Angeles et al v. Napolitano et al
Filing
46
ORDER Granting Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment and Denying Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment. The matter is Remanded to the Agency for further proceedings in processing the Plaintiffs Forms I-485 in accordance with this Order . Since the Court has spent considerable time studying this old record, it retains jurisdiction in the event of further proceedings under the APA in respect to Plaintiffs' application to adjust status. L.R. Civ. P. 40.1(e). Signed by Judge Barry Ted Moskowitz on 8/4/2015.(rlu)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
9
10
11
12
ALAN ANGELES and NATALY
ANGELES.
Plaintiffs,
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
Case No.: 13-cv-00008-BTM-RBB
vs.
JEH C. JOHNSON, Secretary of
Homeland Security, et al.
ORDER GRANTING PLAINTIFFS’
MOTION FOR SUMMARY
JUDGMENT AND DENYING
DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR
SUMMARY JUDGMENT
Defendants.
Presently pending before the Court are the parties’ cross motions for
20
summary judgment in a matter arising under the Administrative Procedures
21
Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. §§ 701- 706. The challenged agency action is
22
23
Defendant’s, United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (“USCIS”
24
or the “Agency”), denial of Plaintiffs’, Nataly and Alan Angeles, Application
25
to Register Permanent Residence or Adjust Status, Form I-485, as
26
27
derivative beneficiaries of a Petition for Alien Relative, Form I-130, filed
28
-1-
1
by their grandfather, Luis Herrera Angeles (“Luis”) on behalf of their father,
2
Demetrio Angeles Moran (“Demetrio”).
3
Having considered the parties oral argument and the record, the
4
5
Court DENIES Defendant’s motion for summary judgment [Doc. 35], and
6
GRANTS Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment [Doc. 34].
7
8
I.
BACKGROUND
9
10
Luis immigrated to the United States from Mexico on October 5, 1976
11
under the then existing Western Hemisphere Program (“WHP”), and was
12
classified as an “SA-1” immigrant according to his Immigrant Visa [Doc. 31-
13
14
3, at 16]. Luis’s son, Demetrio, was born in Mexico in 1960 and resided
15
there at the time of his father’s immigration [Doc. 35-2, at 2]. On June 7,
16
1977, after he became a legal permanent resident, Luis filed the Form I-
17
18
130 in question on behalf of Demetrio, who was then a single minor. The
19
Agency’s predecessor, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”),
20
21
approved the Form I-I30 on August 27, 1977 [Doc. 34, at 2; Doc. 35-1, at 8-
22
9]. On February 14, 1978, Demetrio was issued an Immigrant Visa by the
23
United States Consulate in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, and entered
24
25
the United States on February 15, 1978 [Doc. 35-2, at 2]. Demetrio’s visa
26
shows that he was admitted with the immigrant classification symbol “SA-1”
27
from foreign state or other area “w/h” and was occupied as a “student.” [Id].
28
-2-
1
The visa also had the box checked confirming that Demetrio was statutorily
2
exempt from the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) § 212(a)(14), 8
3
U.S.C. § 1182(a)(14), labor certification requirement, and included the
4
5
additional note: “I-130 Attached.” The meaning and implication of these
6
symbols are at issue in this case. Additionally, the legal and factual
7
questions of whether the Form I-130 was the vehicle for Demetrio’s
8
9
immigration remain disputed.
10
11
If the Form I-130 is found to be unused and therefore still valid, Plaintiffs
could qualify for adjustment of immigration status to permanent legal
12
13
resident based on the intersection of INA § 245(i), 8 U.S.C. § 1255(i) with
14
INA § 204(l), 8 U.S.C. § 1154(l). INA § 245(i) allows certain “grandfathered”
15
aliens who are in the United States illegally to adjust their status to lawful
16
17
permanent resident under certain conditions, such as being the beneficiary
18
of a qualifying Form I-130. A “grandfathered” alien includes a spouse or
19
20
child of a beneficiary of a Form I-130 filed before April 30, 2001. 8 CFR
21
245.10(a). Plaintiffs are the children of a Form I-130 beneficiary, Demetrio.1
22
Luis filed the Form I-130 on Demetrio’s behalf in June of 1977, years
23
24
25
before the April 30, 2001 cutoff date. The INA and its regulations do not
place an expiration date on an approved Form I-130 and 8 C.F.R.
