Hussain v. U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services

541 F. Supp. 2d 1082, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29115, 2008 WL 902939
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedApril 4, 2008
Docket0:07-cv-00059
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 541 F. Supp. 2d 1082 (Hussain v. U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hussain v. U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Services, 541 F. Supp. 2d 1082, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29115, 2008 WL 902939 (mnd 2008).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING PETITION TO AMEND CERTIFICATE OF NATURALIZATION

PATRICK J. SCHILTZ, District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on At-har Syed Hussain’s petition for an order requiring the United States Citizenship and Immigration Service (“USCIS”) to issue to him an amended certificate of naturalization. Hussain’s certificate of naturalization now bears the birth date of June 10, 1949; Hussain seeks an amended certificate bearing the birth date of June 10, 1941. The Court held an evidentiary hearing and heard argument on Hussain’s petition on March 14, 2008. For the reasons that follow, Hussain’s petition is granted.

I. BACKGROUND

Hussain, the third of four brothers, was born at home in Hyderabad, India. Hus-sain did not attend school outside the home until about the fourth or fifth grade. At some point — Hussain surmises that it was when an older brother first brought him to school, but he does not really know — his school was apparently informed that he was born on June 10, 1949, and that date was recorded in his school records as his date of birth. Hussain did not know that this birth date appeared in his school records until many years later.

In 1959, Hussain entered the merchant navy, and he served as a sailor until 1964. The minimum age for acceptance into the merchant navy was seventeen, so when Hussain applied he told the merchant navy that he was seventeen, even though he did not know his actual age. At the evidentia-ry hearing, Hussain submitted nine photographs taken of him during his time in the merchant navy. Most of these photographs were taken on board his ship, and most of them were taken in 1962. One of the photographs is a shot of Hussain posing on the observation deck of the Empire State Building in 1961. All of the photographs show Hussain to be a young man in his late teens or early twenties.

After leaving the merchant navy, Hus-sain returned to school, completing his secondary education in 1968. Pet. Ex. 2. Hussain also married in 1967. Administrative Record 79. Hussain then attended college, first at Anwarul Uloom Evening College and then later at Osmania University. Pet. Exs. 3-4. Hussain graduated from Osmania with a Bachelor of Commerce degree in 1973. Pet. Ex. 5.

Hussain’s school records and marriage certificate consistently state that he was born in 1949. At the hearing, Hussain testified that he was never asked to identify his date of birth until he enrolled in school after completing his service in the merchant navy. At that time, he obtained his primary school records and saw that they reported his birth date as June 10, 1949. From that point forward, Hussain says, on the few occasions on which he was called upon to give his date of birth, he used June 10,1949.

In 1981, Hussain initiated proceedings to immigrate to the United States. The immigration process required Hussain to provide proof of his place and date of birth. Hussain requested a birth certificate from Hyderabad, but the Hyderabad registrar could not locate a birth certificate for Hussain for the year 1949, and thus issued a certificate stating that no birth certificate had been found. Pet. Ex. 6. Hussain then turned to his father, who had been estranged from Hussain and the rest of his family for most of Hussain’s life. By this time, Hussain’s father was quite elderly and had poor eyesight. Hussain drafted an affidavit, which his father signed, attesting that Hussain was born on *1084 June 10, 1949. Pet. Ex. 7. Hussain became a permanent resident of the United States in 1987, and he was naturalized in the District of Minnesota in 1995. Pet. Ex. 8. Like his school records and other official documents, Hussain’s certificate of naturalization states that he was born on June 10,1949.

In 1998, some six years after their father’s death in 1992, Hussain’s brothers obtained various documents that had been in their father’s possession. Among these was an unofficial document in the handwriting of Hussain’s father listing the birth dates of Hussain and his brothers. One of Hussain’s brothers contacted Hussain to inform him that, according to this document, Hussain’s true date of birth was June 10,1941.

After learning this information, Hussain acted diligently to obtain a corrected birth certificate. He promptly asked his brother to apply for a new birth certificate from Hyderabad on his behalf. His brother then submitted various documents to an attorney in India, including an affidavit from one of Hussain’s aunts. Eventually, in 2002, Hyderabad issued Hussain a birth certificate bearing a date of birth of June 10, 1941. Pet. Ex. 9. Unfortunately, however, the Indian attorney apparently destroyed the underlying documents, including the original document from Hussain’s father and the affidavit from Hussain’s aunt. As a result, although Hussain possesses the birth certificate from Hyderabad, he does not possess any of the documents that were the basis for the issuance of that birth certificate.

Armed with this new birth certificate, in 2003 Hussain applied to USCIS for an amended certificate of naturalization bearing the June 10,1941 birth date. 1 Pet. Ex. 10. USCIS denied Hussain’s application in 2004. Pet. Ex. 11. Hussain appealed that denial, and USCIS denied his appeal in April 2005. Pet. Ex. 13. Hussain then filed a request under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), seeking from US-CIS copies of all of the documents he had submitted as part of his original immigration application. USCIS complied with Hussain’s FOIA request in August 2007, and Hussain filed this action two months later.

II. ANALYSIS

A. Discerning the Proper Legal Standards

Hussain brings his petition under 8 C.F.R. § 334.16(b), which states:

(b) After final action on petition. Whenever an application is made to the court to amend a petition for naturalization after final action thereon has been taken by the court, a copy of the application shall be served upon the district director having administrative jurisdiction over the territory in which the court is located, in the manner and within the time provided by the rules of court in which application is made. No objection shall be made to the amendment of a petition for naturalization after the petitioner for naturalization has been admitted to citizenship if the motion or application is to correct a clerical error arising from oversight or omission. A representative of the Service may appear at the hearing upon such application and be heard in favor of or *1085 in opposition thereto. When the court orders the petition amended, the clerk of court shall transmit a copy of the order to the district director for inclusion in the Service file.

This regulation specifies certain procedural requirements, but it provides virtually no substantive guidance to a court that is asked to order USCIS to issue an amended certificate of naturalization. Indeed, the regulation does not even directly address certificates of naturalization, but instead discusses the process for amending petitions for naturalization, including those petitions that have already been granted.

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541 F. Supp. 2d 1082, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 29115, 2008 WL 902939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hussain-v-us-citizenship-immigration-services-mnd-2008.