Brazil Quality v. Chertoff ( 2008 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    BRAZIL QUALITY STONES, INC., a          
    California Corporation; EUGENIO
    TAVARESDOS SANTOS,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    MICHAEL CHERTOFF, Secretary,
    United States Department of
    Homeland Security;
    DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
    SECURITY; UNITED STATES
    CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION
    SERVICES; EDUARDO AGUIRRE, Jr.,
    Director, United States Citizenship           No. 06-55879
    and Immigration Services; DONALD
    W. NEUFELD, Center Director,                   D.C. No.
    CV-05-02533-JFW
    California Service Center of the
    United States Citizenship and                  OPINION
    Immigration Service; CHRISTINE
    POULOS, Acting Director,
    California Service Center of the
    United States Citizenship and
    Immigration Services; MICHAEL B.
    MUKASEY, Attorney General,
    United States Department of
    Justice; ROBERT P. WIEMANN,
    Director, Administrative Appeals
    Office; DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
    SECURITY ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS
    OFFICE,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    
    8377
    8378        BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Central District of California
    John F. Walter, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    February 7, 2008—Pasadena, California
    Filed July 10, 2008
    Before: Alfred T. Goodwin, Diarmuid F. O’Scannlain, and
    William A. Fletcher, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge O’Scannlain
    8380          BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF
    COUNSEL
    Angelo A. Paparelli, Paparelli & Partners LLP, Irvine, Cali-
    fornia, argued the cause for the plaintiffs-appellants and filed
    briefs; Debi Gloria, Paparelli & Partners LLP, Irvine, Califor-
    nia, was on the opening brief.
    Thomas K. Buck, Assistant United States Attorney, Los
    Angeles, California, argued the cause for the defendants-
    appellees and filed a brief; Leon W. Weidman, Assistant
    United States Attorney, Chief, Civil Division, and George S.
    Cardona, Acting United States Attorney, Los Angeles, Cali-
    fornia, were on the brief.
    OPINION
    O’SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judge:
    We must decide whether the United States Bureau of Citi-
    zenship and Immigration Services abused its discretion in
    denying a small corporation’s petition to extend the visa of its
    Brazilian President and Chief Executive Officer.
    I
    Eugene Tavares dos Santos is a Brazilian citizen who has
    served as the President and Chief Executive Officer (“CEO”)
    BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF             8381
    of a Brazilian corporation known as Granite Ebenezer since
    the corporation’s founding in 1998. Granite Ebenezer sells
    and exports Brazilian granite and other decorative stones for
    use in residential and commercial construction. Dos Santos
    owns 99% of the corporation’s stock; his wife owns the
    remaining 1%.
    In 2002, in an effort to improve its ability to import its
    wares into the United States, Granite Ebenezer established a
    U.S.-based affiliate, Brazil Quality Stones, Inc. (“BQS”), as
    a California corporation. Like Granite Ebenezer, dos Santos
    owns 99% of the corporation’s stock, while his wife owns the
    remaining 1%.
    Once established, BQS and dos Santos (collectively “Peti-
    tioners”) sought to transfer dos Santos from Brazil to the
    United States so that he could operate BQS as its President
    and CEO. Thus, BQS filed a petition for an L-1A nonimmi-
    grant visa on dos Santos’s behalf. The L visa is designed to
    allow multinational firms to transfer employees from the
    firm’s overseas operations to its operations in the United
    States. The Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) requires
    an alien granted such a visa (referred to as an “intra-company
    transferee”) to be employed by the entity sponsoring his or
    her petition for a continuous period of at least one year within
    the three years preceding the petition. 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(15)(L). In addition, the noncitizen must “seek[ ] to
    enter the United States temporarily in order to continue to ren-
    der his services to the same employer . . . in a capacity that
    is managerial, executive, or involves specialized knowledge.”
    
    Id.
     A noncitizen employed in a “managerial” or “executive
    capacity” is eligible for an L-1A classification, while a noncit-
    izen employed in a position of “specialized knowledge” is eli-
    gible for L-1B status. 
    8 U.S.C. §§ 1101
    (a)(44)(A), (B); 
    8 C.F.R. § 214.2
    (l)(1)(i). The two classifications impose differ-
    ent limitations upon the noncitizen’s stay. See 
    8 U.S.C. §§ 1184
    (c)(2)(D)(i), (ii).
