249 F. 625 | 9th Cir. | 1918
The plaintiffs in error were convicted and sentenced under an indictment which charged them with a conspiracy to aid and abet F. H. Von Schack and Franz Bopp to escape from the custody of Col. George R. McGunnegle, an officer of the
“•Respecting the power of government, no doubt is entertained. That war gives to the sovereign full right to take the persons and confiscate the property of the enemy, wherever found, is conceded. The mitigations of this rigid rule, which the humane and wise policy of modem times has introduced into practice, will more or less affect the exercise of this right, but cannot impair the right itself.”
Even in times of peace the admission of aliens to the United States and their presence here are not of right, but of favor. In Turner v. Williams, 194 U. S. 279, 289, 24 Sup. Ct. 719, 722 (48 L. Ed. 979) it was said:
“Repeated decisions of this court have determined that Congress has the power to exclude aliens from the United States, to prescribo the terms and conditions on which they may come in, to establish regulations for sending out of the country such aliens as have entered in violation of law, and to commit the enforcement of such conditions and regulations to executive officers; I hat the deportation of an alien who is found to be hero in violation of Jaw is not a deprivation of liberty without due process of law.”
The first reported case arising under the Alien Enemy Act is Lockington’s Case, Brightly, N. P. (Pa.) 269. Lockington, an alien enemy, had refused to comply with the executive order of February 23, 1813, requiring alien enemies who were within 40 miles of tidewater to retire to such places beyond that distance from tidewater as should be designated by the marshals. He was arrested, and on petition for habeas corpus attempted to test the legality of his imprisonment. Chief Justice Tilghman said of the act:
“It is a provision for the public safety, which may require that the alien should not bo removed, but kept in the country under proper restraints. * * * It is never to be forgotten that the main object of tile law is to provide for the safety of the country from enemies who are suffered to remain within it. In order to effect this safety, it might be necessary to act on sudden emergencies. * * The President, being best acquainted with the danger to be apprehended, is best able to judge of the emergency which might render such measures necessary. Accordingly, we find that the powers vested in him are expressed in the most comprehensive terms.”
On the second petition for habeas corpus Judge Yeat.es said:
“When the vessel of the eoinmonwealih is in danger,.partial evils must be submitted to, in order to guard against a general wreck. Aliens who have: come among us before a declaration of war against their sovereign, and continue to reside among us after it, cannot expect an exemption from such evils.”
And Judge Brackenridge said:
“Alien enemies, remaining in our country after a declaration of war, are to be treated according to the law of nations, an,d it has been so argued in ¡his case. Shall, then, the judicial power constitute itself a judge between Ihe executive of the general government and the nation with whom we are at war, and say whether the proceeding in the case of their subjects remaining in our country has been according to the law of nations?”
In Lockington v. Smith, 1 Pet. C. C. 466, Fed. Cas. No. 8,448, Washington, Circuit Justice, said:
*628 “It seems perfectly clear, that the power to remove was vested in the President, because, under certain circumstances, he might deem that measure most effectual to guard the public safety. But he might also cause the alien to be restrained or confined, if in his opinion the public good should forbid his removal.” >
And answering the contention that judicial authority must be resorted to to enforce the regulations so established by the President under the law, he said:
“Such a construction would, in my opinion, be at variance with the spirit as well as with the letter of the law, the' great object of which was to provide for the public safety by imposing such restraints upon alien enemies ns the chief executive magistrate of the United States might think necessary, and of which his particular situation enabled him best to judge.”
In the Case of Fries, 9 Fed. Cas. No. 5,126, Circuit Justice Iredell, charging the jury concerning the provisions of the Alien Enemy Act, said:
“In cases like this it is ridiculous to talk of the crime, because perhaps the only crime that a man can then be charged with is his being born in another country and having a strong attachment to" it. He is not punished for a crime that he has committed, but deprived of the i>ower of committing one hereafter, to which even a sense of patriotism may'tempt a warm and misguided mind. * * * The opportunities during a war of making use of men of such a description are so numerous and so dangerous that no prudent nation would ever trust to the possible good behavior of many of them.”
The judgment is affirmed.