LEE

10 I. & N. Dec. 701
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1964
Docket1387
StatusPublished

This text of 10 I. & N. Dec. 701 (LEE) 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
LEE, 10 I. & N. Dec. 701 (bia 1964).

Opinion

Interim Decision #1887

MATEER OF LEE

In SECTION 245 Proceedings A-10454029 Deckleclby Deputy Associate Commissioner January .90,1964

To be eligible for nonquota status under section 2, Act of October 24, 1962, the retention of status proviso to section 2 of that Act requires that as of the date of the application for adjustment of status under section 245, Immigra- tion and Nationality Act, the beneficiary must have been performing the duties for which his services were sought in the approved petition filed in his behalf prior to April 1, 1962; such nonquota status is retained notwithstand- ing a change from his original employment between the date of Sling and date of final adjudication of his section 245 application since such change of employment, which resulted in the approval of another first-preference visa petition in his behalf, was a continuation of research commenced and was effected, under the same research grant, to take advantage of better facilities. [Cf. Matter of Gupta, Int. Dec. No. 1402.]

The applications for adjustment of status under section 245, 8 U.S.C. 1255, of the Immigration and Nationality Act were denied by the Officer in Charge, Milwaukee, Wisconsin on August 22, 1963, on the ground that immigrant visas were not immediately available to the applicants. On December 26, 1968, the applications ware reopened and certified to this office "for such further consideration as may be warranted." The principal applicant, Dr. Ya-Pin Lee, born at Taipeh, Formosa on October 23, 1924, was admitted to the United States on July 20,. 1955, as an exchange visitor. He had received an M.D. degree from National Taiwan University, Formosa in 1949 and a Ph. D. from Kyu- shu University in Japan in 1955. He conducted post-doctorate re- search in biological chemistry at the Enzyme Institute of the Univer- isty of Wisconsin from July 1955 to September 195t, at the Washing- ton University School of Medicine from September 1957 to Septem- ber 1959 and again at the University of Wisconsin from September 1959 to July 1, 1968, at which time he accepted the position of Hill Re- search Professor of Biochemistry at the University of North Dakota, which position he holds presently. There is ample evidence that sub-

TO1 Interim Decision #1387 jeet is outstanding in his field and that he has made important contri- butions to medical science. Dr. Lee was married in Taiwan to Lin lin Liu on December 7, 1950. -

She was born at Taipeh on July 11, 1925. They have three children, all born at Taipeh: Andrew Shu-tsung, October 31, 1951; Nicolos Chien-tong, August 30, 1953; and Benedict Chien-nan, December 4, 1954. The principal applicant was subject to the two-year foreign resi- dence requirement of section 212(e), 8 U.S.C. 1182(e), by virtue of his admission to the United States as an exchange alien. However, on October 26, 1959 the foreign residence requirement was waived by the Service upon the favorable recommendation of the Secretary of State pursuant to the request of the Department of Defense. On October 28, 1959, the University of Wisconsin filed a petition to accord Dr. Lee first preference status as a Research Biochemist. The petition was approved on December 15, 1959, and subsequently revali- dated to December 15, 1962. Following the enactment of P.L. 87-885 on October 2,4, 1962, which accorded nonquoto, status under certain con- ditions to beneficiaries of first preference petitions filed prior to April 1, 1962, he and his family, who had been paroled into the United states on October 22, 1961, were invited by the Service to apply for adjust- ment of status to permanent residents. This they did on November 20, 1962. It is noted that the principal applicant was then and con- tinued to be until July 1, 1963, employed by the University of Wis- consin performing the duties set forth in the visa petition filed October 28,1959. As part of the processing of the applications, requests for informa- tion from consular records were forwarded to the United States Embassy at Taipeh on December 12 and December 13, 1962, pursuant to outstanding instructions, as the applicants had resided in Taiwan prior to entering the United States. By January 3, 1963, all required action had been taken and all documents necessary to adjudicate the case had been received, except for the report from the Embassy. The Embassy, at that time, had received an unprecedented number of similar requests in connection with other former residents of Taiwan who had simultaneously become prima facie eligible for adjustment of status through the enactment of P.L. 87-885 on October 24, 1962. As a result, the response from the Embassy, which contained no derogatory information, was not received by the Service until August 19, 1963. When the consular report was received, a routine letter was for- warded to the University of Wisconsin, applicant's petitioner, to ascer- tain if applicants were still entitled to first preference status. Upon being ad vised that Dr. Lee had transferred to the University of North -

Dakota on July 1, 1963, the applicants were advised on August 22, 1963, 702 Interim Decision #1387 that inasmuch as Dr. Lee was no longer employed by the petitioner, they were no longer entitled to nonquota status (under section 2 of P.L. 87-885) ; further that approval of their applications for adjustment of status was contingent upon immigrant visas being immediately avail- able and that, since visas under the quota for Chinese persons, to which they were chargeable, were not available, the applications were denied. Subsequently, on. September 4,1963, a petition by Dr. Lee's present employer, the University of North Dakota-, was filed to accord him first preference quota status as Research Professor of Biochemistry. This petition was approved on September 16,1963. The following is quoted from a December 2, 1963, letter to the Service from Dr. Henry Lardy, Professor of Biochemistry and Chair- man of the Enzyme Institute at the University of Wisconsin: Dr. Lee's work has dealt mainly with the mode of action of the thyroid hormones, a problem that is of importance not only to medicine but to problems of stress and adaptation to unusual environments The work that Dr. Lee was carrying out at the University of Wisconsin is being continued by him at his new post. He is completing experiments started in this laboratory, and is expanding his program because of additional facilities available to him at the University of North Dakota.

The following is excerpted from a November 22, 1963, letter to the Service from W. E. Cornatzer, Ph. D., M.D., Professor and Head of the Department of Biochemistry and Director of the Ireland Research Laboratory at the University of North Dakota : Dr. Lee is conducting the same research that he was doing at the University of Wisconsin. In fact, he is still carrying out jointly research with Dr. Henry Lardy of the University of Wisconsin. I have asked Dr. Lardy to write you a letter to confirm this. Dr. Lardy filed the First Preference Quota for Dr. Lee December 15, 1959. Dr. Lee's salary at the University of Wisconsin was being paid by U.S. Public Health Research Grant. Dr. Lee transferred this same research grant to the University of North Dakota for him to continue his research. His salary now is being paid by another research grant given to the University of North Dakota. The foregoing indicates that Dr. Lee was continuing the research commenced at the University of Wisconsin, under the same grant, and had transferred his operations to the University of North Da- kota to take advantage of the better facilities there. It now becomes.

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