The Immigration and Naturalization Service brought proceedings
to deport petitioner as an alien who had unlawfully entered the
United States. At a series of hearings before an Immigration Judge,
the INS presented documentary evidence that petitioner was born in
Italy in 1927 of unknown parents, was placed in a foundling home
there, and ultimately was adopted by an Italian couple. Petitioner
and several other witnesses testified that he was born in Ohio of
an Italian mother and sent to Italy at an early age to reside with
the above couple. Rejecting petitioner's evidence, the Immigration
Judge issued a deportation order, and the Board of Immigration
Appeals affirmed. Petitioner then petitioned the Court of Appeals
for review of the Board's decision, claiming that he was entitled
to a
de novo hearing in District Court pursuant to §
106(a)(5)(b) of the Immigration and Nationality Act, which provides
that, whenever a petitioner seeking review of a deportation order
claims to be a United States citizen and makes a showing that his
claim is not frivolous, the court of appeals, if it finds that "a
genuine issue of material fact as to the petitioner's nationality
is presented," must transfer the proceedings to the district court
for a hearing
de novo of the nationality claim. The Court
of Appeals refused to transfer the case to the District Court for a
de novo hearing and affirmed the deportation order,
apparently holding that, in order to obtain a
de novo
hearing, petitioner was required by
Kessler v. Strecker,
307 U. S. 22, to
present "substantial evidence" in support of his citizenship claim
and that he had failed to do so.
Held:
1. The Court of Appeals' decision, to the extent that it holds
de novo review to be required only where the petitioner
presents substantial evidence in support of his claim to
citizenship, is contrary to the plain language and clear meaning of
§ 106(a)(5)(B), and there is nothing in the legislative
history to indicate that Congress intended to require
de
novo judicial determination of citizenship claims only when
such determinations would be compelled by the
Kessler
"substantial evidence" standard. Pp.
436 U. S.
752-757.
Page 436 U. S. 749
(a) Although § 16(a)(5)(b) was intended to satisfy any
constitutional requirements relating to
de novo judicial
determination of citizenship claims, the statute clearly does not
restrict
de novo review to cases in which the "substantial
evidence" test is met. Rather than incorporating the language of
Kessler in the statute, Congress chose to require hearings
where there is "a genuine issue of material fact," thus
incorporating the same standard as governs summary judgment motions
under Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 56. Pp.
436 U. S.
753-755.
(b) Since summary judgment principles control, it follow that a
court of appeals cannot refuse to allow a
de novo review
of a citizenship claim if the supporting evidence would suffice to
entitle a litigant to trial were such evidence presented in
opposition to a motion for summary judgment. Pp.
436 U. S.
756-757.
2. Applying the appropriate standard to the record in this case,
it is apparent that the Court of Appeals erred when it failed to
transfer he case to the District Court for a
de novo
hearing. While the INS's documentary evidence would suffice, if
uncontradicted, to establish petitioner's birth in Italy, such
evidence would be refuted by petitioner's witnesses' testimony if
that testimony were accepted by the trier of fact. Hence, there is
a genuine issue of material fact for the District Court on the
question of petitioner's citizenship. Pp.
436 U. S.
757-761.
549 F.2d 806, reversed and remanded
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BURGER, C.J., and BRENNAN, STEWART, WHITE, BLACKMUN, and STEVENS,
JJ., joined. POWELL, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which
REHNQUIST, J., joined,
post, p.
436 U. S.
761.
MR. JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
The question for decision is whether petitioner has made a
sufficient showing in support of his claim to United States
citizenship to entitle him to a
de novo judicial
determination
Page 436 U. S. 750
of that claim under § 106(a)(5)(B) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a)(5)(B) (1976 ed.).
I
In 1967, the Immigration and Naturalization Service began
deportation proceedings against petitioner, Joseph Agosto, by
issuance of a show-cause order charging that he was deportable as
an alien who had unlawfully entered the United States. App. 6.
Petitioner opposed deportation, claiming that he was born in this
country, and therefore is a citizen of the United States not
subject to deportation. Over the course of several years, a series
of hearings were held before an Immigration Judge [
Footnote 1] at which the Service presented
documentary evidence in an effort to show that petitioner was born
in Italy in 1927 of unknown parents, placed in a foundling home
there, and ultimately adopted by an Italian couple. Petitioner
presented testimony from himself and several other witnesses to
show that he was born in Ohio of an Italian mother and sent to
Italy at an early age to reside with the aforementioned couple.
In April, 1973, the Immigration Judge issued the deportation
Page 436 U. S. 751
order challenged here, rejecting the evidence tendered by
petitioner and his witnesses that he was born in the United States.
App. 259. The Board of Immigration Appeals affirmed. It noted
that,
"[i]f believed, the testimony of [petitioner's witnesses]
clearly refutes the Service's otherwise strong documentary
demonstration of [petitioner's] alienage"
and that "[i]t is not beyond the realm of possibility that
[petitioner's] claim to United States citizenship is legitimate."
Pet. for Cert. viii. The Board nevertheless accepted the
Immigration Judge's credibility determinations and found that the
"Service's case as to alienage is clear, convincing and
unequivocal."
Id. at xi.
Agosto petitioned for review of the Board's decision in the
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit pursuant to
§ 106 of the Act, and claimed that, pursuant to §
106(a)(5), he was entitled to a
de novo hearing in
District Court to determine whether he was a United States citizen.
Section 106(a)(5) provides that, whenever a petitioner "claims to
be a national of the United States and makes a showing that his
claim is not frivolous," the court of appeals is to transfer the
proceedings to the district court for a hearing on that claim if "a
genuine issue of material fact as to the petitioner's nationality
is presented." When no genuine issue of material fact is presented,
the court of appeals has authority to "pass upon the issues
presented." [
Footnote 2]
Page 436 U. S. 752
The Court of Appeals, with one judge dissenting, refused to
transfer the case to the District Court for a
de novo
hearing on petitioner's citizenship claim, and affirmed the
deportation order. Pet. for Cert. i; affirmance order, 549 F.2d
806. It held that "[t]he evidence presented to the immigration
judge does not disclose a colorable claim to United States
nationality." Pet. for Cert. ii. Further, the Court of Appeals
apparently concluded that, in order to obtain a
de novo
hearing, petitioner was required to present "substantial evidence"
in support of his citizenship claim, and that he had failed to do
so.
