David Anthony Hoskins Saint Claver v. US Atty. Gen , 245 F. App'x 904 ( 2007 )


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  •                                                              [DO NOT PUBLISH]
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    _____________________________         FILED
    U.S. COURT OF APPEALS
    No. 06-13976          ELEVENTH CIRCUIT
    _____________________________ AUGUST 20, 2007
    THOMAS K. KAHN
    CLERK
    BIA No. A34-090-878
    DAVID ANTHONY HOSKINS SAINT CLAVER.,
    Petitioner,
    versus
    U.S. ATTORNEY GENERAL,
    Respondent.
    _________________________________________
    Petition for Review of an Order
    of the Board of Immigration Appeals
    _________________________________________
    (August 20, 2007)
    Before EDMONDSON, Chief Judge, CARNES and FAY, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:
    Petitioner David Anthony Hoskins Saint Claver (“Petitioner”) petitions for
    review of the immigration judge’s (“IJ”) order of removal as an alien convicted of
    two or more crimes of moral turpitude, an aggravated felony, and a drug
    trafficking crime, pursuant to 
    8 U.S.C. §§ 1227
    (a)(2)(A)(ii), (iii), and (a)(2)(B)(i).
    Petitioner contends that he is not subject to removal because he derived United
    States citizenship through the naturalization of his mother. We conclude that no
    reversible error exists; we deny the petition.
    Petitioner, a native of Jamaica, entered the United States as an immigrant in
    1972. Petitioner’s mother, who had resided in the U.S. since 1969, became a
    naturalized citizen in 1977, when Petitioner was 17 years old. Petitioner did not
    apply for derivative citizenship at that time. In 2005, the Department of Homeland
    Security issued a Notice to Appear, charging Petitioner with removability based on
    numerous drug convictions Petitioner sustained in New York and Florida. At a
    hearing before the IJ, Petitioner claimed that he was not an alien subject to
    removability because he derived U.S. citizenship through his mother pursuant to
    former section 237(a) of the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”), 
    8 U.S.C. § 1432
    (a) (1981) (repealed 2000), which allowed a child born outside of the U.S. to
    alien parents to become a citizen under certain circumstances.1
    1
    Because this provision was in effect when Petitioner’s mother naturalized, it governs Petitioner’s
    claim for citizenship in this matter. See Tullius v. Albright, 
    240 F.3d 1317
    , 1320 (11th Cir. 2001)
    (looking “to the applicable law in effect at the time of appellant’s birth” where “[a]ppellant claim[ed]
    that his father, who was a United States citizen at birth, transmitted citizenship to appellant” at
    appellant’s birth).
    2
    The evidence showed that Petitioner’s parents were married in Jamaica in
    1960, but separated in 1963, at which time Petitioner’s mother removed herself
    and her children from the marital home. Although Petitioner’s parents were not
    formally divorced until 1992, when Petitioner’s mother sought a divorce from a
    Florida court, Petitioner’s father remarried another woman in 1965.
    Without making a clear determination about the marital status of
    Petitioner’s parents at the time of his mother’s naturalization, the IJ concluded
    Petitioner was not a U.S. citizen because there was no formal documentary
    evidence that Petitioner’s mother had legal custody at the time of her
    naturalization. Petitioner, who was represented at the hearing, waived his right to
    appeal the IJ’s order, but nonetheless filed a timely pro se appeal to the Board of
    Immigration Appeals (“BIA”), challenging only the IJ’s nationality decision. The
    BIA dismissed the appeal, concluding that it did not have jurisdiction because of
    Petitioner’s appeal waiver. Petitioner now seeks review of the BIA’s order
    dismissing his appeal and the IJ’s order of removal.2
    To the extent that the removal order is based on a legal determination, we
    review that decision de novo. Mohammed v. Ashcroft, 
    261 F.3d 1244
    , 1247-48
    2
    Because we reach the merits of Petitioner’s nationality claim, we do not address Petitioner’s
    argument that the BIA erred in dismissing Petitioner administrative appeal because his appeal waiver
    was not knowing and voluntary.
    3
    (11th Cir. 2001); see also 
    8 U.S.C. § 1252
    (b)(5)(A) (stating that the court of
    appeals “shall” decide a nationality claim where there is no genuine issue of
    material fact). We will, however, defer to the BIA’s statutory interpretation if it is
    reasonable and does not contradict the clear intent of Congress. See Chevron
    U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 
    104 S. Ct. 2778
    , 2781-82 (1984).
    In reviewing a claim for citizenship, we must be mindful that “the burden is on the
    alien applicant to show his eligibility for citizenship in every respect” and that
    “doubts should be resolved in favor of the United States and against the claimant.”
