176 F.2d 741 | 9th Cir. | 1949
The appellant Bechtel was born in Germany in 1900, served as a private in the German army during World War I, left Germany when 20 years old and spent 5 years in Sweden, then, in 1925 migrated to the United States and ultimately made his home at Oakland, California. In 1927 he filed his declaration to become a citizen. He was granted citizenship by judgment of the Superior Court of Alemeda County, California on February 23, 1934. .
These denaturalization proceedings were filed against him on December 22, 1942, in the court below, under the authoriy of section 338 of the Nationality Act of 1940, 8 U.S.C.A. § 738, charging that his naturalization was procured illegally and by fraud in that he was not, as he represented. a person attached to the principles of the Constitution and well'disposed to the good order and happiness of the United States, that he did not truly intend to become a permanent citizen oí the United States, and that his oath of allegiance then taken was false in that he did.not absolutely and entirely renounce and adjure all allegiance, to any foreign state of sovereign, but retained allegiance to Germany and did not intend to bear true faith and allegiance to the United States, or to support and defend the Constitution- of the United States.
Judgment canceling appellant’s certificate of naturalization- was entered March 31, 1944. The only question raised upon the appeal which .we need notice is the contention that the judgment is not sustained by the “clear, unequivocal, and convincing” evidence required in such cases.
Because a number of other denaturalization cases were pending in the same court, in all of which, as in this case, there was evidence that the defendants were at some time members of the German-American Bund, these cases were consolidated for trial of the common issue of the purposes and organization of the Bund, which separate trial afforded each defendant upon all other issues. This was done in the same manner as that adopted by the district court in Knauer v. United States, 328 U.S. 654, and described in the footnote at page 662, 66 S.Ct. 1304, 90 L.Ed. 1504
. With respect to the Bund, its findings may best be summarized by stating that they conformed to the description of the Bund given by the Supreme Court in the Knauer case, as follows :
Upon this issue the court’s conclusions were as follows: “In carrying out the activities hereinabove described, and in seeking tp accomplish its real aims and purposes, the Bund demonstrated itself to be a .German militant ‘fifth column’ organization in the United States, antagonistic to the democratic form of government and to the Constitution and laws of the United States, un-American and subversive. One who believes in the National Socialist philosophy' and form of government cannot at the same time be loyal to the United States nor attached to the principles of the Constitution and laws of the United States.
“The principles of German National Socialism are opposed in all respects to the principles of democracy and to the Constitution and laws of the United States.”
As to Bechtel, the court found:
(1) He joined the Friends of New Germany (the Bund, by an earlier name),
(2) He subscribed for the Bund paper and read it for at least one year.
(3) During this period of membership Bechtel was on numerous occasions clothed in the uniform of the Ordnungs Dienst, or O. D. (the uniformed group within the Bund organized to act as color guards, ushers, distributors of phamphlets and literature and to protect members from attack during meetings.) He attended meetings of the O. D., where he wore its swastika arm band and assisted in its various activities such as marching and carrying the swastika banner. In 1938, at a Bund picnic, he kept watch over the fire while a large swastika was burned on the hillside.
(4) At numerous meetings of these organizations he engaged in giving the “Heil” or “Sieg Heil” salute and in the singing of the “Horst Wessel” song.
(5) He accompanied the Bund .leaders and others when they organized a Bund,, unit in another county.
(6) In May, 1938, Bechtel attended the Bund’s Western District Convention where the district leader and Fritz Kuhn, national leader, spoke.
(7) Between 1934 and 1939 Bechtel stated to various persons that he approved of Hitler’s economic and' social policies in Germany, and approved of his treatment of the Jews.
(8) He stated to various persons that he desired and intended to return to Germany.
(9) On December 14, 1942, he stated before a Board of Army officers that he honored the swastika flag equally with the American flag. ■ :
(10) About 1939, he burned his Bund uniform, knowing that two Bund leaders had burned theirs.
(11) On his tenth wedding anniversary Bechtel gave a party at his home at which time he displayed a swastika flag on the ceiling. ;
(12) He ceased attending meetings of the Bund because: of personal- diságreements with Hein, the local leader, and not because of any disapproval of the Bund’s policies.
The foregoing findings are, with one exception,
(a) Bechtel knew and Understood the leadership principle as- enunciated and subt scribed to by the leaders and members of the Bund.
' (b) At the time of his naturalization, and at all times subsequently, his allegiance has been to Germany rather than to the United States, and his attachment has been to National Socialism rather than to the principles of the United States Constitution.' ' ' . ■ ' ■ -
(c) Bechtel knew the character and connections of the Bund and was in sympathy and agreement with them.
