The relator is an alien who was arrested by agents of the Department of Justice acting under a proclamation of December 8, 1941, No. 2526, 6 Fed.Reg. 6323, made by the President pursuant to the Act of July 6, 1798, as amended, 50 U.S.C.A. § 21. After a hearing before an Alien Enemy Hearing Board and consideration of the evidence by the Attorney General, the latter ordered the relator to be held in custody by the respondent as an alien enemy. On June 2, 1942 the alien filed his petition for a writ of habeas corpus which was forthwith issued. The petition alleged that he was born in the year 1900 in Vares in the Province of Bosnia, which was then a part of the monarchy of Austro-Hungary but later became a part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia; that there *860 upon he become a citizen of Yugoslavia and has so remained. In 1922 he went to Austria and continued to live and work there until June 1939 when he was admitted to the United States as a non-quota immigrant. He carried a “Fremdenpass” issued by Germany in 1938 which describes him as “stateless” and gives his birthplace as Vares. This passport bore an American visa issued to him as a “temporary visitor” under § 3(2) of the Immigration Act of 1924, 8 U.S.C.A. § 203(2). The petition denies that he is or ever has been a native, citizen, denizen, or subject of Germany and asserts that his detention is therefore unlawful.
The respondent’s return to the writ declares the cause of the alien’s detention as already stated, admits his birthplace and his residence in Austria and asserts that Austria has been a part of Germany since early in 1938 and that he is “a denizen and subject of Germany.” It alleges also that he stated under oath, when applying for an extension of his temporary stay in the United States, that he owed allegiance to Germany. The petitioner’s traverse to the return explains that he did not understand the meaning of “allegiance” when he made the said statement. It reasserts that he is a Yugoslav citizen, gives certain additional facts regarding his obtaining the German passport and denies the allegations of the return which allege that Austria has become part of Germany and that he is a denizen and subject of that country. There is also in the record a so-called “Amendment to Return of Writ” signed by an Assistant United States Attorney which purports to make part of the return affidavits by foreign law experts, a copy of the German law of March 13, 1938, and certain papers
1
taken from the relator while in custody. These were in the German language and English translations of them were not presented to the district court but have been added to the record on appeal. The petitioner’s traverse does not allude to the amendment to the return,
2
nor is the amendment mentioned in the recital of the pleadings in the order dismissing the writ, but the opinion refers to the relator’s membership in the German Labor Front and states that under German law it is an integral part of the German National Socialist Party. See United States ex rel. Zdunic v. Uhl, D.C.,
The appeal from the second order, which denied the relator’s motion for reargument must be dismissed. Such orders are discretionary and not appealable. The rule that final orders only are reviewable applies to habeas corpus proceedings. Collins v. Miller,
The appeal from the order which dismissed the writ and remanded the relator to custody presents two questions: (1) whether the pleadings raised any material issue of fact upon which testimony should have been taken, as requested by the relator, and (2) whether he falls within the class of aliens whose restraint is authorized under the statute and presidential proclamation pursuant to which he is held in custody.
In several recent cases the Supreme Court has discussed the procedure to be followed on applications for writs of habeas corpus. Walker v. Johnston,
The decision of the district court went solely on the ground that the relator was a “denizen” of Germany. Only one earlier case has been called to our attention where that term of the Alien Enemy Act was considered. In Ex parte Gilroy, D.C.,
Judgment reversed and cause remanded-for hearing.
Notes
His original Deutscher Reich Arbeitsbuch (German Work Book) and his original membership card in the Deutscher Arbeitsfront (German Labor Front).
The traverse and the amendment were verified the same day and were apparently handed up to the court at' the argument.
1 Blackstone, 373: “A denizen is an alien born, but who has obtained ex donatione regis letters-patent to make him an English subject: a high and incommunicable branch of the royal prerogative. A denizen is in a kind of middle state, between an alien and natural-born subject, and partakes of both of them. He may take lands by purchase or devise, which an alien may not; but cannot take by inheritance: * * *
It is interesting to note that in 1799 South Carolina passed “An Act granting the rights and privileges of denizen-ship to alien friends,” Act No. 1720, 5 Stat. 355. It provided that aliens becoming residents of the state and subscribing to the oath of allegiance should be deemed denizens, so as to enable them to purchase and hold realty and entitle them to like protection from the laws as citizens have, but they could not vote or hold office. See McClenaghan v. McClenaghan, 1 Strob.Eq. 295, 319, 47 Am.Dec. 532.
