156 F. 420 | S.D.N.Y. | 1907
The present naturalization law (Act June 29, 1906, c. 3592, 34 Stat. 596 [U. S. Comp. St. Supp. 1907, p. 417]) requires the payment of fees (considerable in amount for many of the applicants) in advance, viz., on the “making, filing and docketing the petition” (section 13). Upon the filial hearing of said petition, which must be “had in open court before a judge” (section 9), the court must be satisfied, among other things, that the applicant during at least five years’ residence within the United States “has behaved as a man of good moral character” (section 4, subd. 4), and must generally be convinced of the truth of the allegations of the petition, including (in this man’s case) that he “has been denied admission as a citizen of the United States * * * and that the cause for such denial has since been cured or removed” (section 4, subd. 2). While the record from the state Supreme Court does not reveal the exact ground inducing the absolute denial of Guliano’s application, it is inferable from all the papers now submitted that the court did not consider a man, who had within two years and a half pleaded guilty to a serious offense, a person who during five years prior to the hearing of his application had been of good moral character.
The jurisdiction of the Supreme Court over naturalization is as ample as that of any other. Guliauo chose to submit to that jurisdiction the question (inter alia) of his moral character, and a decision has been reached adverse to him. The letter of the present act seems to place no limit upon the number of applications that an alien may make for naturalization; but I cannot think it follows that a man who has fully submitted his case to a court of competent jurisdiction and had judgment against him can propound a new application the next day in another court, and repeat the operation as long as his courage dictates or his pocket permits. It is inconceivable that, should Guli-ano’s application be entertained in this court, and his final petition come on for hearing (as it would) within a few months after the decision above noted, such decision would be wholly disregarded, and a certificate granted upon substantially the same facts as had induced its denial a few months earlier.
But there is nothing in the statute forbidding a preliminary inquiry in cases where it is doubtful whether the applicant can truthfully verify a petition giving him any hope of a successful issue. Section 4 declares that an alien “may be admitted” in the manner therein set forth, and “not otherwise.” The manner therein set forth consists of declaring on oath numerous facts and then proving them after-wards. One of the necessary facts is that the grounds of denial mov
The spirit of the law requires every applying alien to have his day in court; but it is not necessarily a day for which a prerequisite is the preparation of an elaborate petition, posting for 90 days, and a hearing upon a crowded calendar, when it can be ascertained without expense that the application is foredoomed to fail. Such, I think, is Guliano’s position. It has been decided by a court of competent jurisdiction that, because he pleaded guilty to the indictment above noted within five years prior to his application, he was not of good moral character for the statutory period. Other courts and other judges, upon slightly varying facts, might perhaps come to a different conclusion;' but I do not think that this man can show that the cause of denial has been “cured” until at the least he has behaved himself as a man of good moral character for five years after his plea of guilty. =
Motion denied.