Lawrence Rassano v. Immigration and Naturalization Service

377 F.2d 971
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 1967
Docket15473_1
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 377 F.2d 971 (Lawrence Rassano v. Immigration and Naturalization Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence Rassano v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 377 F.2d 971 (7th Cir. 1967).

Opinion

EILEY, Circuit Judge.

This is a petition to review 1 and set aside an order of deportation of Lawrence Rassano and an order denying his request for suspension of deportation. 2 We deny the petition and affirm both orders.

Lawrence Rassano was born in Italy in 1912. In 1913 his father, Paulo Rassano, came to the United States from Italy. Petitioner and his mother followed soon afterwards and have lived in the United States since that time. The deportation proceeding was based upon allegations that Rassano was an alien and that he had been convicted, separately, of armed robbery and burglary. 3 Rassano’s claim to citizenship was based upon the alleged naturalization of his father, Paulo.

The government called Rassano as a witness and introduced certified documents to show petitioner’s convictions of separate felonies, one in 1934 and one in 1952, and an INS certificate to show, after diligent search, no naturalization of a Paulo Rassano.

Lawrence Rassano testified in his own behalf that his father Paulo told him a “number of times” when he was a child in the 1920’s that both he (the father) and Lawrence were citizens. Lawrence Rassano’s uncle and two of his cousins testified, for him, that they heard the father say he had obtained final citizenship papers and was a citizen. Neither Lawrence Rassano nor any of his three witnesses could testify to seeing Paulo Rassano’s naturalization papers or that he had ever voted.

The function of this court on direct appeal from a final deportation order is to determine whether a genuine issue of material fact is presented by the administrative record — in this case as to petitioner’s alienage. If a genuine fact issue is presented our function is to transfer the cause to the district court for a de novo determination of that issue and hold the petition to review until that determination is made and certified to this court. 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a) (1964); Pignatello v. Attorney General, 350 F.2d 719 (2d Cir. 1965); Tanaka v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 346 F.2d 438 (2d Cir. 1965).

If Rassano’s claim of citizenship is supported by evidence sufficient, if believed, to support a finding of citizenship, the executive department had no jurisdiction to pass on that claim. Lew Shee v. Nagle, 7 F.2d 367 (9th Cir. 1925). In reviewing the record to determine if it reveals the existence of a genuine issue as to Rassano’s claimed citizenship, this court has considered the testimony of petitioner and his three witnesses as credible and in the light most favorable to him. After a thorough *973 search of the record we have found no evidence sufficient to raise a genuine issue as to Rassano’s alienage.

All of petitioner’s evidence on his claim to citizenship would be inadmissible in court, if at all, under the family history exception to the hearsay rule. While recognizing the greater latitude in evidentiary matters before administrative tribunals, we think the policy considerations underlying the family history exception shed considerable light on the value to be afforded petitioner’s evidence — and therefore on its sufficiency to raise a genuine issue of fact.

The family history exception is based in part upon the inherent trustworthiness of declarations by a family member regarding matters of family history and the usual unavailability of other evidence on these matters. Whether naturalization is a matter of family history is not without doubt, especially in view of the usual availability of documentary or other corroborative evidence to prove such a vital matter.

We will assume arguendo that declarations regarding naturalization are admissible because the point has not been argued or briefed in this court, and the court’s research has not disclosed a case on point. We turn then to the question of the sufficiency of petitioner’s evidence, which rests upon the trustworthiness of Paulo Rassano’s declarations that he was a citizen.

One of the considerations lending credibility to declarations regarding matters of family history is that ante litem motam a person has little reason to lie about them. But circumstances apart from the controversy in which a declaration is introduced in evidence may also affect its trustworthiness. The circumstances under which Paulo Rassano is said to have claimed naturalization make these declarations highly suspect, since in each instance he had some self interest in making the claim, even if only to satisfy the curiosity of his young son or answer the taunts of his friends. Petitioner was unable to produce such evidence as would in court supply the necessary foundation for the admissibility of hearsay. There was no showing that other means of proof were unavailable, i. e., that the claimed certificate of naturalization had been lost or destroyed. On questioning, none of petitioner’s witnesses was able to testify even that he saw such a certificate, or to supply any corroborative testimony such as Paulo Rassano’s having voted.

If these considerations do not render petitioner’s evidence inadmissible, they do detract greatly from its sufficiency. We hold that petitioner’s evidence is insufficient to raise a genuine issue on his claim to citizenship.

We think the decision of the Second Circuit in Tanaka v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 346 F.2d 438 (2d Cir. 1965), lends support to our decision here. In Tanaka the evidence showed that the petitioner, although born in the United States, had voted in a foreign election, an act of expatriation if done voluntarily. The court held that the burden of going forward with evidence adequate to inject the issue of voluntariness was on Tanaka. At the hearing he testified that he voted because he feared the reprisals of his neighbors. On evidence which we think had greater weight than Rassano’s, the Second Circuit held Tanaka had not adequately injected the issue of voluntariness and that the record presented no genuine issue of material fact. Id. at 442.

Since we have determined that Rassano has raised no genuine issue as to his citizenship, we turn now to the issues raised in the petition to review. The order to show cause originally issued January 26, 1961, with allegations based in part on the record of the alleged Illinois robbery conviction which named the wrong judge and erroneously included the words “with a pistol.” Subsequently on April 1, 1963, an additional deportation charge correcting the error was filed by the government trial attorney. Petitioner contends that the original order to show cause was invalid as *974

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