Bagot v. Atty Gen ( 2005 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2005 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    2-11-2005
    Bagot v. Atty Gen
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 04-2127
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 04-2127
    ODIRI NKOFI BAGOT,
    Appellant
    v.
    JOHN ASHCROFT;
    JAMES ZIGLAR;
    KENNETH ELWOOD
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
    (D.C. No. 03-cv-00309)
    District Judge: Honorable Yvette Kane
    Argued: December 14, 2004
    Before: NYGAARD, ROSENN, and BECKER, Circuit Judges.
    (Filed February 11, 2005)
    JAMES V. WADE
    Federal Public Defender
    RONALD A. KRAUSS (ARGUED)
    Assistant Federal Public Defender
    100 Chestnut Street, Suite 306
    Harrisburg, PA 17101
    Attorneys for Appellant
    THOMAS A. MARINO
    United States Attorney
    DARYL F. BLOOM (ARGUED)
    Assistant United States Attorney
    United States Attorney’s Office
    Middle District of Pennsylvania
    228 Walnut Street, Suite 220
    Harrisburg, PA 17108
    Attorney for Appellees
    _____
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    BECKER, Circuit Judge.
    This appeal by Odiri Nkofi Bagot (“Bagot”) from the
    District Court’s order denying his petition for a writ of habeas
    corpus in a deportation case requires us to inquire into the matter
    of “legal custody.” That inquiry will inform our determination as
    to whether Bagot is correct that Respondents deported him to
    Guyana illegally, because, having been in his father’s legal custody
    at the time the father was naturalized, he is derivatively a United
    States citizen. Respondents maintain that, although Bagot lived
    with his father in New York, a previous New York state divorce
    decree and form custody order left him in the legal custody of his
    mother, who was in Guyana at the time and had never been to the
    United States.
    The District Court was confronted, as we are here, with the
    difficult question of how to define “legal custody”—but the
    relevant law is almost silent on that definition. Judge Becker, the
    author of the Opinion of the Court, believes that, as there is “no
    federal law of domestic relations,” De Sylva v. Ballentine, 
    351 U.S. 570
    , 580 (1956), legal custody depends on state law in the first
    instance. Having reviewed the New York precedents, he concludes
    that Bagot was not in his mother’s legal custody under state law.
    Judges Rosenn and Nygaard would not delve into state law, but
    would find that no valid decree awarded custody of Bagot to his
    mother. The panel is unanimous, however, that under the fallback
    “actual uncontested custody” standard of the immigration laws, see
    2
    Matter of M—, 3 I. & N. Dec. 850 (BIA 1950), Bagot was in the
    legal custody of his father and thus obtained derivative citizenship.
    We will therefore reverse the order of the District Court and
    remand with directions to issue the writ.
    The Opinion of the Court in this case consists of Parts I, II,
    III.A, III.B.2, IV, and V of this Opinion. In the remainder of Part
    III.B, and in Part III.C, Judge Becker, writing only for himself,
    explores New York’s law of legal custody. Although, as will
    appear, he finds that law inconclusive, he believes that this
    threshold exercise is compelled both by the reasoning of our sister
    Courts of Appeals and by basic principles of federalism.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    A. Background Facts
    The essential facts are not in dispute. Petitioner Odiri Nkofi
    Bagot was born on March 6, 1974, in Guyana. His parents, Brian
    Bagot and Frances Wright, were natives and citizens of Guyana,
    and had married there in 1971. In 1982, Brian Bagot left his wife
    and three children in Guyana and emigrated to the United States,
    settling in Brooklyn, New York.
    In 1984, Brian Bagot, acting pro se, sued Frances Wright for
    divorce in New York City. On August 28, 1984, Justice Jack Turret
    of the New York County Supreme Court granted the divorce in a
    two-page form order. The form contained a child custody
    provision, in which Frances W right’s name was typed. The custody
    provision read: “Frances Bagot shall have custody of the child(ren)
    of the marriage,” and then listed the three children, including Odiri
    Bagot. The words “shall have custody of the child(ren) of the
    marriage” were pre-printed on the form; the names of Frances
    Bagot and the children were filled in. In addition, typed onto the
    form was the statement “That the Family Court shall be granted
    concurrent jurisdiction with the Supreme Court with respect to the
    issues of; support, custody and visitation.” Frances Wright and all
    three Bagot children were still living in Guyana at that time; it does
    not appear that they had ever been in the United States at the time
    of the divorce.
    Life in Guyana was apparently difficult for the children, and
    in 1988 Frances Wright and Brian Bagot agreed that the children
    3
    would be better off living in New York. Wright therefore agreed to
    give Brian Bagot custody of, and responsibility for, the children,
    and to send them to live with him in New York. Frances Wright
    herself remained in Guyana until October 1995. She then went to
    New York to live with one of her daughters, and became a
    naturalized U.S. citizen on February 26, 2001.
    Brian Bagot, meanwhile, had made arrangements to bring
    his children to New York. Odiri Bagot arrived in New York on
    November 16, 1988, as a lawful permanent resident. He was
    fourteen years old. Odiri Bagot was raised by his father from that
    time on. He lived with his father in Brooklyn, and attended
    Erasmus High School there. On December 13, 1991, Brian Bagot
    became a naturalized United States citizen. At the time, Odiri
    Bagot was seventeen years old.
    B. The Removal Proceedings
    On May 14, 1999, in the County Court for Broome County,
    New York, Odiri Bagot pled guilty to third-degree attempted
    criminal sale of a controlled substance (cocaine). Cf. N.Y. Penal
    Law § 220.39. He received a sentence of three to six years.
    On January 24, 2000, while Odiri Bagot was in prison, the
    Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) initiated removal
    proceedings.1 The INS claimed that Bagot, as a non-citizen lawful
    permanent resident, was removable under § 237 of the Immigration
    and Nationality Act (INA) because he had been convicted of an
    aggravated felony and of a controlled-substance violation.2 An
    Immigration Judge ordered Bagot removed to the Bahamas or
    1
    The Department of Homeland Security has taken over the
    responsibilities of the former INS. See Ambartsoumian v. Ashcroft, 
    388 F.3d 85
    , app. at 95 n.6 (3d Cir. 2004). The Bureau of Immigration and
    Customs Enforcement, within the Department of Homeland Security, has
    assumed some of those functions.
    2
    The INA classifies as deportable any alien who commits an
    aggravated felony, 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii), or who violates any law
    relating to controlled substances, 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(B)(i). Illicit
    trafficking in a controlled substance qualifies as an aggravated felony.
    8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(43)(B).
    4
    Guyana. Appeal to the Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) was
    waived. Bagot was paroled from the New York prison system on
    November 19, 2002, and was taken into Bureau of Immigration and
    Customs Enforcement (BICE) custody.
    On February 19, 2003, Bagot filed the present petition for
    habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Middle
    District of Pennsylvania, which entered a temporary stay of
    deportation. Two days after filing his petition, Bagot filed an
    application for a Certificate of Citizenship, claiming that he was
    entitled to derivative citizenship based on his father’s
    naturalization. The INS denied this application on February 26,
    2003. The Administrative Appeals Unit denied an appeal. On
    February 25, 2004, the District Court denied the petition for habeas
    corpus. Bagot filed a timely notice of appeal on April 23, 2004.
    In its February 2004 decision, the District Court lifted its
    stay of deportation. Prior to briefing in this appeal, Bagot was
    apparently removed to Guyana.
    II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
    The District Court had jurisdiction in this habeas action
    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2241. We have appellate jurisdiction to
    review the District Court’s denial of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C.
    §§ 1291 and 2253. See Gerbier v. Holmes, 
    280 F.3d 297
    , 302 (3d
    Cir. 2002). Although Bagot has been removed to Guyana, the
    removal does not moot his appeal. See Chong v. Quarantillo, 
    264 F.3d 378
    , 385 (3d Cir. 2001). As the facts are not disputed, we
    review only the legal question whether Bagot was in the “legal
    custody” of his father at the time when his father became a
    naturalized U.S. citizen. This is a question of law subject to plenary
    review. See 
    Gerbier, 280 F.3d at 302
    .
    Several of the arguments that Bagot now presses were not
    raised, in specific terms, before the District Court. In particular,
    much turns on Bagot’s contention that the custody award in the
    1984 New York divorce judgment was invalid under New York
    law, a contention that was raised for the first time on appeal.
    Respondents claim that this argument is waived, and urge us not to
    consider it now, pointing out that “[i]t is well established that
    failure to raise an issue in the district court constitutes a waiver of
    the argument” in this Court. Brenner v. Local 514, United Bhd. of
    5
    Carpenters & Joiners of Am., 
    927 F.2d 1283
    , 1298 (3d Cir. 1991).
    At oral argument, Bagot’s counsel asserted that certain other
    arguments in the briefing before the District Court, especially the
    contention that Bagot’s father never lost his parental rights,
    implicated the question whether the divorce judgment was valid
    and therefore put that question fairly before the District Court. We
    are skeptical. “[T]he crucial question regarding waiver is whether
    [petitioner] presented the argument with sufficient specificity to
    alert the district court,” Brennan v. Norton, 
    350 F.3d 399
    , 418 (3d
    Cir. 2003) (quoting Keenan v. City of Philadelphia, 
    983 F.2d 459
    ,
    471 (3d Cir. 1993)), and it is questionable whether Bagot’s general
    statement that his father retained custody was enough to inform the
    District Court of his present argument that the 1984 New York
    divorce judgment was entered without subject-matter jurisdiction.
    However, this conclusion need not be fatal to Bagot’s
    appeal. This Court has discretionary power to address issues that
    have been waived. See 
    Keenan, 983 F.2d at 471
    ; 
    id. at 477
    (Higginbotham, J., dissenting in part); Loretangeli v. Critelli, 
    853 F.2d 186
    , 189-90 n.5 (3d Cir. 1988) (“This court may consider a
    pure question of law even if not raised below where refusal to
    reach the issue would result in a miscarriage of justice or where the
    issue’s resolution is of public importance.”); Selected Risks Ins. Co.
    v. Bruno, 
    718 F.2d 67
    , 69 (3d Cir. 1983) (“[I]n the past we have
    heard issues not raised in the district court when prompted by
    exceptional circumstances.” (citations omitted)).
    We think that this is just such an exceptional case, and that
    it is therefore appropriate to consider Bagot’s waived arguments on
    appeal. The argument omitted in the District Court is a pure
    question of law, and one that is closely related to arguments that
    Bagot did raise in that court. No additional fact-finding is
    necessary. As w ill appear, the proper resolution of the legal
    question, though not exactly simple, is reasonably certain. And
    failing to consider Bagot’s arguments would result in the
    substantial injustice of deporting an American citizen.
    III. Legal Standards
    Bagot does not dispute that he has committed a removable
    offense under 8 U.S.C. §§ 1227(a)(2)(A)(iii) and 1227(a)(2)(B)(i).
    He argues only that he is in fact an American citizen, and therefore
    6
    not subject to deportation under 8 U.S.C. § 1227. See Acosta v.
    Gaffney, 
    558 F.2d 1153
    , 1158 (3d Cir. 1977). This argument is
    based on the provisions of the INA that allow children of citizens,
    in some circumstances, to claim derivative citizenship.
    A. Derivative Citizenship
    Bagot was not born in the United States and has never been
    formally naturalized; his citizenship claim is derivative upon his
    father’s naturalization. The burden of proof of eligibility for
    citizenship is on the applicant. Berenyi v. District Director, INS,
    