    See Berenyi v. Dist. Director, INS, 
    87 S. Ct. 666
    , 671 (1967) (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    Petitioner contends that he received derivative citizenship at his mother’s
    naturalization in 1977 pursuant to former section 321(a) of the INA, 
    8 U.S.C. § 1432
    (a), which stated that an alien child became a U.S. citizen upon the
    “naturalization of the parent having legal custody of the child when there has been
    a legal separation of the parents” if the naturalization occured when the child is
    under 18 years of age and the child was residing in the U.S. as a lawful permanent
    resident at the time. The parties do not dispute that Petitioner meets the last two
    requirements; the only matters in dispute are whether Petitioner’s parents were
    4
    “legally separated” and whether Petitioner was in the “legal custody” of his mother
    at the pertinent time.
    The meaning of the term “legal separation” is a question of federal statutory
    interpretation. Minasyan v. Gonzales, 
    401 F.3d 1069
    , 1076 (9th Cir. 2005);
    Brissett v. Ashcroft, 
    363 F.3d 130
    , 133 (2d Cir. 2004); Wedderburn v. INS, 
    215 F.3d 795
    , 799 (7th Cir. 2000). Every circuit court to consider this question has
    concluded that, to qualify as a “legal” – rather than “informal” separation – some
    formal action must operate to dissolve or alter the marital relationship by operation
    of law. See Morgan v. Att’y Gen., 
    432 F.3d 226
    , 231-32 (3rd Cir. 2005)
    (reviewing cases); see also Brissett, 
    363 F.3d at 134
     (noting that “[a] contrary
    interpretation would render superfluous the provision’s specification that the
    separation must be ‘legal’”). But the courts have not all agreed on what form that
    formal action must take. Morgan, 432 F.3d at 232. The Fourth, Fifth, and Seventh
    Circuits appear to have limited the formal action to judicial decrees of limited or
    absolute divorce or separation, in accordance with the INS’s interpretation of the
    statutory term in Matter of H-, 
    3 I. & N. Dec. 742
     (BIA 1949). See Afeta v.
    Gonzales, 
    467 F.3d 402
    , 408 (4th Cir. 2006) Nehme v. INS, 
    252 F.3d 415
    , 425-27
    (5th Cir. 2001); Wedderburn, 
    215 F.3d at 795, 799-800
    .
    5
    The Second and Third Circuits, however, have interpreted Matter of H-
    more broadly to require “only a legal alteration,” Brissett, 
    363 F.3d at 135
    , or a
    “formal[] modif[ication],” Morgan, 432 F.3d at 232, of the petitioner’s parents’
    marital relationship and recognize that a “legal” separation may occur through
    other formal – but nonjudicial – procedures that effectuate a divorce or separation
    by operation of law. Morgan, 432 F.3d at 234 n.4 (“[N]othing in the language of
    the statute . . . requires that a court must act for a legal separation to exist.”);
    Brisset, 
    363 F.3d at
    134 n.3; see also Minasyan, 
    401 F.3d at
    1079 n. 19
    (suggesting agreement with the Brissett court’s interpretation but not reaching the
    issue). We conclude that it is unnecessary for us to attempt to resolve – or to add
    to – this disagreement among the circuits here, because Petitioner cannot satisfy
    even this more lenient interpretation of “legal separation.”
    “[W]here the term in question involves a legal relationship that is created by
    state or foreign law, the court must begin its analysis by looking to that law.”
    Minasyan, 
    401 F.3d at
    1076 (citing De Sylva v. Ballentine, 
    76 S. Ct. 974
    , 974
    (1956)). Thus, whether Petitioner’s parents were “legally separated” at the time of
    his mother’s naturalization should be informed by the law of the state or country
    with jurisdiction over Petitioner’s parents’ marriage. Id; see also Morgan, 432
    F.3d at 232; Brissett, 
    363 F.3d 134
    ; Wedderburn, 
    215 F.3d at 799
     (noting that “the
    6
    INS determines the existence, validity, and dissolution of wedlock using the legal
    rules of the place where the marriage was performed (or dissolved)”). But see
    Nehme, 
    252 F.3d at 423-26
     (“reject[ing] any contention that the law of any one
    state should govern the determination whether an alien child’s parents were
    ‘legally separated’” and instead looking to the generally accepted meaning of that
    term in United States jurisprudence).3 If Jamaica (or some other relevant
    jurisdiction) recognized the separate legal existence of the marital parties at the
    pertinent time, then we should presumptively consider the parties to be “legally
    separated” under the INA. Brissett, 
    363 F.3d at 134
    ; cf. Morgan, 432 F.3d at 233-
    35 (“Petitioner has failed to produce any evidence of a court decree or any other
    formal government action establishing that her parents were separated by action of
    law.”).4
    3
    As the Third Circuit noted in Morgan, the Fifth Circuit’s approach on this point in Nehme “is
    inadequate because of the lack of focus on the forums that actually possess the power to decree that
    a separation recognized and enforceable by law has occurred.” Morgan, 432 F.3d at 232.