Ibid. The dissenting judge, while acknowledging that,
as a factfinder, she would not have credited petitioner's
testimony, stated that
"I do not believe our legally assigned role includes a decision
on credibility, and, on that basis, I am unable to say that
petitioner's evidence, if believed, would not present a colorable
claim to American citizenship."
Ibid.
We granted certiorari, 434 U.S. 901 (1977), to consider the
proper construction of § 106(a)(5)(b), and we now reverse.
II
In 1961, Congress enacted § 106 of the Immigration and
Nationality Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1105a (1976 ed.), in order "to
create a single, separate, statutory form of judicial review of
administrative orders for the deportation . . . of aliens from the
United States." H.R.Rep. No. 1086, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., 22
(1961). [
Footnote 3] This
statutory provision eliminated district court
Page 436 U. S. 753
review of deportation orders under § 10 of the
Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702 (1976 ed.), and
replaced it with direct review in the courts of appeals based on
the administrative record. Congress carved out one class of cases,
however, where
de novo review in district court would be
available: cases in which the person subject to deportation claims
to be a United States citizen.
In carving out this class of cases, Congress was aware of our
past decisions holding that the Constitution requires that there be
some provision for
de novo judicial determination of
claims to American citizenship in deportation proceedings.
See H.R.Rep. No. 1086,
supra at 29; H.R.Rep. No.
565, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., 15 (1961). In
Ng Fung Ho v.
White, 259 U. S. 276,
259 U. S. 284
(1922), the Court observed:
"Jurisdiction in the executive to order deportation exists only
if the person arrested is an alien. . . . To deport one who . . .
claims to be a citizen, obviously deprives him of liberty, . . .
[and] may result also in loss of both property and life; or of all
that makes life worth living."
We therefore held that a resident of this country has a right to
de novo judicial determination of a claim to United States
citizenship which is supported "by evidence sufficient, if
believed, to entitle [him] to a finding of citizenship."
Id. at
259 U. S. 282.
See also United States ex rel. Bilokumsky v. Tod,
263 U. S. 149,
263 U. S.
152-163 (1923). In
Kessler v. Strecker,
307 U. S. 22,
307 U. S. 34-35
(1939), we reaffirmed that holding and indicated in dictum that
judicial determination of citizenship claims is required where
"substantial evidence" is presented to support the citizenship
claim.
In the instant case, the court below stated that petitioner
failed to satisfy the standard of
Kessler v. Strecker,
supra; the court thus implicitly held that the standard of
"substantial evidence" had been incorporated into §
106(a)(5)(b). Pet. for Cert. ii. We disagree. Although Congress
intended § 106(a)(5)
Page 436 U. S. 754
to satisfy any constitutional requirements relating to
de
novo judicial determination of citizenship claims,
supra, the statute clearly does not restrict
de
novo review to cases in which the "substantial evidence" test
is met. Rather than incorporating the specific language of
Kessler into the statute, as it easily could have done,
Congress chose instead to require hearings where there is "a
genuine issue of material fact" -- a standard that is different
from, but as familiar as, the substantial evidence standard.
[
Footnote 4]
This statutory language is virtually identical to that embodied
in Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 56, which governs summary judgment motions.
Under Rule 56, district court litigants opposing summary judgment
have a right to a trial whenever there exists a "genuine issue as
to any material fact." We may reasonably assume that, in using the
language from Rule 56 as the standard for granting
de novo
district court hearings on citizenship claims, Congress intended
the language to be interpreted similarly to that in Rule 56.
"'[W]here words are employed in a statute which had at the time
a well known meaning at common law or in the law of this country,
they are presumed to have been used in that sense unless the
context compels to the contrary.'"
Lorillard v. Pons, 434 U. S. 575,
434 U. S. 583
(1978), quoting
Standard Oil v. United States,
221 U. S. 1,
221 U. S. 59
(1911). The Court of Appeals decision in this case, to the extent
that it holds
de novo review to be required only where the
petitioner presents substantial evidence in support of his
Page 436 U. S. 755
claim to citizenship, [
Footnote
5] is thus contrary to the plain language and clear meaning of
the statute. [
Footnote 6]
Nor does anything in the legislative history indicate that
Congress intended to require
de novo judicial
determination of citizenship claims only when such determinations
would be compelled by the
Kessler "substantial evidence"
standard. Although there are references in the legislative history
suggesting that a claim to citizenship must itself be
"substantial," these statements are not amenable to the
interpretation that substantial evidence is required in support of
the claim before a judicial hearing would be provided.
See,
e.g., H. R. Rep. No. 1086,
supra at 29; H. R. Rep.
No. 565,
supra at 5. While Congress, in enacting
§106, sought to "expedite the deportation of undesirable
aliens by preventing successive dilatory appeals to various federal
courts,"
Foti v. INS, 375 U. S. 217,
365 U. S. 226
(1963), this concern hardly justifies the assumption that Congress
intended to impose a steep hurdle to judicial determination of
citizenship claims. None of the abuses of judicial
Page 436 U. S. 756
review catalogued by Congress in the Committee Reports related
to citizenship claims.
See H.R.Rep. No. 565,
supra at 7-13. Rather, Congress was primarily concerned
with the filing of repetitive petitions for review and with
frivolous claims of impropriety in the deportation proceedings.
[
Footnote 7]
See,
e.g., H.R.Rep. No. 1086,
supra at 23, 33; 107
Cong.Rec.19650 (1961) (remarks of Sen. Eastland); 105 Cong.Rec.
12724 (1959) (remarks of Rep. Walter).
Since summary Judgment principles are controlling here, it
follows that a court of appeals cannot refuse to allow a
de
novo review of a citizenship claim if the evidence presented
in support of the claim would be sufficient to entitle a litigant
to trial were such evidence presented in opposition to a motion for
summary judgment. More specifically, just as a district court
generally cannot grant summary judgment based on its assessment of
the credibility of the evidence presented,
see Poller v.
Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., 368 U.
S. 464,
368 U. S.
467-468 (1962); 6 J. Moore, Federal Practice �
56.02 [10], p. 56-45 (2d ed.1976), so too a court of appeals is not
at liberty to deny an individual a
de novo hearing on his
claim of citizenship because of the court's assessment of the
credibility of the evidence,
see Pinatello v. Attorney General
of the United
Page 436 U. S. 757
States, 350 F.2d 719, 723 (CA2 1965). Particularly
where the evidence consists of the testimony of live witnesses
concerning material factual issues, it will seldom if ever be
appropriate to deny a
de novo hearing, since
"[i]t is only when the witnesses are present and subject to
cross-examination that their credibility and the weight to be given
their testimony can be appraised."
