Chiuye Inouye v. Carr

98 F.2d 46, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3142
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 20, 1938
DocketNo. 8755
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 98 F.2d 46 (Chiuye Inouye v. Carr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chiuye Inouye v. Carr, 98 F.2d 46, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3142 (9th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

GARRECHT, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court discharging a writ of habeascorpus and remanding appellant to the custody of the appellee for deportation pursuant to an order of the Acting Secretary of Labor previously made.

Appellant, an alien, a subject of Japan,, about 54 years of age, entered the United States on May 31, 1903 at the Port of-San Francisco as a passenger of the S. S. America Maru and was admitted for permanent residence. He is married and has four American-born children. For some 30 years he has resided in the City of Los Angeles, State of California, and during most of this time has been engaged in the hotel business. For five and one half years preceding the hearing he was-the manager of the Hotel Nesta in Los Angeles, in a district frequented by bootleggers, gamblers and prostitutes. The hotel consists of 32 rooms occupying the-2nd and 3rd floors of the building, some-20 of the rooms being rented by permanent guests and the remaining rooms being used' by transients.

Acting upon a report from the Police-Department of the City of Los Angeles that many arrests for prostitution had been made at the hotel, appellee applied to the Department of Labor at Washington, D.. [47]*47C. for a warrant for appellant’s arrest and on November 9, 1935, a warrant was issued •directing that appellant be taken into custody and given a hearing to show cause why he should not be deported from the United States. On December 5, 1935, appellant was arrested under said warrant which charged that he “has been found managing a house of prostitution or music •or dance hall or other place of amusement, or resort, habitually frequented by prostitutes, or where prostitutes gather,” in violation of Section 19 of the Immigration Act of 1917, 39 Stat. 889, 8 U.S.C.A. § 155.

After a hearing before the Immigration Inspector and a review of all the proceedings by the Board of Review, the Acting Secretary of Labor, upon recommendation ■of the Board, issued his warrant directing the deportation of appellant to Japan. Appellant thereupon • filed his petition in the United States District Court for a writ ■of habeas corpus. Upon issuance of the writ and return by appellee the cause was submitted on briefs. On November 15, 1937, the Court entered its order that the writ be discharged and that .appellant be remanded to the custody of the Immigration Authorities. From this order the present appeal is taken.

Appellant presents two specifications of ■error for our review, namely; (1) the Court erred in holding that there was some evidence to sustain the findings on which the warrant of deportation of appellant was based; and (2) the Court erred in holding and deciding that the appellant had been given a fair hearing by the United States Immigration Service.

In support of his first specification appellant contends that not only was there no substantial evidence showing that appellant had ever at any time managed a house of prostitution, but on the contrary ■all of the evidence conclusively established that he was the manager of a bona fide hotel. He further contends that no evidence was offered tending to prove that he had any knowledge of the character ■or activities of the women arrested at the hotel, or that he had any connection with them, save as they might have been regular bona fide guests of the hotel.

Our own examination of the record and proceedings had before the Immigration Inspector convinces us that the findings of the Board are amply sustained -by the evidence presented. The action taken by the Acting Secretary of Labor against the appellant is supported by the testimony of two police officers of the Los Angeles Police Department, and the record of arrests of prostitutes made at the Hotel Nesta.

Officers Selby and Rawson, members of the Vice Squad of the Los Angeles Police Department, called as witnesses at the hearing, testified in substance that they had made many arrests of women practicing prostitution at the Hotel Nesta; that these women so arrested were known prostitutes; that one of the women, Stella Ortega, had been arrested at -the hotel on four different occasions, and that she was a regular roomer there; also many other known prostitutes had been seen entering the hotel, although never arrested on the premises. Officer Selby was asked at the hearing, “Is this Nesta Hotel known to the Police Department as • a house of prostitution?” He replied, “It is.”

Records introduced in evidence show arrests of women at this Hotel Nesta charged with engaging in prostitution on the following dates: February 23, 1935, April 8, 1935, June 20, 1935, August 1, 1935, August 8, 1935, September 4,' 1935 and September 18, 1935. The Immigration Files further show that after the arrests had been made at the premises, a Mr. Charles Grist of the District Attorney’s office notified appellant that if would be necessary for him to conduct the hotel in an orderly manner or further action would be taken against him.

Appellant stated that all who desired rooms in his hotel were first required to register, and that as soon as it came to his attention that any of his roomers were of a questionable character he refused them lodging. However, ah examination of the hotel register, introduced as an exhibit at the hearing, revealed that in not a single instance did the names of any of the women so arrested appear thereon.

When confronted with the record of these many arrests- made at his hotel, and the further fact that not one of the women so arrested had registered, appellant attempted to explain this by stating that they probably gave him assumed names or perhaps registered by the week. During the questioning of appellant by the Immigration Inspector in this regard he was particularly interrogated as to Mrs. Stella Ortega who had been repeatedly arrested at his place. He was asked if he knew [48]*48her by that name. He replied that he did but he was unable to satisfactorily explain the absence of her name from the hotel register.

The above is but a fragment of the evidence adduced upon the hearing. Appellant, throughout, experienced great difficulty in explaining why these women had failed to register and in accounting for his want of any knowledge of their activities.

The evidence justified the Board in finding that the Hotel Nesta was a place where prostitution was carried on, and where known prostitutes gathered, with the knowledge of appellant.

In the case of Ranieri v. Smith, 7 Cir., 49 F.2d 537, 538, where the alien had been arrested by an Immigration Inspector upon a warrant which charged him with managing a house of prostitution, and where said alien contended, as appellant does in the instant case, that there was no competent evidence to support the findings of the Immigration Authorities, the Court said:

“* * * the testimony presented a state of circumstances from which it would be difficult for a person of ordinary intelligence and moral conceptions to arrive at any other conclusion than that a house of prostitution was being conducted at the times and place in controversy, and under the ownership,.supervision, management, and control of alien. While the work was being directly conducted by his servants, yet his presence there, both day and night, and his.opportunities to observe their conduct, proves that he must have been cognizant of the continued acts of prostitution then and there being carried on.

“The evidence abundantly supports the finding, * *

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Related

Kielema v. Crossman
103 F.2d 292 (Fifth Circuit, 1939)

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Bluebook (online)
98 F.2d 46, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 3142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chiuye-inouye-v-carr-ca9-1938.