Evens Julmice v. Merrick Garland ( 2022 )


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  • USCA4 Appeal: 21-1177     Doc: 42        Filed: 03/23/2022     Pg: 1 of 8
    PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 21-1177
    EVENS JULMICE,
    Petitioner,
    v.
    MERRICK B. GARLAND, Attorney General,
    Respondent.
    On Petition for Review of an Order of the Board of Immigration Appeals.
    Argued: January 27, 2022                                      Decided: March 23, 2022
    Before RICHARDSON, RUSHING, and HEYTENS, Circuit Judges.
    Petition granted; vacated and remanded by published opinion. Judge Heytens wrote the
    opinion, in which Judge Richardson and Judge Rushing joined.
    ARGUED: Jennifer Sheethel Varughese, ROTH JACKSON GIBBONS CONDLIN, PLC,
    McLean, Virginia, for Petitioner. Spencer Stephen Shucard, UNITED STATES
    DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent. ON BRIEF: Brian
    Boynton, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Keith I. McManus, Assistant Director, Office
    of Immigration Litigation, Civil Division, UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
    JUSTICE, Washington, D.C., for Respondent.
    USCA4 Appeal: 21-1177       Doc: 42          Filed: 03/23/2022       Pg: 2 of 8
    TOBY HEYTENS, Circuit Judge:
    A federal statute gives the Attorney General discretion to grant waiver of removal
    to a person who “is the . . . son[ ] or daughter of a citizen of the United States.”
    
    8 U.S.C. § 1227
    (a)(1)(H)(i)(I). The Board of Immigration Appeals concluded petitioner
    Evens Julmice is categorically ineligible under that provision because his U.S. citizen
    father is no longer living. But the statutory text includes no living-parent requirement, so
    we grant the petition for review, vacate the Board’s decision, and remand for the agency to
    determine whether, as a matter of discretion, Julmice should receive a waiver.
    I.
    Congress allocates a certain number of immigrant visas per year for “the unmarried
    sons or daughters of citizens of the United States.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1153
    (a)(1). Julmice applied
    for and received one of those visas while his U.S. citizen father was still living. But Julmice
    was ineligible for such a visa because he had been married for five years when he applied
    for it. And misrepresenting his marital status, in turn, rendered Julmice removable from the
    United States. See §§ 1182(a)(6)(C)(i), 1227(a)(1)(A).
    The Attorney General, however, has discretion to waive removal “for any
    alien . . . who . . . is the spouse, parent, son, or daughter of a citizen of the United States or
    of an alien lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1227
    (a)(1)(H)(i)(I). Julmice requested such a waiver, but an immigration judge
    concluded he was ineligible for one. Noting that Julmice’s father was deceased, the
    immigration judge followed Matter of Federiso, 
    24 I. & N. Dec. 661
    , 664 (B.I.A. 2008), a
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    precedential Board decision concluding that a deceased parent is not a qualifying relative
    for waiver eligibility.
    Julmice appealed to the Board, noting that the Ninth Circuit had already rejected
    Federiso’s living-parent requirement as contrary to the statutory text. See Federiso v.
    Holder, 
    605 F.3d 695
     (9th Cir. 2010). Without engaging with the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning,
    the Board declined to revisit Federiso and adopted and affirmed the immigration judge’s
    decision holding Julmice ineligible.
    II.
    This case raises a discrete question of statutory interpretation: To be eligible for a
    Section 1227(a)(1)(H)(i) waiver, must a person be the son or daughter of a currently living
    U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident? The Board answered yes, and we review that
    determination using the familiar Chevron framework. See Immigration & Naturalization
    Serv. v. Aguirre-Aguirre, 
    526 U.S. 415
    , 424 (1999) (holding that the Board’s construction
    of the statutes it administers warrants Chevron deference). We first use “traditional tools
    of statutory construction” to determine “whether Congress has directly spoken to the
    precise question at issue.” Prudencio v. Holder, 
    669 F.3d 472
    , 480 (4th Cir. 2012) (citation
    omitted). If—and only if—our interpretive toolkit leaves us with a genuine ambiguity do
    we reach the second question, which asks whether the agency’s considered views about the
    meaning of the statute are “reasonable.” 
    Id.