Poller v. Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., supra, at
368 U. S.
473.
III
Applying the appropriate standard to the record in this case, it
is apparent that the Court of Appeals erred when it failed to
transfer the case to the District Court for a
de novo
hearing. The Service's proof that petitioner is not a United States
citizen would certainly be sufficient, if uncontradicted, to
establish his birth in Agrigento, Italy, in July, 1927. However,
the evidence adduced by petitioner to support his claim of American
citizenship creates "genuine issue[s] of material fact" that can
only be resolved in a
de novo hearing in the District
Court.
Petitioner acknowledges that the Service's documentary proof
pertains to him. This proof includes an entry from the city of
Agrigento registry of births for 1927 relating that a 75-year-old
handywoman appeared before the registrar and declared that,
"at 4:00 a.m. on the 17th day of [July] in a house situated in
Via Oblati, of a woman who does not want to be named, a male child
was born, which she presents to me and to whom she gives the first
name of Vincenzo and the surname of Di Paola."
Record 667. The city registry also indicates that the child was
sent to a foundling home. In addition, the foundling home's
registry indicates that a Vincenzo Di Paola was born on July 16,
1927, and was consigned to Crocifissa Porello, petitioner's
adoptive mother and wife of Pietro Pianetti, petitioner's adoptive
father, on August 26, 1927. The last piece of documentary evidence
is a translation from the foundling home record showing that
Vincenzo Di Paola was baptized on July 18, 1927.
Page 436 U. S. 758
Petitioner claims, however, that the records regarding Vincenzo
Di Paola were made at the request of his maternal grandfather to
hide the true facts of his illegitimate birth in the United States.
Petitioner's evidence in support of his claim to United States
citizenship consisted of his own testimony and that of his adoptive
parents, Crocifissa and Pietro Pianetti, and his alleged
half-brother, Carmen Ripolino.
According to the testimony of the Pianettis, petitioner was the
illegitimate son of Crocifissa Pianetti's sister, Angela Porello,
who left her Italian husband and two daughters in 1921 to move to
the United States with her cousin Giacomo Ripolino. Through
correspondence with Angela, the Pianettis learned in about 1925
that petitioner had been born, that his father was Salvatore
Agosto, and that Angela had at least two other children, including
Carmen Ripolino. According to the Pianettis, petitioner was sent to
live with them and with Angela's parents because Angela could not
care for petitioner in Ohio. The Pianettis testified that
petitioner was never in the foundling home, but that the documents
presented by the Service concerning petitioner's birth in Italy
were created by Angela's father to hide the fact that petitioner
was his illegitimate grandson. [
Footnote 8]
Carmen Ripolino corroborated the testimony of the Pianettis in
important respects. He testified that his mother was Angela
Porello, and that she told him when he was a child that he had two
half sisters in Italy and a half brother whom she had sent there to
live with her mother. Although Carmen Ripolino admitted having no
independent knowledge that petitioner was the brother who had been
sent to Italy, his testimony corroborated that of the Pianettis
that Angela Porello gave birth to a son in this country whom she
sent to Italy to live with relatives.
Petitioner's testimony was only partially consistent with
Page 436 U. S. 759
that of his witnesses. Because he possessed a birth certificate
belonging to one Joseph Agosto, born in Cleveland in 1921, which
had allegedly been sent to petitioner in Italy by another American
relative between 1948 and 1950, petitioner maintained for a time
that he was that Joseph Agosto, the son of Salvatore Agosto and his
wife Carmela Todaro. [
Footnote
9] The birth certificate had not actually been issued, however,
until sometime after petitioner claimed to have received it. At the
same time, petitioner also testified that he had been told that his
mother's name was Angela Porello, and that he lived with his
grandfather and the Pianettis after coming to Italy as a small boy.
Petitioner acknowledged that he had been known by different names
at different times.
There is no doubt that petitioner has not told one story
consistently throughout his deportation hearings and has attempted
to establish his citizenship by relying on any possible shred of
evidence. Nor is there any doubt that petitioner has told different
stories about his past to different courts. [
Footnote 10] But it is noteworthy that, starting
in his first deportation hearing, petitioner has acknowledged that
he is not certain of his true parental origins, and that he had
been told that his mother was Angela Porello. And, given the
obvious confusion and uncertainty surrounding the circumstances of
petitioner's birth (under either the Service's theory or that of
petitioner),
Page 436 U. S. 760
it is hardly surprising that petitioner cannot say with any
degree of certainty who his true parents might have been.
We need not decide whether petitioner's testimony, standing
alone, is so inherently incredible in light of its internal
inconsistencies as to justify denial of
de novo judicial
review of the citizenship claim. In this case, the citizenship
claim is supported by the testimony of three witnesses whose story,
while highly unusual, certainly cannot be rejected as a matter of
law. Their disputed testimony concerning petitioner's birth in this
country and subsequent upbringing in Italy is, in most respects, no
more unusual than their unchallenged testimony concerning other
aspects of this family's relations. [
Footnote 11] To accept the present claim to United States
citizenship, the District Court would need only to believe that
petitioner was born to Angela Porello in Ohio in the mid-1920's;
that he was sent by her to live with the Pianettis in Italy; and
that Angela's father had the birth records in his native town
falsified to prevent public knowledge of the birth of an
illegitimate child to his daughter while still permitting him and
other members of his family to raise the child. [
Footnote 12] These events, while out of
Page 436 U. S. 761
the ordinary, are not so extraordinary as to compel disbelief in
their occurrence. Even the Board of Immigration Appeals, which
rejected petitioner's claim of citizenship, stated that "[i]t is
not beyond the realm of possibility that [petitioner's] claim to
United States citizenship is legitimate." Pet. for Cert. viii.
