RODRIGUEZ

Court: Board of Immigration Appeals
Date filed: 1980-07-01
Citations: 18 I. & N. Dec. 9
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Combined Opinion
                                                             Interim Decision #2854 '




                              MATTER OF RODRIGUEZ

                           In Visa Petition Proceedings

                                      A-22756201

         Decided by Regional Commissioner November 7, 1980

(1) A child is an "orphan" within the meaning of section 101(14(1)(F) of the Immigration and
  Nationality Act, 8" U.S.C. 1101(b)(1hF), if he/she is the child of a sole parent who is
  unable to provide for the child and has irrevocably released the child for emigration and
  adoption by a United States citizen and spouse who have complied with the preadoption
  requirements.
(2) An illegitimate child has only one parent, the child's natural mother, for purposes of
  the immigration and Nationality Act.
(3) Where an act is insufficient to establish the legitimacy of an illegitimate child under
  the laws of the child's resident country,, the child remains illegitimate though the Act
  would have established his/her legitimacy in other countries.
ON BEHALF OF PETITIONER: Pro se


   This matter is before me on certification from the District Director's
decision of October 15, 1980, denying the visa petition to classify the
beneficiary as an immediate relative orphan under section 201(b) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S. C. 1151(b). The petition should
be approved.
   The facts are a matter of record. The beneficiary was born in Peru on
September 19, 1980, to Ana Sinforosa Rodriguez-Pomayay, an unmar-
ried woman. The beneficiary's natural father acknowledged his pater-
nity on September 25, 1980, and this fact was recorded on the bene-
ficiary's birth certificate. On September 30, 1980, the beneficiary's mother
executed a "Certificate of Consent" before the Interior Secretary and
Judge of the First Court of Minors in Lima, Peru, in which she stated
that the beneficiary lacks the necessities of life, and that she is willing to
have the child adopted by the petitioners. This document, and the home
study report prepared by a social assistant contracted by the State of
Peru on October 9, 1980, indicated that Ms. Rodriguez. was irrevocably
releasing her daughter, the beneficiary, for emigration and adoption.
The beneficiary's natural father also signed this document. The petition-
ers are both citizens of the United States who are married to each other.
A favorable home study was conducted in August 1980, by a non-profit
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Interim Decision #2854
child placement agency licensed by the Colorado State Department of
Social Services_ The visa petition now under consideration was filed on
July 3, 1980.
   The District Director denied this petition on his finding that the bene-
ficiary was not an orphan within the meaning of section 101(b)(1)(F) of
the Immigration and Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. 1101(b)(1XF), because
she had two living parents who had neither abandoned, nor deserted
her. The District Director noted that although the beneficiary's parents
were unmarried, they were living together as a family unit with the
beneficiary and the two other children born to them. On this basis, the
District Director concluded that the beneficiary had two parents. The
District Director also reasoned that the beneficiary has not been
abandoned, as that term is contemplated by section 101(b)(1)(F) of the
Act, because she has not become a ward of the State of Peru but rather
had beeii turned over to the petitioners for adoption directly by her
natural parents. Matter of Del Conte, 10 I&N Dec. 761 (BIA 1964).
   Section 101(13)(1)(F) of the Act defines the circumstances under which
a child may be classified as an orphan:
  (F) a child, under the age of fourteen at the time a petition is filed in his behalf to accord
  a classification as an immediate relative under section 201(b), who is an orphan because
  of the death or disappearance of, abandonment or desertion bv. or separation or loss
  from, both parents, or for whom the sole surviving parent is incapable of providing the
  proper care and has in writing irrevocably released the child for emigration and adoption;
  who has been adopted abroad by a United States citizen and spouse jointly, or by an
  unmarried United States citizen at least twenty-five years of age, who personally saw
  and observed the child prior to or during the adoption proceedings; or who is coming to
  the United States for adoption by a United States citizen and spouse jointly, or by an
  unmarried United. States citizen at least twenty-five years of age, who have or has
  complied with the preadoption requirements, if any, of the child's proposed residence:
  Provided, That the Attorney General is satisfied that proper care will be furnished the
  child if admitted to the United States: Provided further, That no natural parent or prior
  adoptive parent of any such child shall thereafter, by virtue of such parentage, be
  accorded any right, privilege, or status under this Act.
   Because the District Director concluded that the beneficiary is a child
with two parents, he reasoned that the petitioners must establish that
these parents have either disappeared or have abandoned, deserted,
been separated or.lost from the beneficiary if the child is to be classified
as an orphan. However, I find that the beneficiary is the child of only
 one parent. Therefore, I conclude that the petitioners need only demon-
 strate that this sole parent is unable to provide for the beneficiary and
has irrevocably released her for adoption. It is not necessary to show
 that the beneficiary has been abandoned. Thus, I need not consider this
issue addressed by the District Director.
    The beneficiary was acknowledged by her natural father within 1
 week of her birth; however, this act alone is insufficient to accomplish
 legitimation under the laws of Peru. Matter of Quispe, 16 I&N Dec. 174

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(BIA 1977). This is true, even though such an act of acknowledgment
would cause an illegitimate child to be considered to have been legiti-
mated if born in some other countries_
   See, for example: Matter of Sanchez, 16 I&N Dec. 671 (BIA 1979)
(Honduras); Matter of Sinclair, 13 I&N Dec. 613 (BIA. 1962) (Panama);
Matter of Krzyewski, 8 I&N Dec. 73 (BIA 1958) (Poland); Matter of
Gallinu, 9 I&N Dec. 518 (BIA 1961) (Hungary); Matter of ,Tancar, 11
I&N Dec. 365 (BIA 1965) (Yugoslavia, Rumania); Matter of Wong, 16
I&N Dec. 646 (BIA 1978) (China). By Article 314 of the Peruvian Civil
Code, legitimation of children born out of wedlock only takes place by
subsequent marriage of the parents or by judicial declaration in certain
narrowly-defined circumstances. Matter of Quispe, supra. The record
before me indicates that the beneficiary's parents have not married. There-
fore her status was not converted to a legitimate child by the acknowl-
edgment of paternity. The beneficiary has only one parent for the pur-
poses of the Immigration and Nationality Act—her mother.
   I have carefully reviewed the record and conclude that the beneficiary's
sole parent and the petitioners have taken the actions which make the
beneficiary an orphan. The beneficiary's mother has declared and a social
welfare agency study in Peru has verified that she is unable to provide
proper care for the beneficiary. In an affidavit before a municipal court
in Peru, she irrevocably released her child for emigration and adoption.
A home study of the petitioners indicates that they are capable of
providing for the beneficiary and that they intend to adopt her. I conclude
that the beneficiary is an orphan and the visa petition should be approved.
   ORDER: District Director's decision vacated and'petition approved.




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