(d) His oaths and statements in his pe
There aré other aspects of the case, not 'mentioned in' thé findings, which we must consider if we are to' ré-examine the facts, as 'it- is’’our duty to do. In a case of this kind we a,fe hot 'bound by the trial coiirt’S findings even' although they may not be “clearly erroneous”. Schneiderman v. United States; 320 U.S. 118, 63 S.Ct. 1333, 87 L.Ed. 1796. As stated in Knauer v. United States, 328 U.S. 654, 657, 66 S.Ct. 1304,1307, «we- must -“reexamine ¡the facts to determine whether the United States has -carried :its .burden of -proving by. ‘clear, unequivocal, and. convincing’ evidence, which does not leave -‘the issue iij doubt;’ that the citizen who is, sought to be restored to, the .status of an alien obtained-his . naturalization , certificate illegally.” r
Outstanding-'is-the fact that there- is no’ evidence ’whatever of Bechtel’s views' or opinions prior to the time he joined the Friends of, New ■ ...Germany, some seven months after lie took the oath of allegiance., The'dangers of. reliance upon such retro-, spective proof of lack of allegiance at an earlier date were stated in Baumgartner v. United States, 322 U.S. 665, at page 675, 64 S.Ct. 1240, 88 L.Ed. 1525, and in Knauer v. United States, supra, 328 U.S. 654,, at page 660, 66 S.Ct. 1304, 90 L.Ed. 1504.
Whether Beo.htel’s later membership and activity in the.Bund sufficiently evidenced a state of'miiid at-the tíme his naturalization certificate was issued which was incompatible'-with his oath and representations of attachment to the United States Constitution-depends in,part upon the circumstances .and conditions of his membership. His enthusiastic , participation . in the pro-German, nonsense of the Bund is clear enough. No doubt he wore his O. D. uniform with much pride, and shouted “Heil” and “Sieg Heil” as loudly -as any of them-. There is solid evidence of his admiration for Hitler, and for Hitler’s economic and social program, including his treatment of the Jews.
But the doubts which now assail us arise from our question whether all this evidenced a prior lack of sincerity- when he took his oa.th, or whether, the true inference is that Bechtel,,, apparently by nature ■ a “joiner” (he had belonged to the Sons of -Hermann and the Redmen) had newly found another order, attended by fellow. Germans, where the marching, the “helling”, the uniform, and the laudation of the Fatherland, appealed to some latent love-of regimentation and which he accepted, without any real appreciation of its inconsistency with American loyalty. Many a native-born American would have to plead-guilty to wearing uniforms, participating in parades, and reciting strange and weird language, under the guise of lodge ritual. If, as has, been said, membership in the Bund is not in itself sufficient to convict Bechtel,
The situation here differs from that found in the Knauer case, supra. Bechtel was no dominant figure. He had little education. His formal education ended with grammar school. By occupation he was a gardener. Notwithstanding his years of membership in the Bund, he .never became an officer, and his only distinction appears to have been as a watcher over a fire at a Bund picnic. Although he wore the O. D. uniform frequently, there is no evidence that he did anything but ushering and janitor service when so garbed..
Such a person may well have been as unsophisticated as Bechtel’s own testimony makes him out. He said that he joined the Friends of New Germany about September, 1934, at a time when his wife was absent on a visit. This,, he stated was on the invitation of Hein, the local leader. He testified that the Judge who had admitted him to citizenship had warned him against communism, and that he had believed that this organization, predecessor of the Bund, was a patriotic order devoted to fighting communism, and promoting more friendly relations with Germany. Some circumstantial corroboration of this appears in the record of the consolidated hearing as to the Bund where a number of witnesses for the Government testified that they had joined the .Bund with similar misunderstandings. If, as the court found, the constitution of the Bund was “false and misleading and designed to blind the American public to the true aims and purposes of’ the organization”, it is easy to understand how many of the ignorant rank and file like Bechtel may have been misled, and how Bechtel’s natural pride in the land of his nativity made him a ready dupe for those who were promoting the Bund.
Bechtel vigorously denied that he had' any knowledge of the Nazi “leadership principle”. He said that until years later he did not know the meaning of the word Aryan. He never read “Mein Kampf”. He testified that he quit the Bund, about the, first week in ,1939, not merely because of personal “fights” with Hein, but because Hein was trying to run the Bund “like a dictator”. Only when he heard the pre-trial evidence in this case, did he realize that the Bund leaders were “crooked”.
