HO
This text of 15 I. & N. Dec. 692 (HO) 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.
Opinion
Interim Decision #2499
MATTER OF HO
In Deportation Proceedings A-20838127 A-20838128 Decided by Board June 17, 1976 Operations Instruction 245.4(a)(6) which provides that a case will be held in abeyance where the sale basis for applicant's ineligibility for relief under section 245 of the 'Immigration and Nationality Act is the unavailability of a visa number occurring subsequent t3 the filing of the application is applicable to section 245 applications filed in deportation proceedings where the respondents were qualified for adjustment of status in all other respects and the sole ground for respondents' ineligibility for such relief was that visa numbers which had been available at the time the applications were first filed had become unavailable at the time the applications were processed. CILUIOR;
Order: Act of 1952—Section 241(a)(2)—[8 U.S.C. 1251(a)(2)J—Nonimmigrant visitor—remained longer than permitted (both respon- dents) ON BEHALF OF RESPONDENTS: ON BEHALF OF SERVICE: Norman Glassman, Esquire Paul C. Vincent 363 Seventh Avenue Chief Trial Attorney New York, New York 10001. Richard K. Rogers Acting Trial Attorney
In a decision dated August 5, 1975, we denied the respondents' motion to reopen their deportation proceedings. The respondents have submit- ted a motion seeking reconsideration of that decision. The motion will be granted and the record remanded to the immigration judge. The respondents, husband and wife, are natives and citizens of China. They have conceded deportability under section 241(a)(2) of the Immi- gration and Nationality Act as nonimmigrants who have remained be- yond the authorized length of their stays. The only questions confront- ing us on this motion involve their applications for adjustment of status under section 245. The female respondent has evidently been granted a labor certifica- tion pursuant to section 212(a)(14), and she seeks adjustment of status as a nonpreference immigrant. The male respondent also seeks section 692 Interim Decision #2499
245 relief as a nonpreference immigrant, but his case is entirely depen- dent on his wife's eligibility because he does not claim that he is inde- pendently admissible under section 212(a)(14). One of the requirements for section 245 relief is that an immigrant visa must be immediately available to the alien at the time his applica- tion is approved. The record indicates that the respondents submitted their applications for adjustment of status (Form 1-485) on May 12, 1975. According to the Department of State bulletin entitled Availabil- ity of Immigrant Visa Numbers For May 1975, visa numbers were then currently available to natives of China seeking nonpreference status. However, in June of 1975, the month after the respondents submitted their section 245 applications, nonpreference visa numbers for natives of China became completely unavailable. As of the , date. of this , decision, visa numbers remain unavailable to the respondents. The respondents' applications for adjustment of status were treated as a motion to reopen their deportation proceedings in accordance with 8 CFR 242.22. In our order of August 5, 1975, we denied the motion because nonpreference visa numbers were unavailable to the respon- dents, and the respondents therefore could not establish eligibility for section 245 relief. • In the motion to reconsider, counsel argues that our decision is not in keeping with a Service policy .expressed in Operations Instruction 245.4 (a)(6). 1 This Operations Instruction. specifically applies to aliens who have submitted section 245 applications to district directors for adjudi- cation. It provides for the holding in abeyance - of any Case in which. an alien has submitted a section 245 application.at a time when a visa number was available to the alien, but in which the alien is now pre- cluded from receiving that relief solely because a 'visa number-is not available at the time the processing of the application -is completed. The Operations Instruction further provides for- the•periodic review of all such cases in order that an alien's adjustment of status may take place shortly after a visa number again becomes available. . Counsel for the respondents contends.•hat Operations Instruction 245.4(a)(6) should be applicable in a deportatfun ;proceeding, even though jurisdiction over a section 245 application no longer lies with a district director after the alien has been served with an order to show cause or warrant of arrest. See 8 CFR 245.2(a)(1). We requested a brief from the Service on this question. The Service has informed us that it believes that the Operations Instruction should be applicable to the case of an alien who is in deportation proceedings, and has submitted a motion seeking a conditional termination of these proceedings.
1 Operations Instruction 245.4(a)(6) is quoted in its entirety in the addendum to this opinion. 693 Interim Decision #2499
We too are persuaded that Operations Instruction 245.4(a)(6) should not be foreclosed to an alien merely because he happens to apply for adjustment of status after having been placed in deportation proceed- ings. The motion to reconsider will be granted and the record remanded to the immigration judge for further action consistent with this opinion. ORDER: The motion to reconsider is granted, the outstanding order of deportation is withdrawn, and the record is remanded to the immi- gration judge. ADDENDUM Operations Instruction 245.4(a)(6) Subsequent 'unavailability of a visa number. In any case in which, at the time the application was submitted or at the time the alien was invited to submit the application, the Visa Office Bulletin indicated that an immigrant visa number was available, but the application cannot be approved solely because a visa number is r ot available at the time the processing of the case is com- pleted, it shall be held in abeyance pending the allocation of a visa number by the Visa Office. Those cases held in abeyance pending the allocation of a nonpreference visa number shall be periodically reviewed to screen out any applicant who appears eligible for a preference clas- sification. Any applicant who appears to be eligible for a preference classification shall he informed and instructed how to proceed. In all such cases Feld in abeyance pending allocation of a visa number, Form I-181, in duplicate, bearing the stamped notation "HOLD FOR VISA NUMBER" in the upper right-hand portion of the box labeled "For use by the Visa Control Office" shall be forwarded to the Visa Control Office to insure that a visa , number will be allocated when one becomes avail- able. Similarly, when a different preference is established, a new Form 1-181 prepared in accordance with the foregoing shall be forwarded to the Visa Control Office: When a visa number is available in these cases, the Visa Control Office will return Form 1-181 endorsed to show alloca- tion of an immigrant—visa number for the month following the month notification is furnished to the Service. This will allow sufficient time to complete any unfinished processing.
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