    385 U.S. 630
    , 637 (1967). All doubts “should be resolved in favor
    of the United States and against the claimant.” 
    Id. (quoting United
    States v. Macintosh, 
    283 U.S. 605
    , 626 (1931)).
    At the times relevant to this case, the INA’s requirements
    for derivative citizenship were as follows:
    (a) A child born outside of the United States of alien
    parents . . . becomes a citizen of the United States
    upon the fulfillment of the following conditions:
    (1) The naturalization of both parents; or
    (2) The naturalization of the surviving
    parents if one of the parents is
    deceased; or
    (3) The naturalization of the parent
    having legal custody of the child when
    there has been a legal separation of
    the parents or the naturalization of the
    mother if the child was born out of
    wedlock and the paternity of the child
    has not been established by
    legitimation; and if
    (4) Such naturalization takes place
    while such child is under the age of
    eighteen years; and
    (5) Such child is residing in the United
    States pursuant to a lawful admission
    for permanent residence at the time of
    the naturalization of . . . the parent
    naturalized under clause (2) or (3) of
    7
    this subsection, or thereafter begins to
    reside permanently in the United
    States while under the age of eighteen
    years.
    8 U.S.C. § 1432(a) (1999) (emphasis added), repealed by Child
    Citizenship Act of 2000 (“CCA”), § 103, Pub. L. No. 106-395, 114
    Stat. 1631.3 Thus Bagot must prove four essential facts: (1) that his
    father was naturalized after a legal separation from his mother; (2)
    that his father was naturalized before he (Odiri Bagot) turned
    eighteen; (3) that he was residing in the United States as a
    permanent legal resident at the time of his father’s naturalization;
    and (4) that his father had legal custody at the time of his (Brian
    Bagot’s) naturalization. Respondents concede the first three facts.
    This case therefore turns on whether Brian Bagot had legal custody
    of Odiri Bagot in December 1991, when he was naturalized.
    3
    The current provision relevant to children born abroad to later-
    naturalized parents is 8 U.S.C. § 1431(a), which provides that:
    (a) A child born outside of the United States
    automatically becomes a citizen of the United States
    when all of the following conditions have been fulfilled:
    (1) At least one parent of the child is a citizen of the
    United States, whether by birth or naturalization.
    (2) The child is under the age of eighteen years.
    (3) The child is residing in the United States in the legal
    and physical custody of the citizen parent pursuant to a
    lawful admission for permanent residence.
    Former § 1432(a), however, controls this case. The CCA went into effect
    on February 27, 2001, 120 days after it was signed. See CCA § 104. At
    all relevant times—Bagot’s birth, his move to the New York, his father’s
    naturalization, and his eighteenth birthday—former § 1432(a) was in
    effect. Cf. Runnett v. Shultz, 
    901 F.2d 782
    , 783 (9th Cir. 1990) (“The
    applicable law for transmitting citizenship to a child born abroad when
    one parent is a U.S. citizen is the statute that was in effect at the time of
    the child’s birth.”).
    8
    B. Legal Custody Under the INA 4
    The natural starting point for defining legal custody as used
    in § 1432(a) is the INA itself, as “[w]hat is meant by the phrase
    ‘having legal custody of the child’ is, of course, a question of
    federal statutory interpretation.” Fierro v. Reno, 
    217 F.3d 1
    , 3-4
    (1st Cir. 2000). But the INA does not define the term “legal
    custody,” and its legislative history is similarly unhelpful on the
    question. See 
    id. at 4.
             There exist two partially competing paradigms of INA legal
    custody. The first is that adopted by several other Courts of
    Appeals, which have looked to state law to decide who has legal
    custody of a minor for derivative citizenship purposes. The second
    is that employed by the BIA, which involves a more-or-less unitary
    national standard for determining who has such legal custody.
    1. The State-Law Paradigm
    The leading Court of Appeals case discussing legal custody
    for § 1432(a) purposes is Fierro v. 
    Reno, supra
    . The First Circuit,
    after recognizing that the issue is one of federal law, nonetheless
    looked to state law to determine who had legal custody:
    Legal relationships between parents and children are
    typically governed by state law, there being “no
    federal law of domestic relations.” Accordingly,
    subject to possible limitations, we think that the
    requirement of “legal custody” in section 1432
    should be taken presumptively to mean legal custody
    under the law of the state in question. . . . [T]his
    view is consistent with the approach taken in other
    cases in which a federal statute depends upon
    relations that are primarily governed by state 
    law. 217 F.3d at 4
    (citations omitted) (quoting De Sylva v. Ballentine,
    
