What are the facts?
Tuan Anh Nguyen was born in Vietnam in 1969 to a Vietnamese mother and a U.S.-citizen father, Joseph Boulais. The parents were not married. When Nguyen was approximately six years old, he immigrated to the United States with his father and was admitted as a lawful permanent resident. Although Nguyen and his father lived in the United States and maintained an ongoing relationship, Boulais did not, before Nguyen's 18th birthday, complete any of the statutory steps required for an unwed citizen father to confer citizenship at birth on a child born abroad—such as legitimation, formal acknowledgment under oath, or a judicial paternity determination within the child's minority. As an adult, Nguyen was convicted in Texas of sexual assault on a child, an aggravated felony for immigration purposes. The former Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) initiated removal proceedings. Nguyen resisted removal, asserting that he was a U.S. citizen at birth through his father. He acknowledged that the literal requirements of 8 U.S.C. § 1409(a) (INA § 309(a)) had not been satisfied before his 18th birthday, but argued that the statute's imposition of extra, time-bound conditions on unwed fathers—conditions not imposed on unwed mothers—violated equal protection. The Immigration Judge and the Board of Immigration Appeals rejected his claim; the Fifth Circuit affirmed; and the Supreme Court granted certiorari.
What is the legal issue?
Does 8 U.S.C. § 1409, which imposes more onerous and time-sensitive requirements on unwed U.S.-citizen fathers than on unwed U.S.-citizen mothers for conferring citizenship at birth on a child born abroad, violate the equal protection guarantee embodied in the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause?
What rule applies?
Sex-based classifications are subject to intermediate scrutiny: the government must show that the classification serves important governmental objectives and that the discriminatory means employed are substantially related to the achievement of those objectives. The justification must be genuine and not hypothesized or based on overbroad generalizations. Although Congress has broad authority in matters of immigration and nationality, equal protection principles still apply to citizenship statutes; the Court, however, recognizes practical and administrative considerations in this context. See United States v. Virginia (1996) (exceedingly persuasive justification standard); Craig v. Boren (1976).
What did the court hold?
No. The differing requirements for unwed U.S.-citizen fathers in 8 U.S.C. § 1409 are constitutional. They are substantially related to important governmental interests in (1) ensuring a biological parent–child relationship and (2) fostering an opportunity for a real, demonstrated parent–child connection to the United States during the child's minority. The judgment upholding Nguyen's removability was affirmed.
What is the reasoning?
The Court, in an opinion by Justice Kennedy, applied intermediate scrutiny and identified two important governmental interests served by § 1409's differential treatment. First, the statute seeks to ensure the existence of a biological parent–child relationship. For children born out of wedlock, maternity is nearly always established at birth, while paternity is not self-evident; requiring unwed fathers to take specified steps before the child turns 18 helps confirm biological parentage with administrable and reliable procedures. Second, Congress sought to promote the development of a real, continuing relationship between the citizen parent and the child, which serves as the conduit for the child's connection to the United States. The statute's pre–age-18 timing requirement ensures that this connection is formed while the child is a minor and most receptive to parental influence; it avoids after-the-fact assertions of paternity untethered to an actual familial bond or to the United States. The Court rejected Nguyen's argument that the statute rested on impermissible stereotypes about men and women. It explained that the differential treatment turned on inherent biological and post-birth circumstantial differences: maternity is evident at birth, while establishing paternity and facilitating a meaningful relationship between an unwed father and a nonmarital child typically require affirmative steps, especially where the child is born and initially resides abroad. The Court also declined to adopt proposed gender-neutral alternatives (e.g., universal DNA testing or allowing post-majority acknowledgment) as constitutionally required. Those alternatives, the Court reasoned, would either undercut the government's interest in forming the connection during minority or impose substantial burdens not required by the Constitution. While acknowledging earlier fractured decisions in this area (notably Miller v. Albright), the Court squarely held that § 1409's framework passes intermediate scrutiny. Consequently, because Nguyen's father had not satisfied the statute's pre–age-18 requirements, Nguyen did not acquire U.S. citizenship at birth and remained removable.
Why is this case significant?
Nguyen v. INS is a cornerstone equal protection case in the citizenship context. It demonstrates that some sex-based distinctions—when tied to biological realities and administrable evidentiary concerns—can survive intermediate scrutiny, particularly in the nationality arena where Congress enjoys broad latitude. The decision also clarifies the evidentiary and timing prerequisites for unwed fathers seeking to transmit citizenship to children born abroad, underscoring that post-majority acknowledgments generally cannot cure noncompliance. For students, Nguyen is essential for understanding how the Court balances anti-discrimination norms against practical governance interests, and it frames later developments, including Sessions v. Morales-Santana (2017), where the Court distinguished Nguyen and invalidated a different gender-based distinction (physical-presence requirements) in the citizenship statutes.
What standard of review did the Court apply to the gender classification in § 1409?
The Court applied intermediate scrutiny. Under this standard, a sex-based classification must serve important governmental objectives and be substantially related to achieving those objectives, supported by an exceedingly persuasive justification. The Court found that ensuring biological parentage and fostering an opportunity for a meaningful parent–child and U.S. connection during minority met this test.
Why did the Court view mothers and fathers differently for children born abroad out of wedlock?
The Court emphasized inherent differences relevant to the statutory objectives: maternity is established at birth, while paternity typically is not. Moreover, an unwed father must often take affirmative steps to create and document a relationship with a child born abroad. Requiring pre–age-18 acknowledgment, legitimation, or adjudication ensures both proof of biology and the cultivation of a real relationship when it matters most for transmitting civic ties.
Could DNA testing or allowing post-majority acknowledgment have resolved the equal protection problem?
The Court rejected these as constitutionally compelled alternatives. While DNA testing could confirm biology, it does not ensure the development of a parent–child relationship during minority. Allowing post-majority acknowledgments would undercut Congress's goal of forging the child's connection to the United States through a citizen parent while the child is still a minor.
How does Nguyen relate to Miller v. Albright and Sessions v. Morales-Santana?
Miller v. Albright (1998) involved similar statutory provisions but produced no controlling rationale on the equal protection merits. Nguyen provided a clear holding that § 1409's father-specific acknowledgment requirements survive intermediate scrutiny. In Sessions v. Morales-Santana (2017), the Court distinguished Nguyen and struck down a different gender-based rule concerning physical-presence requirements, holding that those distinctions lacked an exceedingly persuasive justification; as a remedy, it extended the more demanding requirement to all parents.
If an unwed citizen father completes the statutory steps after the child turns 18, can the child still claim citizenship under § 1409?
Generally no. Section 1409(a) requires paternal acknowledgment, legitimation, or adjudication while the child is under 18. Completing those steps after majority does not satisfy the statute's timing requirement, which the Court viewed as substantially related to the governmental interest in forming the connection during the child's minority.
Did the Court rely on the plenary power doctrine to avoid equal protection analysis?
No. Although the Court acknowledged Congress's broad authority over nationality and immigration, it applied equal protection principles (through the Fifth Amendment) and conducted intermediate scrutiny on the merits. The statute survived not because of plenary power alone, but because the Court found an exceedingly persuasive, substantially related justification.