Since the documentary evidence submitted by the Service would be
refuted by the testimony of petitioner's witnesses if that
testimony were accepted by the trier of fact,
ibid., there
is plainly a genuine issue of material fact for the District Court
on the question of petitioner's citizenship. Although as the trier
of fact the District Court might reject the testimony of these
witnesses because of their interest in the outcome, that
determination has been committed by Congress to the district courts
by § 106(a)(5)(b) of the Act, and not to the courts of
appeals. The decision of the Court of Appeals must therefore be
reversed and the case remanded for proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
After petitioner's first set of hearings, an Immigration Judge
issued a deportation order, App. 18, which petitioner then appealed
to the Board of Immigration Appeals. The Board remanded to permit
the Immigration Judge to consider petitioner's claim that he was
entitled to relief from deportation pursuant to § 241(f), 8
U.S.C. § 1251(f) (1976 ed.), as the husband of a United States
citizen, but did not consider petitioner's other challenges to the
finding that he was deportable. App. 19-20. At the hearing on
remand, the Service lodged an additional charge against petitioner
alleging that he was deportable because he had been convicted of
crimes of moral turpitude. The Immigration Judge adhered to his
finding that petitioner was deportable and not entitled to relief
under § 241(f). Record 677-691. On petitioner's second appeal,
the Board again remanded for a further determination of
petitioner's eligibility for § 241(f) relief and to permit
petitioner to produce certain witnesses in support of his claim to
United States citizenship. Record 628-633. The deportation order
challenged here was issued after petitioner's third set of
hearings, App. 23-59, and the Board affirmed the order. Pet. for
Cert. iv-xiii.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 106(a)(5), as set forth in 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a)(5)
(1976 ed.), provides:
"[W]henever any petitioner, who seeks review of an order under
this section, claims to be a national of the United States and
makes a showing that his claim is not frivolous, the court shall
(A) pass upon the issues presented when it appears from the
pleadings and affidavits filed by the parties that no genuine issue
of material fact is presented; or (b) where a genuine issue of
material fact as to the petitioner's nationality is presented,
transfer the proceedings to a United States district court for the
district where the petitioner has his residence for hearing
de
novo of the nationality claim and determination as if such
proceedings were originally initiated in the district court under
the provisions of section 2201 of title 28. Any such petitioner
shall not be entitled to have such issue determined under section
1503(a) of this title or otherwise. . . ."
[
Footnote 3]
Prior to 1961, there was no specific statutory authorization for
judicial review of deportation orders. For many years, habeas
corpus had been the exclusive judicial remedy for challenging such
orders,
see Heikkila v. Barber, 345 U.
S. 229,
345 U. S. 235
(1953), but, in 1955, we held that aliens could also obtain review
of deportation orders in actions for declaratory and injunctive
relief in district court under § 10 of the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702 (1976 ed.),
Shaughnessy v.
Pedreiro, 349 U. S. 48.
[
Footnote 4]
In addition to showing the existence of a "genuine issue of
material fact" as to his nationality, a petitioner must demonstrate
that his citizenship claim is not "frivolous" to obtain a
de
novo hearing. § 106(a)(5). The "frivolousness" standard
apparently refers to the merits of the legal theory underlying the
citizenship claim. A "frivolous" claim would be analogous to one
that could not survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a
claim upon which relief can be granted under Fed.Rule Civ.Proc.
12(b)(6). No one has suggested that the legal theory underlying
petitioner's claim to American citizenship -- that he was born in
this country -- is frivolous.
[
Footnote 5]
In addition to holding that petitioner had not satisfied the
standard of
Kessler v. Strecker, the Court of Appeals held
that petitioner had not made a "colorable" claim to United States
citizenship. The dissenting judge stated that she was unable to say
that petitioner's claim was not "colorable." The term "colorable"
appears nowhere in the statute, and neither opinion hints at its
derivation. We cannot tell whether, by use of the word "colorable,"
the Court of Appeals was applying the proper standard as set forth
in § 106(a)(5); if it was applying that standard, we believe
it did so erroneously.
See 436 U. S.
infra.
[
Footnote 6]
None of the other Courts of Appeals to apply the standard have
held that "substantial evidence" is necessary to trigger
de
novo review under § 106(a)(5)(B). Instead, they have all
indicated, although with some variation in language, that the
appropriate standard is whether there is a genuine issue of
material fact as to petitioner's alienage.
See Olvera v.
Immigration & Naturalization Service, 504 F.2d 1372, 1375
(CA5 1974);
Rassano v. Immigration & Naturalization
Service, 377 F.2d 971, 972 (CA7 1966);
Maroon v.
Immigration & Naturalization Service, 364 F.2d 982, 989
(CA8 1966);
Pignatello v. Attorney General of the United
States, 350 F.2d 719, 723 (CA2 1965).
[
Footnote 7]
Section 106 was designed to minimize dilatory and repetitious
litigation of deportation orders in several key respects. First,
§ 106(c) precludes consideration of petitions for review or
for habeas corpus where the validity of the deportation order
"has been previously determined in any civil or criminal
proceeding, unless the petition presents grounds which the court
finds could not have been presented in such prior proceeding, or
the court finds that the remedy provided by such prior proceeding
was inadequate or ineffective to test the validity of the
order."
8 U.S.C. § 1105a(c) (1976 ed.). Second, § 106(a)(1)
mandates that all petitions for review must be filed within six
months of the date of the final deportation order. 8 U.S.C. §
1105a(a)(1) (1976 ed.). Finally, the statutory review proceeding
replaces review in the district court under § 10 of the
Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702 (1976 ed.), with
review directly in the courts of appeals. 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a)
(1976 ed.).
See supra at
436 U. S.
752-753.
[
Footnote 8]
Petitioner and the Pianettis testified that the name Vincenzo Di
Paola was probably chosen because July 17 was the feast day for
Saint Vincent.
[
Footnote 9]
Salvatore Agosto was sometimes referred to in the deportation
proceedings as Arcangelo Agosto. Petitioner claimed they were
different names for the same man who used one name with his wife,
Carmela Todaro, and one name with Angela Porello.
[
Footnote 10]
Petitioner maintained, in connection with a suit to declare his
third wife his lawful wife, that he had been only 17 at the time of
an earlier marriage in 1944, though in the deportation proceedings
he claimed to have been born no later than 1925. In an effort to
obtain leniency at his sentencing for falsification of papers in
connection with a Federal Housing Administration loan, petitioner
permitted his attorney to represent to the court that petitioner
had no prior convictions, even though he did at that time have a
criminal record in Italy.