    8382             BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF
    On August 29, 2002, the Immigration and Naturalization
    Service (“INS”) granted dos Santos the L1-A visa Petitioners
    had requested. Dos Santos arrived in the United States and
    began operating BQS the next month. Because the applicable
    regulations classified BQS as a “new office,” however, dos
    Santos’s L-1A classification was approved for only one year,
    subject to extension by a later application.1 Thus, as the end
    of dos Santos’s first year in the United States drew near, BQS
    filed a second petition seeking to extend his L-1A classifica-
    tion for an additional three years. To obtain such extension,
    the INA and applicable regulations required BQS to demon-
    strate that it was “doing business” in the United States for the
    year preceding dos Santos’s petition, 
    8 C.F.R. §§ 214.2
    (l)(1)(ii)(H), 214.2(l)(14)(ii)(B), and that dos Santos
    was employed in a “managerial” or “executive capacity,” 
    8 U.S.C. §§ 1101
    (a)(15)(L), 1101(a)(44).
    The United States Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration
    Services (“USCIS”), as the successor to the INS,2 received the
    petition and soon thereafter requested additional evidence
    from BQS, explaining that the petition failed to establish that
    dos Santos was employed in a managerial or executive capac-
    ity. BQS timely responded with additional documentation.
    1
    A “new office” is “an organization which has been doing business in
    the United States through a parent, branch, affiliate, or subsidiary for less
    than one year.” 
    8 C.F.R. § 214.2
    (l)(1)(ii)(F). A petition filed on behalf of
    a noncitizen seeking to open or to be employed in such office “may be
    approved for a period not to exceed one year,” after which time the
    employer may petition to extend the visa if it can demonstrate that it is
    “doing business” in the United States. 
    Id.
     § 214.2(l)(7)(i)(A)(3); see id.
    § 214.2(l)(14)(ii)(B). “Doing business means the regular, systematic, and
    continuous provision of goods and/or services by a qualifying organization
    and does not include the mere presence of an agent or office of the quali-
    fying organization in the United States and abroad.” Id.
    § 214.2(l)(1)(ii)(H).
    2
    In 2003, services provided by the Bureau of Citizenship and Immigra-
    tion Services at the INS were transitioned to the USCIS at the newly-
    created Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”).
    BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF                8383
    The evidence submitted by BQS included an organizational
    chart of the corporation listing dos Santos at the top, supervis-
    ing five employees: an International Budget Analyst, an
    Accounting Clerk, and a three-person sales team. Yet payroll
    records indicated that BQS had paid only three employees
    other than dos Santos during the quarter preceding the peti-
    tion.
    BQS also set forth dos Santos’s duties, explaining that he
    was responsible for (1) supervising and managing BQS’s “of-
    fice and business affairs”; (2) “overseeing capital investment
    opportunities”; (3) developing “plans to further channels of
    distribution”; (4) “hiring and firing all employees and super-
    vising managers”; (5) overseeing “domestic and international
    sales”; and (6) managing “outsourced relationships” with
    BQS’s accounting firm and warehouse.
    To document dos Santos’s performance of these tasks, BQS
    submitted, among other things, a letter dos Santos sent to the
    INS seeking an H-1B visa on behalf of the International Bud-
    get Analyst, letters from BQS’s accounting and warehousing
    firms indicating that dos Santos managed BQS’s relations
    with them, and a brochure for a $35,000 piece of granite-
    cutting equipment that dos Santos had proposed for purchase
    by BQS.
    After reviewing this evidence, the Director of the USCIS
    California Civil Service Center denied the petition to extend
    dos Santos’s L-1A classification, concluding that the record
    failed to establish that dos Santos was employed in a manage-
    rial or executive capacity and that the record did not prove
    that BQS was doing business in the United States.
    BQS appealed the Director’s decision to the DHS Adminis-
    trative Appeals Office (“AAO”).3 BQS submitted additional
    3
    Where appropriate, we refer to the Director and the AAO collectively
    as “the agency.”
    8384             BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF
    evidence at this time, including a report by Dr. James S.
    Gould, a professor at Pace University in New York, which set
    forth his opinion that dos Santos qualified as a managerial or
    executive employee. The AAO considered the new evidence
    but dismissed the appeal, affirming the Director’s conclusion
    that the record failed to show that dos Santos was a qualifying
    employee or that BQS was a qualifying organization.4
    Petitioners then filed a complaint in the district court pursu-
    ant to the Administrative Procedure Act, 
    5 U.S.C. §§ 701
     et
    seq., seeking a declaratory judgment that the agency’s deci-
    sion was arbitrary and capricious and further seeking an
    injunction ordering the agency to approve the petition. The
    district court conducted a bench trial and ruled in favor of the
    agency.
