Aradanas v. Hogan

155 F. Supp. 546
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedOctober 29, 1957
DocketCiv. 1529
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 155 F. Supp. 546 (Aradanas v. Hogan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aradanas v. Hogan, 155 F. Supp. 546 (D. Haw. 1957).

Opinion

McLAUGHLIN, Chief Judge.

As noted during the course of argument and as conceded by the Immigration authorities, this case does present some appealing features. Not only has this man lived in this part of the United States known as Hawaii for most of the years of his life, having come here, I believe, when he was nineteen years of age, but he came to this country originally as a national of the country. He was later by virtue of this country giving independence to the Philippines transformed from a national to an alien. 1 Another phase of the fact picture here which tends to evoke favorable reaction, if that be possible in point of law, is the fact that after World War II, Kwajalein Island being under the dominion of the United States Navy and it desiring to have certain work there done and to that end employed a contractor known as the Contractors Mid-Pac, that contractor solicited labor here in the islands to go to Kwajalein, and this man responded, offering his services under contract as a carpenter, and he was taken there at government expense aboard Navy transportation. When he got there the American flag was flying and whatever law and order appeared to be on the island was in Navy garb, and in a large sense, with the American flag flying, he seemed to be quite at home, as much as he had been in Hawaii as an alien admitted for permanent residence subsequent to the independence of the Philippines. By that I mean that was the status he acquired when the Philippines was given its independence. Then, too, when he decided to cease working for the Navy, although at his own expense, he came back to Hawaii, U. S. A., aboard Navy transporta *547 tion. Indeed, things were of such a nature that even if this man had been a citizen of the United States, it is doubtful if he or anyone else without Navy permission could have gone to or remained on Kwajalein Island.

However, the question for decision is whether or not in point of law in terms of the Immigration Act then applicable in 1951, to-wit, the 1917 Act, whether this alien when he left for Kwajalein under contract left the United States, as that term is defined in the 1917 Act, and did so intentionally and voluntarily, so that when he returned, his return and admission may be deemed a re-entry. If it be a re-entry, then the order of deportation for cause made to appear on this record is justified in point of law; but if his return from Kwajalein was not a reentry within the meaning of the Immigration Act then in force, the authorities have no right to deport this man.

This case, of course, must be distinguished from a naturalization case. It must be distinguished from cases where the departure was involuntary or unintentional, or to be more exact, where the touching of a foreign port or place beyond the jurisdiction of the United States was unintentional and involuntary. I have in mind in saying this the cases of the shipwrecked seaman 2 and of the man going by train from one part of the United States to another through Canada. 3 And, too, this case must be distinguished from problems which have arisen with respect to other areas of the Pacific over which the United States has a different kind of control or to which it has a different relationship, such as Wake or Guam or Okinawa and others that might be mentioned, for this case involves an area known as Kwajalein Island which is presently an area within the Trust Territory under the United Nations, and the relationship of our country to this particular territory is one of an administrating authority under the United Nations Charter.

The question is, under the 1917 Act, whether or not with respect to Kwajalein in 1951 it comes within the definition of the United States, any waters, territory or other place subject to the jurisdiction thereof. Despite the control of this area by the Navy for the United States as the administering authority under the trusteeship of the United Nations, despite the fact that the American flag and American law there obtains, I do not believe that in point of law for immigration purposes that Kwajalein is within the definition of the United States as used in the 1917 Act. 4 Quite clearly it is not within the definition of the United States as that term is defined in the 1952 Act, 8 U.S.C.A. § 1101(a) (38) and which point has already been decided by this Court, at least for the purposes of naturalization, by Judge Wiig in the Reyes ease found in 140 F.Supp. 130. 5 And it is said, and I believe for this proposition the Chief Justice of the United States is quoted in the Gonzales case, 6 that the 1952 Act is but a codification of the preexisting law relating to entry. If it is, of course, clearly my ruling is doubly sound. But, in any event, if the 1952 Act is different than prior law, I am still, nevertheless, satisfied that under the 1917 Act Kwajalein was not within the meaning of the word “United States,” as defined by that Act. Indeed, our country’s relationship to Kwajalein is wholly at variance with the jurisdictional concept expressed, in the 1917 Act, for despite the broad powers given to our country with respect to Kwajalein by the United Nations Charter, it is still something different and apart from the jurisdiction which this nation exercises as of inde *548 pendent right over its own lands, people and waters.

So it is that I hold that when this man who voluntarily and intentionally went to Kwajalein, which is outside of the United States, that when he returned, he made a re-entry, thus giving to the Immigration authorities a legal foundation upon which to cause to order his deportation. Accordingly, the complaint is dismissed, for it is the holding of the Court that this plaintiff is deportable.

Findings of Fact

I

Plaintiff, Victoriano Tomboc Aradanas, is a native and citizen of the Republic of the Philippines.

II

Plaintiff entered the United States at Honolulu on December 15, 1924, as a national of the United States.

III

Plaintiff has resided continuously in the Territory of Hawaii since December 15, 1924, except for a trip to Kwajalein Island, Trust Territory of the Pacific, beginning in May 1951. He reentered the Territory of Hawaii on November 7, 1951.

IV

Plaintiff was convicted of the crime of counterfeiting in 1934.

V

On May 27, 1955 a Special Inquiry Officer of the U. S. Immigration Service entered an order for the deportation of the plaintiff on the ground that at the time of entry he was within one or more of the classes of aliens excludable by the law existing at the time of such entry, to wit, a person who has been convicted of a felony or other crime or misdemean- or involving moral turpitude prior to entry into the United States, under Section 3 of the Act of February 5, 1917, * to wit, counterfeiting.

VI

A motion to reopen the hearing was denied by the Special Inquiry Officer on September 23, 1955.

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155 F. Supp. 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aradanas-v-hogan-hid-1957.