Interim Decision #1694 Maumee OF CORDERO-SAITTANA In Deportation Proceedings A-12618549 Decided by Board February 13, 1967 Notwithstanding respondent, who is deportable on a charge of visa fraud and misrepresentation, is also deportable on documentary charges of "no visa" and "no passport", he is not precluded by such documentary charges from estab- listing he was "otherwise admissible" for the purposes of a waiver of the grounds of deportation under section 241(f) of the Imellgratien and Na- tionality Act, as amended, since any ground of deportation (regardless of the section of statute under which brought) which results directly from the visa fraud or misrepresentation is encdmpaased within the purview of section 241(f) of the Act, provided the alien has the requisite relationship to a "United States citizen or resident alien. ()FUDGES Qrder : Act of1952r-Section 241(a) (1) [8 11.8.0. 1251(i) (1)]—Excludable at time of entry-r-Viaa procured by fraud or mierep- . resentation. Act of 1052 sootioa 241(a) (1) 'f5 ;DS 0. 1251(a) (1)7 Excludable — — at time of entry—No passport. Lodged: Act of 1952—Section 241(a) (1) [8 U.S.C. 1251(a) (I)I—Excludable at time of entry—No valid immigrant visa. Brststr or Snsvroz: Irving A. Appleman Appellate Trial Attorney Stephen Ai. Suffix Trial Attorney (Brief filed) . • The case comes forward on appeal by the Service from the order of the special inquiry officer dated June 3, 1965 terminating the pro- ceedings. The respondent is a native and citizen of Mexico, 43 years old, male, who was admitted to the United States for permanent residence on July 4, 1961 on the basis of a nonquote, immigrant visa issued to him on July 3, 1961 at the American Consulate General at Tijuana, B.C., Mexico on July 3, 1961, as a native of the western hemisphere. A Mex- 69 Interim Decision #1694 lean passport was not required under the State Deparment regulations because he had been married to a United States citizen, Neomia Tarkington, on March 7, 1960. However, the record establishes that the respondent had previously been married on October 28, 1943 to Maria Isabel Marcado-Garcia at Sayula, Jalisco, Mexico and that four children were born of this mar- riage. He resided with Maria from 1942 until he entered this country as an agricultural laborer in 1952, did not live with her thereafter but continued to support their children. On November 18, 1964 his mar- riage to Maria was terminated by divorce and he remarried Neomia on May 21, 1965. In his application 'for the immigrant visa executed before the Amer- ican Vice Consul on July 3, 1961, the respondent stated that he vats married only once, that his wife's name was Neomia and that he had no children. Although the respondent was by birth nonquota, these false statements are regarded as material inasmuch as at the very least the misrepresentations choked off a relevant line of inquiry which might have resulted in a proper determination of excludability since it would have led to the discovery of adultery and bigamy and deser- tion of the first wife.' The charge of excludability based upon the visa procured by fraud or misrepresentation is sustained. The special inquiry officer has terminated proceedings on the theory that the second charge contained in the order to show cause and the lodged charge, which are documentary charges, all arose out of the same fraud or misrepresentation. The special inquiry officer applied section 241 (1) of the . Immigration and Nationality Act which provides: - The provisions of this section relating to the deportation of aliens within the United States on the ground that *boy were excludable at time of entry as aliens who have sought to procure, or have procured visas or other documenta- tion, or entry into the United States by fraud or misrepresentation shall not apply to an alien otherwise admissible at the time of entry who is the spouse, parent, or a child of a United States citizen or of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence. The special inquiry officer concluded that on the basis of his present marriage to a United States citizen he comes within the ameliorating provisions of section 241(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended, that the waiver in that section also covers other deporta- tion grounds flowing directly from the fraud or misrepresentation, and terminated proceedings upon the basis of the 241(f) waiver. Consideration of the case on appeal was held in abeyance pending the outcome of the appeal to the Supreme Court in Er, ioo v. Immigration I Matter of 8— and 13 - 0 , 9 I.