247 F. 138 | E.D.N.Y | 1917
The applicant seems well disposed to the United States. His wife was born in this country and appears to protest against her alien status by marriage. As soon as possible the
The statute was enacted when the application and hearing could be completed at one hearing. The present law compels the elapse of 90' days before final hearing, and the case of United States v. Meyer, 241 Fed. 305, 154 C. C. A. 185, established the law for this circuit by excluding from the effect of section 2171 those cases in which the application was made (petition filed)’ before the declaration of war. But this does not allow the court to file nunc pro tunc those petitions which the court might feel would, if some physical occurrence had not intervened, have been actually on file. In this view of the matter the question of responsibility for the applicant’s misfortune cannot change his actual status.
The application for mandamus will be denied.