26
27
1
28
See Matter of Estrada, 26 I. & N. Dec. 180, 184 (BIA 2013) (established that both principal and
derivative “grandfathered aliens” are independently eligible for adjustment of status under INA §245(i)).
-3-
1
§ 204.2(h)(1) confirms that an approved family-based Form I-130 remains
2
valid for the duration of the relationship to the qualifying beneficiary.
3
Furthermore, INA § 204(l) gives the USCIS discretion to consider an
4
5
approved Form I-130 to be valid for use by a surviving relative, such as
6
Plaintiffs, despite the death of the qualifying beneficiary, here Demetrio.
7
Defendant does not appear to challenge the application of INA § 204(l) to
8
9
10
11
this case. [See Doc. 35-1, at 10 n.7].
Demetrio’s children, Plaintiffs Alan and Nataly Angeles, were born on
September 20, 1990, and December 31, 1992, respectively, in Tijuana,
12
13
Baja California, Mexico [Doc. 31-2, at 30-31; Doc. 30-2, at 26-27]. Luis
14
was naturalized on July 8, 1994, at which time Demetrio remained
15
unmarried [Doc. 30-1, at 13; Doc. 31-2, at 59]. Demetrio passed away on
16
17
October 11, 2009. [Doc. 31-2, at 56]. According to their Forms I-485, Alan
18
and Nataly Angeles last entered the United States at or near the San
19
20
Ysidro, California, port of entry in January 2006 and August 2007,
21
respectively, without being admitted or paroled by immigration authorities
22
[Doc. 30-1, at 30; Doc. 30-2, at 60; Doc. 31-2, at 8, 16].
23
24
The parties agree that if the Form I-130 was used as the vehicle of
25
Demetrio’s immigration, it is no longer available for use by Plaintiffs.
26
However, if Demetrio’s immigration was based on his status as a child of a
27
28
WHP immigrant, “following to join” his father under that program, then the
-4-
1
Form I-130 was not used. Plaintiffs maintain that the Form I-130 remains
2
approved and available for their use as a vehicle for immigration based on
3
the combined effect of INA §§ 204(l), 8 U.S.C. § 1154(l) and 245(i), 8
4
5
U.S.C. § 1255(i). Defendant questions whether the Plaintiffs can use the
6
Form I-130 even if it is found to be unused by Demetrio, since Plaintiffs
7
were born after Demetrio immigrated [Doc 35-1, at p. 9 n.6].2
8
9
II.
LEGAL STANDARD
10
11
12
The APA allows for judicial review of any final agency actions. See 5
U.S.C. §§ 701- 706. Executive agencies have expertise and experience in
13
14
administering their statutes that no court can properly ignore. See Judulang
15
v. Holder, 132 S. Ct. 476, 483 (2011). However, while courts generally
16
defer to an agency’s interpretation of the statute and regulations it is
17
18
charged with administrating, this is not so when the interpretation is plainly
19
erroneous or inconsistent with that statute or regulation. See Udall v.
20
21
Tallman, 380 U.S. 1, 16-17 (1965). A court reviewing an administrative
22
agency’s decision must decide relevant questions of law, interpret statutory
23
provisions as necessary, and set aside agency actions, findings, and
24
25
26
27
28
This argument, grounded in 22 CFR 42.53(c), first appeared in the Agency’s Notices of Intent to Deny
issued on April 10, 2013 [Doc. 30-1, at 30; Doc. 31-2, at 1], and was rebutted by Plaintiffs in their identical
replies on May 9, 2013 [Doc. 30-1, at 12; Doc. 31-1, at 44]. The Agency omitted this argument from its
final decisions. The argument is questionable given the application of 22 CFR 42.53(c) to WHP
applicants, and not to Plaintiffs, whose legal theory relies on the intersection of INA § 204(l), 8 U.S.C. §
1154(l) and INA § 245(i), 8 U.S.C. § 1255(i) in seeking to adjust their status using the Form I-130 and not
any benefit under the former WHP.
2
-5-
1
conclusions that are (among other things) “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse
2
of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2).
3
“A decision is arbitrary and capricious if the agency ‘has relied on
4
5
factors which Congress has not intended it to consider, entirely failed to
6
consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its
7
decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so
8
9
10
11
implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the
product of agency expertise.’” O'Keeffe's, Inc. v. U.S. Consumer Prod.