[
Footnote 11]
For example, Carmen Ripolino testified that he did not know who
his father was, and that he had two birth certificates, one showing
his father as Giacomo Ripolino (the man who brought Angela Porello
to this country) and a second showing his father to be one Charles
Litizia. In addition, the Pianettis testified to the varied
relationships Mrs. Pianetti's sister, Angela Porello, maintained
with different men and to her departure from Italy with one of
those men, leaving behind a husband and two daughters. Although the
Service may not have challenged this other testimony because it was
immaterial to the issue of petitioner's citizenship, its lack of
materiality and its unflattering character also suggest that the
witnesses would have had no reason to testify to those events if
they had not occurred.
[
Footnote 12]
Since only the registrar signed the entry in the registry of
births regarding the birth of Vincenzo Di Paola and the witnesses
who were present were unable to write and only had the document
read to them, it is certainly not entirely implausible that
Angela's father was able to have that record and the notation at
the foundling home falsified.
MR. JUSTICE POWELL, with whom MR. JUSTICE REHNQUIST joins,
dissenting.
The Court today has construed a statute in a way that rewards
falsehood and frustrates justice. The statute is § 106(a) of
the Immigration and Naturalization Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1105a(a)
(1976 ed.), adopted in 1961 as part of a general revision of the
statutory provisions governing judicial review of deportation
orders. The general revision was designed to prevent repetitious
litigation of frivolous claims, and "dilatory tactics" used to
forestall deportation, by eliminating in most instances any review
by district courts of deportation decisions.
Foti v. INS,
375 U. S. 217,
375 U. S.
224-225 (1963). [
Footnote
2/1]
Page 436 U. S. 762
The general rule under § 106(a) leaves deportation matters
largely to administrative proceedings, subject to review by a court
of appeals to ensure that the administrative decision is supported
by "reasonable, substantial, and probative evidence on the record
considered as a whole." 8 U.S.C. § 1106(a)(4) (1876 ed.).
Section 106(a)(5), quoted
ante at
436 U. S.
751-752, n. 2, provides a narrow exception to the
general rule when the deportation proceeding involves a person
claiming to be a national of the United States. In such a
proceeding, § 106(a)(5) requires a reviewing court of appeals
to refer the case to a district court for a
de novo trial
when the claimant clears two hurdles: first, he must show that his
claim to United States citizenship is not "frivolous," and then
that its resolution turns on "a genuine issue of material fact." As
indicated in the Court's opinion, the statute is hardly a model of
artful draftsmanship. Even so, it is unnecessary to construe it, as
the Court does, to require a trial
de novo in federal
district court in response to any asserted claim to citizenship
turning on questions of "credibility," however far-fetched.
There can be no case less deserving of further factual review
than this one. Petitioner is an ex-convict, convicted of several
crimes involving moral turpitude. He has told five different
stories with respect to his nationality, inventing new fabrications
to meet the Service's evidence or whenever they served other
purposes.
See ante at
436 U. S. 759
n. 10. No one has believed his stories. Yet he has proved himself a
master at exploiting the safeguards designed to vindicate bona fide
-- not specious -- claims of citizenship. The Court's holding
totally frustrates the intent of Congress in enacting §
106(a), in response to the
"growing frequency of judicial actions being instituted by
undesirable aliens whose cases have no legal basis or merit, but
which are brought solely for the purpose of preventing or delaying
indefinitely their deportation
Page 436 U. S. 763
from this country."
H.R.Rep. No. 1086, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., 22-23 (1961). Rather
than putting an end to this abuse of our generous procedures, the
Court now concludes that petitioner is entitled to a
de
novo trial of a claim to citizenship so transparently false
that none of the numerous judges who have passed on it believes
it.
I
The Immigration Service claims that petitioner is an Italian by
birth named Vincenzo Di Paola Pianetti, and that he is deportable
because his most recent entry into the United States was fraudulent
and because he has been convicted of crimes involving moral
turpitude. The Service claims that petitioner last entered the
United States in 1966, purporting to be a citizen of the United
States and relying on the passport of Joseph Agosto. Petitioner
claims he was born in Cleveland, Ohio, assigning various dates of
birth from 1921 to 1927, and was named Joseph Agosto; that he was
sent to Italy when he was 2 or 3 years old; that he lived there
with his natural mother's sister and her husband, who later
"affiliated" him and gave him their name; and that he returned to
the United States in 1951 or 1952. The issue ultimately is one of
identity. If petitioner is "Agosto," rather than "Pianetti," he is
an American citizen. During the course of the instant proceedings,
commenced in 1967, not a single administrative or judicial official
has believed that petitioner is not the Italian-born Pianetti.
The proceedings in this case have been protracted. On September
5, 1967, the Service issued a show-cause order, and notice of
hearing, seeking petitioner's deportation. A full hearing was held
before an Immigration Judge. The Service introduced documentary
evidence demonstrating that petitioner was born, taken to a
foundling home, and baptized in Agrigento, Italy, in 1927, and
later was entrusted to the Pianettis.
See ante at
436 U. S. 757.
The Service also demonstrated
Page 436 U. S. 764
that petitioner was married to an Italian woman in 1944 and had
two daughters in Italy. At this first hearing, petitioner conceded
that the documentary evidence pertained to him, but claimed that he
really had been born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1921, and was named
Joseph Agosto. Petitioner produced a marriage certificate showing
that he was married in Alaska in 1953, and that he claimed at the
time to be 32 years old and not previously married. Petitioner
testified that he was sent to Italy when he was 4 or 5, and that
his belief that he was born in Cleveland was based entirely on the
birth certificate which an uncle sent him from the United States.
The Service countered with documentary evidence that the birth
certificate pertained to a Joseph Agosto who had been born in
Cleveland in 1921 and died in Italy in 1951, and an affidavit from
Joseph Agosto's sister that petitioner falsely was using the
identity of her deceased brother.
The Immigration Judge sustained the charge of the Service and
entered a deportation order. He concluded that petitioner
"presented no credible evidence to show that he is not the person
[Pianetti] whom the Government claims him to be." App. 14. On
appeal, the Board of Immigration Appeals remanded the proceedings,
"without reviewing the case on the merits," for the Immigration
Judge to consider petitioner's contention that he was nondeportable
under § 241(f) of the Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1251(f) (1976 ed.),
because of his marriage to an American citizen, Mary Marie Agosto.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Following a second hearing, the Immigration Judge again found
petitioner not a citizen, deportable (not only because he had
entered the United States without inspection but also
Page 436 U. S. 765
because he had been convicted of several crimes involving moral
turpitude), and not entitled to relief under § 241(f). Again
petitioner appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals. On this
appeal, petitioner conceded that a Joseph Agosto died in Italy in
1951, but maintained that there were "two Joseph Agostos," both
born in Cleveland of the same father but different mothers.
