This suit is for a judgment declaring that an outstanding warrant for the deportation of appellant, plaintiff below, is without force and for an injunction restraining appellee, District Director of the Immigration Service, from proceeding against him under the warrant pursuant to § 23 of the Internal Security Act of 1950, 8 U.S.C.A. § 156 * After *482 joinder of issue, summary judgment was granted in favor of appellee on the latter’s motion. The argument in support of the relief asked by appellant is that before the effective date of the amendments made by the Internal Security Act of 1950 to section 20 of the Immigration Act of 1917 the deportation order had spent its force or become functus officio by virtue of unexcused lapse of time.
The facts are riot in dispute. Appellant Spector is a native of Odessa, Rus-sia, where he was born in 1895. He-departed from Odessa' in 1913, embarking at Trieste, Austria, and was admitted to the United' States on August 27 of that year. He has since lived in the United States, most of the time in California. He married a fellow immigrant, ánd 'there is one ■ child as - issue of the marriage, a daughter, who herself is the wife of an American' citizen. In 1928 the Secretary of Labor initiated deportation proceedings culminating on August 23, 1930; in the issuance of a warrant for appellant’s deportation to Russia, via Shanghai, China, on the ground that he had been found in - the United States in violation of the Act of October 16, 1918, as amended, 8 U.S.C.A. § 137. † Specifically, the findings of the Secretary were that Spector believes in, advises, advocates or teaches the overthrow by force or violence of the government of the United States, and that he is a member of an organization or group so advising, advocating or teaching. Upon the establishment of diplomatic relations between the United States and the Soviet Union in November of 1933 the Commissioner of Immigration and Naturalization sought to obtain permission from the Soviet Union for appellant’s deportation to that country. The request was refused. After the initial refusal, appellant’s case, with others, was presented a second time to the Soviet authorities without success. Following the establishment of- an allied military government in Trieste as an outgrowth of the Second World War, the Commissioner attempted to obtain permission for appellant’s deportation to that place as his port of embarkation. In April of 1948 permission was refused, and in August of the same year another attempt was riiade to obtain permission for his deportation to Trieste, again without success. At all times appellant has remained at liberty on his own recognizance, except that in March 1950 he was required to post a bond for his appearance in deportation proceedings.
No cases have been found by counsel holding that a deportation warrant becomes invalid or unenforceable through'mere lapse of time, or for that matter because of dilatory conduct or laches on the part of the immigration authorities in' effecting a deportation. There are a number of decisions in habeas .corpus to the effect that the right to hold the alien in custody under a deportation warrant persists for no more than a reasonable period. See, for example, United States ex rel. Janavaris v. Nicolls, D.C.,
We may add that Congress appears not to have been of opinion that the Spector or other outstanding warrants had lost their effectiveness as of the time of the adoption of the Internal Security Act of 1950, which contains provisions designed to expedite the deportation of aliens. In the report on the proposed legislation specific reference was made, among others, to Spector’s case as one of those with which the government was unable to cope under existing law. 1 Undoubtedly it was the intent of Congress to make the new legislation applicable in the case of existing unexecuted warrants. See opening sentence of § 156(b) of 8 U.S.C.A.
Apparently as an alternative to his claim for outright reversal appellant asks that the judgment below be set aside and his action dismissed as premature. The suggestion is predicated on the following circumstances which we will notice briefly. Prior to the commencement of the action appellant had been indicted on charges, among others, of violating the 1950 legislation, 8 U.S. C.A. § 156(c). The charges under this section were dismissed by the district court, and on direct appeal to the Supreme Court the judgment of dismissal was reversed. United States v. Spector,
The judgment is affirmed.
