223 F. 487 | 9th Cir. | 1915
This cause is here on appeal from a judgment dismissing a petition for a writ of habeas corpus; a demurrer having been sustained to such petition. The petitioner is a Chinese woman, who is charged with being unlawfully in this country because engaged in practicing prostitution, and is held for deportation upon warrant of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor. The purpose of suing out the writ was to effect her release from such custody.
The alleged illegality of her restraint consists in abuse of discretion by the immigration officers in the examination of the petitioner for deportation, and in failing to render her a fair and impartial hearing, in the following particulars:
(1) ' Incorporating into the record against the petitioner the testimony of Leong Toe, Ton Yook Lan, and Wong Go, and refusing to set a time and place for the examination of said witnesses on behalf of petitioner.
(2) Taking- the testimony of Arthur D. Layne and Dennis Bohle on affidavit against petitioner, without potice to her, and withholding the fact that such testimony had been taken until the final hearing, and embodying the same in the record without affording opportunity tO' her of answering the same.
(3) Submitting evidence detrimental to the petitioner’s case, previously withheld and clandestinely forwarded to the department, after the close of the hearing, and not affording her an opportunity of answering such evidence, and so abridging and limiting the right of her counsel as to prevent him from ascertaining all the evidence against her.
(4) Submitting evidence against petitioner in the form of oral examination of witnesses had prior to< according her the right of an attor
A copy of the proceedings before the immigration officers is appended to the petition, so that what was actually done is made to appear from the record.
The testimony of Leong Toe,. Ton 'Yook Lan, and Wong,Go was taken by question and answer before Inspector F. H. Ainsworth September 20, 1912, and on the same day Samuel W. Backus, Immigration Commissioner at San Francisco, recoriimended to the Department of Commerce and Labor that a warrant issue for the arrest of petitioner and Leong Toe, because found in a well-known house of prostitution; the said petitioner Choy Gum claiming to have been in this country for 19 years, although only 21 years of age.
On September 21st the department declined to issue the warrant. On September 25th the commissioner again wired that :
“It now appears tliat Choy Gum’s true name is Go King, landed October 23, 1908, from steamship China as wife of native.”
Whereupon, on the next day, the acting Secretary of Commerce and Labor directed that petitioner be taken into custody and granted a hearing to enable her to show cause why she should not be deported.
On October 10th a hearing was had before Inspector Ainsworth, at which were present petitioner and her counsel, and petitioner was examined through an interpreter. Her counsel was advised that he could ask her any questions he thought, pertinent, or make any statement he wished, but he only asked that the matter be continued. Counsel was thereupon provided with the previous record in the case, being a record of the whole proceeding, with the exception of what occurred on that day in his presence, and the hearing was continued until October 24, 1912, to give petitioner opportunity to show cause why she should not be deported.
The next recorded proceeding bears date November 7, 1912, and shows the hearing to have been continued to that time. At this hearing counsel'for petitioner advised the inspector that the evidence in her behalf would be submitted in the form of affidavits, and the government offered in evidence the affidavits of two policemen, namely, Arthur D.' Layne and Dennis Bohle, copies of which had been furnished counsel. Counsel for petitioner at the same hearing entered protest, first, against any further action being taken in the cause, on the ground that petitioner had resided continuously in the United States for more than three years prior to the date of the arrest; second, against the incorporation into the record of the testimony of Wong Go and Ton Yook Lan, on the ground that petitioner had not been accorded the opportunity of cross-examining, and against closing the hearing without affording such opportunity ; third, against the introduction of the affidavits of Layne and Bohle, on the ground that the evidence was presented after the petitioner was permitted the right of counsel, and counsel was not afforded the opportunity to cross-examine the affiants; and, fourth, that the proceeding is in violation of the rights of an alien domiciled in the United States, and contrary to the letter and spirit of the Constitution. When
The affidavits which counsel announced would be submitted in behalf of petitioner were accordingly submitted, and were incorporated in the record, which was subsequently transmitted to the Secretary of Commerce and Labor for his consideration. Based upon the proofs thus submitted, the Acting Secretary of Commerce and Labor, on November 15th, commanded petitioner’s deportation.