    351 U.S. 570
    , 580 (1956)). Other courts have found this analysis
    4
    Judges Rosenn and Nygaard do not join Parts III.B (except Part
    III.B.2) or III.C of this Opinion, which represent only the view of Judge
    Becker.
    9
    persuasive. See Tabucbuc v. Ashcroft, 84 Fed. Appx. 966, 969 (9th
    Cir. Jan. 2, 2004) (unpublished opinion) (“To determine whether
    [petitioner] was in the legal custody of his father when he
    immigrated to the United States in 1984, we look presumptively to
    Hawai’i law.” (citing Fierro)); Bucknor v. Zemski, No. 01-3757,
    
    2002 WL 221540
    , *4 (E.D. Pa. Feb. 12, 2002) (“This Court agrees
    [with Fierro], and to determine whether [petitioner’s] father had
    legal custody over [him], this Court will apply Pennsylvania state
    law.”); cf. In re Bulfa-Dadulo, No. A44 273 047, 
    2004 WL 1059577
    (BIA Mar. 16, 2004) (unpublished decision) (citing
    Fierro approvingly, and looking to state law to determine whether
    parents were “legally separated”).
    The Seventh Circuit has come to the same conclusion
    independently, noting that the INS has regularly referred to state
    law in deciding legal custody. Wedderburn v. INS, 
    215 F.3d 795
    ,
    799 (7th Cir. 2000) (“‘Legal custody’ and ‘legal separation of the
    parents,’ as words in a federal statute, must take their meaning
    from federal law. . . . But federal law may point to state (or foreign)
    law as a rule of decision, and this is how the INS has consistently
    understood these terms.”).
    On the other hand, the Fifth Circuit has declined to defer to
    state law in defining the analogous term “legal separation” for
    § 1432(a)(3) purposes. In Nehme v. INS, 
    252 F.3d 415
    , 422 (5th
    Cir. 2001), that court held that “in the absence of plain language to
    the contrary, Congress does not make the application of a federal
    act dependent on state law.” Nehme cited Fierro and Wedderburn
    approvingly for the proposition that the definition of “legal
    separation” is an issue of federal law, but refused to follow their
    lead in looking to state law to help decide the issue. Finding that
    the linchpin of the analysis was the need for uniformity across the
    nation, the Fifth Circuit determined that the question of legal
    separation was one of federal law, and “reject[ed] any contention
    that the law of any one state should govern the determination
    whether an alien child’s parents were ‘legally separated.’” 
    Id. at 423-24.
            The Fifth Circuit therefore arrived at a unitary definition of
    legal separation. In so doing, it looked to the laws of several states,
    and to the legislative history of the INA, which “indicates that
    Congress wanted to ensure that only alien children whose ‘real
    interests’ were located in America with their custodial parent, and
    10
    not abroad, should be automatically 
    naturalized.” 252 F.3d at 425
    .
    The court therefore concluded that legal separation requires a
    judicial act to create separation: mere living apart, without a formal
    separation, does not qualify as legal separation under the INA. See
    
    id. at 425-26;
    see also Brissett v. Ashcroft, 
    363 F.3d 130
    , 133-34
    (2d Cir. 2004) (approving the INS interpretation, following Nehme,
    that “an informal separation is not sufficient to render the parties
    legally separated” under § 1432(a)(3)).
    Because Nehme is concerned with the concept of legal
    separation, not legal custody, it is of limited relevance to this case.
    The policy goal that the Fifth Circuit drew from the INA’s
    legislative history—ensuring that the child’s “real interests” were
    with the custodial parent in the United States—is unlikely to be
    hindered by applying state law definitions of child custody, as those
    standards typically make reference to the child’s interests. And,
    because there is “no federal law of domestic relations,” 
    DeSylva, 351 U.S. at 580
    , I think that it is most appropriate to turn, in the
    first instance, to state-law definitions of legal custody. I therefore
    would not extend Nehme to this case; instead, I agree with Fierro
    and Wedderburn that it is appropriate to look to state law to define
    “legal custody” for the purposes of 8 U.S.C. § 1432(a)(3).
    2. The BIA Paradigm
    The BIA, however, has made its own attempts at defining
    “legal custody” under the INA. The BIA’s longstanding
    interpretation of the “legal custody” requirement is set out in
    Matter of M—, 3 I. & N. Dec. 850 (BIA 1950). In that case, the
    BIA interpreted a predecessor statute of § 1432(a)(3), and stated:
    It is the view of the [Immigration and Naturalization]
    Service that, in the absence of judicial determination
    or judicial or statutory grant of custody in the case of
    legal separation of the parent [sic] of a person
    claiming citizenship under section 314(c), the parent
    having actual uncontested custody is to be regarded
    as having “legal custody” of the person concerned
    for the purpose of determining that person’s status
    under section 314(c).
    3 I. & N. Dec. at 856. Thus, Matter of M — provides a two-step test
    11
    of legal custody. First, if there is a “judicial determination or
    judicial or statutory grant of custody,” then the parent to whom
    custody has been granted has legal custody for INA purposes.
    Second, if no such determination or grant exists, then the parent in
    “actual uncontested custody” is deemed to have legal custody.
    The Matter of M— test has been cited approvingly by the
    Seventh Circuit in 
    Wedderburn, supra
    , 215 F.3d at 797 (citing
    Matter of M— for the proposition that “one parent’s permanent
    physical custody with the other’s consent is ‘legal custody’”), by a
    recent unpublished BIA decision, In re Kwe, No. A37 385 667,
    
