Case of Former Residence by a Chinese Laborer

21 F. 791, 10 Sawy. 361, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 1912
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 21 F. 791 (Case of Former Residence by a Chinese Laborer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case of Former Residence by a Chinese Laborer, 21 F. 791, 10 Sawy. 361, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 1912 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Field, Justice.

The facts of this caso differ from those in the Case of the Chínese Laborer with an Unused Tag, ante, 701, recently decided, in this particular: that the laborer there left the United States, after the passage of the act of 1882, without a certificate enabling him to return, relying upon a tag entitling him to such a certificate, but which he had not obtained, while the laborer here left before the passage of the restriction act, and of course before any certificate was required. It appears, from the agreed statement of facts, that the petitioner is a laborer of the Chinese race, and a subject of the emperor of China; that he resided within the United States on the seventeenth of November, 1880, and continued his residence until June, 1881, when he departed for Honolulu, in the Hawaiian Kingdom, where he remained until September of the present year, (1884,) and then returned to the port of San Francisco, and, of course, without any certificate under the act of 3882, or that of 1884, as none could be issued to him while out of the country; and he now seeks to land by virtue of his residence here on the seventeenth of November, 1880, contending that the acts of 1882 and 1884 except Chinese laborers in like situation from the necessity of presenting any certificate, inasmuch as it would be impossible to obtain one.

My associate, the circuit judge, sustains the contention of the petitioner, and in a written opinion has presented his construction of the act with his usual elaboration and learning. The district judge of this district and the district judge of the district of Nevada concur with him. It is, therefore, with much diffidence that I venture to express my dissent from their conclusions. The restriction act of 1882 in its first section declares that, after 90 days from its passage, and for the period of 10 years from its date, the coming [792]*792of Chinese laborers to the United States is suspended, and that it shall be-unlawful for any such laborer to come, or, having come after the 90 days, to remain within the United States. The second section .makes it a misdemeanor punishable by fine, to which imprisonment may be added, for the master of any vessel knowingly to bring within the United States from a foreign port and land any such, Chinese laborer. The third section then provides that the two sections mentioned shall not apply to Chinese laborers who were in the United States on the seventeenth of November, 1880, or who came, within 90 days after the passage of the act, “who shall produce to such master before going on board such vessel, and shall produce to 'the collector of the port in the United States at which such, vessel shall arrive, the evidence hereinafter in this act required of his being one of the laborers in this section mentioned;” nor shall they apply to the case of a master of a vessel coming within the jurisdiction of the United States by reason of stress of weather, or touching at any port of the United States' on its voyage -to a foreign port,—the laborers brought to depart with the vessel.

What, then, is the evidence which must thus be produced to the master in the foreign .port, and to the collector at the port of the United States, by the laborers thus within the exception mentioned? The fourth section answers this. It declares that, for the purpose of identifying those laborers,—that is, those who were here on the seventeenth of November, 1880, or came -within the 90 days mentioned,— and to furnish them with “the proper evidence” of their right to go from and come to the United States, the “collector of customs of the district from which any such Chinese laborer shall depart from the United States, shall, in person or by deputy, go on board such vessel having on board any such Chinese laborer, and cleared or about to sail from his district for a foreign port, and on such vessel make a list of all such Chinese laborers, to be entered in registry books to be kept for that purpose, with a statement of the age, occupation, last place of residence, and of physical marks or peculiarities of each one necessary to his identification; and each laborer thus departing shall be entitled from the collector, or his deputy, to a certificate containing such particulars corresponding with the registry as may serve to identify him. “The certificate herein provided for,” says the section, “shall entitle the Chinese laborer, to whom the same is issued, to return and to re-enter the United States upon producing and delivering the same to the collector of customs of the district at which such Chinese laborer shall seek to re-enter.”

Now, what is the meaning of these provisions ? It is not, as I read them; that the Chinese laborer in the United States on the seventeenth of November, 1880,—the date of the supplementary treaty, —or who came within 90 days after the passage of the act,—that is, before it took effect,—shall be subsequently permitted—that is, after íhe¡act had taken effect—to come without any certificate, for the act [793]*793makes no exceptions of persons by whom, it must be obtained. It' means, in my judgment, that those laborers, if still in the United Slates when the act lakes effect, and desirous to leave and yet return again, shall be permitted to do so upon obtaining the prescribed certificate. The production of that certificate is the only protection of the master of the vessel against criminal prosecution, for bringing and landing those laborers after the expiration of 90 days from, the passage of the act; it is the only evidence which the act requires to be furnished by them, and its production is the essential condition prescribed for their landing. The act, interpreted according to its direct language, necessarily excludes in its operation those who left the country before the act took effect. If this construction works any hardship, it is for congress to change the act. The court has no dispensing power over its provisions. Its duty is to construe and declare the law, not to evade or make it. Oftentimes, indeed, there is a sense of impatience in the public mind with judicial officers for not announcing the law to be what the community at the time wishes it should be. And nowhere has this feeling been more manifested than in California, and on no subject with more intensity than that which touches the immigration of Chinese laborers; but it often does great injustice to officers anxious to perform their whole duty. While I differ from my associates in the construction of the restriction act, I can bear testimony to the great solicitude manifested by them to reach a right conclusion; If, as already stated, the law works any hardship, it is for congress to change it. With that body it rests, under the constitution, to determine what foreigners shall be permitted to come to the United States and on what conditions to remain.

The provisions of the amendatory act of 1884 seem to me to remove any doubt as to the necessity of the certificate, if any existed under the act of 1882, for .the admission of any Chinese laborers, who may have left tiie country before the passage of the original act. Under the construction adopted in this circuit, parol evidence had been allowed in a multitude of eases whore previous residence was alleged; and the district and circuit courts were blocked up by them, to the great delay of their general business and the inconvenience of suitors.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. 791, 10 Sawy. 361, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 1912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-of-former-residence-by-a-chinese-laborer-uscirct-1884.