Safety Comm'n, 92 F.3d 940, 942 (9th Cir. 1996) (quoting Motor Vehicle
12
13
Mfrs. Ass'n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983)). In
14
determining whether an agency decision was “arbitrary or capricious,” the
15
reviewing court “must consider whether the decision was based on a
16
17
consideration of the relevant factors and whether there has been a clear
18
error of judgment.” Marsh v. Oregon Natural Resources Council, 490 U.S.
19
20
306, 378 (1989). When reviewing an agency action, a court must examine
21
the reasons for agency decisions, or, as the case may be, the absence of
22
such reasons. See FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 556 U.S. 502, 515,
23
24
(2009).
25
However, the “arbitrary and capricious” standard of review only
26
applies to limit judicial review of questions of fact found by the agency, and
27
28
questions of law are freely reviewable by the courts. See, e.g., Nat'l Indus.
-6-
1
Sand Ass'n v. Marshall, 601 F.2d 689, 699-700 (3d Cir. 1979); United
2
States v. Dahan, 369 F. Supp. 2d 1187, 1190-91 (C.D. Cal. 2005). Thus,
3
the standard of review of a USCIS determination that an applicant is
4
5
statutorily ineligible to adjust status as a matter of law and where facts are
6
undisputed, is subject to review for errors of law. Salehpour v. I.N.S., 761
7
F.2d 1442, 1444-45 (9th Cir. 1985).
8
9
This matter involves a mixed question of fact and law, since the
10
Agency’s factual determination that “[Demetrio] did, in fact, use the Form I-
11
130 filed by Luis Herrera Angeles to immigrate” was based in large part on
12
13
its legal conclusion that Demetrio had to have used the Form I-130 to
14
immigrate [Doc. 31-1, at 36; Doc. 30-1, at 5].
15
///
16
17
18
III.
DISCUSSION
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
A. Summary of Administrative Record
Defendant filed both Plaintiffs’ administrative records documenting
the challenged USCIS decisions on November 6, 2014 [Doc. 18].
Plaintiff Alan Angeles (“Alan”) filed his Form I-485 requesting
adjustment of status under INA § 245(i) on September 19, 2011. He
appeared for an interview before USCIS related to that application on
28
-7-
1
January 23, 2012 [Doc. 31-2, at 16]. A redacted email correspondence
2
from Alan’s counsel to the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) dated
3
July 19, 2012, states that he did not receive a Notice of Intent to Deny
4
5
(“NOID”) prior to receiving the Agency’s Notice of Decision (“ND”), dated
6
May 31, 2012, and argues that Mr. Angeles was denied an opportunity to
7
rebut its reasoning [Doc. 31-3, at 42; 31-2, at 16]. For unspecified reasons,
8
9
10
11
USCIS subsequently sent a notice of Agency Motion to Re-open the Matter
on March 1, 2013, and an Amended Agency Motion to Re-open on March
5, 2013, stating that the Agency had determined to re-evaluate its prior
12
13
decision [Doc. 31-1, at 7, 9]. On April 10, 2013, USCIS sent a NOID
14
denying approval of Alan’s Form I-485 [Doc. 31-1, at 60]. Through counsel,
15
Alan replied to the NOID on May 9, 2013, rebutting the Agency’s reasoning
16
17
[Doc. 31-1, at 41]. On July 18, 2013, USCIS sent Alan its final Decision
18
denying his Form I-485, and stating that he could not appeal the decision
19
20
21
22
23
24
[Doc. 31-1, at 34].
The majority of Plaintiff Nataly Angeles’s (“Nataly”) administrative
record tracks her brother’s record, with slightly later dates. Nataly filed a
Form I-485 on May 24, 2012 based on facts identical to Alan’s Form I-485
25
[Doc. 30-1, at 29]. On August 23, 2012, she appeared for an interview
26
related to that application. On September 10, 2012, USCIS sent a ND
27
28
denying her application [Doc. 30-2 at 4]. Similarly to Alan, Nataly received a
-8-
1
notice of Agency Motion to Re-open the Matter on March 1, 2013, and an
2
Amended Agency Motion to Re-open on March 5, 2013 [Doc. 30-2, at 2-3].
