MANGAOANG v. BOYD, District Director, Immigration and Naturalization Service et al.
No. 13537.
United States Court of Appeals Ninth Circuit.
June 17, 1953.
205 F.2d 553
See also 9 Cir., 186 F.2d 191.
Before HEALY, BONE and POPE, Circuit Judges.
POPE, Circuit Judge.
The appellant was arrested on a warrant of deportation and after a hearing ordered deported from the United States upon the ground that he was after entering the United States an alien who was a member of the Communist Party of the United States and hence deportable under the provisions of the Internal Security Act of 1950, Pub. Law 831, Ch. 1024, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., U.S. Code Cong. Service 1950, p. 984. The order was affirmed by the Board of Immigration Appeals and appellant sought a writ of habeas corpus in the court below. The appeal is from the judgment denying the writ.
Appellant was born of Filipino parentage in the Philippine Islands on February 22, 1902. He came to the continental United States for permanent residence April 29, 1926, and has lived in the United States continuously since that day. At the time of his arrival in this country he was not an alien, but was a national of the United States. Cabebe v. Acheson, 9 Cir., 183 F.2d 795. The Philippine Independence Act, enacted March 24, 1934,
§ 22 of the Internal Security Act of 1950 contains the provisions under which the deportation was ordered. That section, amending the Act of October 16, 1918, as amended,1 provided as follows: “§ 4(a) Any alien who was at the time of entering the United States, or has been at any time thereafter, * * * a member of any one of the classes of aliens enumerated in section 1(2) of this Act, shall, upon the warrant of the Attorney General, be taken into custody and deported in the manner provided in the Immigration Act of February 5, 1917. The provisions of this section shall be applicable to the classes of aliens mentioned in this Act, irrespective of the time of their entry into the United States.” § 1(2) of the Act refers to: “(2) Aliens who, at any time, shall be or shall have been members of any of the following classes: * * * (C) Aliens who are members of * * * the Communist Party of the United States“.
Appellant asserts that he is not now an alien, but that he always has been and remains a national of the United States. It is clear that to maintain this position he must demonstrate that the rule of Cabebe v. Acheson, supra, does not apply to him. In that case this court held that upon proclamation of Philippine Independence on July 4, 1946, Filipino nationals of the United States lost the status of nationality whether they were then inhabitants of the Islands or domiciled in the United States. We said, 183 F.2d at page 801: “The status of United States nationality for Filipinos was the direct result of the United States’ assumption of sovereignty over the Islands. When the United States relinquished its sovereignty, there remained no basis for such status.”
Appellant argues that since Cabebe was domiciled in Hawaii and not in continental United States, the rule of that case should not be applied to him. Further he challenges the correctness of the decision in the Cabebe case and seeks to have us reexamine it. We think that it was rightly decided and that under its rule the appellant became an alien on July 4, 1946.
The trial court declined to go along with this last contention of the appellant, holding that it was not necessary that appellant “have been an alien at the time he was a member of the Communist Party in order to come within the provisions of § 22 of the Internal Security Act of 1950“. The trial court was of the view that this conclusion was compelled by the decision in Eichenlaub v. Shaughnessy, 338 U.S. 521, 70 S. Ct. 329, 332, 94 L. Ed. 307.
We do not think that the Eichenlaub case controls here for the reason that the statutory language there construed read quite differently than does the present act. In that case the class of persons was described as “All aliens who since August 1, 1914, have been or may hereafter be convicted of any violation or conspiracy to violate any of the following Acts * * * ”
It is apparent that appellant‘s status cannot be disposed of without determining whether he must be considered to have been an alien within the meaning of the present Act in the years 1938 and 1939. This depends upon the significance of the words “shall be considered as if they were aliens” in the portion of the Philippine Independence Act which we have previously quoted.2 Just what effect that section had in creating for the appellant a status which would bring him within the operative phraseology of the Internal Security Act of 1950 is not altogether free from doubt. In the first place there is the question whether the words “for the purposes of the Immigration Act of 1917 * * * and all other laws of the United States relating to the immigration, exclusion, or expulsion of aliens“, has reference only to such laws then in effect, or whether it is intended to refer to all such laws enacted at any time in the future.
It is to be noted also that following the proclamation of Philippine Independence in 1946, Proclamation No. 2695, 22 U.S.C.A. § 1395 note, this section became completely obsolete and no longer had any effective reference to any one;3 and in Del
If we assume, as we do, that the 1934 Act‘s reference to “all other laws * * * relating to the immigration, exclusion, or expulsion of aliens” comprehended not only such laws then in effect but also such as might thereafter be enacted, it is clear that if the appellant is now subject to deportation such must result not from what was said in the Act of March 24, 1934, but from what was said in the Internal Security Act of 1950. If appellant is deportable, it is by reason of the impact of the latter act. The question is whether the word “aliens” in subdivision (C) — “Aliens who are members of * * * the Communist Party“, includes not only aliens in the ordinary sense but was intended to be broad enough to include persons who were in reality nationals of the United States but who under the provisions of the Act of March 24, 1934 were to be “considered as if they were aliens“.
If it be conceded that the word “aliens” in the present Act might possibly be given so broad a construction, the most that could be said is that this possibility suggests an ambiguity. There is nothing to show that when Congress enacted the Internal Security Act, it had in mind the very special case of the Filipinos described in the quoted section of the Act of March 24, 1934. Clearly we deal here with an Act which, if it were to apply to this appellant, would have a punitive impact.4 A person in appellant‘s situation obviously could be at the moment not only no longer a communist but a most vigorous, aggressive and useful anti-communist. If appellant is to be deported, it must be for some act which he long since may have repented.
We think that the rule of strict construction should be applied to a statute having this impact, and that subdivision (C) above quoted must be construed to use the word “aliens” in the ordinary sense and connotation, and not to include Filipinos who were for certain limited purposes to be “considered as * * * aliens“, under a section of a law long since obsolete and inoperative. We think therefore that the Act here in question did not authorize the appellant‘s deportation.
There is a further reason why the appellant cannot be regarded as subject to deportation. § 4(a), quoted above, which authorizes the deportation of certain aliens, refers only to any alien “who was at the time of entering the United States, or has been at any time thereafter, a member of any one of the classes of aliens enumerated“, etc. While it is true that in a popular and non-technical sense the appellant did “enter” the United States in 1926, when he came here for permanent residence, yet in the sense of statutes relating to immigration, exclusion, citizenship and expulsion, Congress has always referred to “entering the United States” in a limited and technical sense. The word “enter” has always been used as a word
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause is remanded with directions to order the appellant‘s release from custody.
BONE, Circuit Judge (specially concurring).
I concur in the first part of Judge POPE‘s opinion which holds that Mangaoang is not a member of a deportable class, not having been simultaneously an alien and a member of the Communist Party. I have grave doubts and therefore reserve judgment concerning the validity of the second ground of the decision, i. e., that Mangaoang never “entered” the United States, and therefore is not deportable.
