delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiffs in error were convicted in the superior court of Sonoma County, California, of conspiracy to effect a transfer of real property in violation of the Alien Land Law of that State. Judgment was affirmed by the district court of appeal.
Under the Alien Land Law, Japanese subjects who are not eligible to citizenship under the laws of the United
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States are not permitted to acquire, use or control agricultural lands in California. Statutes of California, 1921, p, lxxxiii. Treaty of February 21, 1911, 37 Stat. 1504.
Porterfield
v.
Webb,
Plaintiff in error Cockrill is an American, and Ikada is a. Japanese subject not eligible to citizenship. They entered into an agreement to purchase certain agricultural lands and to take title in the name of Cockrill. Ikada furnished the money which was paid on account of the purchase price, and, upon the making of the contract, took possession of the property. Cockrill had no interest in the land; and the prosecution maintained that he made the contract with the seller and intended to take the deed and hold the land in trust for Ikada. But
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plaintiffs in error represented that the land was being acquired for and was to be owned by the children of Ikada, who are natives of the United States and entitled to take and hold such lands. See
Estate of Tetsubumi Yano,
It is not, and could not reasonably be, suggested that the statute is repugnant to the due process clause. It does not i operate to preclude any defense. The inference thaf payment of the purchase price by one from whom the privilege of acquisition is withheld and the taking of the land in the name of one of another class are for the purpose of getting the control of the land for the ineligible alien is not fanciful, arbitrary or unreasonable. There is a rational connection between the facts and the intent authorized to be inferred from them. The statute involves no attempt to relieve the prosecution of the burden of proving guilt beyond reasonable dbubt. It merely creates a presumption which may be overcome by evidence sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt. See
Yee Hem
v.
United States, ante,
p. 178;
Mobile, J. & K. C. R. R.
v.
Turnipseed,
The statute is not repugnant to the equal protection clause. The rule of evidence applies equally and without discrimination to all persons — to citizens and eligible aliens as well to the ineligible. In the application of the law at the trial, no distinction was made between the citizen and the Japanese. Plaintiffs in error maintain that invalidity results from the fact that, where payment of the purchase price is made by an ineligible alien, the law creates a presumption of a purpose to pre
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vent, evade or avoid escheat, while no such presumption arises where such payment is made by a citizen or eligible alien. But there are reasonable grounds for the distinction. Conveyances to ineligible Japanese are void as to the State and the lands conveyed escheat. Payment by such aliens for agricultural lands taken in the names of persons not of that class reasonably may be given a significance as evidence of intent to avoid escheat not attributable to like acts of persons who -have the privilege of owning such lands. The equal protection clause does not require absolute uniformity, or prohibit every-distinction in the laws of the State between ineligible aliens and other persons! within its jurisdiction. The State has a wide discretion and may classify persons on bases that are reasonable and germane having regard to the purpose of the legislation.
Truax
v.
Corrigan,
It is the third paragraph of Article I of the treaty that plaintiffs in error contend is violated. The treaty provision is, “ The citizens or subjects of each of the High Contracting Parties shall receive, in the territories of the other, the most constant protection and security for their persons and property, and shall enjoy in this respect the same rights and privileges as are or may be granted to native citizens or subjects, on their submitting themselves to the conditions imposed upon the native citizens or subjects.” It is plain that the treaty does not furnish any protection to Japanese subjects in this country against the application of a rule of evidence created *263 by state enactment that is not given them by the due process and equal protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. As the law does not contravene these constitutional provisions, it must be held not to violate the treaty.
Judgment affirmed.