3
On April 10, 2013, USCIS sent a NOID [Doc. 30-1, at 29]. Nataly, through
4
5
counsel, also sent a Reply to NOID on May 9, 2013, tracking the
6
arguments made by Alan [Doc. 30-1, at 9]. On July 18, 2013, USCIS issued
7
its final Decision denying Nataly’s Form I-485 for the same reasons stated
8
9
10
11
in the Decision denying Alan’s application [Doc. 30-1, at 3].
Plaintiffs brought this APA challenge before the Court on January 2,
2013 [Doc. 1]. On September 29, 2014, the Court granted in part and
12
13
denied in part Defendant’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter
14
jurisdiction and failure to state a claim [Doc. 18]. The parties filed the
15
pending cross motions for summary judgment on January 8 and 9, 2015
16
17
[Docs. 34, 35].
18
19
20
B. Summary of Applicable Immigration Law
21
Much of the argument in this case surrounds the complex change to
22
the immigration system resulting from the INA Amendments of 1976, Pub.
23
24
L. 94-571 (90 Stat. 2703) (“1976 Amendments”), which took effect on
25
January 1, 1977. According to their legislative history, the goal of the 1976
26
Amendments was to “eliminate the inequities in existing law regarding the
27
28
admission of immigrants from countries in the Western Hemisphere” . . . by
-9-
1
“extend[ing] to the Western Hemisphere the seven-category preference
2
system, the 20,000 per-country limit, and the provisions for adjustment of
3
status currently in effect for Eastern Hemisphere countries.” H.R. Rep. 94-
4
5
6
7
1553 (1976), 1976 WL 14063 (Leg. Hist.).
As implemented, the 1976 Amendments changed the prior WHP in
existence since 1968, under which citizens of “independent” Western
8
9
Hemisphere countries desiring to immigrate to the United States were
10
defined as “special immigrants,” were not categorized by a priority or
11
preference system, and were admitted on a first-come first-served basis
12
13
without a per-country quota. Id. at *2. The single restriction on prospective
14
Western Hemisphere immigrants entering to perform skilled or unskilled
15
labor was to obtain a certification from the Secretary of Labor indicating
16
17
that his or her entry will not adversely affect the United States labor market.
18
However, parents, spouses, and children of those “special immigrants” who
19
20
had become United States citizens or legal permanent residents, and
21
whom they were “accompanying, or following to join” at a later date, were
22
exempted from this requirement. Id.; INA §§101(a)(27), 212(a)(14) (1965).
23
24
The 1976 Amendments integrated the Western and Eastern
25
Hemisphere Programs under one immigration system, removed the
26
“special immigrant” definition, and also deleted the exemption from the
27
28
labor certification for the Western Hemisphere natives who were close
- 10 -
1
relatives of United States citizens and permanent residents, if they were
2
“entering [the United States] to work.” H.R. Rep. 94-1553 (1976), 1976 WL
3
14063 at *14-15. However, the new law also contained a “savings clause”
4
5
at § 9(b) of Pub. L. 94-571, which continues to appear in the Amendments
6
section of the current version of the INA. 8 U.S.C. § 1153 (2000), at 874.3
7
Section 9(b) states that even though Western Hemisphere immigrants
8
9
would now be moved from the “special immigrant” category of INA
10
§ 101(a)(27)(1965) to the “non-preference” visa category of INA §
11
203(a)(8), individuals who were registered with a consular office under the
12
13
old WHP, before January 1, 1977, would preserve their old visa priority
14
dates, which they could use with a visa petition under the new preference
15
system entitling them to priority status, for instance, by virtue of marriage or
16
17
a parent-child relationship. See id.; see also H.R. Rep. 94-1553 (1976),
18
1976 WL 14063 at *16.
19
20
3
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
The language of Pub. L. 94–571 (HR 14535), October 20, 1976, 90 Stat 2703, states:
An alien chargeable to the numerical limitation contained in section 21(e) of the Act of
October 3, 1965 (79 Stat. 921), who established a priority date at a consular office on the
basis of entitlement to immigrant status under statutory or regulatory provisions in
existence on the day before the effective date of this Act shall be deemed to be entitled to
immigrant status under section 203(a)(8) of the Immigration and Nationality Act and shall
be accorded the priority date previously established by him. Nothing in this section shall
be construed to preclude the acquisition by such an alien of a preference status under
section 203(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended by section 4 of this
Act. Any petition filed by, or in behalf of, such an alien to accord him a preference status
under section 203(a) shall, upon approval, be deemed to have been filed as of the priority
date previously established by such alien. The numerical limitation to which such an alien
shall be chargeable shall be determined as provided in sections 201 and 202 of the
Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended by this Act.