“It is entirely settled that the authority of Congress to prohibit aliens from coming within the United States and to regulate their coining includes authority to impose conditions upon the performance of which the continued liberty of the alien to reside within the bounds of this country may be made to depend; that a proceeding to enforce such regulations is not a criminal prosecution, within the meaning of the fifth and sixth amendments; that such an inquiry may be properly devolved upon an executive department or subordinate officials thereof; and that the findings of fact reached by such officials, after a fair, though summary, hearing, may constitutionally be made conclusive, as they are made by the provisions of the act in question.”
This holding has been later reaffirmed in Bugajewitz v. Adams, 228 U. S. 585, 591, 33 Sup. Ct. 607, 57 L. Ed. 978. In an earlier case (Yeung How v. North, 223 U. S. 705, 32 Sup. Ct. 517, 56 L. Ed. 621), the contention was made that the statute and procedure thereunder (the case being one for deportation) deprived the petitioner of due process of law under the Constitution, inasmuch as there was no provision by which the commissioner could procure or compel the attendance of witnesses, and because such alien lawfully in this country could not be deported without a hearing of a judicial character. Notwithstanding such contention, the appeal was dismissed. Eor this statement of the case, see Low Wah Suey v. Backus, 225 U. S. 460, 468, 32 Sup. Ct. 734, 56 L. Ed. 1165. These authorities answer fully the constitutional objection insisted upon by counsel for appellant.
“Considering the summary character of the hearing provided by statute and the rights given to counsel in the rules prescribed, we are not prepared to say that the rules are so arbitrary and so manifestly intended to deprive the alien of a fair, though summary, hearing as to be beyond the power of the Secretary of Commerce and Labor under the authority of the statute.”
Low Wah Suey v. Backus, supra, 225 U. S. 472, 32 Sup. Ct. 737, 56 L. Ed. 1165.
The affidavits were inspected by counsel for petitioner, and the only objection or protest made to their admission was that the petitioner was not áfforded the opportunity to cross-examine the affiants; none was interposed on the ground that petitioner was not given the opportunity of answering them; nor was any request made for an extension of time in which to produce further testimony to refute the same. So the question rests on the propriety of admitting affidavits in evidence,
This kind of testimony, while not ordinarily competent for judicial inquiry in the sense of a trial in a court of justice, has nevertheless been resorted to before executive officers and boards of immigration inspectors for determining the right of aliens to remain in this country, and yet the aliens have been refused their liberty upon habeas corpus, where the inquiry appeared to be fair and impartial, and where the immigration officers had been guilty of no abuse of discretion reposed in them. Such a case was Healy v. Backus, Commissioner of Immigration, 221 Fed. 358, recently decided by this court. In that case many affidavits were taken and admitted, both for and against the petitioner, and a very wide range of inquiry was indulged in by which information was gathered by means of letters and reports, and yet the court was o E the view that the inquiry was fairly conducted toward the aliens whom Healy represented, and without abuse of discretion on the part of the immigration officers, and consequently refused to liberate them upon habeas corpus; there being pertinent testimony adduced from which the finding made could be reasonably inferred. To the same purpose are also the recently decided cases of White v. Gregory, 213 Fed. 768, 130 C. C. A. 282, in this court, and United States v. Uhl, 215 Fed. 573, 131 C. C. A. 641, in the Circuit Court, of Appeals for the Second Circuit.
The language of the court in Low Wah Suey v. Backus, supra, 225 U. S. 468, 32 Sup. Ct. 735, 56 L. Ed. 1165, is pertinent for repetition here:
“In order to successfully attack by judicial proceedings the conclusions and orders made upon such hearings, it must be shown that the proceedings were manifestly unfair, that the action of the executive officers was such as to prevent a fair investigation, or that there was a manifest abuse of the discretion committed to them by the statute. In other cases the order of the executive officers, within the authority of the statute, is final.”
We are not convinced, from the petition and the record made a part thereof, that any unfairness or impartiality was practiced by the immigration officers in the conduct of petitioner’s examination touching her deportation, nor do we find that they were guilty of any abuse of discretion. The objections and protest insisted upon, therefore, are not well taken.-
Judgment of the District Court affirmed.