Abdallah's Naturalization

6 Pa. D. & C. 41, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 288
CourtPhiladelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions
DecidedMay 11, 1925
DocketNos. 13273 and 13280
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Pa. D. & C. 41 (Abdallah's Naturalization) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Philadelphia County Court of Quarter Sessions primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abdallah's Naturalization, 6 Pa. D. & C. 41, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 288 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Stern, P. J.,

The petitioner, .Joseph Abdallah, filed his declaration of intention to become a citizen (No. 53254) in the District Court of the United States, at Philadelphia, on Feb. 25,1920, and his petition for naturalization (No. 13273) on Sept. 30, 1924. He was born at Mt. Lebanon, Syria, and is fifty-two years of age. He arrived in this country on Oct. 9, 1909, and has resided in Pennsylvania, and, therefore, in the United States, continuously since that date. His occupation is that of a laborer.

The petitioner, Kerian Barniak, filed his declaration of intention to become a citizen (No. 7134) in the District Court of the United States, at Philadelphia, on June 12, 1922, and his petition for naturalization (No. 13280) on Oct. 7, 1924. He was born in Eastern Galicia (then a part of Austria), and is thirty-seven years of age. He arrived in this country on July 1, 1913, and has resided in Pennsylvania, and, therefore, in the United States, continuously since that date. His occupation is thajt .of -a laborer.

These applicants were heard in open court on Feb. 27, 1925. That they had complied with all the formalities of the law and were in every respect entitled to citizenship was admitted, except as to one contention of the Government hereinafter set forth. They had each filed proper declarations of intention and petitions for naturalization, and had each been continuously within the boundaries of the United States', the one for more than fifteen, the other for more than eleven years. Their papers, and the testimony taken at the hearing, disclosed that they had no beliefs or views of government proscribed by the naturalization laws; they were admittedly of good moral character, “attached to the principles of the Constitution of the United States, and well disposed to the good order and happiness of the same;” they spoke the English language; and each produced the required two witnesses, citizens of the United States, as to the facts of residence, moral character and attachment to the principles of the Constitution.

The representative of the Government, however, objected to their admission to citizenship because of the fact thát the petitioner Abdallah has five children, aged, respectively, sixteen, twenty, twenty-one, twenty-six and twenty-seven years, all of whom are now living, and have always lived, at Mt. Lebanon, Syria (his wife is deceásed); ’ and the petitioner Barniak has a wife, who, although previously in this country, now resides in Poland (he has no children). Upon inquiry from the court as to the relevancy of these facts, the Government representative called the court’s attention to a memorandum from the Assistant Secretary of Labor to the Commissioner of Naturalization, dated Feb. 2, 1924, and to a letter of instructions from the Commissioner of Naturalization to all examiners and clerks in the naturalization service, dated Feb. 19,1925. The court was of opinion that the observations and arguments [42]*42contained in said memorandum and circular letter were without merit, and, accordingly, being convinced that the applicants possessed the necessary qualifications for naturalization, and that they gave promise of good citizenship, the court thereupon, to wit, on Feb. 27, 1925, ordered that the petitioners, having taken the oaths required by law, be, and they then and there were, admitted te become citizens of the United States. The representative of the Government asked the court to file an opinion .setting forth the reasons upon which its action was based, and this opinion is filed in accordance with that request.

The contention of the Government, as outlined in the memorandum and circular letter above referred to, is that, as a matter of policy, it is undesirable to admit to citizenship applicants whose wives or children have not been residents of this country, and that, as a matter of law, they are ineligible for admission. A more detailed consideration of the memorandum and letter reveals that they are curious documents.

The memorandum from the Assistant Secretary of Labor to the Commissioner of Naturalization, dated Feb. 2, 1924, sets forth that:

“Whatever virtue there may have been in the plan for not naturalizing aliens who had wife or minor children, or both, in Europe when the plan was first adopted, there are ten-fold more reasons now under the existing immigration law. At the time when the naturalization of the man here made his wife a citizen, the matter was settled. Under present practice, when the wife of a naturalized citizen arrives and she is inadmissible for any reason, including the quota law, it creates an almost impossible situation. As a matter of law, we may not admit her, but as a matter of fact, they all are admitted, because, thus far, no public officer has been found able to stand up under the everlasting hammering of hundreds of public officers and millions of American citizens who are shocked beyond expression at the thought that the wife of an American citizen should be denied admission. They care not that the law prohibits it. The truth of the matter is, cases of this kind almost wreck the machinery of the immigration service.
“The situation with reference to their children is not changed by the change in the law. It is also true that almost without exception, where a man has been naturalized while he had wife or minor children abroad, some one in that family proved inadmissible on arrival. No doubt, many aliens ask for naturalization with honest purposes, so far as their family abroad is concerned, but the bulk of them ask for it under those circumstances for the sole purpose of putting the immigration forces of America over a barrel.”

The memorandum in question also states:

“They (citizens, and aliens who have declared their intention to become citizens) both stand on exactly the same basis, so far as visa of passports is concerned. The only difference is, as above indicated, when the members of the family of an American citizen arrive, they swing a nastier club over the immigration officers than do those who are not yet naturalized.”

Passing by, without comment, the bizarre phraseology of this memorandum; passing by, likewise, the peculiar point of view that the “bulk” of aliens ask for naturalization “for the sole purpose of putting the immigration forces of America over a barrel” (whatever may be the meaning of that phrase); passing by, likewise, the extravagant exaggeration contained in the statement that “almost without exception” some one in the family of the naturalized citizen proved inadmissible on arrival; passing, further, the serious imputation upon our public officials that, thus far, “no” public officer has been found able to “stand up” and execute the law; passing, finally, the supercilious reference to “millions of American citizens” being “shocked beyond [43]

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Bluebook (online)
6 Pa. D. & C. 41, 1925 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abdallahs-naturalization-paqtrsessphilad-1925.