28
- 11 -
C. Analysis
1
2
3
Defendant maintains that the changes in immigration law described
above ultimately impacted how Demetrio immigrated, with or without using
4
5
a Form I-130, which today is still used by United States citizens and lawful
6
permanent residents to establish a relationship to certain alien relatives
7
wishing to immigrate to the United States.4 As a matter of law, Plaintiffs
8
9
may adjust their immigration status from undocumented to legal permanent
10
residents as “derivative beneficiaries” of an unused Form I-130 filed by their
11
grandfather on behalf of their father. See In re Villarreal–Zuniga, 23 I. & N.
12
13
Dec. 886, 889 (BIA 2006) (stating that an approved Form I-130 visa petition
14
cannot be reused to obtain a benefit, and implying that an unused form is
15
valid); 8 C.F.R. § 204.2(h); see also Paet v. Medina-Maltes, No. 12-CV-
16
17
3416, 2013 WL 5348375, at *4 (N.D. Ill. Sept. 24, 2013).
18
19
20
The Agency’s decision denying each Plaintiff’s application to adjust
their status turned on the Agency’s legal determination that Demetrio had
21
no other vehicle for immigration other than the Form I-130. The Agency
22
arrived at this conclusion on the basis of its interpretation of the “SA-1”
23
24
25
notation on Demetrio’s Immigrant Visa and the “savings clause” as showing
“that, presumptively, Demetrio would have immigrated as a nonpreference
26
27
I-130, Petition for Alien Relative, “Purpose of Form,” Official Website of the Department of Homeland
Security, available at: http://www.uscis.gov/i-130 (last accessed July 30, 2015).
4
28
- 12 -
1
immigrant subject to the labor certification requirement.” [Docs. 31-1, at 36;
2
30-1, at 5]. The Agency concedes, however, that Demetrio’s visa “shows
3
that he was not required to have a labor certification,” and the record does
4
5
not suggest he had one [Id.]. Still, the Agency determined “that the proper
6
conclusion is that he immigrated with the [Western Hemisphere priority
7
date], but as the son of a [legal permanent resident],” since that familial
8
9
status exempted him from a labor certification requirement [Id.]. This legal
10
determination led the Agency to factually determine that Demetrio “did, in
11
fact, use the Form I-130 filed by Luis Herrera Angeles to immigrate” and
12
13
therefore, “it was no longer available as an ‘approved’ petition at the time of
14
his death” so that each Plaintiff “cannot be said to be a derivate beneficiary
15
of an approved petition.” [Docs. 31-1, at 36; 30-1, at 5].
16
17
18
19
20
Reviewing the Agency’s legal determination concerning the absence
of an alternative to the Form I-130 de novo, the Court finds that the
Agency’s conclusion that Demetrio could not have possibly immigrated as a
21
“following to join” child under the pre-1977 WHP is plainly erroneous and
22
“not in accordance with the law,” and must therefore be set aside. 5 U.S.C.
23
24
§ 706(2); Nat'l Indus. Sand Ass'n, 601 F.2d at 699. Specifically,
25
Defendant’s legal interpretation fails to consider the likelihood that
26
Demetrio, a 16-year-old child of a WHP immigrant, was allowed to “follow
27
28
to join” his father under the WHP. Although new WHP immigration had
- 13 -
1
technically ceased after January 1, 1977, a number of sources Plaintiffs
2
submitted in their administrative records, which Defendant ostensibly
3
ignored and failed to address, confirm that at the time of Demetrio’s
4
5
immigration in February 1978, he was exempt from the labor certification
6
requirement not because he was the son of a legal permanent resident and
7
beneficiary of a Form I-130, but because of the alternative immigration
8
9
10
pathway still available to children “following to join” their WHP immigrant
parents who had become permanent legal residents or American citizens.
