235 F. 847 | 9th Cir. | 1916
(after stating the facts as above).
“This testimony was not taken in the presence of petitioner, but the witness Carrion identified a photograph of petitioner as that of the man seen by him in the laundry at Juarez.
“Under the Chinese Exclusion Act, a Chinese alien unlawfully in the country is entitled, to a hearing before a commissioner or judge, before he may be deported. 'At such hearing the ordinary rules of evidence are generally, applied. Under the Immigration Act, however, any alien may be deported after a hearing before the immigration officers at any time within three years after the date of his entry into the United States, if such entry shall have been in violation of law. The claim here is that, as petitioner was identified as having been in Juarez as late as August or September of last year, he must have entered from there in violation of law, as he did not enter through any of the immigration channels. He was not found on the Mexican border, and the only evidence that he had been out of the United States within the three years was the evidence of Carrion, who did not see the petitioner him.self for the purposes of identification, but only a photograph.
“The court does not undertake to prescribe rules of evidence for the Immigration Department; but in a case like the present, where the very jurisdiction of the department depends upon the establishment of a certain fact, which fact, when established, takes the alien’s case out of the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States where it is placed by the Chinese Exclusion Law, the court is entitled to regard, not perhaps the weight of the evidence, but certainly the character of the evidence by which such a transfer of jurisdiction is effected. In the case at bar we have a Chinaman, resident of this country for 40 years, having a laborer’s certificate entitling him to remain, who is not found near the Mexican border line, and who is ordered deported, without being confronted by the witness upon whose testimony the jurisdiction of the Immigration Department to make the order depends.
“In my judgment, while affidavits and ex parte statements, and statements not under oath, have been held admissible in proceedings by the Immigration Department looking to the exclusion or deportation of aliens, the right to remain here of a Chinese person so long a resident of the United States, and who is fortified by, the possession' of that evidence of his proper presence here which the law requires, should not be made to depend upon the fact, that some resident of another country not produced at the hearing has identified a photograph, when such identification is the only thing which could deprive the alien of his right to be, heard before a commissioner or judge, where such identification would not be admissible as evidence at all.”
There is nothing in the opinion suggesting that the court either overlooked or ignored the finding that the alien was in the United States in violation of section 36 of the Immigration Act; on the contrary, the decision is based upon the question of jurisdiction of the assistant secretary under that act.
But, as said by the court below:
“Where the very jurisdiction of the department depends upon the establishment of a certain fact, which fact, when established, takes the alien’s case out of the jurisdiction of the courts of the United States where it is placed by the Chinese Exclusion Law, the court is entitled to regard, not perhaps the weight of the evidence, but certainly the character of the evidence by which such a transfer of jurisdiction is effected.”
The accused was arrested in Tucson, Ariz., on February 19, 1915. He was examined by the immigrant inspector on February 20, 1915, and, in reply to questions propounded by the inspector, gave an account of his residence in California and Nevada from the date of his arrival in San Francisco from China in 1873 or 1874 down to his departure from California some months previously. From that statement it appears that he had been employed at well-known places and by well-known persons in California, among others by the Governor of the state. He stated that he had been registered as a resident of Sacramento, Cal. This certificate, admitted as true by the government, was subsequently produced and shows that he was registered in Sacramento, Cal., in March, 1894, under the Act of May 5, 1892. This certificate was .prima facie evidence of his right to be in the' United States. Moreover, his statement as to his various employments in California was capable of easy verification, if true, or contradiction, if not true. The absence of any such inquiry or examination by the officers, coupled with the certificate of residence, carries the presumption that the statement was true.
“Q. What, if anything, have you to say in answer to the testimony of the witness Pasqual Carrion to the effect that you were in Juarez, Mexico, in August or September, 1914? A. If he states that he has seen me in Juarez, Mexico, what can I say? If he says he has seen me there, I cannot say anything else.
“Q. Then you don’t deny that this witness did see you in Juarez, Mexico, in August or September, 1914? A. I have never been there, I don’t know the place.
“Q. Do you desire to offer any testimony in support of your claim that you have never been in Juarez, Mexico? A. No, I cannot offer any evidence or any witnesses.”
