Xiu Qin Chen, a citizen of China, seeks asylum in the United States. She contends that China persecuted her because of her political opinions and will imprison her because of those opinions should she be returned. Her political opinion, as she expresses it in this court, is that China should pay just compensation when it takes private property for public use. That capitalist principle, enshrined in the fifth amendment to the Constitution of the United States, is less honored in communist nations.
Chen contends that her home town of Langqi razed about a dozen homes in order to construct a military building. (We recount her story, which the Board of Immigration Appeals accepted provisionally.) Officials promised to provide similarly sized plots of land and to pay for construction of new houses within three months, and to provide rent for transitional housing. The rent was paid, but when four months passed without the transfer of new land or the money to build new homes, Chen filed suit against the local government. The court dismissed that suit, and officials appeared at her family’s rented home with a warrant for her arrest. She fled. Police have tried to find her ever since, and when her father refused to reveal her whereabouts he was beaten and his leg broken. But the Board of Immigration Appeals concluded that Chen’s lawsuit did not advance a political position, so the government’s reaction, though excessive, was not on account of “political opinion” within the meaning of 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(l)(B)(i).
One circuit has held that litigation is a form of political expression that can make a person eligible for asylum.
Baghdasaryan v. Holder,
First, the ninth circuit approached the subject as if the judiciary made an independent decision. It does not. The Attorney General, and his delegate the Board of Immigration Appeals, are principally responsible for interpreting ambiguous terms in the immigration laws, and the judiciary must respect administrative decisions that plausibly implement this legislation. See
Chevron U.S.A Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Second, it is necessary to distinguish having a political opinion from the means of its expression. The United States does not allow punishment for anyone’s political
Third, the United States has
itself
limited the expression of political opinion in the courts. True enough, litigation is protected by the first amendment as one of the ways by which the people may petition for redress of grievances. See
Lewis v. Casey,
This record strongly implies that Chen’s suit was objectively baseless. It’s not just that she lost. She did not own the land. Her parents did, and the government’s promise to supply replacement land and pay for a new house was made to her father, not to her. In the United States, a suit complaining about a municipality’s failure to pay for real property taken from the plaintiffs parents would be dismissed as frivolous, and an award of sanctions would be likely. Only the owner can sue for compensation. Chen says that she filed the suit because her parents (and the other owners whose land was taken) were afraid to challenge the local government. That makes the suit sound like a political protest but also reveals that it was filed for reasons other than any hope of success and thus abused the legal process. If courts of this nation would deem such a suit frivolous and sanctionable — and not an impingement on the rights of political opinion sheltered by the first amendment — it cannot be political persecution for other nations to think likewise. (Chen says that the court dismissed the suit peremptorily and without explanation, which suggests that the judge found it frivolous.)
This conclusion does not necessarily lead to a decision in the agency’s favor, however. The Board assumed that litigation dif
The Board’s failure to address the time, place, and manner topic is not the only problem with its disposition. The response to Chen’s suit was not a fine or any equivalent sanction but a warrant for her arrest. That step is so disproportionate to the filing of a frivolous suit that it raises the question whether the government was setting out to muzzle a political opponent rather than just to enforce the nation’s rules on the appropriate subject matter of litigation. The agency did not consider the possibility that the attempt to arrest Chen revealed that the local government perceived a challenge much different from the annoyance of a suit filed by a person who did not own the confiscated property. The State Department reports that China has been stern in suppressing opposition to its land-acquisition policies, at least when that opposition takes the form of public gatherings, see 2006 Country Report: China 9, 15 (March 2007), and if China has classified Chen as a public protester then perhaps an imputed political opinion is “at least one central reason” for the attempted arrest. The agency needs to consider this possibility; so far it has not done so.
Before conducting a more comprehensive analysis of litigation as political opinion in China, the Board might want to decide whether Chen is telling the truth. The immigration judge disbelieved her, remarking that Chen had not supplied material documents, the absence of which raised suspicions. Chen relates that she was represented by counsel in China. It therefore should be possible to obtain any papers filed on her behalf and learn from counsel whether, as Chen asserts, the court’s decision was never transcribed. The warrant for her arrest should be available and could reveal the nature of the charge laid against her. Medical records from her father’s treatment likewise may be helpful. The agency could infer that Chen’s failure to produce documents that would corroborate her story, if they existed, implies that the documents do not exist and that the story is false. See 8 U.S.C. § 1158(b)(l)(B)(ii), (iii);
Mitondo v. Mukasey,
There are other potential questions too, such as whether the threat of an arrest is itself persecution, if the nation has a legal
The petition for review is granted, and the matter is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
