AMENDED ORDER
I. INTRODUCTION
Defendants denied plaintiff a United States passport on the ground that plaintiff is not a United States citizen. Plaintiff, whose mother was an American citizen, argues that the applicable statute, which grants citizenship to the foreign-born offspring of male American citizens but not female American citizens, violates her right to the equal protection of the laws.
There is no dispute as to the relevant facts. The parties have filed cross motions for summary judgment.
II. BACKGROUND
The plaintiff’s mother, Bertha Dirksen, was born a United States citizen in Nebraska in 1889. Some time between 1900 and 1910, Ms. Dirksen moved to Canada. She *244 married a Canadian citizen, plaintiffs father, in Canada in 1910. The plaintiff was born in Canada in 1921.
The plaintiffs father died in 1964. Ms. Dirksen visited the United States throughout her life before passing away in 1969.
Plaintiff applied for a United States passport on October 2,1987. The State Department denied her request on the ground that she is not a United States citizen. Plaintiff exhausted her administrative remedies and commenced this action. She challenges the State Department’s determination that she is not a United States citizen.
III. DISCUSSION
A. Introduction
The Supreme Court in
Rogers v. Bellei,
Article I, section 8, paragraph 4 of the Constitution gives Congress the power “[t]o establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization .... ” Congress exercised this power by providing in Section 1993 of the Revised Statute of 1874 (hereinafter “statute”) that
[a]ll children heretofore born or thereafter born out of the limits and jurisdiction of the United States, whose fathers were or may be at the time of their birth citizens thereof, are declared to be citizens of the United States; but the rights of citizenship shall not descend to children whose fathers never resided in the United States.
Under section 1993, only a United States citizen-father could transmit United States citizenship to a child born outside of the United States; a United States citizen mother could not. Congress amended section 1993 via the Act of May 24, 1934, 48 Stat. 797, to provide that either parent could transmit his or her United States citizenship to foreign born offspring. The 1934 Act was not retroactive, however. 1
In the instant case, Section 1993 — the statute then in effect — does not provide Ms. Elias with American citizenship. Even though Ms. Elias would be awarded citizenship if her father rather than her mother were a citizen, the statute makes Ms. Dirk-sen’s United States citizenship irrelevant. Under its terms, Ms. Dirksen is not allowed to pass on her citizenship to her daughter even though a male in her position could.
Plaintiff attacks the constitutionality of section 1993 on both her own and her mother’s behalf. In addition to claiming that she is deprived the equal protection of the laws, plaintiff on behalf of Ms. Dirksen asserts that the statute discriminates against female United States citizens because it allows citizen fathers but not citizen mothers to pass on their citizenship to their foreign-born offspring.
B. The Non-Citizen Challenge
At the outset, we recognize that we apply a significantly different standard of review to the claims of an unadmitted alien than to the challenge of a United States citizen. The Supreme Court has stated clearly that “an unadmitted and non-resident alien [has] no constitutional right of entry to this country.”
Kleindienst v. Mandel,
With regard to plaintiffs own claims, the Fifth Circuit rejected a similar challenge by an unadmitted alien to the constitutionality of Section 1993. In
Villanueva-Jurado v. Immigration and Naturalization Serv.,
An alien has no constitutional right to citizenship which is a privilege conferred as a matter of grace by Congress under Article I, § 8 of the United States Constitution. ...
Id., quoting Hein v. United States Immigration and Naturalization Serv.
Plaintiff attempts to distinguish
Villa-nueva-Jurado
on two grounds. First, she notes that the case was decided two years before
Craig v. Boren,
Second, plaintiff argues that the basis of the Villanueva-Jurado court’s decision is unclear, and that in any event the equal protection clause is not mentioned. Indeed, if the equal protection clause did apply, it is doubtful that this statute could withstand even the most deferential scrutiny. The court’s failure to consider the applicability of the equal protection clause is unsurprising, however, in light of its conclusion that Article I, section 8 grants of citizenship are not subject to constitutional limitation by an unadmitted alien. 2
The reasoning of the Fifth Circuit is, of course, not binding on this court. With all due respect to that tribunal, it is possible that recent ease law recognizing at least limited judicial scrutiny of immigration legislation and the advances made by women in the intervening sixteen years warrant a re-examination of its rationale. In that regard, we note that plausible grounds may exist to at least support plaintiff’s challenge on her own behalf. 3 Rather than *246 attempt to weigh the current validity of the Fifth Circuit’s approach, however, we now turn to assertions that neither the Fifth Circuit nor other reviewing courts have assessed: that the statute discriminates against United States citizen females rather than the unadmitted alien.
