Chomel v. United States

192 F. 117 | 7th Cir. | 1911

PER CURIAM.

The petitioner Martha Brion, a native and citizen of the republic of France, arrived in the United States the 5th of February, 1906, and since that time has been continuously in the country. The petitioner Raymonde Chomel, a native and citizen also of the republic of France, arrived in the United States the 8th of *118September, 1905, and has been since continuously in the country. This appeal presents the question whether, having been in the country more than three years prior to the warrants of deportation issued by the Secretary of Commerce and Tabor under the act approved March 26, 1910, amending the act of February 20, 1907, the imprisonment and detention of the petitioners for the purposes of deportation are unlawful. If so, the orders appealed from denying the petitions for habeas corpus should be reversed. Otherwise they should be affirmed.

Section 2 of the act of February 20, 1907, limits itself to the exclusion from admission into the United States of the character of persons therein named, including idiots, insane persons, beggars, persons afflicted with dangerous contagious diseases, persons having been convicted of crime or misdemeanor involving moral turpitude, polygamists, anarchists, prostitutes, or persons coming into the United States for the purposes of prostitution, and persons who are supported by or receive part of the proceeds of prostitution, leaving it to sections 20 and 21 to provide that such persons shall be deported if proceedings therefor are begun within three years, as also the procedure to be followed. Section 3, both in the original act and as amended, relates exclusively to the importation of aliens for the purposes of prostitution or other immoral purposes, the holding of such persons for such purposes in pursuance of such importation, and aliens found inmates of houses of prostitution after they have entered the United States or who derive benefit from the earnings of the same. This section, unlike section. 2, contains in its body the remedy to be applied, namely, deportation “in the manner” provided by sections 20 and 21 of the act, from which it is evident that Congress meant to deal with this class of persons separately from the larger class included in section 2.

Now “in the manner provided” does not necessarily include the three-year limitation contained in sections 20 and 21; and when we take into account that in amending the original section 3 Congress dropped the three-year limitation therein contained, changed the clause “shall be deported as provided by” to the clause “shall be deported in the manner provided,” and that the amendment was intended to effectuate the recommendation of a commission, appointed to look into the matter, that the three-year limitation- should be eliminated, and that the members of Congress having the amendment in hand, as shown by the Congressional Record, believed that the limitation was thereby eliminated, it was rightly found by the court below, we think, that the words “in the manner provided” were not intended to include the three-year limitation, but only the procedure contained in those sections. That this was the intention of the amendment is -made still clearer by the provision 'in the same amendment that any alien convicted under the provisions of the act might be sentenced to a prison in this country for a period of ten years, at the expiration of which his deportation should take place.

With this statement we rest our affirmance of the orders appealed from upon the written opinion of the court below and the opinions in *119United States ex rel. Mango v. Weis (D. C.) 181 Fed. 860 (Judge Rose), and United States ex rel. Rose Dickman v. Williams, Commissioner (Southern District of New York) 183 Fed. 904 (Judge Holt).

The orders appealed from are affirmed.

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