YEE

11 I. & N. Dec. 27
CourtBoard of Immigration Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1964
Docket1426
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 11 I. & N. Dec. 27 (YEE) 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
YEE, 11 I. & N. Dec. 27 (bia 1964).

Opinion

Interim Decision #1426

MATTER.or YES

In Visa Petition Proceedings A-12994661 • A-12994665 Decided by Board January 20, 1964 Since the burden of proof of establishing eligibility for =Meta status rests upon the petitioner, and since the petitioner has not borne his burden—his identity and claimed relationship to the beneficiaries having been cast in doubt by the established identity of his mother and by -the testimony of wit- nesses in Hong Kong—the visa petition approval is revoked, without prej- udice to reopening if petitioner is able to produce further evidence relating to his claimed identity and relationship.

The -cases come forward on appeal from the notice of revocation of the District Director, San Francisco District, dated October 29, 1963, revolting the visa petitions in behalf of the son and daughter for the reasons that the American Consulate at Hong Kong has re- turned the visa petitions with the information that a local investiga- tion concerning the beneficiaries reveals that they are surnamed LOUIE rather than YEE and, therefore, the petitioner failed to establish the relationship claimed; and that the petitioner has also failed to resolve discrepancies developed by the American Consulate in Hong Kong.. The petitioner, born at Wo On Village, Toyshan District, Kwang- tung, China on February 9, 1924, claims United States citizenship through parentage and is holder of a certificate of citizenship AA- 33814 issued in San Francisco in 1952. He filed a visa petition on September '1, 1962, on behalf of his alleged son, JerngWai Yee, and daughter, Chun Har Yee. The beneficiaries were born on December 6, 1951, and April 1, 1949, respectively, at Wo On Li, Toyshan Dis- trict, Kwangtung, China. The petitions were conditionally approved for nonquota status on October 8, 1962, and forwarded to the Amer- ican: Consulate at Hong Kong. 27, Interim Decision #1426 The visa petitions were accompanied by a letter dated April 17, 1958, relating to the approved visa petition of the petitioner's wife, Ng Ngan Sun, which reflected that the petitioner first arrived in the United States on June 15, 1952, was admitted by a Board of Special Inquiry as a United States citizen and was issued citizenship certifi- cate No. AA-33814 'around August 14, 1952. At the time of his first admission to the United States he was 26 years old and stated he was single. When he applied for a certificate of citizenship he also stated that he was single. The petitioner alleged that he made a trip to Hong Kong on April 29, 1957, returning on October 2, 1957, and exhibited United States Passport No. 197665 showing such admis- sion. The petitioner was interviewed on April 15, 1958, and the facts and allegations in. his petition and relating files were verified by him. He furnished photographs of himself and the wife-beneficiary of his petition, identifying the latter photograph as a good likeness of his wife, Ng Ngan Sun. He also submitted a certified copy of a Hong Kong marriage certificate certifying to the marriage of 'himself to the beneficiary. In the interview he stated that he was married on August 31, 1957, and that he first met his wife in the Nathan Coffee Shop in Kowloon after being introduced to her by a friend, Ng Min Poy. He stated that after two months they became engaged and then in about another month they were married; that he then lived with his wife after the marriage. He stated that he thereafter took his wife to the movies; that he bought her a gold ring with a jade setting; and also bought her some clothes including shoes and a wrist watch of Swiss make. He stated that his wife's father is Ng Man Yin and her mother is Lew Shea, both of whom were presently in Hong Kong and that his wife has no brothers or sisters. The peti- tioner stated that his wife's native village was Tung Gong Village T.S.D., China and that she had lived in Hong Kong for over two years. He stated that he sent her a little less than $1,000 since he returned to the United States and stated that she is not now preg- nant. Photographs of the petitioner and the beneficiary and the cer- tificate of marriage certifying to the marriage of Yee Yook Lin and Ng Ngan Sun were presented. The petitioner was interviewed on October 8, 1962. It was ascer- tained that the original information regarding his single status was false. Actually, according to the petitioner, he was married by Chi- nese custom at the Wo On Village, Toishan, China, on December 15, 1945, and remarried, according to western custom at Hong Kong on August 31, 1957. The petitioner's wife was also present at the inter- view and her file, A 1076880$ shows she was admitted into the -

28 Interini:Dedisidn 4t1426 United States at Honolulu, Hawaii, via sir, on February 12, 1960, under section 101(a) (2I) (A) of the Immigrration and Nationality Act, as the -wife of Yee Yok Lin. In her application for an immi- grant visa she listed her husband as Yee Yok Lin but does not show the name of any minor children. She stated at •her interview on October 8, 1962, that she did not inform the American Consulate it Hong Kong of her children, Jeing Wai Yee and Chun Har Yee, because it did not seem logical for her to do so inasmuch as she was claiming that she had married for the first time on August 31, 1957. The petitioner and his wife asserted that she and the two beneficiaries went to Hong Kong during the Chinese ninth month of 1954, having traveled from Ai Gong Market where the petitioner's wife and•the two children had been living since 1952. It is alleged that she and the children left, the Wo On Villege. about 1952, which was the year that the petitioner entered the United States, for the reason that her mother lived near the Ai Gong Market in the 'Ung Gong Village and the market was just across the river from the Ung Gong Village. It is again claimed that Ngan Sun Ng, the wife, has no brothers or sisters. The petitioner stated that he has the following brothers and sisters: Yook 'lee, two years older than the petitioner living in Col- -orado ; Yook Lim; three years younger than the petitioner, residing in Illinois; Gim Lan, his only sister, two years younger than the petitioner residing in Fresno, California. A consular report dated March 20, 1963, from the American Con- sulate at Hong Kong, after reciting the above facts, states that inas- much as the petitioner's surname and native village did not check with the village index, the consular officer questioned his claimed identity. On February 8, 1903, the case investigator caned on the beneficiaries' alleged maternal grandmother, Lan Lai Wall, but found instead at the dame.address a woman claiming to be the beneficiaries' guardian. She asserted that Lau Lai Wah returned to the Mainland after the beneficiaries' mother left for the United States in 1960. The alleged guardian identified herself as Ng Gim Lui, a fellow ten- ant of the beneficiaries' family before their mother went to the Unitecr-States, after -which, the witness said she -herself took the responslity of looking after the beneficiaries. The witness dis- claimed any relationship to the beneficiaries' family. The witness gave her husband's name as Louie Ting also known as Louie gun Wai (marriage name), now in the United. States. While in the wit- ness' fiat, the investigator noticed'a -certilie,ate from .

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Related

JULIANUS
14 I. & N. Dec. 435 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1973)
DARWISH
14 I. & N. Dec. 307 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1973)
ATWATER
14 I. & N. Dec. 410 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1973)
ANNANG
14 I. & N. Dec. 502 (Board of Immigration Appeals, 1973)

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Bluebook (online)
11 I. & N. Dec. 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yee-bia-1964.