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Abstract

Argument: Tuesday, November 4, 1997
Decision: Wednesday, April 22, 1998
Issues: Civil Rights, Rights of Illegitimates

Advocates

Edwin S. Kneedler (Argued the cause for the respondent)
Donald R. Patterson (Argued the cause for the petitioner)

Facts of the Case

Lorelyn Miller was born in the Philippines, in 1970, to a Filipino national woman and an American soldier. Her parents were never married. In 1992, after the State Department rejected her first application for U.S. citizenship, Miller reapplied when a Texas court granted her father's petition for a paternity decree declaring him her father. When the State Department rejected her citizenship application again, claiming that 8 U.S.C. Section 1409(a) required foreign born illegitimate children of American fathers to be legitimated before age 18, Miller challenged the refusal. She claimed that since Section 1409(c) established at birth the citizenship of an illegitimate foreign-born child whose mother was an American citizen, the State Department's refusal to do the same under Section 1409(a), when the father is an American citizen, was unconstitutional. On appeal from an appellate court's decision to affirm the lower court's dismissal of the case, the Supreme Court granted Miller certiorari.

Question

Does 8 U.S.C. Section 1409, establishing upon birth the U.S. citizenship of illegitimate foreign-born children whose mothers only are U.S. citizens but failing to do the same if only their fathers are U.S. citizens, violate the Fifth Amendment's equal protection guarantees?

Conclusion

No. After ruling that Miller had standing to challenge the constitutionality of a federal statute, the Court held that 8 U.S.C. Section 1409 did not violate the Equal Protection Clause. The Court reasoned that different treatment of mothers and fathers of out-of-wedlock children was justified since the two parents are not "similarly situated." While the child's relationship with its father may be undisclosed for several years, its blood relationship to its mother is usually apparent through hospital records. Moreover, whereas birth mothers will know immediately of their child's existence, birth fathers and their children may never know each other. The statutory requirement that a child born out of wedlock to a citizen father obtain formal proof of paternity by age 18, either through legitimization, written acknowledgment by the father under oath, or adjudication by a competent court, is well tailored to address the difficulties of establishing a child's citizenship based only on the relation to the father.

Supreme Court Justice Opinions and Votes (by Ideology)

Sort by Seniority
(More information here)
Decision: 6 votes for Albright, 3 vote(s) against
Legal Provision: Immigration and Naturalization, Immigration, Nationality, or Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Acts, as amended
Wrote the judgment of the Court
Stevens
Wrote a dissent, joined Breyer's dissent
Ginsburg
Wrote a dissent, joined Ginsburg's dissent
Breyer
Voted with the minority, joined Ginsburg's dissent, joined Breyer's dissent
Souter
Voted with the majority, joined O'Connor's concurrence
Kennedy
Wrote a special concurrence
O'Connor
Voted with the majority
Rehnquist
Wrote a special concurrence
Scalia
Voted with the majority, joined Scalia's concurrence
Thomas
Judgment of the Court by Justice John Paul Stevens

Cite this page

The Oyez Project, Miller v. Albright, 523 U.S. 420 (1998),
available at: <http://www.oyez.org/cases/1990-1999/1997/1997_96_1060/>
(last visited ).