    2003 WL 23508701
    (BIA Dec. 17, 2003) (unpublished decision)
    (“In the absence of a judicial determination or judicial or statutory
    grant of custody in a case of a legal separation of the naturalized
    parent, the parent having actual, uncontested custody is to be
    regarded as having ‘legal custody’ of the child.”), and by a District
    Court in this Circuit, Charles v. Reno, 
    117 F. Supp. 2d 412
    , 417
    (D.N.J. 2000). See also Am. Jur. 2d Aliens & Citizens § 2883
    (2004) (“‘Legal custody’ of the child, for purposes of the statute,
    resides in the parent who has been granted custody of the child by
    court order or statutory grant, or, in the absence thereof, in the
    parent having actual uncontested custody of the child.” (footnotes
    omitted) (citing Matter of M—)).
    Matter of M— appears to represent the position of the
    agencies charged with interpreting the INA. Respondents thus
    argue that we are bound to give it deference under Chevron, U.S.A.,
    Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, Inc., 
    467 U.S. 837
    (1984). This
    proposition is subject to some debate. See Hughes v. Ashcroft, 
    255 F.3d 752
    , 757-758 (9th Cir. 2001) (finding Chevron deference to
    the INS inappropriate in determining United States citizenship,
    because the INA leaves that determination in the hands of the
    courts). It is not necessary to decide, however, whether the Matter
    of M— standard is entitled to Chevron deference, both because it
    is helpful in understanding the meaning of “legal custody,” and
    because the parties appear to accept its application here.
    3. A Framework for INA Legal Custody:
    Reconciling Fierro and Matter of M—
    This leaves a surfeit of standards, as both the Fierro
    approach (looking to state law to define legal custody) and the
    12
    Matter of M— test (looking for a decree of custody or, failing that,
    for “actual uncontested custody”) are helpful. I conclude, however,
    that these two standards can be reconciled in a straightforward
    way. 5
    The BIA position in Matter of M— is that a “judicial
    determination or judicial or statutory grant of custody” creates legal
    custody. These are all matters of state law, as no federal courts or
    statutes grant child custody. Thus, the first stage of the Matter of
    M— determination is a matter of state law, consistent with Fierro.
    If state law provides no answer as to child custody, then federal
    courts cannot follow Fierro to determine who has legal custody. 6
    Rather than simply inventing state law, however, the courts can fall
    back on the second part of the Matter of M— test: if state law does
    not fix “legal custody,” then the federal standard of “actual
    uncontested custody” applies.
    Thus, if, for example, a state court has entered a valid decree
    granting custody of a child to the child’s father, then the father has
    “legal custody” of the child. This result follows naturally from both
    Fierro and Matter of M— (as it is a “judicial determination or
    judicial . . . grant of custody”). Similarly, if (again, for example)
    there has been no decree, but a state statute provides that “in the
    absence of a decree, a child of divorced parents is in the legal
    5
    Judge Rosenn, in his concurrence joined by Judge Nygaard,
    concludes that Matter of M— is dispositive in this case, and therefore
    would not delve into state law. I think that Fierro correctly held that we
    must look to state law, in the first instance, to decide matters of legal
    custody, as there is no federal law of domestic relations. I view this as an
    important principle of federalism. Fierro may be factually
    distinguishable—there, unlike here, there was a valid state-court
    decree—but I think it clear that the underlying principle of Fierro
    requires an inquiry into state law.
    6
    One could read Fierro’s reliance on state law to indicate that,
    where state law does not fix custody, neither parent has legal custody for
    § 1432(a)(3) purposes, and the child cannot claim derivative citizenship
    through either parent. But this reading comports with neither the intent
    of Fierro nor the purposes of the INA, which attempts to find the parent
    with whom the child’s interest lies. Therefore, I do not take Fierro to
    mean that, where state law is silent, no parent has legal custody under the
    INA, and I would instead follow Matter of M— in such a situation.
    13
    custody of whichever parent he resides with,” then courts should
    follow the state law under both Fierro and Matter of M—
    (“statutory grant of custody”). And, if state law is silent about legal
    custody, Fierro is of no help, and we must rely on the Matter of
    M— fallback of “actual uncontested custody.”7
    In this case, then, I look first at the New York law defining
    legal custody. Only because that law does not determine who had
    legal custody of Odiri Bagot do I turn to the Matter of M—
    standard of actual uncontested custody.
    C. Legal Custody Under New York Law
    I believe that our first obligation under Fierro is to examine
    New York law to see whether it clearly determines legal custody.
    Unfortunately, New York law, like the INA, does not define the
    term “legal custody.” The New York Domestic Relations Law uses
    the term repeatedly, but never defines it. Nor does any case from
    the Court of Appeals, New York’s highest court, define or
    explicate the phrase. I have found only three cases in which New
    York courts have given some clues to the state’s definition of
    “legal custody,” albeit not clear direction. See Otero ex rel. Otero
    7
    This reconciliation of Matter of M— and Fierro is not seamless.
    One can imagine, for example, a state in which there is no statutory
    definition of legal custody, but whose common law has consistently held
    that a child of divorced parents is always in the legal custody of his
    mother. In this state, a child of divorced parents as to whom there has
    been no custody decree would be, as a matter of state law, in the custody
    of his mother, even if he in fact lived with his father. Fierro leads to the
    conclusion that such a child would be in the custody of his mother. On
    the other hand, under Matter of M—, since his status was not determined
    by a “judicial determination or judicial or statutory grant of custody”
    (unless the common-law rule can be treated as a “judicial grant of
    custody”), this child would be in the custody of whoever has “actual
    uncontested custody”—in that case, presumably, his father.
    This is probably a far-fetched example. In most normal cases,
    either state law will determine custody by statute or judicial
    determination, or else state law will be silent and the court will be left to
    fall back on “actual uncontested custody.” It may be that some
    theoretical tension remains between Fierro and Matter of M—, but that
    tension is unlikely to assert itself often.
    14
    v. State, 
    602 N.Y.S.2d 501
    (N.Y. Ct. Cl. 1993); Villafane v.
    Banner, 
    387 N.Y.S.2d 183
    (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1976)); Coveleski v.
    Coveleski, 
    93 A.D.2d 924
    (N.Y. App. Div. 1983). The first two
    cases were decided in the context of New York Civil Practice Law
    and Rules (CPLR) 1201, which allows a parent or other person
    with “legal custody” to bring a suit on behalf of an infant. The
    Otero and Villafane courts determined legal custody only for the
    purpose of allowing the alleged custodian to sue on the child’s
    behalf.
    In Otero, the New York Court of Claims, which adjudicates
    civil suits against state government agencies, refused to allow an
    incarcerated father to bring a CPLR 1201 suit on behalf of his
    infant daughter, who was injured while visiting him in prison. The
    court noted that there was “very little discussion of the term ‘legal
    custody’ as used in this context. It apparently incorporates both
    physical custody and, where someone other than a parent has
    physical custody, a judicial decree awarding custody to that
    
    person.” 602 N.Y.S.2d at 502
    (citing 
    Villafane, supra
    , 387
    N.Y.S.2d at 184). Finding that an incarcerated parent could not
    have physical custody, the court ordered the case dismissed unless
    the daughter’s legal custodian was substituted as plaintiff within
    sixty days. 
    Id. In Villafane,
    the Supreme Court of New York County
    refused to allow a grandmother to bring a CPLR 1201 action on
    behalf of her infant grandchild. The grandmother had long had
    “informal custody” of the infant, but the child had never formally
    been placed in her care. The court determined that, under CPLR
    1201, married parents share legal custody, while, if the parents are
    separated, “[i]t would appear . . . that ‘having legal custody’ was
    intended to designate a person whose custody was formally
    determined by judicial 
    decree.” 387 N.Y.S.2d at 184
    . As no such
    decree gave the grandmother custody, the court stayed the suit
    pending appointment of a guardian ad litem to litigate on behalf of
    the infant.
    The CPLR 1201 context is tangential here, and I am none
    too confident in drawing lessons about New York’s law of legal
    custody from these two cases. I do so only because there are so few
    relevant sources for that law, and because Otero and Villafane, like
    the INA, seem motivated by a desire to fix legal custody on the
    person who represents the real interests of the child, in order to
    15
    insure that litigation on behalf of the child is actually in his or her
    interests.8
    On the other hand, the third New York case, 
    Coveleski, supra
    , 
    93 A.D.2d 924
    , is more clearly a domestic relations case.
    Pursuant to a separation agreement, an earlier court order had
    granted custody of a child to the mother, and required the father to
    pay child support. The father ended up having physical custody of
    the child for a significant period, and did not pay child support
    during that time. The mother sued for the arrearages, and the father
    “argue[d] that he had physical custody of the child during the
    period in question and not plaintiff and, therefore, he was not
    required to pay plaintiff child support pursuant to the agreement.”
    
