NIUKKANEN, ALIAS MACKIE, v. McALEXANDER, ACTING DISTRICT DIRECTOR, IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION SERVICE
No. 130
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued March 21, 1960. Decided April 18, 1960.
362 U.S. 390
Oscar H. Davis argued the cause for respondent. On the brief were Solicitor General Rankin, Assistant Attorney General Wilkey, Beatrice Rosenberg and Julia Cooper.
Blanch Freedman filed a brief for the American Committee for Protection of Foreign Born, as amicus curiae, urging reversal.
PER CURIAM.
The petitioner sought relief from an order directing his deportation on the ground that as an alien he had become, after entering the United States, a member of the Communist Party within the meaning of the Act of October 16, 1918, as amended by § 22 of the
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE, MR. JUSTICE BLACK, and MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN concur, dissenting.
Petitioner was born in Finland in 1908, came here when he was less than a year old and has resided here ever since. He is married to a native-born citizen; he served honorably in our Army; and he has no criminal record of any kind except for a petty offense, back in 1930.
These two ex-Communists testified that petitioner attended dances that the Party arranged in Portland. But they said he never held an office in the Party; nor was ever employed by the Party; nor was ever a “functionary” in the sense of representing the Party. He attended a regional meeting at Aberdeen, Washington, where various speakers, according to one ex-Communist, gave “glowing accounts” of their work for the Party, “more or less fabricating” their achievements.
We know from petitioner‘s lips that he was not acquainted with the conventional Communist literature;
This is the background against which the following testimony can be best understood.
“Q. In the Finnish Hall or anywhere else did you attend Communist Party meetings?
“A. Well, if I said yes and if I said no maybe I wouldn‘t be telling the truth, because I really couldn‘t tell one way or the other. I went to meetings there. Sometimes maybe they were Communist, and maybe they wasn‘t. It could have been and maybe they wasn‘t.
“Q. Have you been a member of the Communist Party of the United States or any branch or affiliate or organization by that name or any similar name?
“A. Knowingly, I haven‘t, no.
“Q. Do you believe that membership in the Communist Party now is a lawful political purpose?
“A. No. I can‘t answer questions about that because I don‘t know. If Congress says it is unlawful, it is unlawful. If it isn‘t, it isn‘t. I don‘t know. If I got the question right, I don‘t know.
I am not trying to confuse you, . . . I am trying to find out your feelings toward Communism. “A. Naturally I don‘t—Communism or socialism, I don‘t care what party it is here or any place else, if it has anything to do with overthrowing the government by force and violence I don‘t agree with it, no.
“Q. What was your impression of what the Communist Party was trying to do?
“A. Well, the only thing I heard in those days was more relief and more work, and I never heard anything else; no violent overthrow of the Government, or anything of that sort, but anyplace I went to meetings was always more work and more food.
“Q. As far as you know, that was what the Communist Party stood for during that period?
“A. I don‘t know if they stood for that, but I never heard anything against it.”
The case is on all fours with Rowoldt v. Perfetto, 355 U. S. 115. The “solidity of proof” (id., at 120) required for the severe consequences of the deportation of a man who came here when he was less than one year old, whose only memory of life is in this land, and who has lived here over 50 years has not been met. The “meaningful association” with the Party which the Rowoldt case requires (id., at 120) simply has not been established here. In this case, as in Rowoldt, petitioner‘s association with the Party was “wholly devoid of any ‘political’ implications.” Id., at 120.
The testimony of the two ex-Communists upon which petitioner is being banished has never been heard by a court. The only testimony taken by the District Court was that of the petitioner and his character witnesses. The district judge believed the witnesses against Niuk-
The unanimity of all the finders of fact in the Rowoldt case (id., at 119) that Rowoldt was a “member” of the Party and his refusal to answer when asked in the deportation proceedings whether he had ever been a member of the Communist Party, did not stop us from declaring that “the record before us is all too insubstantial to support the order of deportation.” Id., at 121. The unanimity of the finders of fact in the present case should likewise be no barrier to our entry of a just decree. A man who has lived here for every meaningful month of his entire life should not be sent into exile for acts which this record reveals were utterly devoid of any sinister implication.
