MOREIRA

17 I. & N. Dec. 370
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1980
DocketID 2792
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 I. & N. Dec. 370 (MOREIRA) 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
MOREIRA, 17 I. & N. Dec. 370 (bia 1980).

Opinion

Interim Decision 112792

MATTER OF MOREIRA

In Visa Petition Proceedings

A-22211458

Decided by Board Nay 6, 1980

(1) In order to establish a steprelationship under the Immigration and Nationality Act, there must be a showing that the stepparent has, prior to the stepchild's eighteenth birthday, evinced an active parental concern for the stepchild's support, instruction, and general welfare. Matter of Mareira, Interim Decision 2720 (BIA 1979). (2) Where the marriage creating a technical steprelationship takes place shortly before a stepchild's eighteenth birthday, inquiry may properly be made into what occurred between the stepparent and stepchild before the marriage, or after the child reached the age of 18, in order to determine if the standards set forth in Matter of Moreira, id., have been met. (8) Although a simple wan-lame ceremony will not be itself create genuine familial bonds between ateprelatives, where such bonds can be shown, Matter of Moreira, id., should be broadly construed in order to give effect to the goal of encouraging and preserving bonafide family relationships. (4) Where petitioner, wife of the beneficiary's natural father, knew of the beneficiary's existence from the time she first met her husband, a year before they were married, where she and her husband have sent money to the beneficiary from their shared income, and where the petitioner has always been willing to accept the beneficiary, take responsibility for him, and consider him as her own child, the petitioner's parental interest in the beneficiary was sufficiently active and timely to warrant granting the visa petition, despite the fact that the marriage creating the steprela- tionship occurred only 4 months before the beneficiary's eighteenth birthday. (5) It is not a denial of equal protection to have different rules of law in different judicial districts. Castillo-Felix v. INS, 601 F.2d 459 (9 Cir. 1979). (6) In the Board of Immigration Appeals' prior decision in Matter of Moreira, supra, the decision in Andrade v. Esperdp, 270 F.Sunp. 5146 (S.D1sT.Y.1967), was not rejected, but rather was interpreted to mean that some evidence of genuine familial bonds was required in order to establish a steprelationship for immigration purposes, even though a "close family unit" need not be shown. (7) The standards in Matter of Moreira, supra, apply nationwide, including in the Southern District in New York. ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER:, ON BEHALF OF SERVICE: James J. Orlow, Esquire Jim Torn Haynes Public Ledger Building, Suite 936 Appellate Trial Sixth & Chestnut Streets Attorney Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19106

370 Interim Decision #2792 BY: Milhollan, Chairman; Maniatis, Appleman, Maguire, and Farb, Board Members

This is the second time this case has been before us. In a prior decision, dated July 16, 1979, we remanded the record to the District Director to give the petitioner an opportunity to show that the benefi- ciary qualified as her "stepchild" under the Immigration and National- ity A et, as that term was defined in our prior decision, which was designated as a precedent. Matter of Moreira, Interim Decision 2720 (BIA 1979). The District Director, in a decision dated October 30, 1979, determined that the beneficiary did not qualify as the petitioner's stepchild as we had interpreted that term. In accordance with our previous order, the District Director then certified his decision back to this Board for review. Oral argument was heard before this Board on February 21, 1980. The decision of the District Director is reversed. The petitioner in this case is a 52-year-old native of Argentina and citizen of the United States. The beneficiary is a 25-year-old native and citizen of Argentina who was born out of wedlock to the petitioner's husband and a woman he never married. The petitioner married the beneficiary's father in 1972, when the beneficiary was 17 years old. Thus, a purely technical steprelationship came into existence prior to the beneficiary's eighteenth birthday. However, in our prior precedent decision in this case, we held that more than a merely technical relationship was required in order to establish a steprelationship under the Act. After a careful review of the legislative history of the stepchild provision, as well as of the case law, both from this Board and from the courts, we held that a steprelationship exists for immigration purposes where the stepparent has, prior to the child's eighteenth birthday, evinced an active concern for the stepchild's support, in- struction, and general welfare. While such an interest can be demon- strated by taking the child into the home and caring for him as a parent, it can also be shown, we held, by a stepparent's continuing and genuine interest in the well-being of a stepchild who may, due to distance, immigration restrictions, or national boundaries, be unable to actually live with the stepparent. Matter of Moreira, id. The petitioner in the present case has submitted an affidavit which indicates that she knew of and accepted the existence of the beneficiary from the time she first met her husband, approximately one year before they were married. She states that because the beneficiary had always been a great concern of her husband's, he became a concern of her's also, and that she and her husband sent money to the beneficiary from their shared income. The petitioner states that she knew that when she married her husband, the beneficiary and the beneficiary's sister would become her children "as fully and completely as if they

371 Interim Decision #2792

were mine by blood...." She acknowledges twice in the affidavit that she has am "obligation" to the beneficiary. The special problem presented by this case lies in the fact that the petitioner's marriage to the beneficiary's father occurred only 4 months before the beneficiary reached his eighteenth birthday. The Immigration and Naturalization Service argues, and counsel for the petitioner has all but conceded, that the requirements of our precedent decision could not have been, and were not, met in those 4 months. We believe that the interpretation given to our decision by both counsel and by the Service is too narrow. What we sought in our prior decision was to encourage and preserve relationships where genuine familial bonds existed, but also to recognize the fact that a simple marriage ceremony not in every case serve to create such genuine bonds between persons who have come steprelatives. Our decision in Moreira, id., should be broadly construed where, as here, a bona fide family relationship has been shown. The fact that the marriag6 creating a relationship occurs shortly before a stepchild's eighteenth birthday should not be fatal to a finding that the Moreira standards have been satisfied. Each case must be decided on its own facts. If, as in the present case, there is very little time between the marriage and the birthday, it is not improper to inquire into what occurred between the stepchild and stepparent before the marriage, or to inquire into what occurred after the child reached th.e age of 18. In both Nation v. Esperdy, 239 F.Supp. 531 (S.D.N.Y. 1965) and Andrade v. Esperdy, 270 F.Supp 516 (S.D.N.Y. 1967), for example, the Court emphasized that the stepmothers evinced an active parental interest in their future stepchildren even before they married the children's fathers. In the present ease, the record indicates that the petitioner showed concern for the beneficiary prior to her marriage to the beneficiary's father, and it is quite clear that this interest continued, even grew, up until the beneficiary reached his eighteenth birthday, and beyond.

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Related

VIZCAINO
19 I. & N. Dec. 644 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 I. & N. Dec. 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moreira-bia-1980.