47 F.2d 768 | D. Minnesota | 1931
The petitioner is here upon a writ of ha-beas corpus issued out of this court. He is held upon a warrant issued by the Assistant Secretary of Labor for deportation upon the charge that he is an alien found in the United States in violation of the Immigration Act of February 5, 1917, to wit, that he was a person likely to become a public charge at the time of his entry.
Section 3, chapter 29, Immigration Act of February 5, 1917, section 136, title 8 USOA, provides as follows: “The following classes of aliens shall he excluded from admission into the United States (i) Persons likely to become a public charge.”
The facts as disclosed upon tho hearing under the warrant of deportation before the Assistant Secretary of Labor show that the petitioner is a citizen of Finland who came to the United States in the year 1919 when ho was 15 years old and that he is 26 years old at the present time. He came to this country to live with his father who then lived on a farm near Two Harbors, Minn.; for the first three years after coming to this country from Finland, the petitioner lived with his father and attended public school for three winters; he then obtained a job as a common laborer and worked for three months for tho City of Two Harbors; from that time on to the present time he has worked pretty steadily, following the vocation of a sailor upon American boats plying the Great Lakes, during the boat season and working during the winters in the logging camps. When on the boats, ho worked decking, coal passing, and portering, always on American boats. On the American Boat William II. Wolf in September, 1929; he made tho port Midland, Ontario, and remained with the boat in that port three days. The boat was loading grain there at the timo. He went ashore and remained in Canada a couple of hours, returning to the boat, and returned to Allouze, Superior, Wis., and re-entered the United States September 7,1929.
It appears from the evidence that tho petitioner was somewhat addicted to the use of intoxicating liquor and was arrested eight or nine times, each time on a liquor charge, in Duluth and West Superior, within the last five years. It appears, however, that ho did earn his own living, working as before, related. It appears from the evidence taken at the hearing that the petitioner was convicted in the municipal court of the city of Duluth as follows: April 12, 1925, for drunkenness, committed to St. Louis County Work Farm for twenty days; July 12,1926, for drunkenness, committed to the St. Louis County Work Farm for twenty days; December 20, 1926, for drunkenness, suspended sentence; March 13.1927, drunkenness, committed to St. Louis County Work Farm for twenty days; August 22.1927, drunkenness, committed to St. Louis County Work Farm for twenty days; January 20, 1930, drunkenness, committed to St. Louis County Work Farm for twenty days.
He was also convicted in the United States District Court in and for the District of Minnesota, on February 11, 1930, for a liquor nuisance and was committed to the St. Louis County Work Farm for twelve months; also he was convicted on January 5, 1931, for drunkenness, in the municipal court of the city of Duluth, Minn., and sentenced to serve twenty days in the St. Louis County Work Farm.
The government depends upon tho convictions and commitments of April 12, 1925, July 12, 1926, December 20,1926, March 13, 1927, and August 22, 1927, to establish the charge that the petitioner was a person likely to become a public charge at the time of his re-entry into tho United States, all of said convictions last above mentioned having taken plae© prior to his re-entry into the United States September 7, 1929. The subsequent convictions were admitted in evidence at the hearing, on the theory that they constituted corroborativo evidence.
The position of the government is: (1) That the landing in Canada, as before related, and tho return to tho United States, constituted a re-entry into the United States; and (2) that tho convictions aforesaid established the charge that tho petitioner was a person likely to’ become a public charge at the time of his re-entry into the United States.
As to the first proposition, tho Circuit Court of Appeals of this circuit in the case of U. S. ex rel. Medich v. Burmaster, 24 F.(2d) 57, supports tho contention of the government.
In that case the alien entered tho United States in 1913 and became engaged in a taxicab business. In June, 1924, while so engaged in the taxicab business, he transported a company of teachers to Canada and returned to the United States, on the same day. It was held that such absence and re-entry made him subject to deportation under the Immigration Act of 1917, section 19, title 8, USCA § 155, within five years for a crime involving moral turpitude committed in Minnesota on April 24, 1924, and that the period in which an alien may be deported for commission of an offense involving moral turpi
I think the law is settled as to this point by the decision of the Supreme Court in the ease of United States ex rel. Claussen v. Day, 279 U. S. 398, 49 S. Ct. 354, 73 L. Ed. 758. In that case, the alien having come to the United States shipped as a seaman for a round trip on board an American vessel to a South American port. He went with his ship to a South American port and returned to the United States. His absence and re-entry into the United States was held to constitute an entry into the United States within the meaning of section 19 of the Immigration Act of 1917.
As to the second proposition, it turns upon the meaning of the phrase contained in section 3, chapter 29, of the Immigration Act re^ ferred to, namely: “Persons likely to become a public charge.”
The courts are in conflict on this question. The Second, Fifth, and Ninth Circuit Courts of Appeals hold one way and the Eighth circuit holds the opposite way. The view taken in the Second, Fifth, and Ninth is that the language of the statute referred to suggests dependency rather than imprisonment as the controlling element in the cause for deportation, and the reasoning of those eases is not only that the words naturally imply dependency rather than imprisonment, but also that, when Congress has specifically dealt-with crime as a ground and has defined which kinds are to be considered as cause for deportation and which are not, the courts are not free to suppose that other crimes or the probability of other crimes is ground for deportation. The eases supporting the former view are U. S. ex rel. Iorio v. Day, 34 F.(2d) 920 (C C. A. 2d Cir.); Howe v. U. S., 247 F. 292 (C. C. A. 2d Cir.); Ng Fung Ho v. White, 266 F. 765, 769 (C. C. A. 9th Cir.); Coykendall v. Skrmetta (C. C. A.) 22 F.(2d) 120.
In United States ex rel. Medich v. Burmaster, 24 F.(2d) 57, 59, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals took a different view and held: “The fact that the appellant confessed to a crime punishable by imprisonment in the federal prison, and the very fact that he was actually incarcerated for a period of 18 months was sufficient to support the allegation in the warrant of deportation that he was likely ‘to become a public charge’ ” — citing Ex Parte Horn (D. C.) 292 F. 455; Ex parte Tsunetaro Machida (D. C.) 277 F. 239, loc. cit. 241; Ex parte Fragoso (D. C.) 11 F.(2d) 988; Ex parte Reeves (D. C.) 292 F. 766; Ex parte Britten (D. C.) 293 F. 61; U. S. v. Williams (D. C.) 175 F. 274.
United States ex rel. Medich v. Burmaster, supra, is cited by Judge Hand [U. S. v. Day (C. C. A.) 34 F.(2d) 920, 922], and I think correctly, as holding an opposite view to that proclaimed in the Second, Fifth, and Ninth circuits on this question.
In view of the holding of the Eighth Circuit, this court is relieved of much responsibility, and, whether that decision is sound or not, this court does not feel at liberty to do otherwise than follow it.
The present case presents even a stronger ease on the theory of imprisonment being sufficient than the ease of U. S. ex rel. Medich v. Burmaster, and in accordance with this view I hold that the evidence is sufficient to support the allegations in the warrant of deportation, and that the petitioner was at the time of his entering into the United States a person likely to become a public charge, and the writ of habeas corpus is discharged, and the petitioner is remanded to the custody of the sheriff of St. Louis county and the Assistant Secretary' of Labor.