C. The Citizen’s Challenge
1. Plaintiffs Standing for Ms. Dirksen’s Claims
In order to weigh the merits of Ms. Dirksen’s challenge, we first must establish whether plaintiff has standing to sue on her behalf. As an initial matter, we emphasize that the government does not dispute that plaintiff should be allowed to assert whatever rights her deceased mother might have. To its credit, it states:
Although it is unclear how many persons similarly situated to plaintiff’s mother exist, such person’s rights, if any, could conceivably be diluted by an adverse ruling on plaintiff’s constitutional claim in this case. The interests of plaintiff and any rights her mother may have possessed with regard to § 1993 appear to be mutually interdependent.... Given these considerations, it appears that the prudential doctrine prohibiting standing to assert the rights of a third party might be relaxed to allow plaintiff to assert her mother’s rights, if any, with regard to § 1993.
Defendant’s Supplemental Brief at 4.
As a general rule, a party to whom a statute may constitutionally be applied may not challenge that statute on the grounds that the statute may conceivably be applied unconstitutionally to others.
Singleton v. Wulff,
In appropriate circumstances, the federal courts have upheld a plaintiff’s assertion of third party rights.
Singleton,
Under the first arm of this standard, the court examines the relationship between the plaintiff and the third party to ensure that the plaintiff will be an effective proponent of the third party’s interest and that the third party’s rights are, in fact, implicated.
Singleton,
With the second factor, the court is to look at the ability of the third party to assert his or her own right to assure that the third party’s right is truly at stake and sufficiently important to the third party to warrant judicial consideration. As the Singleton court stated:
If there is some genuine obstacle to such assertion, however, the third party’s absence from court loses its tendency to suggest that his right is not truly at stake, or truly important to him, and the party who is in court becomes by the default the right’s best available proponent.
Plaintiff thus easily satisfies the standard for relaxing the prudential doctrine and will be allowed to assert the rights of her mother. We now turn to the merits of Ms. Dirksen’s claim.
2. Merits of the Citizen Challenge
The government asserts two defenses to the mother’s claim that Section 1993 infringes upon her equal protection rights. It argues first that no constitutional right to transmit citizenship exists. It then acknowledges that limited judicial review based upon the equal protection and due process rights of United States citizens might be applied to congressional policy decisions in the area of immigration. Based upon the Supreme Court’s decision in
Fiallo v. Bell,
As a starting point, it is important to reiterate the basis of Ms. Dirksen’s challenge. She does not and cannot assert that Congress is constitutionally precluded from restricting the ability of citizen parents to transmit their citizenship to their foreign-born children.
See, Rogers v. Bellei,
At the outset, then, the government’s initial argument must be rejected for two reasons. First as we have just explained, Ms. Dirksen does not claim a right to transmit her citizenship but to equal protection. Thus, the two Supreme Court cases the government properly cites for the proposition that no constitutional right to transmit citizenship exists,
Rogers v. Bellei,
Having framed the issue, we now address the government’s second argument: that the limited review of immigration legislation implicating citizens’ rights does not warrant reevaluation of Section 1993. The Supreme Court has recognized that the court must provide at least some minimal level of review to the constitutional claims of United States citizens. In
Kleindienst v. Mandel,
Our cases reflect acceptance of a limited judicial responsibility under the Constitution even with respect to the power of Congress to regulate the admission and exclusion of aliens.
Relying upon
Fiallo,
the government asserts that the limited review discussed in these cases does not warrant overturning Section 1993. In
Fiallo,
the Supreme Court reviewed an immigration statute that distinguished between the mothers and fathers of illegitimate children in the awarding of preferential immigration status. Under its terms, neither a non-citizen father of an illegitimate citizen child nor a non-citizen illegitimate child of a citizen father would receive such status. Thus, males but not females in certain situations were precluded from beneficial treatment. The Supreme Court rejected the equal protection and due process claims of the alien fathers and children. In stressing the limited nature of the inquiry, the Court emphasized that Congress must be left to distinguish which of the widely varying relationships and degrees of kinship should
*249
be awarded preferential treatment.