    This appeal timely followed.5
    II
    In examining a district court’s decision after a bench trial,
    we review the district court’s findings of fact for clear error
    and its conclusions of law de novo. See Poland v. Chertoff,
    
    494 F.3d 1174
    , 1179 (9th Cir. 2007). However, the underlying
    agency decision in this case may not be set aside unless it is
    “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not
    in accordance with law.” 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(A). Thus, to pre-
    vail on its contention that the agency abused its discretion in
    declining to extend dos Santos’s L-1A classification, Petition-
    4
    Although BQS only appealed the Director’s conclusion that dos Santos
    was not a qualifying employee to the AAO, the AAO affirmed the Direc-
    tor’s decision on both grounds the Director articulated. Because Petition-
    ers challenged both aspects of the AAO’s decision in the district court, we
    consider their claim that BQS was a qualifying organization preserved for
    purposes of this appeal.
    5
    In a concurrently filed memorandum disposition, we address Petition-
    ers’ additional challenges to the district court’s decision. See Brazil Qual-
    ity Stones, Inc. v. Chertoff, No. 06-55879 (9th Cir. July 10, 2008).
    BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF              8385
    ers must demonstrate that the record compels two conclu-
    sions: (1) that dos Santos was primarily employed in a
    managerial or executive capacity (2) that BQS was doing
    business in the United States for the year preceding BQS’s
    petition. See id.; Family, Inc. v. U.S. Citizenship & Immigra-
    tion Servs., 
    469 F.3d 1313
    , 1315 (9th Cir. 2006) (explaining
    that this court “will not disturb the agency’s findings under
    this deferential standard unless the evidence presented would
    compel a reasonable finder of fact to reach a contrary result”
    (internal quotation marks omitted)). If we determine that the
    record fails to compel either determination, the agency’s deci-
    sion must stand.
    A
    1
    In 1970, Congress created the L nonimmigrant visa for a
    multinational firm’s intra-company transferees by providing
    for the temporary admission of such noncitizens if, among
    other things, the noncitizen sought to render services in the
    United States to the firm or its subsidiary or affiliate “in a
    capacity that is managerial, executive, or involves specialized
    knowledge.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(15)(L). Years later, in 1987,
    the INS in a set of regulations defined the terms “managerial”
    and “executive capacity.” See 
    8 C.F.R. § 214.2
    (l)(1)(ii)(B),
    (C) (1989). Although nothing in the express language of the
    INA limited the availability of L visas to employees of mul-
    tinational firms of a certain size, the INS comments accompa-
    nying the final rule expressed concern that sole proprietors
    were taking improper advantage of this classification. As the
    INS explained,
    A self-employed person . . . will frequently attempt
    to qualify under the L category by setting up a cor-
    poration in the United States, giving himself an
    executive title (e.g., “president”) and continuing his
    self-employment in the U.S., often with a minimal
    8386              BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF
    “investment,” with no foreign operations abroad and
    no intent to return abroad. . . . We do not believe that
    Congress intended the L classification to be used in
    this manner, and the regulations are intended to con-
    trol this abuse.
    Temporary Alien Workers Seeking Classification Under the
    Immigration and Nationality Act, 
    52 Fed. Reg. 5738
    , 5740
    (Feb. 26, 1987).
    Accordingly, the regulation required that any noncitizen
    seeking an L-1A visa demonstrate that he or she would super-
    vise decision-making personnel in his or her new position.
    Specifically, the regulation defined “managerial capacity” as
    an assignment within an organization in which the
    employee primarily directs the organization or a
    department or subdivision of the organization, super-
    vises and controls the work of other supervisory,
    professional, or managerial employees, has the
    authority to hire and fire or recommend those as well
    as other personnel actions (such as promotion and
    leave authorization), and exercises discretionary
    authority over day-to-day operations.
    
    8 C.F.R. § 214.2
    (l)(1)(ii)(B) (1989) (emphasis added).6
    This regulation was short-lived. In the Immigration Act of
    1990, Congress availed the L-1A classification to a wider
    group of noncitizens by amending the INA to define the term
    “managerial capacity” more broadly than the preceding regu-
    6
    The regulation went on to state that
    [t]he term manager does not include a first-line supervisor, unless
    the employees supervised are professional, nor does it include an
    employee who primarily performs the tasks necessary to produce
    the product and/or to provide the service(s) of the organization.