    Id. at 924.
    The Appellate Division disagreed, noting that the
    separation agreement and judgment of divorce had never been
    modified, and “consequently legal custody of the child continued
    throughout in plaintiff.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
            Coveleski is clearly in some tension with Otero’s suggestion
    that physical custody is a necessary element of legal custody. Given
    this tension, I think it best to avoid determining whether New York
    legal custody law actually requires physical custody, as Bagot urges
    us to do.
    On the other hand, each of these New York cases places
    some emphasis on deriving legal custody from a judicial decree.
    While Otero at least suggests that a parent in physical custody may
    not need a decree to obtain legal custody, Villafane and Coveleski
    seem to require a judicial decree of custody in essentially all cases.
    8
    I note also that no court seems to have questioned these cases’
    definitions of legal custody. Villafane’s method of defining custody has
    been cited approvingly by another New York Supreme Court case,
    Matter of Meyers, 
    528 N.Y.S.2d 778
    , 779 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1988) (finding
    that an infant’s mother cannot sue on his behalf where his grandmother
    has been granted custody by legal decree), and Otero’s method has been
    cited by two federal district courts in New York, Bailey v. Tricolla, No.
    CV-94-4597 (CPS), 
    1995 WL 548714
    , *7 (E.D.N.Y. Sep. 12, 1995)
    (finding physical custody to be a necessary element of legal custody);
    DeBruyne v. Clay, No. 94 Civ. 4704 (JSM), 
    1995 WL 51134
    , *2
    (S.D.N.Y. Feb. 8, 1995) (same); see also Ellis v. Hamilton, 
    669 F.2d 510
    , 514 (7th Cir. 1982) (citing Villafane for the proposition that
    custodial grandparents might have the right to sue on behalf of their
    grandchildren).
    16
    I thus draw only the most limited conclusions from New
    York law. Taken together Otero, Villafane, and Coveleski make
    clear that, at a minimum, a valid judicial decree plus physical
    custody will create legal custody under New York law. Under
    Coveleski, it is quite likely that a valid judicial decree alone will
    create legal custody in at least some cases, though we need not
    decide that issue here. However, in the absence of a valid judicial
    decree of legal custody, matters are much murkier. No New York
    case appears to find legal custody in a divorced parent who does
    not have a custody order from a court.
    It is not necessary to decide that New York law requires a
    valid judicial decree to create legal custody. Rather, I conclude
    only that New York law is not sufficiently clear to fix INA legal
    custody in the absence of such a decree. Therefore, under Fierro,
    I look to New York law to see if any court has issued a valid order
    determining legal custody. In the absence of such an order, and
    there is none here, I will not attempt to divine what New York
    courts would do; rather, I will fall back on the “actual uncontested
    custody” prong of Matter of M—.9
    IV. Legal Custody of Bagot in 1991
    We now apply the law to the facts of Bagot’s case. We first
    examine the 1984 divorce judgment that purportedly granted
    custody of Bagot to his mother. Finding that this decree did not
    create legal custody, we address the Matter of M— standard of
    “actual uncontested custody.”
    A. New York Legal Custody
    The 1984 judgment, on its face, granted a divorce between
    Brian Bagot and Frances Wright, and granted custody of the
    9
    Thus I essentially adopt the entire test of Matter of M— in this
    case, requiring a judicial decree or, failing that, actual uncontested
    custody. However, under the Fierro/Matter of M— test set forth above,
    
    see supra
    Part III.B.3, this is not an inevitability; another state’s law
    might more clearly fix custody even in the absence of a decree, and
    under Fierro I would look to that law in preference to the “actual
    uncontested custody” fallback.
    17
    children of their marriage to Frances Wright. Bagot argues that this
    grant of custody was invalid, because the New York court lacked
    jurisdiction to decide his custody.
    1. The Validity of the Decree
    There is no question that the New York County Supreme
    Court had jurisdiction to enter a judgment of divorce between
    Brian Bagot and Frances Wright. In New York, the Supreme Court
    can obtain in rem jurisdiction over a marriage if (among other
    possibilities) either party to the marriage has resided in New York
    for two years. N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law § 230(5) (2004). But the New
    York courts have jurisdiction over child custody determinations
    only if they can meet the higher standards of the Uniform Child
    Custody Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA), N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law § 75-d(1)
    (1999), which we set forth in the margin (and rely upon infra).10
    10
    New York’s version of the UCCJA provided:
    1. A court of this state which is competent to decide child
    custody matters has jurisdiction to make a child custody
    determination by initial or modification decree only
    when:
    (a) this state (i) is the home state of the child at the time
    of commencement of the custody proceeding, or (ii) had
    been the child’s home state within six months before
    commencement of such proceeding and the child is
    absent from this state because of his removal or retention
    by a person claiming his custody or for other reasons, and
    a parent or person acting as parent continues to live in
    this state; or
    (b) it is in the best interest of the child that a court of this
    state assume jurisdiction because (i) the child and his
    parents, or the child and at least one contestant, have a
    significant connection with this state, and (ii) there is
    within the jurisdiction of the court substantial evidence
    concerning the child’s present or future care, protection,
    training, and personal relationships; or
    (c) the child is physically present in this state and (i) the
    child has been abandoned or (ii) it is necessary in an
    emergency to protect the child; or
    18
    The mere fact of divorce jurisdiction does not create child-custody
    jurisdiction; the requisites for the two types of jurisdiction are
    different and must be separately satisfied. See, e.g., Foley v. Foley,
    