Petitioner explained the fact of only one birth certificate by
saying that his mother had been the father's mistress, and that the
birth of the legitimate Joseph Agosto had not been recorded. The
Board again declined to reach the merits of petitioner's claim to
citizenship and remanded for consideration of "forgiveness" relief
under § 241(f).
It was not until the third hearing, in 1971, that petitioner
produced three witnesses, the couple who adopted him in Italy and
his supposed half-brother from Ohio, who testified in support of
petitioner's claim to citizenship. Petitioner abandoned his other
stories of birth in 1921 or 1927, and maintained that he was born
in Cleveland in 1924, the son of the father of the Joseph Agosto
who was born in 1921. On April 11, 1973, the Immigration Judge
filed an exhaustive opinion concluding that all of petitioner's
various and contradictory stories were fabrications. App. 23-59.
The opinion characterized petitioner as having had, since "he was
sixteen years of age, . . . a record of deceit, double-dealing and
subterfuge."
Id. at 32. The Board of Immigration Appeals
affirmed. In the context of affirming the denial of discretionary
relief from deportation, it observed that petitioner "knowingly
gave false testimony before the immigration judge; his claim to
citizenship has been knowingly false since its inception." Pet. for
Cert. xii.
Having finally exhausted his administrative remedies, petitioner
appealed to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit. That court issued its memorandum decision on January 24,
1977, and sustained the deportation decision, saying:
Page 436 U. S. 766
"The evidence presented to the immigration judge does not
disclose a colorable claim to United States nationality; nor does
it meet the standard set forth in
Kessler v. Strecker,
307 U. S.
22,
307 U. S. 35 (1939)."
Id. at ii.
We granted certiorari on October 1, 1977. 434 U.S. 901. Today
the Court hands down a decision entitling petitioner to continue
his 11-year saga, commencing with a trial
de novo in a
district court.
II
The first flaw in the Court's reasoning is that it reads out of
the statute the threshold requirement that the claim to United
States nationality not be "frivolous." The Court muses in a
footnote, without support, that "[t]he
frivolousness' standard
apparently refers to the merits of the legal theory underlying the
citizenship claim," ante at 436 U. S. 754
n. 4, and therefore has been satisfied in this case because
petitioner's theory of citizenship -- that he was born in this
country -- is not frivolous.
Neither the language of the statute nor its legislative history
sheds any helpful light on the intended meaning of the term
"frivolous" for purposes of this statute. [
Footnote 2/3] The term may well refer in some instances
to the underlying legal theory of a claim. But to say that this is
the exclusive meaning is virtually to read the term out of the
statute. If all that is required for a claim to be considered
nonfrivolous is that the alleged alien maintain that he was born in
this country, patently frivolous claims will pass the first
threshold of the statute. [
Footnote
2/4] If Congress thought that every claim to birth
Page 436 U. S. 767
in this country, however tenuous, merited judicial
trial, rather than judicial
review, one would
assume it would have so provided, rather than create a dual system
of
de novo factfinding by both administrative and judicial
proceedings. In addition, the legal theory underlying
any
claim to citizenship almost always will be that the purported
citizen was born or naturalized in the United States. According to
the Court's theory, therefore, the underlying legal theory of a
claim to citizenship rarely will be deemed "frivolous."
We normally construe statutes to give meaning to each of their
components. I read Congress' intent to have been that the courts of
appeals must examine the administrative record to determine whether
a claim to citizenship is frivolous for any reason. [
Footnote 2/5] And it would be difficult to
find a more frivolous claim to citizenship than this one. [
Footnote 2/6]
III
Assuming,
arguendo, that petitioner's claim is not
frivolous, the Court of Appeals was required to transfer the case
to a
Page 436 U. S. 768
district court for a
de novo hearing only if it
concluded that a "genuine issue of material fact" existed. The
Court today, applying the standard governing summary judgment in
the federal courts, concludes that a genuine issue of material fact
exists here because
"the citizenship claim is supported by the testimony of three
witnesses whose story, while highly unusual, certainly cannot be
rejected as a matter of law."
Ante at
436 U. S. 760.
The fallacy in this holding is twofold. First, it applies an
erroneous standard. The Court assumes that Congress meant to import
the summary judgment standard into an entirely different statutory
scheme, simply because the same words appear in both contexts.
While this is a superficially appealing approach, it abdicates our
responsibility to construe the statute in light of its origin and
purpose. The second flaw in the Court's holding lies in its
incorrect application of the summary judgment standard itself.
A
Section 106(a)(5) apparently was enacted in order to satisfy the
constitutional requirement, first enunciated in
Ng Fung Ho v.
White, 259 U. S. 276
(1922), that a resident who claims to be a United States citizen
and supports the claim with the requisite quantum of proof is
entitled to a judicial determination of his claim to citizenship.
Id. at
259 U. S.
282-285;
see H.R.Rep. No. 1086, 87th Cong., 1st
Sess., 29 (1961). The Court held that two of the petitioners in
Ng Fung Ho were entitled to a
de novo judicial
determination of their citizenship claim because they "supported
the claim by evidence sufficient, if believed, to entitle them to a
finding of citizenship." [
Footnote
2/7] 259 U.S. at
259 U. S.
282.
Page 436 U. S. 769
The standard of proof required by
Ng Fung Ho for a
judicial hearing was restated in two later cases, both decided
before the enactment of § 106(a)(5). In
United States ex
rel. Bilokumsky v. Tod, 263 U. S. 149
(1923) -- which, like
Ng Fung Ho, was written by Mr.
Justice Brandeis -- no claim to citizenship had been made. The
Court observed, however, that,
"[i]f, in the deportation proceedings, Bilokumsky had claimed
that he was a citizen
and had supported the claim by
substantial evidence, he would have been entitled to have his
status finally determined by a judicial, as distinguished from an
executive, tribunal."