    
    8 C.F.R. § 214.2
    (l)(1)(ii)(B) (1989).
    BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF                    8387
    lation. Specifically, the Act provided that an intra-company
    transferee would qualify as an employee acting in a “manage-
    rial capacity” if he or she “primarily . . . supervises and con-
    trols the work of other supervisory, professional, or
    managerial employees, or manages an essential function
    within the organization, or a department or subdivision of the
    organization.”7 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(44)(A)(ii) (emphasis
    added). Thus, Congress removed the requirement that an
    applicant supervise decision-making personnel as a prerequi-
    site to obtaining an L-1A classification. Indeed, Congress
    unequivocally expressed such intent by adding an additional
    subsection to the INA stating that “[a]n individual shall not be
    considered to be acting in a managerial or executive capacity
    . . . merely on the basis of the number of employees that the
    individual supervises,” and instructing the agency to “take
    into account the reasonable needs of the organization . . . in
    light of [its] overall purpose and stage of development” in
    7
    In full, the Act defines the term “managerial capacity” as “an assign-
    ment within an organization in which the employee primarily—
    (i) manages the organization, or a department, subdivision,
    function, or component of the organization;
    (ii) supervises and controls the work of other supervisory, pro-
    fessional, or managerial employees, or manages an essential
    function within the organization, or a department or subdivision
    of the organization;
    (iii) if another employee or other employees are directly super-
    vised, has the authority to hire and fire or recommend those as
    well as other personnel actions (such as promotion and leave
    authorization) or, if no other employee is directly supervised,
    functions at a senior level within the organizational hierarchy or
    with respect to the function managed; and
    (iv) exercises discretion over the day-to-day operations of the
    activity or function for which the employee has authority.
    A first-line supervisor is not considered to be acting in a manage-
    rial capacity merely by virtue of the supervisor’s supervisory
    duties unless the employees supervised are professional.
    
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(44)(A).
    8388            BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF
    cases where “staffing levels are used as a factor in determin-
    ing whether an individual is acting in a managerial or execu-
    tive capacity.” 
    Id.
     § 1101(a)(44)(C).
    2
    In the case before us, the agency concluded that dos San-
    tos’s supervision of BQS personnel did not place him in a
    managerial capacity because he supervised only one profes-
    sional employee.8 Petitioners do not challenge such conclu-
    sion here. Rather, they argue that the agency failed properly
    to consider whether dos Santos was managing an “essential
    function” of BQS’s organization, and urges that he was.
    [1] We agree with Petitioners that the INA, as amended,
    renders managers of an essential business function eligible for
    an L-1A classification even if they supervise no employees at
    all. See id. § 1101(a)(44)(A)(iii) (stating that “if no other
    employee is directly supervised,” the intra-company trans-
    feree must “function[ ] at a senior level within the organiza-
    tional hierarchy or with respect to the function managed”).
    We also acknowledge the agency’s observation that dos San-
    tos holds a leadership position at the very top of BQS’s corpo-
    rate structure. Yet regardless of an intra-company transferee’s
    position in the organizational hierarchy of his employer, the
    INA imposes the burden on the transferee and his or her
    employer to demonstrate that the transferee’s responsibilities
    are “primarily” managerial. Id. § 1101(a)(44)(A).
    [2] The Director held, and the AAO affirmed, that BQS
    failed to satisfy this burden. First, while BQS suggested that
    8
    As explained above, an employee acting in a “managerial capacity”
    must supervise other “supervisory, professional, or managerial employ-
    ees.” 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(44)(A). The organizational chart submitted by
    BQS indicated that three paid employees were under dos Santos’s supervi-
    sion, but only the International Business Analyst qualified as a “profes-
    sional” under the regulations. See 
    8 C.F.R. §§ 204.5
    (k)(2), (3)(i).
    BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF                   8389
    dos Santos was responsible for overseeing capital investment
    opportunities at BQS, the AAO pointed out that the only evi-
    dence to support such assertion was the fact that dos Santos
    proposed the purchase of a single piece of granite-cutting
    equipment. The AAO reasoned that this purchase, even if
    consummated, indicated only that dos Santos had authority to
    invest in equipment on BQS’s behalf, but did not indicate that
    such investments were made on a regular basis or that their
    oversight constituted a significant portion of dos Santos’s
    responsibilities.