    Here, our analysis ends at step one. The relevant statutory text says the Attorney
    General “may” waive removal “for any alien . . . who . . . is the spouse, parent, son, or
    daughter of a citizen of the United States.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1227
    (a)(1)(H)(i)(I). The subject of
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    the sentence is the “alien” seeking the waiver, and the relevant verb (“is”) appears in the
    present tense. In contrast, there is no present-tense verb (or any verb at all) applicable to
    the citizen parent. Hearing the sentence “Olivia is the child of a U.S. citizen,” a listener
    might safely assume that Olivia is currently alive but has no syntax-based reason to assume
    the referenced parent remains living (as one might if the sentence read “Olivia is the child
    of a parent who is a U.S. citizen”). Simply put, “an ordinary speaker of English would say
    that” a still-living child remains the child of a deceased parent. Comcast Corp. v. National
    Ass’n of African American-Owned Media, 
    140 S. Ct. 1009
    , 1015 (2020); accord Federiso,
    
    605 F.3d at 698
     (“A child never ceases to be his mother’s son. He always is her son, even
    after her death.”).
    The Board never explained how its contrary view is consistent with (much less
    mandated by) the statutory text. On appeal, the government relies primarily on a purported
    statutory “silence,” noting that the relevant provision does not specify whether the parent
    must be living or dead. U.S. Br. 16.
    Without question, Chevron deference applies to certain statutory silences, such as
    when Congress enacts a broadly worded rule without specifying how that rule must be
    implemented in particular situations. See, e.g., Environmental Prot. Agency v. EME Homer
    City Generation, L.P., 
    572 U.S. 489
    , 513–15 (2014). “Silence, however, does
    not . . . automatically mean that a court can proceed to Chevron step two,” Arangure v.
    Whitaker, 
    911 F.3d 333
    , 338 (6th Cir. 2018), because “sometimes statutory silence” merely
    reflects “limit[s]” on “agency discretion,” Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, Inc., 
    556 U.S. 208
    , 223 (2009). For example, “‘[t]hou shall not kill’ is a mandate neither silent nor
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    ambiguous about whether murder is permissible if committed after 5:00 p.m.,” even though
    it is “silent” about what time the deed is done. AFL-CIO v. Federal Election Comm’n, 
    333 F.3d 168
    , 181 (D.C. Cir. 2003) (Henderson, J., concurring in the judgment). So too here:
    Saying the statute is “silent” about whether the parent must currently be alive is just another
    way of saying Congress chose not to include such a requirement, and the government
    cannot invoke that silence “to impose unilaterally novel substantive requirements beyond
    those” Congress enacted. Federiso, 
    605 F.3d at 698
    .
    The government also asserts that the statute’s use of the present tense “is” connotes
    an ongoing parent-child relationship. That may well be true when it comes to Section
    1227(a)(1)(H)(i)’s use of the word “spouse”—a relationship that certainly terminates on
    divorce and is normally understood to terminate on death as well. (After all, a widowed
    person may remarry without violating anti-bigamy laws.) But, in ordinary English, we
    continue to refer to someone as the “son of ” or “daughter of ” their parent in the present
    tense even long after the parent has died.
    The government’s efforts to conjure a counterexample simply confirm the point
    because all involve changing Congress’s chosen language in some material way. Most
    invert the syntax so that the deceased parent (not the still-living child) is the subject. See,
    e.g., U.S. Br. 17 (wondering whether a man could “describe his [deceased] mother in the
    present tense five years later”). Another changes both the noun (from “any alien” to “a
    child”) and the verb (from “is” to “describes”) while adding a preposition (“with”) that
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    appears nowhere in the statute. See 
    id.
     (“a child whose parents are deceased describes
    himself as an orphan, not as a child with two parents”). 1
    True, a different provision of the same title of the U.S. Code refers to someone who
    “is the parent of a citizen of the United States or was a parent of a citizen of the United
    States who, within the past 2 years, lost or renounced citizenship status related to an
    incident of domestic violence or died.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1154
    (a)(1)(A)(vii)(I). Read in isolation,
    that provision might suggest Congress sometimes views a parent’s relationship with their
    child (though not necessarily a child’s relationship with their parent) as terminating at the
    child’s death. But, even then, the implication is not so clear because that statute references
    both the parent of a deceased citizen child and the parent of “a citizen of the United States
    who . . . lost or renounced citizenship status.” 
    Id.