All this was Bechtel’s own story¿ which by reason of his self-interest, must be properly discounted. It can be disregarded as evidence, but it yet suggests a doubt. Fitting into this pattern of a deluded ignoramus with a loose tongue is the fact that inT938, while his Bund activities were at their height, B.echtel wrote for an essay contest an article oh the American Constitution which has every evidence of sincerity, and which, if sincere, would go far toward demonstrating his loyalty. •
A number of Bechtel’s former employers came forward as character' witnesses for him, and generally testified that although they had often discussed public affairs with him, they never heard him indicate any disloyalty. One who thus testified was Chief Justice Phil S. Gibson of the Supreme Court of- California. Bechtel had been his gardner in the period following 1939, at a time when. Bechte’l had quit the Bun-d. The Witness had worked in the garden himself, with Bechtel, and had many discussions with him. Bechtel had often expressed pride in his American citizenship. With respect to conditions in Germany- the testimony was: “I remember that I asked him with reference to his service in the German -army, if he had served in the -army in Germany, and I asked him with reference to conditions in Germany immediately following the close of the last war, and out of questions that I asked him in a general discussion of conditions, he stated to me that originally he had been very hopeful that Hitler and his followers would do something for the poor people in Germany, and that he thought they would also represent the common peo,ple of Germany as against the military-clique, and also he thought that they were opposing the spread 'of Communism into" Germany; but since the treaty between Germany and Russia he had become very much disillusioned and he had decided they were a bad lot.,”
The evidence of Mrs. Young would indicate that- even -his friends considered him a reckless blatherskite, and that he continued his anti-Semitic tirades even after he left the. Bund. - Such evidence has a tendency to persuade us of his general lack of judgment, rather than of a fraudulent and false oath in -February,: 1934. As said in the Baumgartner case, supra, [322 U.S. 665, 64 S.Ct. 1245], .his new American citizenship gave him “the freedom to speak foolishly and without moderation”,' and to express “silly or even sinister-sounding views which native-born citizens utter with impunity.” ■ That he undertook to claim this freedom and to act in that way is as readily attributable to his ignorance as to a calculated and- conscious disloyalty.'
Upon consideration of the whole record we are of the opinion that the judgment of the district court is not sustained by that “clear, -unequivocal, and convincing” evidence which the decisions- of. the Supreme Court have required in such cases.2 ****
The judgment is reversed.
The same footnote refers to the opinion of the district court in this case, sub. nom. United States v. Holtz, 54 F.Supp. 63.
328 U.S. at page 661, 66 S.Ct. at page 1308.
The import of the formal findings is disclosed in the opinion of the trial court, cited in note 1, supra.
With reference to item (0) above, it appears that Bechtel, while being examined in 1942 by army officers acting as an exclusion board making inquiry' with respect to his fqrmer membership in the Bund, explained that he knew little about the Bund when he joined and thought it was a patriotic organization. He said: “it was presented to me that way and we honored the flags, the American flag and the German flag equally, and the only way it was, I know they wouldn’t admit Communists, and that is the only thing I know.”
When questioned about this statement Bechtel .explained that he meant that each flag was honored in its “proper placo”. The ’ very brief ’ extract of his statement to the army officers which is in the record indicates he may have meant no more than to point out that the Gorman flag was never displayed alone, but always with the American flag. In any event, since he was merely narrating past, events in the Bund, which he had since, quit, we think it incorrect to say that in 1942' Bechtel stated that “he honored the, swastika flag equally with the American flag.” ’
The court’s finding of - fact XVI' recites-: “That- tho -sworn oaths and statements of the defendant in his Petition for Naturalization and in his oath of allegiance 'at the-date of naturalization, asset forth in the complaint were then and there false, fraudulent, and illegal in that the "defendant, át thé time of taking said oaths, did'hot .in fact absolutely and entirely renounce and adjure all allegiance and fidelity' to Germany and the German Reich, but in fact intended'to and did', secretly reserve, and'retain allegiance and' fidelity to Germany, and the German Reich; nqr did the, defendant then and there intend/to) support'and defend the Constitution arid laws óf the Upited •States of America, against all enemies) foreign and domestic, but in' fact the said defendant then and there secretly reserved his intention not to support and defend the Constitution and laws of the United States against Germany and -the German Reich should they become enemies of the United States of America; nor did the defendant at the time of taking said oaths intend to bear true faith and allegiance to the United States of America, but in fact secretly reserved and retained his in-' tention not to hear true faith and allegiance to the United States of America. That by taking said oaths falsely, with the secret mental reservations and intentions as aforesaid, the defendant deceived the United States, its . officers and agents, and the said Naturalization Court at the date of admission to citizenship in order that said defendant might obtain the rights, privileges, and protection of citizenship in the United States of America.”
Knauer v. United States, 328 U.S. 654, at page 669, 66 S.Ct. 1304, 90 L.Ed. 1504.
In Klapprott v. United States, 335 U.S. 601, 60 S.Ct. 384, 889, two of the opinions suggest .that the standard of proof required in cases of this character is substantially the same as pi-oof “beyond a reasonable doubt.” It is proper to state that when this case was decided, the able trial judge did not then have, as do we, the aid of the decision in the ' Baumgartner case.