298 F. 951 | S.D.N.Y. | 1924
These two cases present nearly the same situation though Basile’s is a little the weaker. The exclusion is in each case under the Quota Eaw, and the alien bases his right to enter upon five years’ continuous residence in the Argentine. There is nothing in the story of each to excite suspicion, except that Basile at first swore that he had run away to Barcelona and gone thence to Chile, from where he eventually went to the Argentine. Eater, without so far as I can see any detection in this fabricated story, he said that he had gone direct to the Argentine as a stowaway. No doubt this in some measure discredited his general testimony, but it scarcely in itself constitutes evidence which justifies disregarding the documentary evidence upon which each alien relied.
The alien’s explanation of his failure to produce the document was adequate, unless it was disbelieved, and there was no reason to disbelieve it; at least, none was suggested. Thus to exclude him without any evidence justifying its rejection was to deny him a fair hearing. I may even assume that the alien has the burden of proof in such cases, and the result is the same. It is not enough for the board' of special inquiry to say that they do not believe that the certificate was retained by the consul, in the face of his jurat, or that it was false, when they had not seen it. They have no power to dispense with the usual means of ascertaining the truth. They are as much bound to proceed rationally as I am, and it is not rational procedure to disregard evidence inherently probative for no assignable reasons.
Plence I held that these aliens were denied a fair hearing, because it lay within the power of the authorities, and probably of them alone, to produce the missing certificates on which the aliens’ cases hung. The question whether they are entitled to admission is quite another matter. It will be referred to William Parkin, Esq., as master to hear and report. The respondent will, of course, be allowed time to produce the certificates from the American consul in Buenos Ayres; but, if he does not, the master will treat the aliens’ secondary evidence of them as adequate.
Writ sustained; reference ordered; aliens admitted to bail.