10 Misc. 2d 402 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1958
This is a motion for leave to reargue, or in the alternative, for permission to allow an appeal from a determination of this court to the Appellate Division. We have decided to grant the alternative relief, not because of any lack of faith in the affirmance of the action taken by the learned Justice of the City Court, but due to two factors of apparently contradictory nature. The question involved is of great importance to many thousands of people. Yet it has never, so far as we can determine, been litigated before.
The facts are as follows: The defendants, in 1948, being desirous of facilitating the entry of their two nephews into the United States as immigrants, gave an assurance to the American Consul abroad. The assurance is in the form of an affidavit and contains this language: ‘ ‘ That we are willing and able to receive, maintain, support the aliens after their immigration to the United States and hereby assume such obligations guaranteeing that none of them will at any time become public charges upon any community in the United States and that any of school age will be sent to school.” The affidavit gives information of the financial worth of the defendants indicating their ability to meet such obligations.
The next question is what regulations have been made. Plaintiff points out that assurances in the same general form have been in use for over 30 years. This, however, begs the question. The extended use of the form is not a guide to the purpose behind that use. The use itself is just as compatible with the theory that the form was employed to lend an air of solemnity to a moral obligation as it is with the theory of contract. However, if a contract is authorized the use of a contract form would be a strong indication that such was intended. In this connection, it is well to note that the defendants do not argue that they were misled into making a contract. Their point is that the consular officer had no right to exact a contract from them, because the United States sought no such contract as a condition for granting a visa. Plaintiff produced no regulation or promulgation of any department. Actually, the record shows that the State Department has consistently refused to take a stand on whether the affidavit is an enforeible agreement, showing that this is a matter for the courts. Also, the State Department has issued a pamphlet of “ General Information Regarding Visas for Immigrants ’ ’ in which it prescribes that a sponsor may submit a statement showing his ability and willingness to contribute to the support of the immigrant. This is quite different from an agreement to supply that support. Also, there is a statutory provision for the posting of a bond where a visa would otherwise be refused for likelihood that the immigrant would become a public charge., (U. S. Code, tit. 8, § 1183.)
Finally, and most persuasive, is the report of a Senate Committee on the Judiciary of April 20, 1950 (Senate Report No. 1515, 81st Cong., 2d Sess.). In discussing whether to give consuls authority to require a bond to be posted, the committee stated that the usual sponsor’s affidavits are moral obligations only and are not enforeible as contracts. There are many similar declarations of policy and interpretation with regard to later special statutes on immigration, notably the displaced persons and refugee relief laws. These are not deemed of value on this application because the acts in question were emergency measures designed in the particular circumstances affected, to relieve against the rigors of the immigration laws.
Hofstadter and Heoht JJ., concur.