11
The proper conclusion that Demetrio immigrated as a child “following
12
13
to join” Luis under the WHP is confirmed by the markings on Demetrio’s
14
Immigrant Visa, contemporary primary and secondary sources interpreting
15
the 1976 Amendments, and the effect of the Zambrano v. Levi, No. 76-c-
16
17
1456 (N.D. Ill. June 21, 1977) and Silva v. Bell, 605 F.2d 978 (7th Cir.
18
1979) court decisions.
19
First, the markings on Demetrio’s visa, issued on February 14, 1978, a
20
21
day before he entered the United States, as well as his Permanent Resident
22
Card, confirm that he was exempt from the labor certification requirement of
23
24
///
25
///
26
///
27
28
///
- 14 -
1
INA § 212(a)(14) because he immigrated as a child “following to join” his
2
father under the WHP [Docs. 35-2, at 2; 31-3, at 2; 30-3, at 23]. Both
3
documents state that Demetrio’s immigration category was “SA-1,” a
4
5
notation that the State Department and INS used to denote
6
immigrants. Secondary publications from 1994 submitted by Plaintiffs and
7
WHP
uncontested by Defendant define “SA-1” as “alien born in independent
8
9
Western Hemisphere country.” [Docs. 38, at 5; 38-1, at 3; 35-1, at 21]. “SA-
10
1” is also the immigrant category shown in Luis’s WHP Immigrant Visa from
11
October 1976 [Doc. 35-2, at 3].
12
13
The fact that “SA-1” appears in Luis’s and Demetrio’s documents
14
supports Plaintiffs’ argument that Demetrio, like Luis, was a WHP immigrant
15
and didn’t use a Form I-130, regardless of whether it was available to him.
16
17
Additionally, the fact that two government agencies, the Department of
18
State’s consulate in Tijuana, Mexico and the INS, both independently
19
20
classified Demetrio as an “SA-1” immigrant in his Immigrant Visa and
21
Permanent Resident Card supports the argument that the classification was
22
not a clerical error and accurately reflected his immigration category under
23
24
the WHP. The Agency does not suggest that any of Demetrio’s immigration
25
///
26
///
27
28
///
- 15 -
1
documents in the record are fraudulent, or that any inconsistencies therein
2
demonstrate that they relate to some other matter.
3
Second, the Agency’s statement in its Decision letters to Plaintiffs
4
5
that “[t]he ‘SA-1’ notation on [Demetrio’s] visa cannot possibly mean he
6
immigrated as a Western Hemisphere special immigrant” because “[t]hat
7
classification no longer existed on February 15, 1978” is incorrect because
8
9
10
11
“SA-1” appears to have been recognized by the INS and State Department
as a viable immigrant category for specific purposes. For example, as of
April 1, 1977, 22 CFR 42.61(a)(3)(iii) was revised to advise State
12
13
Department Foreign Service Officers posted in United States consulates
14
abroad to maintain waiting lists of immigrant classifications, including those
15
“entitled to special immigrant status under INA § 101(a)(27).”
16
17
18
19
20
Additionally, after the 1976 Amendments became effective, the court
in Zambrano v. Levi, No. 76-C-1456 (N.D. Ill June 21 1977) ruled that the
INS had improperly charged approximately 144,999 Cuban refugee
21
adjustment numbers to the Western Hemisphere quota, depriving others on
22
the waiting lists of available visa numbers, and ordered the government to
23
24
recapture and reissue them to the plaintiffs. In a related class action, Silva
25
v. Bell, 605 F.2d 978, 986 (7th Cir. 1979), the court ordered that the visa
26
numbers erroneously charged be allocated among the Western
27
28
Hemisphere applicants on waiting lists in accordance with historical
- 16 -
1
immigration pattern for countries involved, and particularly to benefit
2
prospective Mexican immigrants who had overwhelmingly been harmed by
3
the misallocation. In response, the State Department issued a bulletin to
4
5
foreign consulates on July 25, 1977, requiring that “Mexican applicants with
6
priority dates before January 1, 1977 will be processed, within the 144,946
7
numbers, as special immigrants (SA) and that the SA category is presented
8
9
10
11
current.” [Doc. 38-1, at 19.]. These court orders and the documentation of
their implantation provides additional proof of the post-January 1, 1977
viability of the SA-1 category and Demetrio’s potential inclusion in the class
12
13
of reallocated visa numbers given his inheritance of Luis’s pre-January 1,
14
1977 Western Hemisphere priority date.
15
Lastly, the Agency’s interpretation of the “SA-1” notation in
16
17
Demetrio’s Immigrant Visa to mean that he was only permitted to use Luis’s
18
Western Hemisphere 1976 priority date under the savings clause is
19
20
unpersuasive. First, “SA-1” clearly appears on Demetrio’s Permanent
21
Resident Card, issued several years after his immigration [Doc. 31-1, at 36;
22
Doc. 30-1, at 4-5] and after full implementation of the 1976 Amendments.