The government suggests that the Fiallo Court’s rejection of an equal protection claim based upon the facially differential treatment of men and women warrants a similar conclusion here. Upon a closer examination, this argument must be rejected. As an initial matter, the gender classification in Fiallo had at least a supportable justification: the problems of proving paternity of an illegitimate child. In the instant situation, the government has offered no rationale at all. Nor can we can imagine one other than the Congress of that day simply assumed that women as the chattels of their husbands should not be entitled to transmit their United States citizenship to their foreign-born offspring. This is obviously neither legitimate nor bona fide.
Perhaps more importantly, the
Fiallo
Court weighed a gender-based classification in a Congressional determination significantly different than the instant one. The classification at issue in
Fiallo
affected visas subject to numerical limitations.
7
Under what is known as the preference system, Congress authorized 270,000 of these visas and set forth the familial relationships that should be awarded the highest priority in their allotment.
8
8 U.S.C. § 1153. As the
Fiallo
Court noted, Congress necessarily had to distinguish between the various forms of the extended family to determine the operation of the preference system.
In Section 1993, however, Congress dealt with visas not subject to numerical limitation. Thus, Congress was neither obligated to draw lines nor involved in the administration of the preference system. It could have authorized both American fathers and mothers to transmit their citizenship to their children. Rather than allocating a limited number of visas based on the particular family relationships as it did in the Fiallo classification, Congress in Section 1993 simply determined that non-citizen children of American mothers should not have access to the unlimited visas. Fiallo thus does not suggest that we should reject Ms. Dirksen’s claim that Section 1993 violates her equal protection rights.
Turning to Section 1993 itself, we are obliged to find the statute’s differential treatment of men and women unconstitutional if the review power explicitly articulated by the
Fiallo
Court is to have any meaning. Although the
Fiallo
Court upheld the statute it reviewed, it recognized that judicial inquiry served to limit the arbitrary exercise of Congressional action in the immigration field. We have such unjustified action in this instance. Just as
*250
if Congress attempted to preclude black but not white aliens from entry, this statute infringes upon the most basic of constitutional protections without any any justification. Not only does it involve the facially discriminatory treatment of a suspect class,
Craig v. Boren,
This statute’s use of a suspect classification cannot pass the limited review we provide Congressional legislation in the immigration field: it is unconstitutional.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, we find Section 1993’s differential treatment of male and female American citizens is unconstitutional. Plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment is therefore granted, and defendant’s motion for summary judgment is denied.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Congress has amended this provision several times since, gradually loosening the requirements for establishing citizenship through a citizen-parent. The current provision appears at 8 U.S.C. § 1401. None of these statutes has been applied retroactively.
. They are subject to the requirement of Article I, section 8, that laws governing naturalization be "uniform." After supplemental briefing by the parties, however, we conclude that this requirement requires only that the standards of citizenship may not differ between the states.
See, Kharaiti Ram Samras v. United States,
. Plaintiff urges the court to test the rationality of the statute based upon
Rogers v. Bellei,
Although this "unreasonable, arbitrary, or unlawful” standard implies that the courts are authorized to make some limited review of alien challenges to Article I, Section 8 grants of citizenship, the
Bellei
court also suggested in dicta that the particular law currently challenged— Section 1993—was not vulnerable to such constitutional challenge.
. "Similarly situated women” are female United States citizens who gave birth abroad to legitimate children of foreign fathers between 1855 and 1934.
. Plaintiff has provided the declaration of at least one such woman who would like to provide citizenship for her foreign-born child but cannot due to Section 1993.
.In light of the definition of similarly situated women in note 4, the youngest such women still alive would be at least seventy years old today.
. The statutory definition at issue in Fiallo, codified at 8 U.S.C. § 1101(b)(1), applied both to visas subject and not subject to numerical limitation. Under the Immigration and Naturalization Act, 8 U.S.C. § 1101 etseq, an alien seeking immigrant status may qualify for a visa not subject to limit if he or she is an immediate relative of United States citizens or qualifies as a special immigrant. 8 U.S.C. 1151(b). The visas subject to the numerical cap are granted to aliens based upon lesser familial relationships with American citizens or permanent resident aliens as well as other factors. 8 U.S.C. 1153. Because Section 1993 concerns only unlimited visas, we emphasize in this discussion that the definition analyzed in Fiallo affects visas subject to numerical limitation.
. For example, the first preference guarantees 20% of the 270,000 visas of this type for unmarried sons and daughters of United States citizens. 8 U.S.C. § 1153(a)(1). The second preference provides that 26% of the total are to be used by spouses and unmarried sons and daughters of permanent resident aliens. 8 U.S.C. § 1153(a)(2).