    649 N.Y.S.2d 999
    (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1996); see generally Merril
    Sobie, Practice Commentary to N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law § 76, section
    2 (2002).
    At the time of his parents’ divorce, Bagot had never set foot
    in New York, so paragraph (a) of § 75-d(1), which applies where
    New York is the child’s “home state,” could not have created
    jurisdiction. Paragraph (b), which requires a “significant
    connection” with New York and “substantial evidence” within the
    state, was similarly inapplicable, again because there is no
    contention that Bagot had ever been to New York to establish such
    a connection. “Maximum rather than minimum contacts are
    required,” Vanneck v. Vanneck, 
    404 N.E.2d 1278
    , 1282 (N.Y.
    1980), and the legislative intent behind paragraph (b) was “to limit
    jurisdiction rather than to proliferate it,” 
    id. Paragraph (c),
    which
    creates emergency jurisdiction where the child is physically present
    in New York, was inapplicable because Bagot was not in the state
    at the time of the disputed custody grant.
    This leaves us with paragraph (d), a fallback provision
    allowing New York to take jurisdiction where no other state has
    done so and such an exercise of jurisdiction is in the best interests
    (d)(i) it appears that no other state would have
    jurisdiction under prerequisites substantially in
    accordance with paragraph (a), (b), or (c), or another state
    has declined to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that
    this state is the more appropriate forum to determine the
    custody of the child, and (ii) it is in the best interest of
    the child that this court assume jurisdiction.
    N.Y. Dom Rel. Law § 75-d(1) (1999), repealed by 2001 N.Y. Laws c.
    386. The 2001 legislation, which took effect on April 28, 2002, enacted
    the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act
    (UCCJEA). The jurisdictional provision replacing § 75-d is at N.Y.
    Dom. Rel. Law § 76 (2004). The earlier UCCJA was effective from 1978
    until 2002, see 1977 N.Y. Laws c. 493, § 2, and was thus New York law
    at all times relevant to this appeal.
    19
    of the child.11 However, we doubt that a New York court would
    have assumed jurisdiction over a child who had never set foot in
    the state, and who lived with his mother in Guyana, on the basis of
    § 75-d(1)(d). Cf. Sobie, Practice Commentary to N.Y. Dom. Rel.
    § 75-d, section 4 (1988) (“The possibility of using the [§ 75-
    d(1)(d)] provision is fairly remote; examples might include migrant
    workers, hobos or perhaps members of a circus troop.”). As long
    as it was not manifestly against Bagot’s best interests to leave
    Guyana in control of his custody, a New York court would not
    have taken jurisdiction over his custody under paragraph (d). See
    Nesa v. Baten, 
    290 A.D.2d 663
    , 664 (N.Y. App. Div. 2002) (“[I]t
    is difficult to see how the [Bangladeshi] children’s best interests
    would be served by having a New York court litigate issues of
    custody.”).
    Even if there was some conceivable way that the New York
    court could have taken jurisdiction under paragraph (d), such
    jurisdiction would require findings that it was in the best interests
    of the child. See People ex rel. Bruzzesse v. Bruzzese, 
    70 A.D.2d 957
    , 958 (N.Y. App. Div. 1979). The two-page form order lacks
    such findings, and provides no reason to believe that the New York
    court believed that it had § 75-d(d) jurisdiction over the child
    custody determination.
    Thus there is no real doubt that the New York County
    Supreme Court lacked jurisdiction to determine Bagot’s custody.
    The divorce decree appears to have been simply a form order,
    normally used for in-state divorce cases where custody over the
    children is easily established; the presiding justice presumably did
    not notice that he was exceeding his jurisdiction, and no one
    pointed out this error at the time.12
    11
    The definition of “state” in the UCCJA did not include foreign
    countries, see N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law § 75-c(10) (1999) (repealed), so, as
    required by paragraph (d), no “state” had jurisdiction over Bagot;
    however, the UCCJA was intended to follow general principles of
    comity in respecting foreign jurisdiction. See N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law § 75-
    w (1999) (repealed).
    12
    The failure to alert the New York court to its lack of jurisdiction
    did not waive the issue, as custody jurisdiction under § 75-d was not
    waiveable. Gomez v. Gomez, 
    86 A.D.2d 594
    , 595 (N.Y. App. Div.),
    20
    2. The Appropriateness of Reviewing State Judgments in
    Immigration Proceedings
    Respondents contend, however, that this Court should refuse
    to examine the validity of the New York custody decree now,
    almost twenty years after that decree was issued. They argue
    forcefully that the INS’s successor agency should be able to rely on
    the finality of state custody orders, and that, if immigration
    petitioners were allowed to mount collateral attacks on such orders,
    the result would be a heavy burden on the courts and the INS’s
    successor agency. Courts might, the argument continues, have to
    look into whether there was proper service of the custody order,
    whether there was personal jurisdiction over the parties, and
    whether the custody decision was proper on its merits. Such
    inquiries would be costly and time-consuming, and might be
    susceptible to fraud and manipulation.
    We share Respondents’ concern for the finality of state-
    court judgments in immigration proceedings, and we confine our
    review of the New York court’s custody order to the purely legal
    question whether, on the undisputed facts presented by this case,
    that court had subject-matter jurisdiction to issue a custody
    decree.13 Such a narrow review does not implicate the concerns
    raised by the Respondents: we need not look into service of
    process, personal jurisdiction, or the merits of the custody
    determination; nor must we engage in any fact-finding that could
    be undermined by a petitioner’s fraud. In this case, however, the
    predicate facts—that the divorce decree granted custody of Bagot,
    who had never been in the United States, to his mother—are
    undisputed, and they lead inevitably to the legal conclusion that the
    New York Supreme Court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over
    the custody determination under § 75-d. We feel confident that we
    can reach this conclusion without entering the thicket that
    aff’d, 
    437 N.E.2d 272
    (N.Y. 1982).
    13
    Although it speaks in terms of the location of the parties, N.Y.
    Dom. Rel. Law § 75-d creates subject-matter, not personal, jurisdiction.
    See Gomez, supra note 
    10, 86 A.D.2d at 595
    ; 
    Bruzzese, supra
    , 70
    A.D.2d at 958; Schaeffer v. Schaeffer, 
    101 Misc. 2d 118
    , 120 (N.Y. Fam.
    Ct. 1979).
    21
    Respondents conjure.
    Basic principles of conflict of laws, including New York’s
    jurisprudence in the area, support our refusal to recognize custody
    decrees not properly based on subject matter jurisdiction. Under
    New York law, and the UCCJA as adopted by most states,14 one
    state need not recognize the custody decree of another state “where
    the decree was not made under factual circumstances meeting the
    jurisdictional standards of the [UCCJA].” N.Y. Jur. Domestic
    Relations § 457 & n.21 (citing Wilber v. Buelow, 
    136 A.D.2d 786
    (N.Y. App. Div. 1988) (refusing to give full faith and credit to
    Texas custody decree where Texas court lacked UCCJA
    jurisdiction)). No state following the UCCJA—including New
    York—would enforce the custody decree at issue here; we do not
    believe that a federal court should be bound by a decree that no
    state would consider binding.
    Respondents correctly note that federal courts in
    immigration cases disfavor collateral attacks on the state
    convictions that give rise to aggravated-felony removals. See, e.g.,
    Drakes v. INS, 
    330 F.3d 600
    (3d Cir. 2003); Giammario v. Hurney,
    