23
24
Second, the Agency provided no evidence of immigration authorities using
25
“SA-1” to denote nonpreference immigrants under the post-1977 system.
26
///
27
28
///
- 17 -
Furthermore, the Court is persuaded that “P22” is the more accurate
1
2
symbol to have been used in Demetrio’s Immigrant Visa had he been
3
admitted using the Form I-130. Plaintiff’s submission in exhibit 1 to Doc. 38-
4
5
1 defines P22 as “unmarried son or daughter of lawful permanent resident
6
alien (2nd preference).” And though “P2-2” is handwritten in the corner of
7
Demetrio’s approved Form I-130, it does not appear in the Immigrant Visa
8
9
10
11
ultimately grating him entry to the United States. [Doc. 35-2, at 1, 2]. See
Hernandez v. Ashcroft, 345 F.3d 824, 845 (9th Cir. 2003) (“We do not
believe that the [USCIS] intends to advocate for a rule whereby an
12
13
applicant may rely upon government documents only if he or she is able to
14
explain every notation upon them.”). Thus, since Demetrio’s visa classified
15
him as “SA-1” and not “P22”, the Court is persuaded that he was not
16
17
admitted under the latter category. See also Corniel-Rodriguez v. INS, 532
18
F.2d 301, 304 n.10 (2d Cir. 1976) (an unmarried daughter of a permanent
19
20
legal resident was designated SA-1 and exempt from filing a labor
21
certification for “following to join” her father under the WHP in 1967).
22
///
23
24
///
25
///
26
///
27
28
- 18 -
Defendant’s argument that Demetrio was not admitted to the United
1
2
States under the WHP because he was not exempted from the labor
3
certification by the “savings clause” and therefore could only enter without
4
5
that certificate by using the Form I-130 and Luis’s October 5, 1976 priority
6
date is also unsupported by the evidence. The notation “I-130 Attached”
7
typed in the box confirming that Demetrio was exempt from the labor
8
9
10
11
certification may mean that his classification as an unmarried son of a legal
permanent resident exempted him from INA 212(a)(14). However,
Demetrio would have also been exempt from the labor certification
12
13
requirement by virtue of his status as a child “following to join” his father
14
under the WHP. See 24 CFR 42.91(a)(14)(ii)(b).5 Thus, the notation may
15
have alternatively served as proof of the parent-child relationship between
16
17
Demetrio and Luis for purposes of establishing the “following to join”
18
immigration pathway and its exemption from the labor certification.
19
20
///
21
///
22
///
23
24
25
///
///
26
“The following persons are not considered to be within the purview of section 212(a)(14) and do not
require a labor certification: (b) a spouse or child accompanying or following to join an alien spouse or
parent who either has a labor certification or is a nondependent alien who does not require such a
certification.” 24 CFR 42.91(a)(14)(ii)(b).
5
27
28
- 19 -
The likelihood that Demetrio continued to be exempt from the labor
1
2
3
certification as a “following to join” child under the WHP in 1978 is
confirmed by the Interpreter Releases, Vol. 53, Nos. 43 and 50, from
4
5
November and December 1976, issued in anticipation of the then
6
forthcoming implementation of the 1976 Amendments.6 These secondary
7
sources outline the INS’s guidelines for the 1976 Amendments and the
8
9
State Department’s administrative interpretations thereof, with particular
10
focus on the “savings clause” in §9(b) [Doc. 38-1, at 33]. The Interpreter
11
Releases confirm that even after the 1976 Amendments went into effect,
12
13
the exemption from a labor certification was preserved for spouses and
14
children of lawful permanent residents who had established their WHP
15
priority date by either being registered on a consular waiting list prior to
16
17
January 1, 1977 or sending in their applications for registration prior to that
18
date [Doc. 38-1, at 23, 27]. While there is no direct evidence in the record
19
20
one way or the other as to whether Luis had registered Demetrio on a
21
consular waiting list prior to January 1, 1977, the SA-1 designation on
22
Demetrio’s visa is strong circumstantial evidence that he had been on the
23
24
25
waiting list.
