47 F. 578 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California | 1891
The petitioner is a subject of the. empire of China, whence he arrived at the port of San Francisco on the 11th day of August, 1891. The master of the vessel on which he sailed having refused to land him, a writ of habeas corpus was issued in his behalf, and in answer thereto it is alleged that the cause of his detention upon such vessel is that he had not procured from the government of China the certificate required by the act of congress. From an agreed statement of facts it appears that the petitioner for the last 17 years has been a merchant and a member of a prominent Chinese mercantile firm of Portland, Or., where he has during that time resided; that on September 30,1890, he went to China, intending shortly to return to this country and to his business, which he did on said 11th day of August, but without procuring from the Chinese government the certificate required by the act named.
The only question for determination is whether a Chinese person, who has been domiciled in this country as a merchant, and temporarily leaving it, can re-enter without such certificate. In consequence of the indefinite legislation and the incompatible adjudications on this subject, it is not one of easy solution. To briefly review both may not be
In Chew Heong v. U. S., 112 U. S. 536, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 255, a Chinese laborer, who, by said treaty, being entitled to a residence here, left before the passage of the act, and hence without procuring, on leaving, the certificate required for laborers, and on his attempt to return was refused a landing. While the law required all laborers who had lived here and had left and desired to re-enter to have such certificate, and provided that it should be the only evidence of their right to return, the supreme court held that it was absurd to maintain that those Chinese laborers who left when no certificate was required, could not be admitted upon their return, after the passage of the act, without one, and that the law should be consistently construed, according to its spirit, and not letter, and in such way as to carry out the intent of congress, which was to sustain the treaties, and not to violate them. It should also be noted that the treasury department has generally so construed the act as to permit the return,
If the foregoing authorities and rulings were the only guide, the facts of this case might justify the petitioner’s release; but the supreme court, in the very recent case of Wan Shing v. U. S., 11 Sup. Ct. Rep. 729, lias adopted a contrary view. In that case the petitioner claimed to have been a merchant in San Francisco, which place he left in 1882 for a temporary residence in China, and returned to 'San Francisco in 1889, without having procured, before leaving China, such certificate; which the court held, was essential to his admission. Against the force of this decision it is now urged that what is in it which might affect this case is more obiter dictum; that ilie. only question involved was whether the testimony was sufficient,to establish the petitioner’s character as a merchant; that, whether he could land without such certificate was not an issue; and that, in so far as this last question was decided, it was-without consideration, and more the result of inadvertence than of deliberation. If such were the fact, in view of the other rulings cited above, this last ease might be considered as not a controlling one. The opinion says the refusal to land the petitioner was based, not upon the acts of 1882 and 1884, but upon that of 1888, which prohibits all Chinese laborers from now coming to tho United States, and that “the petitioner, if a laborer, could not be permitted to land. * * * His right to land, therefore, rested upon his establishing the fact that he was not a laborer within the provisions of the act of October 1, 1888, and that could only have been shown by a certificate of identity, issued undoi the authority of the Chinese government.” The opinion then proceeds to quote from said section 6, as enacted in 1882 and amended in 1884, especially emphasizing the clause which directs that said certificate “ shall be the sole evidence permissible on the part of the person so procuring the samo to establish a right of entry into the United States.” It then declares:
“This clause disposes of the case before us. No certificate was presented by the petitioner, under the statute, showing that he was entitled to enter the United States; nor was any attempt made to account for its absence.”
Had the decision concluded here, this last clause would justify the view that such certificate is not always necessary, but, when a sufficient reason appeal’s for its absence, other evidence may be substituted. But it is further added:
“The evidence offered lo show that the petitioner was a merchant was weak and unsatisfactory, but the statute itself does away with the necessity for an investigation by the court as to its sufficiency, for it declares that, while the certificate may be contradicted by the authorities of the United States, and is to be taken by them as only primo, facie evidence, it shall constitute the sole evidence permissible on the part of the person producing the name to establish his right to enter the United States.”
And in the concluding clause of the opinion the court reiterates the same view. It is true the court did not, at any great length, discuss the direct question involved here, but it certainly has most deliberately and in unequivocal language decided that the certificate defined by the law is abso
There is, however, another view to be taken of this law. When a statute is so plain that doubt cannot be entertained that the legislators intended it as it reads, courts should not attempt to attach to it another construction than that plainly intended, but only ambiguous and unconstitutional statutes they may construe and overturn. When this last act was adopted, congress had become familiar with the Chinese question and the legislation concerning it, and must have foreseen the effects of this law. Moreover, when a Chinese subject returns to China, and remains there many years, he should be required, before returning here, to procure the certificate of his occupation there. Seeing the necessity of such a rule in such cases, and the difficulty of fixing any limit of residence in a foreign country which should make it proper to secure such certificate, it seems probable that congress intended the rule to become applicable to all coming here, whether for the first time or otherwise. At all events, the supreme court seems to have adopted this view, and has left it to congress to amend the law if it shall work hardship, as it undoubtedly may in cases like this. In accord, therefore, with what is deemed the ruling of that court, it is now ordered that the writ be denied, and the petitioner be remanded to the empire of China.