Nguyen Da Yen, Cross-Appellees v. Henry Kissinger, Secretary of State, Cross-Appellants

528 F.2d 1194
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 5, 1975
Docket75-2493, 75-2632
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 528 F.2d 1194 (Nguyen Da Yen, Cross-Appellees v. Henry Kissinger, Secretary of State, Cross-Appellants) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nguyen Da Yen, Cross-Appellees v. Henry Kissinger, Secretary of State, Cross-Appellants, 528 F.2d 1194 (9th Cir. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION

Before CHAMBERS, KOELSCH and TRASK, Circuit Judges.

KOELSCH, Circuit Judge:

These are cross-appeals from a preliminary injunctive order over which we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). We heard the appeals on an expedited basis on August 14, 1975, and on that day affirmed the order, as we revised it. Because of temporal exigencies, we were unable to immediately explicate our rationale in a written opinion and were compelled to defer that matter to a later time. Having now had a decent opportunity to thoroughly study and consider the numerous and difficult issues, we conclude that our earlier order must be modified, and for the following reasons.

We think it fair to conclude that this is a unique lawsuit, responsive to a high *1197 ly unusual operation — the Vietnamese Orphan “Babylift.” During the waning hours of our involvement in Vietnam, as the fall of Saigon grew imminent, various agencies of the United States Government, in concert with private American adoption agencies, participated in an airlift to evacuate children from Vietnam. The airlift was apparently intended to remove only those children who were already in some stage of the requisite procedure for admission to the United States and adoption by American families- — i. e., who were adoptable under Vietnamese law, legally in the custody of the American private agencies, and who satisfied the criteria for admission into the United States under the definition of an orphan “child,” 8 U.S.C. § 1101(b)(1) (F), classifiable as an “immediate relative” under 8 U.S.C. § 1151(b).

However, it now appears that some of the 2700 children airlifted were brought here improperly. We are presently dealing with a very limited record. The documentation accompanying some of the children is insufficient on its face to establish the child’s status as an orphan, abandoned, or irrevocably released child, the validity of the private agency’s custody of such a child under Vietnamese child custody law, or the child’s eligibility for admission under 8 U.S.C. §§ 1101(b)(1)(F) and 1151(b). While inadequate documentation is in many cases the product of the last minute haste of the evacuation, in at least some cases, as the district court found, it is because the children are not orphans and have not been validly released into the custody of the adoption agencies. From plaintiffs’ assertions, it appears that some of the children have a living parent, and were merely left in orphanages for safekeeping (Vietnamese orphanages allegedly serve some of the functions of day care centers). The parent(s) may or may not know the child is alive, or where it is. Other children were allegedly released with the understanding that the parents would be reunited with the child here; still others were released by hysterical parents terrorized by the fear that the child would be murdered by the approaching forces. In the latter situations plaintiffs question the validity of the releases.

To put the matter in broad outline, the ultimate objective the plaintiffs seek is the reunion of children with their parents. In order to attain that objective, plaintiffs seek the accumulation and investigation of the children’s records in order to identify and locate children who may have living parents (the children are now spread all over the country in foster and adoptive homes), and the establishment of procedures for locating the natural parents and repatriating and reuniting the children with them. Plaintiffs seek to accomplish those objectives expeditiously, in one lawsuit in a single forum, before the passage of time erases the children’s memories (making more difficult the location of living relatives), and makes even more bitter the disruption in the child’s and adoptive parents’ lives should the child eventually be reunited with its natural parents.

A variety of legal theories are advanced in the complaint to sustain plaintiffs’ claim to relief. In essence, plaintiffs allege that the defendants’ cooperation in the removal of a child from Vietnam without proper custody of it having been obtained (including by totally voluntary parental releases), and its continued, allegedly involuntary, detention in this country in custody other than that of its natural parent, is a violation of the child’s fundamental human rights and of its Fifth Amendment right to liberty and due process. The legal vehicle by which that claim is asserted on behalf of those of the 2700 orphans who share the complaint is a class action. The three named plaintiffs are children who apparently have living parents in Vietnam. They are represented by a guardian ad litem appointed by the court, and by the latter’s attorneys. The class they seek to represent is of course as yet indeterminate — the district court has allowed the suit to proceed as a class action for *1198 discovery purposes in order to determine the identity of children who may share the named plaintiffs’ legal claim. 1

The proceeding is still very much in the preliminary stages. Having filed their complaint, plaintiffs immediately moved for a preliminary injunction, seeking inter alia that the defendants accumulate records necessary to determine each child’s adoptive status and to find its parents, disclosure of those records to plaintiffs, institution of procedures through international agencies for tracing parents or relatives, a stay of all adoption proceedings until, where necessary, a search for parents or relatives fails, and the immediate return of any child found to have a living parent seeking its return. At a series of hearings it became apparent that one of the defendants, the Immigration and Naturalization Service, intended and perhaps had already begun, to conduct an investigation aimed at developing some of the information sought by plaintiffs. Because of the press of time, the INS had departed from its usual procedure requiring the filing and approval of form 1 — 600, Petition to Classify Orphan as an Immediate Relative, with the accompanying documentation required to establish eligibility under 8 U.S.C. §§ 1151(b) and 1101(b)(1)(F), 2 before the Babylift orphans were admitted to the United States. See 8 C.F.R. § 204.2(d). Rather, the INS had facilitated the children’s removal from Vietnam through the exercise of the discretionary parole power. 8 U.S.C. § 1182

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Bluebook (online)
528 F.2d 1194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nguyen-da-yen-cross-appellees-v-henry-kissinger-secretary-of-state-ca9-1975.