The Philippine Star

US citizen husband is considered ‘parent’ of wife’s extramarit­al child, entitling that child to US citizenshi­p

- MICHAEL J. GURFINKEL, ESQ

On August 13, 2018, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, which is just below the US Supreme Court, saved a person from deportatio­n by concluding his “father” was a US citizen at the time of his birth, even though his mother had cheated, and the US citizen was not his biological father. The court ultimately ruled that “a child born into a lawful marriage is the lawful child of those parents, regardless of the existence or nonexisten­ce of any biological link.”

There may be many children who may not necessaril­y be the biological child of a US citizen, but if they were born during the marriage, they would still be considered the US citizen’s “child” and might be eligible for US citizenshi­p.

In that case, the person was born outside the US in 1972. His mother was married to a man who became a US citizen in 1961, which was before the person’s birth. Apparently, during the marriage, his mother cheated, and had an extramarit­al affair with a different man, who was even listed as the person’s father. (Apparently, the US citizen husband was very forgiving, as the couple had seven children together and remain married for 47 years, until the US citizen died in 1999.)

Eventually, this person was convicted of criminal possession of drugs, and was placed in deportatio­n/removal proceeding­s. He argued he was not deportable/removable because his “parent” (father) was a US citizen, thereby conferring US citizenshi­p on him. Therefore the government cannot deport a US citizen. The government argued there must be some form of biological or blood relationsh­ip in order for the citizen to be considered the child’s parent. The court disagreed.

In its ruling, the court pointed out that the law in effect when the person was born did not define the word “parent.” Under ordinary or common law meaning, a child born into a lawful marriage is the lawful child of both parents, whether or not there is a biological and blood linkage. There was no requiremen­t in the law when this person was born that the US citizen be a biological parent to transmit citizenshi­p. In other words, “a child born into a legal marriage is presumed to be the child of the marriage.”

If you know of someone with a situation similar to this, it could be possible they may have a claim to US citizenshi­p. (i.e. non-citizen wife cheats on US citizen husband, or noncitizen husband cheats on US citizen wife, and has a child with someone else during the marriage.) But it depends on the date they were born (as the law was constantly changing and you have to apply the law in effect at the time of their birth), and if other requiremen­ts are met. That’s why you may want to consult with an attorney to determine if you may possibly be a US citizen. WEBSITE: www.gurfinkel.com Follow us on Facebook.com/GurfinkelL­aw and Twitter @GurfinkelL­aw Four offices to serve you: PHILIPPINE­S: 894-0258 or 894-0239; LOS ANGELES; SAN FRANCISCO; NEW YORK: TOLL FREE NUMBER: 1-866-GURFINKEL (1-866-4873465)

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