263 U.S. at
263 U. S. 152
(citing
Ng Fung Ho, supra) (emphasis supplied). In
Kessler v. Strecker, 307 U. S. 22,
307 U. S. 335
(1939), the Court again observed, citing
Bilokumsky, that
an alien is entitled to a trial
de novo on claim of
citizenship if supported by "substantial evidence." It is clear,
therefore, that the constitutional requirement of a
de
novo judicial hearing is triggered only if the person claiming
citizenship provides some substantial evidentiary support for his
claim.
The Court's conclusion that Congress intended to set a lower
standard in § 106(a)(5) is not supported by the legislative
history. The Court acknowledges, but disregards, the fact that the
House Reports antedating enactment of § 106(a)(5) contain
repeated references to "substantial" and "genuine" claims to
citizenship.
See ante at
436 U. S. 755;
see also H.R.Rep. No. 1086,
supra at 28; H.R.Rep.
No. 565, 87th Cong.,
Page 436 U. S. 770
1st Sess., 13, 15 (1961). In each of these Reports, the
reference to "a substantial claim of U.S. nationality" immediately
precedes the observation that the statute was meant to satisfy the
constitutional requirement articulated in
Ng Fung Ho.
In the face of this unequivocal evidence of legislative intent,
the Court errs in concluding that Congress meant to depart from the
evidentiary standard stated in
Ng Fun Ho, as interpreted
in
Bilokumsky and
Kessler. The Court then
compounds its error by holding that § 106(a)(5) places a court
of appeals, in reviewing a decision of the Board of Immigration
Appeals, in the position of a district court ruling upon a motion
for summary judgment at the outset of a trial. Fed.Rule Civ.Proc.
56(c). Although there is congruity in the "genuine issue of
material fact" language, found in both § 106(a)(5) and Rule
56(c), there is a controlling difference in the settings in which
this language is used.
In the usual civil trial, the summary judgment motion is
entertained before any hearing has taken place. If sustained, it
forecloses all opportunity for the opposing party to present his
case before the finder of fact. Subject to appeal, a decision in
favor of the movant in effect deprives his opponent of a trial on
the facts. The situation to which § 106(a)(5) applies simply
is not comparable. That section is part of an elaborate
administrative procedure in which a claimant may present fully his
evidence to an Immigration Judge and then have it reviewed by the
Board of Immigration Appeals. There is no summary judgment
procedure under the Act and, consequently, no danger that a
claimant will be denied a full evidentiary hearing. In this
respect, the standard contained in § 106(a)(5) is more like
the standard governing directed verdicts, Fed.Rule Civ.Proc. 50,
than summary judgments. [
Footnote
2/8]
Page 436 U. S. 771
Although the Court of Appeals in this case itself did not
observe the witnesses who testified on petitioner's behalf, it was
not required to ignore completely the unequivocal opinion of the
Immigration Judge that petitioner's witnesses had been "coached as
to their testimony," Pet. for Cert. viii;
see App. 41, and
that their stories were fabrications. Even if the Court of Appeals
was not in as good a position to judge these matters as a judge
ruling on a motion for directed verdict, neither was it as
constricted as a judge ruling on a motion for summary judgment. As
both motions are governed by the "genuine issue of material fact"
standard, there is no reason to adopt the more restrictive, but
less appropriate, analogy. [
Footnote
2/9]
This case illustrates forcefully the inappropriateness of the
summary judgment analogy. Petitioner has had three evidentiary
hearings before an Immigration Judge, three appellate reviews by
the Board of Immigration Appeals, and one review
Page 436 U. S. 772
each by the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit and the
United States Supreme Court. One normally would expect that, at the
end of this elaborate sequence of hearings and reviews, the case
would be concluded. Instead, the Court launches petitioner's
litigation anew, bowing to a form of words, rather than the
substance of justice. All that has occurred -- the entire sequence
of eight proceedings -- is merely prologue. Petitioner's case now
starts afresh in a district court in the same way that any civil
litigation would commence. He is free to change his testimony --
again -- and to round up new witnesses who will swear to it. If he
loses once more, he will have an appeal as of right to the Court of
Appeals; from there, he may file another petition for certiorari.
This additional round of proceedings probably will take several
years. Meanwhile, petitioner will continue to enjoy the privileges
of American citizenship that he has consistently abused.
B
Even if one assumes with the Court that the summary judgment
analogy is appropriate, today's decision still is untenable. Under
Rule 56(c) itself, there must be a degree of substantiality to the
evidence proffered in opposition to a summary judgment motion if
the motion is to be defeated.
See Firemen's Mutual Ins. Co. v.
Aponaug Mfg. Co., 149 F.2d 359, 362 (CA5 1945);
Whitaker
v. Coleman, 115 F.2d 305, 306 (CA5 1940); 10 C. Wright &
A. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2725, p. 512
(1973); 6 J. Moore, Federal Practice � 56.15[4], p. 56-521
(2d ed.1976).
See also Maroon v. Immigration &
Naturalization Service, 364 F.2d 982, 989 (CA8 1966). A court
never is required to accept evidence that is inherently incredible
or "
too incredible to be accepted by reasonable minds.'"
[Footnote 2/10] 6 Moore,
supra at 56-621.
Page 436 U. S. 773
I believe petitioner's evidence reasonably cannot be viewed in
any other light. [
Footnote
2/11]
In concluding that there is a "genuine issue of material fact"
presented on this record, under the standard applicable to a
summary judgment motion, the Court relies primarily on the
testimony of petitioner's adoptive parents and supposed half
brother, presented for the first time at petitioner's third hearing
before the Immigration Judge. In effect, the Court applies the
summary judgment standard as if the only testimony on the record
were that adduced at the third hearing. But if the summary judgment
standard is to be applied, it is necessary to view the evidence
submitted by petitioner in its totality -- as if petitioner, in
contesting a summary judgment motion, had submitted three sets of
depositions containing precisely the same evidence presented by him
at the three administrative hearings. A district court then would
be confronted with three significantly different stories, each
sworn to by petitioner, one belatedly corroborated by his coached
kinsmen, and all of them contradicted by authenticated documentary
evidence. I doubt that any district court would find petitioner's
evidence sufficient, viewed in its totality, to defeat a motion for
summary judgment.
