| S.D.N.Y. | Jan 29, 1924

LEARNED HAND, District Judge

(after stating the facts as above). The objection to the fairness of the hearing does not go to the honesty or impartiality of the medical board, but to the unfitness of the tests which they applied to determine the mental capacity of a child of the relator’s age; that is, the charge is not that the board applied the tests unfairly in this particular instance, or that the child would in fact have passed them, if fairly treated. Hence the question is whether the medical board understood how to ascertain the condition of feeble-mindedness; in short, whether it was competent for its duties. The case is therefore not the usual one of whether a.board of special inquiry has acted without any evidence. Gegiow v. Uhl, 239 U.S. 3" court="SCOTUS" date_filed="1915-10-25" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/gegiow-v-uhl-98536?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="98536">239 U. S. 3, 36 Sup. Ct. 2, 60 L. Ed. 114" court="SCOTUS" date_filed="1915-10-25" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/gegiow-v-uhl-98536?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="98536">60 L. Ed. 114. Feeble-mindedness is indeed a question of fact, but it turns upon a standard not fixed by law, but by psychiatry; judges must accept it from expert opinion.

There is no question that the medical officers appointed by the Surgeon General believed that the standard adopted by them was in accord with psychiatric usage. In practice that will always be enough, for the statute gives to an alien no more than the right to an honest decision by such officers as the Surgeon General may believe to be competent. Their finding is itself expert opinion that the standard used by them was proper. In such cases courts may not interfere, unless the alien in fact complied with all the tests or the officers later admit that the standards used were wrong. Hence the issue tried before the master turns out 4o be non justiciable here, and the board’s finding is beyond attack.

The second point is more troublesome! Section 16 intrusts the original examination to two medical officers of the United States Public Health Service. From their certificate the alien is given an appeal to a board of medical officers, likewise of the United States Public Health Service, whom t{ie Surgeon General is to select and convene. On that appeal the alien may call .one expert witness of his own.x Obviously *120the hearing on appeal is to be a reconsideration oh the whole matter, first, because of this new evidence; and, second, because the appeal can in any event be decided only after a fresh examination of the alien. There is no record to review, as we know it in judicial procedure.

There seems to me no necessary reason why the Surgeon General should not appoint one or both of the.original medical officers on this appellate boárd, though I should think it was generally undesirable. Certainly he should scrutinize the character of the men whom he appoints for so delicate a duty. However, it is by no means beyond the compass of human impartiality to reconsider the correctness of one’s former conclusions. The appeal is quite different from the original •ex parte examination of the alien. Since he is prima facie non sui compos, it is the first time that his case can be competently and contentiously presented, and many, perhaps most, men would feel no humiliation in changing their minds under such circumstances.

The statute is drawn with minute detail and has been often amended; one ought to hesitate before implying conditions in it. If the relator be right, either five medical officers must be stationed at all ports of entry, or they must be assembled whenever an appeal is taken. The statute is of general application over the country, and 1 question whether Congress meant to require so much. Rather I should suppose that matters like this were meant to be left to the good judgment of the Surgeon General when he made up the appellate board.

While I do not think the analogy in point, it is perhaps pertinent to say that the relator is quite wrong in supposing that a judge was disqualified at common law from sitting in review of h'is own decisions. The practice was extremely common in the law courts of England; and still obtains in this country, at least in Massachusetts and elsewhere, though not generally, ' True, judges are thought to have ihore detachment than others-; but, when they sit, it is in cases where the whole matter has been once contentiously argued. The case at bar, if we are to look to judicial precedents at all, which I question, is rather like a hearing on return day after the preliminary consideration given by a judge before issuing an ex parte stay. At any rate, all that courts can look at in reviewing such proceedings as these is whether the alien has had the substance of a fair hearing. U. S. ex rel. Bilokumsky v. Tod, 263 U.S. 149" court="SCOTUS" date_filed="1923-11-12" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/united-states-ex-rel-bilokumsky-v-tod-100280?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="100280">263 U. S. 149, 44 Sup. Ct. 54, 68 L. Ed.-. I think that an unfair hearing did not result because the Surgeon General made up the appellate board under section 16 with two of the original examining medical officers.

Writ dismissed; relator remanded.

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