Trinidad Z. Garcia v. Immigration and Naturalization Service

31 F.3d 441, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 19219, 1994 WL 387780
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 27, 1994
Docket93-2735
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 F.3d 441 (Trinidad Z. Garcia 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
Trinidad Z. Garcia v. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 31 F.3d 441, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 19219, 1994 WL 387780 (7th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

RIPPLE, Circuit Judge.

Trinidad Zaide Garcia, a citizen of the Philippines, petitions for review of a final order of deportation. See 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a) (establishing judicial review of all final deportation orders). For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

I

BACKGROUND

In October 1978, the petitioner’s father was admitted from the Philippines to the United States as a permanent resident alien. Shortly after admittance, he filed a visa petition for his daughter’s admission to the United States as an unmarried daughter of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence pursuant to section 203(a)(1) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), 8 *442 U.S.C. § 1153(a)(1). Although the petitioner had married Oscar Garcia in a Philippine civil ceremony in January 1978, she attested to being unmarried in various immigration documents as well as in an interview with a consular official. She eventually was admitted to the United States on March 7, 1981. In May 1982, she returned to the Philippines to remarry Oscar Garcia in a Catholic ceremony.

After returning to the United States in June 1982, the petitioner filed a visa petition for her husband’s admission to the United States as the spouse of a permanent resident alien. In support of Oscar’s visa petition, the petitioner submitted a sworn statement that she had married Oscar in a civil ceremony in January 1978 and in a religious ceremony in May 1982. A.R. 280. She also submitted their Catholic marriage certificate, which notes at the bottom the existence of the 1978 civil marriage. A.R. 282. Oscar’s visa petition was approved in September 1983, although for reasons unknown he neither obtained an immigrant visa nor immigrated to the United States.

In early 1986, the petitioner applied for United States citizenship. The Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) denied her citizenship application on the basis of her 1978 civil marriage. On March 24, 1986, the INS charged the petitioner with deportability under, among other provisions, section 212(a)(19) of the INA, 8 U.S.C. § 1182(a)(19), for willfully misrepresenting a material fact (her marital status) in procuring a visa. While the petitioner’s deportation proceedings were pending, she obtained an annulment decree in April 1987 from a Philippine court for her 1978 civil marriage.

At her hearing before the Immigration Judge (IJ), the petitioner admitted that she and Oscar Garcia did participate in a January 1978 civil marriage. But she stated that she went through with the civil ceremony only out of guilt from having engaged in sexual relations with Oscar a few days beforehand. After the civil ceremony, she neither lived with Oscar as his wife nor told anyone that she had married him. The petitioner acknowledged that, when she sought entry to the United States, she was aware that her application was contingent upon her unmarried status because she was seeking to enter as the unmarried daughter of a permanent resident alien. She testified that she did not disclose her marriage to immigration authorities, however, because she did not consider a civil marriage to have effectuated a change in her marital status. Rather, she believed that only if she had been married in the Catholic Church would she in fact have been married at the time she informed immigration authorities that she was not married.

In a May 25, 1988 decision, the IJ found the petitioner deportable. The IJ first found that the petitioner was legally married as of January 5, 1978 for immigration purposes. He based this determination on the fact that the petitioner testified that she had intended to become Oscar Garcia’s wife by means of the civil ceremony. The IJ then turned to the issue of the Philippine annulment of the civil marriage in April 1987. He noted that the Philippine court’s annulment decree declared the civil marriage to be void ab initio. He also stated that the Law Librarian at the Library of Congress concluded that the Philippine annulment meant that under Philippine law the civil marriage is deemed never to have occurred at all. Nonetheless, the IJ held that the circumstances of this case dictated that the annulment not be given retroactive effect. See Matter of Magana, 17 I & N Dec. 111 (BIA 1979) (applying “the relation back doctrine only where to do so would bring about a more just result”). He found the petitioner’s testimony concerning her failure to inform immigration authorities about her 1978 civil marriage to be “neither plausible or credible.” A.R. 56. The IJ therefore concluded that there was clear, unequivocal, and convincing evidence 1 that the petitioner willfully misrepresented her marital status in procuring her visa and thereby violated section 212(a)(19) of the INA. 2 The *443 IJ entered an order of deportation pursuant to INA section 241(a)(1), 8 U.S.C. § 1251(a)(1). The petitioner was, however, granted voluntary departure. The Board of Immigration Appeals summarily dismissed the petitioner’s appeal.

II

DISCUSSION

On appeal, the petitioner submits that the IJ erred in not looking to Philippine law in determining whether her 1978 civil marriage was valid at its inception. According to the petitioner, if the IJ had examined Philippine law, he would have found that the civil marriage was void ab initio. First, because the petitioner was under 23 years of age at the time of the marriage and did not have her parents’ consent to marry, she and Oscar were required to wait three months after the issuance of a marriage license before marrying pursuant to Philippine law. As the Philippine court which granted the annulment for the 1978 civil marriage found, the couple failed to fulfill this requirement. Second, neither party to the marriage resided in the municipality in which the marriage was solemnized. The couple obtained the civil marriage license in an improper municipality by fraudulent means. The petitioner therefore asserts that the IJ should never have considered the 1978 civil marriage to have taken place. The petitioner points out that the IJ did not have to take the petitioner’s word on the status of her 1978 civil marriage nor make any determination or application of Philippine domestic relations law. Rather, according to the petitioner, the IJ simply should have found, as the results of the IJ’s research request at the Library of Congress concluded, that the April 1987 Philippine annulment of the 1978 civil marriage related back to that marriage, thereby negating the marriage’s very existence.

In focusing on Philippine law and not on the issue of her state of mind in representing her marital status in procuring a visa, we believe that the petitioner has misapprehended the immigration statute at issue. Section 212(a) of the INA lists classes of aliens who are ineligible to receive visas and who are to be excluded from admission into the United States. The petitioner has been charged as deportable under one of those classes:

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31 F.3d 441, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 19219, 1994 WL 387780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trinidad-z-garcia-v-immigration-and-naturalization-service-ca7-1994.