66 F.2d 495 | 2d Cir. | 1933
This is an action to recover for fines imposed upon a carrier under section 16 of the Quota Act of 1924 (8 USCA § 216), which brought in seven aliens after July 1, 1924. There is nothing to add to the genera] considerations already stated in the other opinions handed down herewith. We proceed at once to tlio seven causes of action separately.
The first two concerned a husband and wife who entered in February, 1926. They were illiterates, hut had both lived here before, the husband for sixteen years, the wife for thirteen; they had been absent nearly, a year. They had taken out return permits under section 10 of the Quota Act of 1924 (8 US CA § 210), but the period limited in these had expired before they sailed; they had no
The alien in the third cause of action was an illiterate who came in with a visa. He was excludable for illiteracy under section 3 of the Immigration Act of 1917, which he tried to excuse under the first proviso of that section as one who, having been lawfully admitted, had resided here five years and been absent less than six months. He satisfied the last two requirements, but his original entry had been unlawful; he came in surreptitiously by ferry from Cuba. The question is whether his unlawful entry was discoverable by ■ reasonable diligence. -The only way in which the carrier could have learned this was by inquiry of the alien; but as he supposed that he had been lawfully admitted, and freely told the facts upon his examination, it ■seems to us that reasonable diligence should have discovered the character of his entry. The eanier, which knew of his illiteracy, was charged with the duty of probing all the conditions and it failed. The fine was rightly imposed.
The fourth cause of action concerned a seaman, who had originally come here in 1906 and stayed till 1911. He then left and came back in 1921, at that time deserting his ship. He left the second time in December, 1924, and returned in the following May. He had sworn before the consul that his last entry was lawful, but when examined here did not conceal the desertion. There is no reason to suppose that if examined before leaving, he would not have told the truth. His case is like the last.
The sixth cause of action was substantially the same. The alien, a seaman, last left the United States in August, 1924, and came back in the following October. He had been here off and on for seven years, always serving on American ships, but he admitted that he had always come in as a seaman. Such an entry is not the lawful admission which the second proviso contemplates, and the fine was proper.
The alien in the seventh cause of action was an illiterate, coming back to visit his wife and children in this country. He had a non-quota visa. He had entered in 1906, stayed, till the end of 1911, had come back in June, 1912, and stayed till December, 1915, when he returned to serve in the Italian army. He came back as a reservist in June, 1920, and remained till January 2, 1923. He then returned in September, 1924, being absent for over two years and a half. As an illiterate, he could not therefore make use of the first proviso of section 3 of 1917, because he had been absent for more than six months. Even were we to assume that by his service in the Italian army he did not relinquish his domicile, still his absence of over two and. a half years made it at least doubtful whether he had not then relinquished it, if he ever acquired it. Thus, it did not appear that he was entitled to the, exercise of the Secretary’s dispensing power under the seventh proviso of section 3 of 1917. He was excludable and the facts were accessible to the carrier.
The alien in the fifth cause of action shipped from Italy on July 21, 1924, with a passport issued by the Argentine consul in Catania, Italy, which, bore an American visa dated May 24,1924. He also had a discharge from the Italian army which recited that he was bom in the Argentine. He shipped on July 21, 1924, after the Quota Act of 1924 went into effect, by section .28 (d) of which (8 USCA § 224 (d) a visa is construed to
Judgment reversed as to the fifth cause of action; affirmed as to the other six.