STANLAKE

13 I. & N. Dec. 517
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1970
Docket2034
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 13 I. & N. Dec. 517 (STANLAKE) 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
STANLAKE, 13 I. & N. Dec. 517 (bia 1970).

Opinion

Interim Decision #2034

MATTER OF STANLAKE

In Exclusion Proceedings A-14248767 Decided by Board December 19, 1969, as modified March 20, 1970 In the absence of persuasive evidence that he did not intend to renounce his United States citizenship, applicant who in 1946 was voluntarily natural- ized in Canada and took an oath of allegiance to that country (even though there was no oath of renunciation of U.S. citizenship) thereby transferred his allegiance which resulted in a loss of United States citi- zenship under section 401(a) of the Nationality Act of 1940.

EXCLUDABLE: Act of 1962—Section 212(a) (20) [8 U.S.C. 1182(a) (20 ) migrant without immigrant visa.

ON BEHALF OF APPLICANT: ON BEHALF OF SERVICE: Marie M. Donohoe, Esquire Irving A. Appleman 217 Lyon Building Appellate Trial Attorney 60'7 Third Avenue (Memorandum filed) Seattle, Washington 98104 B. G. Greenwald (Memorandum filed) Trial Attorney (Brief filed)

The special inquiry officer certified his order finding the appli- cant an alien and excluding him as an immigrant without a visa. We shall make no change in his order. The issue is whether the applicant's naturalization in Canada caused him to lose United States citizenship. The applicant con- tends expatriation did not result because he became naturalized in the belief he had to acquire Canadian citizenship in order to obtain a job as a forest ranger. He states that he did not intend to renounce United States allegiance when he became naturalized. The special inquiry officer found the applicant voluntarily became naturalized, and his assumption of Canadian allegiance was inconsistent with retention of allegiance to the United States. The applicant, a 53-year-old male, was born in the United States. When he was about two years old, his mother, a Canadian national, took him to Canada. He remained in Canada, except for a year spent in the United States in 1936. He served in the Cana-

517 Interim Decision #2024 dian Army from September 1939 to October 1945. On August 13, 1946, he executed a petition for naturalization in Canada and on the same day took an oath of allegiance to King George VI after having written it out in longhand (Ex. 8). On October 18 he was granted a naturalization certificate. This is considered to be the date of his expatriation (Ex. 5). On October 21 he took an oath of allegiance with the Province of Manitoba and an oath of office as a forest ranger. He entered on duty as a forest ranger in November 1946. He held the job until June 1950. Canadian authorities have stated that Canadian citizenship was not a requirement for the position, that an oath of allegiance is not mandatory, and that an oath of office is required (Ex. 9). The applicant was self-employed for a while. The Canadian 3overnment paid for some training he took in the United States. He was hospitalized for a period of time. In 1962, in connection vith a job in the Canadian post office department, he took an oath )f allegiance to Queen Elizabeth II and also took an oath of office ',Ex. 7). The applicant certified as true a post office appointment orm showing that he was "naturalized October 1946" (Ex. 6). On September 25, 1962, the applicant secured a Canadian pass- ,ort (p. 28) and filed an application for an immigrant visa with he American consul at Toronto. The records of the consul reveal hat the applicant then stated he had become a naturalized Cana- ian citizen (Ex. 8). He did not proceed with the application. Applicant was admitted as a visitor at Cleveland, Ohio, on ctober 26, 1962, for a period ending March 25, 1963. On October 3, 1964, he was placed under deportation proceedings for having !mained beyond the date of admission. The record of the hearing as not transcribed. It was adjourned to January 19, 1965 (Ex. . The record does not show that a hearing was held on January but we note that exhibits in the deportation hearing were .ted January 19, 1965. The applicant returned to Canada before e proceedings could be concluded. The applicant applied for admission on December 10, 1967. His ipectiun was deferred but was not completed, because of his [lure to appear when. requested (unnumbered exhibit following :. 9). On July 8, 1968, after applying for admission as a United States izen, he was given a hearing in exclusion proceedings. The ler which the special inquiry officer certified to the Board fol- Ted. kt the time of the applicant's naturalization in Canada, United

518 Interim Decision 4#2034

States law provided that a United States citizen would lose his nationality by— obtaining naturalization in a foreign state, * * (section 401 (a), Nationality Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 1168). On appeal counsel contends that subjective intent controls as to whether expatriation occurred, that applicant applied for natural- ization because he believed it was necessary in order to obtain a job as a forest ranger, that there is nothing in the record to show that he desired a transfer allegiance from the United States to Canada, that the oath signed by the applicant did not state he was abandoning United States citizenship, that the concept of dual citizenship is accepted, that the United States and Canada are similar and that there is traditional friendship between the countries. Counsel points out that the record does not show that applicant tried to avoid any duty or obligation imposed upon him by United States citizenship and that he claimed United States citizenship when he entered the United Staes. The Service contends that voluntary naturalization in a foreign state coupled with an oath of allegiance is inconsistent with retention of United States citizenship and constitutes a transfer of allegiance regardless of subjective intent. We need not con- front that issue in this case, for we find on this evidence that respondent has failed to establish a lack of intention to renounce his United States citizenship. We do not believe the applicant has established that he sought naturalization in Canada because he thought it was a prerequisite to getting a job. In his application for naturalization, he stated the application was made for the following reasons: "I have been in Canada since infancy, married to a Canadian, served in the Canadian Army, and intend to remain in Canada" (Ex. 8). There is nothing about employment. Furthermore, Canadian citizenship was not a requirement for the position which the applicant held (Ex. 9). To accept applicant's claim, in the face of the documentary evi- dence to the contrary, requires a finding that he is at least credi- ble. This finding would not be justified on the record. His testi- mony is conflicting and uncorroborated. Although he now claims he became naturalized to take a job, when questioned under oath by the Service in July 1964, he denied that he had ever gone through a Canadian naturalization procedure. He said that he was offered a position with the Canadian Government after dis- charge from the army, that there was a question as to whether he could be a provincial civil servant since he was an American citi-

519 Interim Decision #2034

zen, that inquiry was made concerning this at Ottawa, Ontario, that without, further ado he received naturalization papers and that he refused them (Ex. 15 of Ex. 5, pp. 3, 8). At his hearings on November 6, 1968, he stated that in 1962 he told the United States consul in Canada that he had been issued naturalization papers which he refused (pp. 15-16) . He informed a Service officer in the summer of 1968 that he had refused naturalization (p. 27). He stated he had been sent naturalization papers and had returned them (pp. 34, 35). He testified he returned his naturali- zation certificate to the Canadian authorities while he was a forest ranger (p. 37).

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Related

WAYNE
16 I. & N. Dec. 248 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
13 I. & N. Dec. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanlake-bia-1970.