///
26
27
6
28
The authenticity and authority of the Interpreter Releases as a contemporary visa news bulletin was
uncontested by the Agency at oral argument.
- 20 -
Defendant does not dispute that Demetrio was a native of the
1
2
Western Hemisphere, whose established priority date was the same as his
3
father’s, dating back to 1976, and that he was the child of a legal
4
5
permanent resident alien, Luis [Doc. 35-1, at 17]. Therefore, if Demetrio
6
established his priority date with a United States consulate, then he
7
remained exempt from the labor certification when he immigrated in 1978.
8
9
10
11
Though the record is unclear as to whether Demetrio’s application was
received and/or registered at a United States consulate prior to February
14, 1978, the date he was issued his Immigrant Visa by the American
12
13
Consulate in Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico, the record contains no
14
evidence to the contrary. Thus, the Court is satisfied that Demetrio was
15
exempted from the labor certification of INA § 212(a)(14) without the Form
16
17
I-130.
18
19
20
Defendant’s reasoning also assumes that after January 1, 1977, the
“following to join” procedure available to spouses and children of WHP
21
immigrants completely vanished. In fact, this immigration pathway
22
continues to benefit close relatives of certain visa holders even today, as
23
24
25
confirmed by the USCIS Website.7 According to the USCIS:
///
26
“Bringing Children, Sons and Daughters to Live in the United States as Permanent Residents,” Official
Website of the Department of Homeland Security, available at http://www.uscis.gov/family/family-uscitizens/children/bringing-children-sons-and-daughters-live-united-states-permanent-residents (last
accessed July 31, 2015).
7
27
28
- 21 -
If you were married and/or had children who did not obtain
permanent residence at the same time you did, they may be
eligible for follow-to-join benefits. This means that you do not
have to submit a separate Form I-130 for your spouse and/or
children. In addition, your spouse and/or children will not have
to wait any extra time for a visa number to become available. In
this case, you may simply notify a U.S. consulate that you are a
permanent resident so that your spouse and/or children can
apply for an immigrant visa. Id.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Defendant presented no evidence that Luis did not take the necessary step
of notifying the United States consulate of his legal permanent resident
10
11
status. Indeed, the Form I-130 he filed for Demetrio provided such notice.
12
Thus, Demetrio could have “followed to join” Luis over one year after the
13
1976 Amendments became effective.
14
As the aforementioned evidence demonstrates, the Agency’s
15
16
17
18
underlying legal conclusion, announced in both Alan and Nataly’s Decision
letters, that the “SA-1 notion on [Demetrio’s] visa cannot possibly mean he
19
immigrated as a Western Hemisphere special immigrant,” is incorrect as a
20
matter of law [Docs. 31-1, at 35-36; 30-1, at 4]. Therefore, the Agency’s
21
22
resulting factual conclusion that Demetrio “did, in fact, use the Form I-130
23
filed by Luis Herrera Angeles to immigrate,” [Docs. 31-1, at 36; 30-1, at 5],
24
///
25
26
27
///
///
28
- 22 -
1
is arbitrary and capricious because it is based purely on speculation, and
2
wholly fails to address evidence to the contrary presented by Plaintiffs in
3
their identical replies to the NOID. In sum, Plaintiffs have demonstrated that
4
5
Demetrio’s Form I-130 was not used and it may be available for Plaintiffs’
6
use.
7
8
9
IV.
CONCLUSION
10
11
12
13
For the reasons discussed above, Defendant’s motion for summary
judgment is DENIED and Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is
GRANTED. The matter is REMANDED to the Agency for further
14
15
proceedings in processing the Plaintiffs’ Forms I-485 in accordance with
16
this Order. Since the Court has spent considerable time studying this old
17
record, it retains jurisdiction in the event of further proceedings under the
18
19
20
APA in respect to Plaintiffs’ application to adjust status. L.R. Civ. P. 40.1(e).
Dated: August 4, 2015
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
- 23 -
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?