed that decision to this Board; we affirmed the District Director's decision in Matter of H—, 6 I. & N. Dec. 470 (BIA 1954). In the present appeal, taken some 20 years after our decision in Matter of H—, supra, we are once again concerned with Mr. Hassan's consular divorce. In the present context, the petitioner's claim to legitimated status must be evaluated in ligh.t of our holding in Matter of supra. The registration of the petitioner's birth indicates that he was officially acknowledged by the beneficiary shortly after his birth on January lo, 1953. It is counsel's contention that the petitioner was legitimated under the laws of his residence; the District of Columbia, when his father, Mr. Hassan, entered into a. common-law marriage with his mother in the District in the mid - 1950's_ Quite obviously, unless we now find that Mr. Hassan was free to enter into the alleged common-law marriage, we cannot accept counsel's theory. In short, we are urged to overturn Matter of H—, supra, and to extend belated recognition to the beneficiary's consular divorce for the following two reasons. First, counsel contends that the Board's characterization of the ben- efieiary's divorce as a "consular divorce" (a decree granted at a foreign For a succinct discussion of the reasons underlying the invalidity of the "consular divorce" in this country, see Puente, The Foreign Consul and His Juridical Status in the

17 Interim Decision #2531

consulate within the United States) is inaccurate. According to counsel, although the proceeding was commenced in New York City, it was concluded, some three years later, in Egypt. Moreover, it was a pro- ceeding in which both parties participated and over which the rendering authorities in Egypt had competent jurisdiction. Thus, it is more pre- cisely characterized as a foreign divorce. As such, recognition of its validity becomes a matter of international comity. If recognized by the jurisdiction most concerned with the effect of the decree, namely, the beneficiary's residence at the time of the proceeding, it must be recog- nized for immigration purposes. Second, counsel contends that the Board erred in holding that the beneficiary was a resident of New York, and that, as a consequence, New York law governed the validity of the divorce. Counsel maintains that the beneficiary's residence was the District of Columbia. Therefore, as a corollary to the first argument, counsel contends that recognition of the foreign divorce must be assessed in light of the laws and policies of the District of Columbia. We observe, at the outset, that unless we find that the beneficiary's divorce was a foreign judgment, and not a consular divorce, as counsel contends, we need not discuss the choice of law issue. For if the divorce is, as we held in Matter of H—, supra, a consular divorce, granted in usurpation of New York's traditional and exclusive authority in mat- rimonial matters over persons within her borders, it cannot be recog- nized by the District of Columbia. It is axiomatic, under the principle of full faith and credit, that no jurisdiction can adopt, as valid, a divorce decree which is void in the jurisdiction where rendered. Therefore, the pivotal issue in counsel's first argument is whether the beneficiary's divorce was a "New York" divorce, obtained in a consulate in New York or whether New York was only coincidentally the site of the institution of divorce proceedings which eventually culminated in a filial decree of divorce issued by an Egyptian court in Egypt.

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16 I. & N. Dec. 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hassan-bia-1976.