Page 436 U. S. 774
IV
However one may read the unclear language of § 106(a)(5),
it is at least clear that Congress did not intend duplicate
judicial proceedings to follow administrative proceedings simply
upon demand. If all that § 106(a)(5) requires is a swearing
contest -- even when the Government's case is predicated on
documents whose authenticity is uncontested -- then every subject
of deportation proceedings has it within his power to circumvent
the obvious intention of the statutory scheme to minimize dilatory
tactics by deportable aliens. The Court today has opened wide this
inviting door.
[
Footnote 2/1]
"[B]y eliminating review in the district courts, the bill [was
intended to] obviate one of the primary causes of delay in the
final determination of all questions which may arise in a
deportation proceeding."
104 Cong.Rec. 17173 (1958) (remarks of Rep. Walter), quoted in
Foti v. INS, 375 U.S. at
375 U. S. 225
n. 11.
[
Footnote 2/2]
On June 3, 1968, in connection with a friendly suit to have Mary
Marie Agosto declared his legal wife, petitioner executed an
affidavit which contradicted the story told at the first
deportation hearing. The affidavit stated that petitioner was born
in 1927, and therefore was only 17 when he married his Italian wife
in 1944. This would have rendered his first marriage invalid, and
would have validated his American marriage.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The origin of the term in this context seems to have been
Ng
Fung Ho v. White, 259 U. S. 276
(1922), where the Court articulated the constitutional requirement
of a judicial hearing when the petitioner "claims citizenship and
makes a showing that his claim is not frivolous. . . ."
Id. at
259 U. S. 284.
The threshold requirement that the claim not be frivolous was
absent from one of the earlier drafts of § 106(a)(5).
See H.R.Rep. No. 2478, 85th Cong., 2d Sess., 1 (1958).
[
Footnote 2/4]
Petitioner himself does not argue that a "frivolous" claim to
citizenship can only be one whose underlying legal theory is
frivolous. Petitioner's counsel conceded before us that, if there
were uncontested documentary evidence of birth in Italy and only
the alien's sworn statement that he was born in the United States,
"that would be a frivolous claim, because [the hypothetical case]
is really a bare assertion of citizenship without any evidentiary
support at all." Tr. of Oral Arg. 10.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The courts of appeals are accustomed to determining whether
in forma pauperis appeals from denials of habeas corpus
petitions are "frivolous," and therefore warrant dismissal, under
28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). Whether such an appeal is considered
"frivolous" may depend on either the legal theory or the facts of
the case.
[
Footnote 2/6]
In
Maroon v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
364 F.2d 982 (CA8 1966), the alleged alien -- somewhat like
petitioner here -- changed his story between the deportation
proceedings and judicial review, in the face of solid contrary
documentation offered by the Service. The Court of Appeals
concluded:
"In this situation, petitioner's present claim to be a national
of the United States, wholly unsupported by any substantial
evidence whatever, and utterly inconsistent with the documents
admittedly executed by him, would appear to be
frivolous."
Id. at 98 (emphasis supplied).
[
Footnote 2/7]
In
Ng Fung Ho, two of the petitioners' claims of
citizenship apparently were not contradicted by independent
evidence presented by the Government. Rather, the petitioners had
entered the United States lawfully, as the foreign-born sons of a
naturalized United States citizen, and therefore as citizens
themselves, and had been issued "certificates of identity." Later,
when immigration officials came to suspect perjury in the earlier
proceedings, they sought to deport the petitioners. The petitioners
argued in this Court that the immigration authorities had not
presented any "real substantial evidence to support them in
attempting . . . to set aside the former finding of American
citizenship. . . ." Brief for Petitioners in
Ng Fung Ho v.
White, O.T. 1921, No. 176, p. 33. Thus the determination of
citizenship in
Ng Fung Ho depended entirely on whether the
evidence of the petitioners was believed by the factfinder or
disbelieved because of the Service's attempt to discredit it.
Perhaps this explains the Court's use of the "sufficient, if
believed" language.
[
Footnote 2/8]
When a part moves for a directed verdict, he does so after the
evidence is in. This is comparable to the situation confronting a
court of appeals in a case like this. The formulation of the
standard governing summary judgments and directed verdicts is the
same with respect to the "genuine issue" rule: "Both motions . . .
call upon the court to make basically the same determination --
that there is no genuine issue of fact and that the moving party is
entitled to prevail as a matter of law." 10 C. Wright & A.
Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2713, p. 407
(1973). Yet a major difference between summary judgment and
directed verdict is that credibility determinations may enter into
the latter, but not the former. Unlike a summary judgment
motion,
"a directed verdict motion typically would be made after the
witness had testified and the court could take account of the
possibility that he either could not be disbelieved or believed by
the jury."
Id. at 406.
[
Footnote 2/9]
In addition, the Court substitutes its "genuine issue" standard
for that used even by some of the Courts of Appeals in cases cited
by the Court with approval. For example, in
Rassano v.
Immigration & Naturalization Service, 377 F.2d 971 (CA7
1967), the petitioner and three supporting witnesses testified that
the petitioner's father said he had been naturalized, and that both
father and son were citizens. They were unable to produce the
naturalization papers or to testify that they had seen them. The
court held that the evidence was insufficient to raise a genuine
issue of material fact, in part because of the untrustworthiness of
the testimony. While the
Rassano court used the standard
of "genuine issue of material fact," in conformity with the
statutory language, it surely did not use the summary judgment
standard endorsed by the Court today.
[
Footnote 2/10]
And while the facts must be viewed in the light most favorable
to the party opposing summary judgment, this means no more than
that
"the party opposing a summary judgment motion is to be given the
benefit of all
reasonable doubts and inferences in
determining whether a genuine issue exists that justifies
proceeding to trial."
10 Wright & Miller,
supra at 510 (emphasis
supplied).
[
Footnote 2/11]
The Board of Immigration Appeals did say: "It is not beyond the
realm of possibility that [petitioner's] claim to United States
citizenship is legitimate." Pet. for Cert. viii. But the rest of
the Board's statements place this one in perspective. Immediately
following its acknowledgment that petitioner's claim was not
demonstrably impossible, the Board observed that it would have to
accept a number of illogical and unrealistic propositions in order
to accept petitioner's most recent story. In essence, the Board
made clear that the story could not be accepted by reasonable
minds; and it concluded ultimately that petitioner's claim to
citizenship "[had] been knowingly false since its inception."
Id. at xii.