188 F. 694 | D. Mass. | 1910
This petition alleges that the petitioner is a naturalized citizen and that his wife is unlawfully detained by the immigration commissioner at Boston.
It appears from the petition that his alleged wife is the same person whose detention by the commissioner, under her maiden name of Haiganoosh Avakian, was complained of in a previous petition to this court by Hagop Avakian, 188 Fed. 688. A writ of habeas corpus was issued on that petition, November 2, 1910, upon grounds stated in an opinion dated the same day. After a hearing upon the writ it was discharged, for reasons stated in a subsequent opinion dated November 26, 1910. The docket number of the case is 346.
The present petition alleges that the detention now complained of is under a warrant of deportation issued November 19, 1910, by the Acting Secretary of Commerce and Eabor.'
The commissioner has appeared in obedience to a notice to show cause issued on the present petition. At the hearing upon that notice it has appeared that the order of deportation referred to is the same order, issued November 19, 1910, to which reference is made in the above opinion dated November 26, 1910. The record of the proceedings had before the immigration officers, which resulted in that order, and sets forth the order itself, was submitted as showing that his detention of Haiganoosh Avakian (or Kaprielian if that be her present name) is lawful.
I find in the record submitted no reason to believe that there was any defect in the proceedings or that the deportation order is not valid.
It thus appears, and I find, that the marriage alleged in the petition took place, if at all, after the order for the woman’s deportation was made, pending its execution, and while the commissioner held security for her surrender to him in order that it might be executed.
The petitioner contends that under Rev. Stats. § 1994 (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1268), she ceased to be an alien and became a citizen hy virtue of her marriage to him on November 22, 1910, so that the immigration authorities have now no power to exclude her from the country or detain her for that purpose. The marriage is not alleged to have been, on'the part of either party to it, in ignorance of the pending proceedings or of the issuance of the deportation order. The mere fact of marriage to a citizen is relied on.
I am unable to believe that such a marriage is capable of having the effect claimed, in view of the facts shown. The deportation order was a final decision by the proper authorities that Haiganoosh Avakiati was an alien belonging to one of the excluded classes and was in the country without right. She entered the country in July, 1910, as the record shows.
In Hopkins v. Fachant, 130 Fed. 839, 65 C. C. A. 1, the deportation
■ A marriage entered into under circumstances such as are here d.is-r closed could hardly have been free from intent thereby to avoid •deportation, whether otherwise in good faith or not. The bare fact.of marriage to a citizen since the deportation order being all that is relied on, I must decline to issue the writ.,
Petition denied;