    311 F.2d 285
    , 287 (3d Cir. 1962). But a collateral attack on the
    merits of a criminal conviction is much more susceptible to the
    problems posited by the Respondents than is an attack on a custody
    decree’s subject-matter jurisdiction.
    Child custody is a much more fluid affair than is an
    aggravated felony conviction. Indeed, few things in the law are as
    ephemeral as a child custody adjudication. To be sure, a state
    court’s judgment of conviction renders an immigrant a removable
    aggravated felon; in the normal case, that status is unlikely to
    change. But see 8 U.S.C. § 1227(a)(2)(A)(v) (authorizing waiver
    of deportation for certain felons granted a full pardon by the
    President or a Governor). But a court’s order granting child custody
    is rarely the final word on the subject; family circumstances
    constantly change, and family courts throughout the land frequently
    modify orders for full or partial custody (visititation) to better
    14
    The UCCJA continues in force in sixteen states and the U.S.
    Virgin Islands. Thirty-four other states, and the District of Columbia, had
    enacted the UCCJA, but have repealed it and adopted the UCCJEA. See
    generally Unif. Child Custody Jurisdiction Act Refs. & Annos., 9 U.L.A.
    261-62 & supp. 25-27 (1999 & Supp. 2004).
    22
    accommodate the (changing) best interests of the child. See 45
    N.Y. Jur. 2d Domestic Relations § 501.
    Indeed, at oral argument in this case, Respondents conceded
    that Brian Bagot could have arranged to have the 1984 custody
    order modified to comport with the reality that he had undisputed
    physical custody over Odiri Bagot. Our deference to the finality of
    state criminal convictions is due in part to the fact that they are
    intended to be final; such deference to the finality of frequently and
    easily modified state custody determinations would, we think, be
    misplaced.
    We therefore cannot find that Frances Wright had legal
    custody of Odiri Bagot under New York law. The decree that
    granted her custody was facially invalid, and no court in New York
    or anywhere else would defer to it.
    B. Actual Uncontested Custody
    If no one had legal custody of Bagot under a New York
    decree, then were are left to the fallback “actual uncontested
    custody” prong of Matter of M— . That decision makes clear that,
    where legal custody has not been determined by decree or statute,
    “the parent having actual uncontested custody is to be regarded as
    having ‘legal custody’ of the person concerned for the purpose of
    determining that person’s status under [§ 1432(a)].” 3 I. & N. Dec.
    at 856. See Part 
    III.B.2, supra
    . Therefore, if New York law did not
    fix Bagot’s legal custody, his father had “legal custody” of him for
    derivative-citizenship purposes if, but only if, he had “actual
    uncontested custody.”
    We think it is clear that he did. Brian Bagot had actual
    physical custody of Odiri Bagot, who lived with him and attended
    high school in Brooklyn; Frances Wright approved of the
    arrangement; and no one else seems to have disputed his father’s
    custody of Bagot at any time. In Matter of M—, a father who took
    care of his daughter was found to have “legal custody,” based on
    his “actual uncontested custody,” where he lived with the child and
    undertook to provide for her, and where the mother consented to
    his custody. 3 I. & N. Dec. at 851, 856. Similarly, in 
    Charles, supra
    , 
    117 F. Supp. 2d
    at 418, the court found “actual, uncontested
    custody” where the father had been responsible for the child’s
    upbringing and the mother had consented to that custody.
    23
    In their brief, Respondents suggest that legal custody under
    the INA requires a court decree, and that, since no decree granted
    custody to Bagot’s father, he could not have had legal custody.
    Respondents base this argument on the Fifth Circuit’s conclusion
    in 
    Nehme, supra
    , 252 F.3d at 427, that the term “legal separation”
    in § 1432(a)(3) requires a judicial decree of separation, not just
    living apart under legal circumstances. See also Brissett v.
    Ashcroft, 
    363 F.3d 130
    , 133-34 (2d Cir. 2004). By analogy to
    Nehme and Brissett, Respondents conclude that a child of divorced
    parents whose custody has not been determined by a valid court
    decree is in the joint custody of both of his parents, and therefore
    cannot meet the requirement of § 1432(a)(3) unless both parents
    naturalize. Cf. 
    Wedderburn, 215 F.3d at 800
    (where parents share
    custody, both must naturalize to create derivative citizenship).
    Respondents cite no authority for the proposition that legal
    custody, like legal separation, requires a court decree. We think
    that the two concepts are easily distinguishable, and that there is no
    inconsistency in requiring a court order for legal separation while
    allowing legal custody to be based on the consent of the parties or
    on undisputed physical custody. In fact, at oral argument, counsel
    for Respondents conceded that Matter of M— forecloses the
    argument that a decree is required to create legal custody: the
    BIA’s longstanding position is that, in the absence of a decree, the
    parent with actual uncontested custody has legal custody for INA
    purposes. See also Bucknor v. Zemski, No. 01-3757, 
    2002 WL 442861
    , *2 (E.D. Pa. Mar. 21, 2002) (rejecting the argument that
    a court decree is required to establish “legal custody” for
    derivative-citizenship purposes).
    Under the Matter of M— standard, Brian Bagot had “actual
    uncontested custody” of Odiri Bagot after the latter arrived in the
    United States in 1988. For INA purposes, therefore, he also had
    legal custody.
    V. Conclusion
    We conclude that, when he was naturalized in 1991, Brian
    Bagot had “legal custody” of Odiri Bagot for the purposes of 8
    U.S.C. § 1432(a)(3), because he had actual uncontested custody
    under Matter of M—. Because the other requisites of § 1432(a)
    were also met, Odiri Bagot gained derivative United States
    24
    citizenship when his father was naturalized. As an American
    citizen, Bagot was not deportable, and we will therefore reverse the
    order of the District Court and remand the matter with directions
    to issue a writ of habeas corpus.
    25
    Bagot v. Attorney General of the United States
    No. 04-2127
    Rosenn, Circuit Judge, concurring, in which Nygaard, Circuit
    Judge, joins.
    I concur and join in the opinion of the Court, with the
    exception of Parts III.B.1, III.B.3, and III.C. I write separately
    because I believe it is unnecessary in this case to grapple with the
    nuances of “legal custody” under New York law.
    The threshold question that must be decided, as I see it, is
    the validity of the custody decree entered by the New York
    Supreme Court in the 1984 judgment of divorce granted to Brian
    Bagot, Odiri Bagot’s father. The New York proceedings were
    essentially in divorce. The divorce proceedings were instituted by
    Brian Bagot. At the time of these proceedings, Frances Wright, his
    wife, and their children, including Odiri, a minor, resided in
    Guyana. They did not appear in these proceedings. As for Brian
    Bagot, he had emigrated to the United States in 1982, and settled
    in Brooklyn, New York.
    The divorce decree consisted of a brief printed form order
    dissolving the marriage. As an ancillary measure, the decree stated
    that “Frances Bagot shall have custody of the children of the
    marriage.” At the time, the children were in Guyana, a foreign
    country, and in the physical custody of their mother. They did not
    reside with their father and had not set foot in New York. Thus,
    although the New York Supreme Court had in rem jurisdiction to
    enter the judgment of divorce, because Brian Bagot had been
    residing in New York continuously for more than two years, see
    N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law § 230(5) (2004), the court had no in personam
    or subject matter jurisdiction to determine the legal status of Brian
    Bagot’s children. See Vernon v. Vernon, 
    296 A.D.2d 186
    , 191
    (N.Y. App. Div. 2002); Zwerling v. Zwerling, 
    636 N.Y.S.2d 595
    ,
    598 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1995); Pavlo v. Pavlo, 
    520 N.Y.S.2d 991
    , 993
    (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1987).
    As Judge Becker points out, the New York courts had
    jurisdiction to make “child custody determinations only if they can
    meet the higher standards of the Uniform Child Custody
    Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA), N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law § 75-d(1) (1999),”
    repealed by 2001 N.Y. Laws ch. 386. Ante, at 28-29 & n.10. The
    26
    UCCJA was in effect when the New York Supreme Court entered
    the divorce decree and fixed the status of the children, and was the
    governing New York law at all times relevant to this appeal.
    Under the UCCJA, much more was required before the
    court could exercise child custody jurisdiction than in rem
    jurisdiction over one parent for divorce. The New York court
    could have exercised jurisdiction over Brian Bagot’s minor son
    only if New York were the home state of the child at the time of the
    custody proceeding, or if New York had been his home state within
    six months before the commencement of the proceedings and the
    child had been absent from the state because of his removal or
    retention by a person claiming custody or for other reasons. See
    N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law § 75-d(1)(a). The court also could have had
    jurisdiction under the UCCJA if it was in the best interest of the
    child that the court assume jurisdiction because the child and his
    parents, or the child and at least one parent, had a significant
    connection with the state and there was within the jurisdiction of
    the court substantial evidence concerning the child’s present or
    future care, training, and relationships. See 
    id. § 75-d(1)(b).
    The
    court might also have had jurisdiction in the event the child had
    been abandoned or in certain other situations, none of which are
    relevant here. See 
    id. § 75-d(1)(c)-(d).
            Thus, for the reasons set forth in Judge Becker’s analysis of
    the foregoing New York jurisdiction statute, we are in agreement
    that the undisputed facts of this case “lead inevitably to the legal
    conclusion that the New York Supreme Court lacked subject matter
    jurisdiction over the custody determination under § 75-d.” Ante, at
    34. See, e.g., Weyant v. Barnett, 
    302 A.D.2d 801
    , 802 (N.Y. App.
    Div. 2003) (approving the dismissal of child custody proceeding
    for lack of jurisdiction under the UCCJA where “substantial
    evidence concerning the children’s care, protection, training and
    relationships does not exist in New York,” the “allegations of
    emergency [were] insufficient,” and “the children had resided with
    their mother in North Carolina for more than six years . . .”); see
    also McBride v. McBride, 
    688 So. 2d 856
    , 859 (Ala. Civ. App.
    1997).
    Because there was no valid decree of the New York
    Supreme Court, or as far as this record shows, any other court,
    giving custody of Odiri Bagot to Frances Wright, his mother, he
    was not subject to any decree of court fixing his legal custody when
    27
    he emigrated to the United States in 1988 and when his father
    applied for United States citizenship in 1991. I therefore disagree
    with the Judge Becker that we need to examine the law of New
    York with regard to parental rights in minor children prior to Brian
    Bagot’s application for naturalization.
    Turning to Odiri Bagot’s legal status in New York in 1991,
    when his father applied for naturalization, we are informed that, in
    1988, when he was fourteen years old, he and his siblings came to
    live with their father in New York. Due to poor conditions in
    Guyana, their mother had agreed that it was in the best interests of
    the children to transfer physical custody of them to their father,
    while she remained behind in their home country. Odiri’s father
    provided him with a home, enrolled him in a public school, and
    otherwise supported him. In 1991, when his father became a
    naturalized citizen, Odiri Bagot was still a minor, seventeen years
    old, and still living with his father. As the opinion of the Court
    concludes, it is clear that his father had actual, consensual physical
    custody of the boy for derivative citizenship purposes.
    Because Odiri Bagot was not born in the United States and
    had never been naturalized, it is undisputed that his claim of
    citizenship is derivative upon his father’s naturalization.
    Citizenship in the United States and naturalization proceedings are
    federal matters and are governed by the federal Constitution and
    federal statutes. At the time of that naturalization, the Immigration
    and Nationality Act provided for derivative citizenship of a child
    permanently residing in the United States while under the age of
    eighteen upon the “naturalization of the parent having legal custody
    of the child when there has been a legal separation of the parents.”
    8 U.S.C. § 1432(a)(3), repealed by Child Citizenship Act of 2000,
    Pub. L. No. 106-395, § 103(a), 114 Stat. 1631. Former §
    1432(a)(3) was in effect when Brian Bagot was naturalized and
    controls this case. See ante, at 11-12 & n.3.
    In the absence of a judicial decree determining the legal
    status of a minor child or some other judicial grant of custody, the
    remaining question in the instant case is whether Brian Bagot’s
    custody of his son satisfies the “legal custody” requirement of §
    1432(a)(3) for derivative citizenship purposes. The Bureau of
    Immigration Appeals considered this precise question in making a
    status determination in Matter of M—, 3 I. & N. Dec. 850, 
    1950 WL 6650
    (BIA 1950). In that case, a child born in Czechoslovakia
    28
    in 1929 of alien parents was admitted to the United States as a
    permanent resident in August 1947. The marriage of her parents
    had been annulled in 1940 and, as in this case, the child remained
    abroad with her mother until August 1947. The father came to the
    United States in 1941 and became a naturalized citizen in 1946.
    The decree of annulment made no provision for the custody of the
    child. As in this case, the child’s mother orally agreed in 1947 to
    the father’s assumption of custody of the child. In April 1948, the
    mother stated in an affidavit that the father had obligated himself
    since August 1947 to educate and support the child to which the
    mother consented, and that the daughter would remain with her
    father.
    The BIA held that:
    [I]n the absence of judicial determination or judicial
    or statutory grant of custody in the case of legal
    separation of the parent[s] of a person claiming
    citizenship under section 314(c), the parent having
    actual uncontested custody is to be regarded as
    having ‘legal custody’ of the person concerned for
    the purpose of determining that person’s status under
    section 314(c).
    Matter of M—, 3 I. & N. Dec. at 856. Although Matter of M— is
    only a decision of a federal agency, it has not been rejected for over
    a half-century, and has been the subject of approval of the federal
    courts. See Barthelemy v. Ashcroft, 
    329 F.3d 1062
    , 1067 n.4 (9th
    Cir. 2003) (Where “neither natural parent . . . [has] been awarded
    legal custody of the child by a court . . ., the parent with physical
    control of the child will have a claim to ‘legal custody’ over the
    child.”); Wedderburn v. INS, 
    215 F.3d 795
    , 797 (7th Cir. 2000)
    (citing Matter of M—, approvingly); Charles v. Reno, 
    117 F. Supp. 2d
    412, 417-18 (D.N.J. 2000) (applying “actual uncontested
    custody” standard of Matter of M— where no court order or
    statutory grant of custody existed).
    In the absence of a legal custody decree for a minor child,
    as we have here, an analysis of child custody law in the State of
    New York is unnecessary and irrelevant. Indeed, Judge Becker also
    concludes that “we essentially adopt the entire test of Matter of
    M— in this case, requiring a judicial decree or, failing that, actual
    uncontested custody.” Ante, at 27 n.9.
    Judge Becker believes that he is compelled to explore New
    29
    York law concerning legal custody of a minor child, even in the
    absence of a legal decree, based on his understanding of Fierro v.
    Reno, 
    217 F.3d 1
    (1st Cir. 2000). However, unlike our situation
    here, a state probate court in Fierro had issued a valid custody
    decree. See 
    Fierro, 217 F.3d at 4
    . Here, there is none. By
    contrast, in 1991when Brian Bagot applied for naturalization, the
    not-uncommon relationship existed where parents consensually
    agreed upon the physical, uncontested custody of a minor child.
    The opinion of the Court ultimately concludes that “it is
    clear” that Brian Bagot had “legal custody” of his son, Odiri, for
    derivative citizenship purposes. Ante, at 37-38. The opinion of the
    Court also rejects the Respondents’ argument that “legal custody,”
    like “legal separation,” requires a court decree. Ante, at 39. I fully
    agree with both propositions.
    Accordingly, we agree that when he was naturalized in
    1991, Brian Bagot had legal custody of his son, Odiri, for
    derivative citizenship purposes. Because all other requisites of §
    1432(a) were also met, Odiri obtained derivative United States
    citizenship when his father was naturalized. Odiri Bagot, therefore,
    is not deportable and the Order of the District Court should be
    reversed and the case remanded to the District Court with
    instructions to issue a writ of habeas corpus.
    30
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-2127