    4
    We say “presumptively” to account for those limited circumstances in which the rule of the state
    or country with jurisdiction over the marriage may use the term “legally separated” “in a way entirely
    strange to those familiar with its ordinary usage;” in such cases, the state or foreign rule might not
    control our interpretation of this term. See De Sylva, 
    76 S. Ct. at 980
    . For example, both the Second
    and Ninth Circuits have noted that “some orders that the relevant state or nation might not
    characterize as creating a legal separation may nonetheless effect such a drastic change in the
    couple’s marital existence that the couple may be considered legally separated for purposes of §
    1432(a)(3).” Brissett, 
    363 F.3d at 134
    ; see also Minasyan, 
    401 F.3d at
    1077 n.14 (quoting this
    language from Brissett with approval).
    7
    Petitioner contends that, at the time of his parents’ separation in 1963,
    Jamaican law did not require or provide judicial proceedings for separation and
    that his father’s desertion of his mother was sufficient to withdraw consent to the
    marriage and effect a “legal separation.”5 But even if Jamaican law did not
    provide for a judicial decree of separation until 1969, as Petitioner contends, no
    dispute exists that Jamaican law has provided a procedure for absolute divorce
    since 1879 or that Petitioner’s mother could have obtained a divorce under that
    law. Furthermore, Petitioner’s mother did not emigrate to the U.S until 1969 and
    did not naturalize until 1977; at that time, Jamaican law did provide for separation
    by judicial decree. See Morgan, 432 F.3d at 233. The record is unclear about
    which U.S. state(s) had jurisdiction over Petitioner’s parents’ marriage after his
    mother’s emigration, but no evidence exists that she obtained formal recognition
    of the termination of her marriage in any U.S. jurisdiction before her 1992 Florida
    divorce decree.
    5
    Petitioner points to Brandon v. Brandon, 8 J.L.R. 199, 202 (1963) as support for his claim that
    Jamaican common law regarded “separation by mutual consent” as “legal separation.” But Brandon
    merely addressed whether the parties’ separation constituted desertion, thus providing grounds for
    a divorce. Id. at 199. Brandon did not recognize “separation by mutual consent” as having an
    independent legal effect and, in fact, indicated that such a separation was not grounds for divorce.
    See id at 202-03 (concluding that respondent had deserted the petitioner, and that petitioner was
    therefore entitled to a divorce, but noting that “had the respondent . . . left the home upon being told
    she could go by the petitioner then the separation would have been by mutual consent”).
    8
    Petitioner also points to his father’s subsequent remarriage – which was
    officiated by a “Marriage Official” and recorded in the registry – as a “formal act”
    establishing that his parents were legally separated under Jamaican law. But
    Petitioner has provided no authority for the proposition that Jamaica would
    recognize Petitioner’s father’s subsequent marriage as legally ending the first
    marriage. Nor has Petitioner shown that Jamaican law would have regarded the
    second marriage as valid at all when it occurred, despite the ostensible government
    involvement in issuing a marriage certificate; in fact, Petitioner’s counsel
    conceded at oral argument that the second marriage was bigamous under Jamaican
    law. U.S. courts would also generally regard the first marriage as continuing and
    the second marriage as invalid. See generally, 55 C.J.S. Marriage §§ 18
    (“Generally, a person who has contracted a valid marriage is incapacitated, while
    such valid marriage remains undissolved by death, divorce, or otherwise, to
    contract a subsequent marriage.”), 59 (“[T]he presumption in favor of a second
    marriage that the prior marriage was dissolved . . . may be rebutted by facts
    tending to show that no divorce in fact was granted . . . or where there is a failure
    to show dissolution of the first marriage.”).6 Thus, we cannot say that Petitioner’s
    6
    That Petitioner’s mother was unsure about the authenticity and legality of her husband’s second
    marriage, that Petitioner’s sister stated that her father had remarried without divorcing her mother,
    and that a Florida court later granted Petitioner’s mother a divorce also support the proposition that
    9
    father’s invalid second marriage effected a “legal separation” of Petitioner’s
    parents.
    Because no evidence exists that Jamaica – or a state exercising jurisdiction
    over Petitioner’s parents’ marriage before his mother’s naturalization – regarded
    Petitioner’s parents as separate legal entities after their separation, Petitioner has
    failed to satisfy the “legal separation” element of section 237(a)(3). Even if
    Petitioner’s mother, in some sense, had “legal custody” of Petitioner at the
    pertinent time, her naturalization alone is insufficient to grant Petitioner
    citizenship. For Petitioner to have acquired derivative citizenship in these
    circumstances – where his parents were not legally divorced or separated at the
    time of naturalization – both parents would have had to become naturalized
    citizens while Petitioner was a minor residing in the U.S.. See INA § 237(a)(1),
    (4)-(5); 
    8 U.S.C. § 1432
    (a)(1), (4)-(5) (conveying citizenship on alien children
    residing in the U.S. upon “[t]he naturalization of both parents”). Therefore,
    Petitioner’s petition for review of the IJ’s and BIA’s orders is denied.
    DENIED.
    the first marriage remained valid after Petitioner’s father’s remarriage.
    10