* N. Dec. 488 (A.G., 1981 ). — 70 Interim Decision #1694 and Naturalization Service (9th Circuit) and Scott v. Immigration and Naturalization Service (2d Circuit) which reached diametrically opposed conclusions on the meaning of the term "otherwise admissible alien" contained in section 241(f) of the Immigration and Nationality Act. The Supreme Court decision was handed down December 12, 1966 and is reported in 385 U.S. 314. At the-outset the Supreme Court noted that even the Government agrees that section 241(f) cannot be applied with strict literalness. Under the literal interpretation which would involve a violation of section 212(a) (19) of the statute, an alien who entered by fraud could be deported for having entered with a defective visa or other docu- mentary irregularities even if he would have been admissible if he had not committed the fraud. Such an interpretation would be ad- mittedly inconsistent with the manifest purpose of the section and the administrative authorities have consistently held that section au(t) waivee any deportation uharYe that results directly' from the misrep- resentation regardless of the section of the statute wader which the charge was brought, provided that the alien was "otherwise admissible at the time of entry." The Court traced the parent comparable legislation, namely, the Displaced Persons Act of 1948 and section 7 of the 1957 Act. The Court held that the language contained in the 1957 Act would be meaningless if an alien who committed fraud for the purpose of evad- ing quota. restrictions would have been . deportable as "not oth.erwiss admissible at time of entry."• Congress must have felt that aliens who evaded quota restrictions by fraud would be "otherwise admissible at time of entry" or it would not have found it necessary to provide fur- ther that., in the case of an alien not possessing a close familial rela- tionship to a 'United States citizen or lawful permanent resident, the fraud must not be for the purpose of evading quota restrictions. The Court felt its conclusion was reinforced by the fact that Congress fur- ther specified that the aliens who were not close relatives of United States citizens must establish that their fraud was not committed for the purpose of evading an investigation. The Court concluded that ele- mentary principles of statutory construction led to the conclusion that Congress meant to specify two specific types of fraud that would leave an alien "otherwise admissible" but that it would nonetheless bar relief to those aliens who could not claim relationship with a United States citizen or alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence, i.e.; fraud to evade quota restrictions and fraud to &Void. investigation. The Court went on to state that the construction of the statute that it adopted in these eases was further reinforced when the section was regarded in the context of the 1957 Act. The fundamental purpose 71 Interim Decision #1694 of this legislation was to unite families. The Act principally granted relief to persons who would be temporarily or permanently separated from their nearest relatives and the strict requirements of the Im- migration and Nationality Act, including the national quotas, were not relaxed for them. It was wholly consistent with this purpose for Congress to provide that immigrants who gained admission by mis- representation, perhaps many year ago, should not be deported be- cause their country's quota was oversubscribed when they entered if the effect of deportation would be to separate a family composed in part of an American or a lawfully permanent resident. The Court went on to say that any doubts, even in a deportation statute, should be resolved in favor of the alien and concluded that to give meaning to the statute in the light of its humanitarian purpose of preventing the breaking up of families composed in part at least of American citizens, the conflict between the Circuits must be resolved in favor of the aliens, affirmed the Enrico decision and reversed the Scott decision. In the instant case the documentary charges flow from and are a direct result of the fraud charged in the order to show cause.. 2 The Supreme Court in Enrico, etc.fhas held. that section 241(f) waives any deporiation charge:that results.directly from the mietrepresentaL tion regardless of the section of the statute under which the charge was brought provided that -the alien was ootherwise admissible -at time of entry?' The Court emphasized that-in the- case of persons possessing the necessary familial ties, and having in mind that the fundamental purpose of the legislation was to unite families and to- give moaning to the statute in the light of its humanitarian purpose- of preventing the breakup of families composed in part at least of American citizens, immigrants who gained admission by misrepre- sentation should not be deported because their quota was oversuh- scribed. The Court held that the documentary charges relating to- the fraud, in the light of the humanitarian purpose of the statute. and its historical-background, should be waived. The Supreme Court decision confirms that the proceedings were properly terminated by the special inquiry officer. ORDER: It is ordered that the appeal of the Service from the- decision of the special inquiry officer terminating the proceedings be- and the same is hereby dismissed. . 'Where a no passport charge is linked to a no visa - charge by a common- ground of misrepresentation and the no visa charge is not sustained, the no passport charge also falls. Matter of Boa, 16 L & N. Dee. 87. 72
CORDERO-SANTANA
Court: Board of Immigration Appeals
Date filed: 1967-07-01
Citations: 12 I. & N. Dec. 69
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