300 F. 248 | W.D. Wash. | 1924
The petitioner invokes the five years after entry limitation specified by section 19 of the act of 1917 (Comp. St. 1918, Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1919, § 4289J4jj)- The Immigration Act of 1924 took effect May 26, 1924, and has no application. The government contends that the conviction of the alien in 1907 in the United States subjected him to deportation under the act of 1917 at any time, and cites Lauria v. U. S. (C. C. A.) 271 Fed. 261; U. S.
Lauria first entered the United States December 27, 1914. He was arrested on deportation warrant December 19, 1919, and warrant of deportation was issued May 5, 1920. The effective date involved is conclusive that deportation proceedings were commenced within five 3'ears from the date of entry. The court did say at page 263:
“We think Congress intended, to pronounce classes of aliens who are undesirable, and, by general provision of law, exclude all within five years, but provided specifically that certain classes, including the class to which the appellant belongs, might be taken into custody and deported at any time.”
In U. S. ex rel. Davis v. Tod, supra, the court held it sufficient if deportation proceedings are instituted within five years.
The issue in the instant case is distinguished from that in the Lauria Case, in that this proceeding was not instituted within five years from date of entry. The court in the Lauria Case is right in saying that the Congress intended to classify the aliens and to limit deportation to the particular classes, and that Lauria was within the provisions of the act; but the language of the court is obitur dictum in saying that a person convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude prior to entry can be deported under the act of 1917 at my time. Section 19 deals with two classes of aliens: The first is those who have no right to enter; the second class, those whose admission was lawful, but whose subsequent conduct forfeited the right to remain. The five-year limitation of the first class began at the date of entry, and the five-year limitation period of the second class began at the time of the commission of, or conviction of, the inhibited crime. This is the view expressed by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Third Circuit in Hughes v. Tropello, supra. The petitioner is of the first class. Thus concluding, it is unnecessary to discuss whether the conviction involved moral turpitude. Inter alia, it may be said, however, that this court on May 25, 1922, in Re Eli Rousseau, affirmed (C. C. A.) 284 Fed. 565, held that a person convicted under the state statute of the crime of being a “jointist,” and sentenced to the penitentiary, was convicted of a crime involving moral turpitude.
"The writ will be granted’.