    [3] Petitioners also maintain that dos Santos was responsi-
    ble for overseeing BQS’s domestic and international sales and
    its distribution chains. Yet the documents submitted to the
    agency do not describe with particularity what such duties
    entailed.9 In summarizing the evidence, the AAO acknowl-
    edged dos Santos’s leadership role at the top of BQS’s hierar-
    chy, but also concluded that dos Santos’s direct involvement
    in the corporation’s daily operations was necessary for its suc-
    cess and that such fact precluded dos Santos from qualifying
    as a managerial employee. In other words, the AAO deter-
    mined that BQS has not yet reached the level of organiza-
    tional sophistication in which dos Santos could devote his
    primary attention to managerial duties as opposed to opera-
    tional ones, even though he held a position at the head of
    BQS’s corporate structure.
    [4] We cannot conclude that the record compels a contrary
    conclusion. BQS is a small business that paid only three
    9
    In the proceedings before the AAO, BQS submitted Dr. Gould’s report,
    which set forth his opinion that an individual acting as outlined in BQS’s
    description of dos Santos’s responsibilities would qualify as an executive
    or manager under the INA. The AAO declined to give this opinion eviden-
    tiary weight, however, because it was based on the generalized job
    description furnished by BQS, rather than any specific study of dos San-
    tos’s performance at BQS. Under these circumstances, we cannot con-
    clude that the agency abused its discretion in failing to give Dr. Gould’s
    opinion evidentiary weight.
    8390             BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF
    employees other than dos Santos during the quarter preceding
    its petition to extend his visa. As we have held before, an
    organization’s small size, standing alone, cannot support a
    finding that its employee is not acting in a managerial capac-
    ity, but size is nevertheless a relevant “factor in assessing
    whether [an organization’s] operations are substantial enough
    to support a manager.” Family, Inc., 
    469 F.3d at 1316
    . Under
    the plain terms of the INA, dos Santos cannot qualify for an
    L-1A visa simply because he performs managerial tasks; such
    tasks must encompass his primary responsibilities. See
    Republic of Transkei v. INS, 
    923 F.2d 175
    , 177-78 (D.C. Cir.
    1991) (holding that, under the pre-1990 version of the INA,
    a visa applicant who performs both operational and manage-
    rial tasks bears the burden of demonstrating what proportion
    of his responsibilities are consumed with the latter).10
    [5] BQS bore the burden of demonstrating that dos Santos
    was primarily engaged in overseeing essential functions of
    BQS’s business rather than performing them himself. While
    the record contains evidence that dos Santos performed mana-
    gerial tasks, it does not compel the conclusion that such tasks
    comprised his primary responsibilities at BQS.
    [6] Petitioners argue that requiring such a showing will
    impose an onerous burden on small businesses seeking to gain
    visas for their executive and managerial employees. Yet what-
    ever policy Petitioners’ argument might advance, we are
    bound by the plain terms of the INA and confined by the def-
    10
    The AAO relied on the BIA’s decision in In re Church of Scientology,
    
    19 I. & N. Dec. 593
    , 604 (1988) for the proposition that an applicant bears
    the burden of demonstrating the proportion of his or her activities that are
    managerial. Even though Scientology was decided before the Immigration
    Act of 1990, we reject Petitioners’ assertion that the AAO’s reliance on
    such authority was inappropriate. While the Act expanded the definition
    of “managerial capacity” to include employees managing an essential
    function of a qualifying organization’s business, the Act retained the pre-
    ceding regulation’s requirement that such employee’s responsibilities must
    be “primarily” managerial. 
    8 U.S.C. § 1101
    (a)(44)(A).
    BRAZIL QUALITY STONES v. CHERTOFF           8391
    erential standard with which we review agency decisions. See
    
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2). Accordingly, based on the record before
    us, we conclude that the agency’s determination that dos San-
    tos was not acting in a managerial capacity at the time of
    BQS’s petition to extend his visa was not an abuse of discre-
    tion.
    B
    Because we conclude that the agency did not abuse its dis-
    cretion in finding that dos Santos was not a qualifying
    employee, Petitioners cannot demonstrate that he is eligible
    for an L-1A classification. Accordingly, we express no view
    on the agency’s alternative determination that BQS failed to
    establish that it was “doing business” in the United States for
    the year preceding its petition to extend dos Santos’s visa as
    is required of a qualifying organization. See 
    8 C.F.R. §§ 214.2
    (l)(14)(ii)(B), 214.2(l)(1)(ii)(H).
    III
    Based on the foregoing, the decision of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.