Filed Date: 2/11/2005

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/13/2015

Authorities (20)

Jhonson Barthelemy, AKA Johnson Barthelemy v. John D. ... , 329 F.3d 1062 ( 2003 )

Miguel Noel Fierro v. Janet Reno, Attorney General, Miguel ... , 217 F.3d 1 ( 2000 )

Selected Risks Insurance Company v. Bruno, Anthony v. And ... , 718 F.2d 67 ( 1983 )

ronald-l-runnett-moira-hr-runnett-v-george-p-shultz-secretary-of-state , 901 F.2d 782 ( 1990 )

Pietro Giammario v. L. W. Hurney , 311 F.2d 285 ( 1962 )

Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, ... , 104 S. Ct. 2778 ( 1984 )

Nehme v. Immigration & Naturalization Service , 252 F.3d 415 ( 2001 )

Lee Moi Chong v. District Director, Immigration & ... , 264 F.3d 378 ( 2001 )

Amy Frances Ellis, Zella Fern Frazier and Victor Frazier v. ... , 669 F.2d 510 ( 1982 )

Kevin Wedderburn v. Immigration and Naturalization Service , 215 F.3d 795 ( 2000 )

william-j-brennan-v-william-norton-individually-and-as-chief-of-the , 350 F.3d 399 ( 2003 )

carol-keenan-and-lawrence-gerrard-and-ernest-gilbert-and-walter-smith-and , 983 F.2d 459 ( 1993 )

carlos-acosta-beatriz-acosta-and-lina-acosta-v-john-j-gaffney-acting , 42 A.L.R. Fed. 915 ( 1977 )

robert-b-brenner-jude-brenner-alexander-bronsberg-george-butchko , 927 F.2d 1283 ( 1991 )

McBride v. McBride , 1997 Ala. Civ. App. LEXIS 86 ( 1997 )

Garegin Ambartsoumian Nadia Ambartsoumian Karina ... , 388 F.3d 85 ( 2004 )

Calvin Anthony Brissett v. John Ashcroft, Attorney General ... , 363 F.3d 130 ( 2004 )

dino-loretangeli-frank-forst-thomas-stiglic-and-local-194-new-jersey , 114 A.L.R. Fed. 835 ( 1988 )

Trevor Drakes v. Immigration and Naturalization Service , 330 F.3d 600 ( 2003 )

Charles v. Reno , 117 F. Supp. 2d 412 ( 2000 )

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