     In other words, Congress may well have
    chosen to use “was” in that statute to include parents of certain people who once had—but
    later lost—U.S. citizenship. See infra note 2. And regardless of how that statute is properly
    interpreted (a point we do not decide), any comparison of Section 1227(a)(1)(H)(i) with
    the quite different language of a far removed sub-sub-subparagraph of the same general
    Act “do[es] not create the kind of ‘stark contrast’ that might counsel adoption of a meaning
    other than the most natural one.” Babcock v. Kijakazi, 
    142 S. Ct. 641
    , 646 (2022).
    One also might argue that—even if Julmice is still the child of his deceased father—
    he is no longer the child of “a citizen of the United States” because his father (the argument
    1
    The government also notes parental rights may be legally terminated before death.
    This case does not require us to decide whether a person might be eligible for a waiver
    based solely on a biological—as opposed to a legal—relationship with a U.S. citizen
    parent, so we do not reach that question.
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    would go) is no longer a U.S. citizen following the father’s death. But the Board did not
    rely on that theory in Federiso and the government affirmatively disclaimed it at oral
    argument. Oral Arg. 19:25–20:17. For that reason, it is at minimum unclear whether any
    such argument is properly before us. Compare Amaya v. Rosen, 
    986 F.3d 424
    , 430 (4th
    Cir. 2021) (noting that this Court has “suggested that standards of review cannot be waived
    and that Chevron deference is such a standard of review”), with Jimenez-Rodriguez v.
    Garland, 
    996 F.3d 190
    , 194 (4th Cir. 2021) (declining to consider whether a Board decision
    could be sustained under a statutory provision the agency had never relied on), and Ortez-
    Cruz v. Barr, 
    951 F.3d 190
    , 197 n.5 (4th Cir. 2020) (declining to consider an issue the
    government “confirmed that it ha[d] abandoned” at oral argument).
    Regardless, any such argument would fail as well. For one thing, it founders on the
    same grammatical shoals as the government’s view of the parent-child relationship. The
    statute asks whether Julmice “is” the son of a U.S. citizen, not whether his father is still a
    U.S. citizen following the father’s death.
    The broader statutory context does nothing to undermine this interpretation; rather,
    it tends to confirm it. Most notably, other provisions of the Immigration and Nationality
    Act repeatedly refer to “citizens” in situations where context makes clear the citizen in
    question may—or even in one instance, must—be deceased. See 
    8 U.S.C. § 1430
    (d)
    (authorizing the naturalization of “[a]ny person who is the surviving spouse, child, or
    parent of a United States citizen, whose citizen spouse, parent, or child dies during a period
    of honorable service in an active duty status in the Armed Forces of the United States”);
    §§ 1403–1405 (granting retroactive citizenship to people born in Alaska, Hawaii, and the
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    Canal Zone without regard to whether they were still living decades later); see also
    §§ 1401(c), 1101(c)(2) (granting citizenship at birth to children born to “parents both of
    whom are citizens of the United States” while specifically defining “parent” to include “a
    deceased parent” in some circumstances). And although numerous provisions involve
    “citizens” performing acts only possible while alive—such as filing certain petitions, see,
    e.g., § 1154(a)(1)(A)(i)—nothing in the Act suggests it is linguistically odd to refer to a
    still-living person as the child of a deceased U.S. citizen. 2
    *      *       *
    The government insists that treating Julmice as an eligible “son” is incompatible
    with “the purpose for enacting the fraud waiver,” which (it thinks) “exists in large part to
    keep the families of United States citizens together.” U.S. Br. 14–16; accord Federiso, 24
    I. & N. Dec. at 664 (similar). But “no amount of policy-talk can overcome . . . plain
    statutory” text. Niz-Chavez v. Garland, 
    141 S. Ct. 1474
    , 1486 (2021). The question here
    is not whether Julmice should be granted a waiver as a matter of executive discretion—it
    is whether Congress has forbidden one via legislative command. Because the answer is
    no, we grant the petition for review, vacate the Board’s decision, and remand for further
    proceedings.
    SO ORDERED
    2
    In contrast, it may well be odd to refer to someone as “the child of a United States
    citizen” in situations where the parent has renounced or been stripped of their U.S.
    citizenship. That question, however, is unrelated to—and arises regardless of whether—
    the parent in question is currently living. This case does not require us to address that
    situation and we therefore do not.
    8