Further than his own denial that he had ever been in Mexico, it was probably beyond his power to' prove this negative; but, on the other hand, if he had been working in a laundry on Noche Triets behind a carpenter and blacksmith shop in Juarez, Mexico, in August or September, 1914, as recited in the statement of Pascual Carrion, the fact was of easy proof by competent testimony, and it should have been produced. Section 22 of the Act of February 20, 1907 (34 Stat. 898 [Comp. St. 1913, § 959]), authorizes the Commissioner General of Immigration, under the direction of the Secretary of Labor, to establish rules “not inconsistent with law” for carrying out the provisions of the act. Under this authority, certain rules have been established for such service, among others rule 22 relating to the arrest and deportation of aliens on warrant. The rule, so far as pertinent to the present.inquiry, is as follows:
“Subdivision 1. Officers shall make thorough investigation of all cases where they are credibly informed or have reason to believe that a specified alien in the United States is subject to arrest and deportation on warrant. All such cases, by whomsoever discovered, shall be reported to the immigration officer stationed nearest the place where the alien is found to be.
“Subd. 2. The application must state facts bringing the alien within one or more of the classes subject to deportation after entry. The proof of these facts should be the best that can be obtained.”
The rule of law respecting evidence demands of a party seeking to establish a fact that he produce the best evidence available to him. Greenleaf on Evidence (16th Ed.) § 81; Wigmore on Evidence, § 1173; Jones on Evidence, vol. 2, §, 212. And this is the identical rule prescribed by the Department of Labor for the examination of the case of an alien charged with being subject to arrest and deportation under the Immigration Act. Of course, this means that the best evidence must be proper evidence. Jones on Evidence, supra.
The statement of Pascual Carrion recites that he was sworn—by whom, it does not appear—presumably by the examining inspector, but that official had no authority to administer an oath in this case. Whitfield v. Hanges, 222 Fed. 745, 749, 138 C. C. A. 199. Section 24 of the Immigration Act provides that immigration officers shall have power to administer oaths and take and consider evidence touch
But the statement of Carrion was not the best evidence if it had been made under an oath administered by an authorized officer. The identification of the accused was by means of a photograph; it was not ma.de in the presence of the accused, and the latter had no opportunity to examine the alleged witness concerning the identification or statement. But whether or not the accused had been employed in a laundry in Juarez, Mexico, in August or September, 1914, must have been a matter of easy verification or contradiction by the production of legal testimony, and the officers were employed for that purpose under a rule of the department requiring that the investigation should he thorough. Moreover, the Commissioner General of Immigration, with the approval of the Secretary of Labor, had authority under section 22 of the Immigration Act to detail an immigration officer to make the necessary investigation in Juarez, Mexico. The rule of evidence in this respect is that no evidence shall be admitted which, from the nature of the case, supposes still greater evidence behind in the party’s possession or power. Clifton v. United States, 45 U. S. (4 How.) 242, 247, 11 L. Ed. 957. The presumption in such case is that, if the legal testimony had been produced, it would have been unfavorable, if not directly adverse, to the case. Clifton v. United States, supra.
The warrant of deportation recites that Louis E. Post, Assistant Secretary of Labor, has “become satisfied that the alien, Owe Sam Goon, who landed at an unknown port, subsequent to the 1st day of July, 1914, is subject to be returned to the country whence he came under section 21 of the Immigration Act approved Eebruary 20, 1907, being subject to deportation under the provisions of a law of the United States, to wit, the Chinese Exclusion Laws.” The warrant further recites:
“From proofs submitted, to me, after due bearing before Immigrant Inspector Alfred E. Burnett held at Tucson, Ariz., I have become satisfied that the said alien has been found In the United States in violation of the act of Congress approved February 20, 1907, amended by the act approved March 26, 1910.”
As has been stated, the Secretary of Labor is not authorized by law to deport aliens under the Chinese Exclusion Law, and there was no legal proof, nor was the best evidence attainable submitted which authorized him to deport the accused under the Immigration Act.
But it is contended that, when the accused was arrested, he was unable to explain the circumstances connected with his presence in a freight car arriving at Tucson from the East. This fact may be a ground for some suspicion and possibly some conjecture as to where he came from; but mere suspicion or conjecture were not sufficient
The case of Wong Back Sue v. Connell, 233 Fed. 659, — C. C. A. —, turned upon other questions than that of jurisdiction of the Department of Labor to issue the order of deportation under section 21 of the Act of February 20, 1907. It is not an authority except upon the questions there involved.
It follows that the order appealed from, granting the petition for a wjit of habeas corpus herein, should be affirmed; and it is so ordered.