Ex parte Chin Yoke Tung

2 F. Supp. 549, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1532
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Washington
DecidedDecember 23, 1932
StatusPublished

This text of 2 F. Supp. 549 (Ex parte Chin Yoke Tung) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Chin Yoke Tung, 2 F. Supp. 549, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1532 (W.D. Wash. 1932).

Opinion

JAMES C. WILSON, District Judge.

Chin Yoke Tung petitions for an order to the Immigration Commission at Seattle, Wash., to show cause why he: should not be granted a writ of habeas corpus, alleging he is unlawfully detained by such officer, under an order of deportation. He was admitted to the United States July 17, 1917, as a Chinese exempt, with a status of minor son of a legally domiciled Chinese merchant. He has been leg-ally such domiciled resident of tho United States since that date. Between the date of his admission and 1930 he was twice given permission, by the immigration authorities, to visit China. His first visit was, as a Chinese merchant, in 3921, returning in 1924. The second visit, with a Chinese laborer’s return certificate, was in 1926, returning in 1927. His third visit was under a Chinese laborer’s one-year return certificate dated .January 25, 1930. He returned June 9, 1931, with a consular overtime certificate, having, without permission, extended his visit beyond a year.

The controlling statute to be construed is tho Act of September 13, 1888, 25 Stat. 476, 477 (see 8, USCA § 275):

Section 5. “That from and after the passage of this act, no Chinese laborer in the United States shall be permitted, after having left, to return thereto, except under the conditions stated in the following sections.”

Section 7 of this same act (see 8 USCA § 277) provides: “The right to return under the said certificate shall be limited to one year; but it may he extended for an-additional period, not to exceed a year, in cases where, by reason of sickness or other came of disability beyond his Control, the holder thereof shall be rendered unable sooner to return, wMeh facts shall he fully reported to and investigated by the consular representative of the United States at the port or place from which sueh laborer departs for the United States, and certified by such representative of the United States to the satisfaction of the Chinese Inspector in charge at the port where sueh Chinese person shall seek to land in the United States «.■ * * aI1(j n0 Quinóse laborer shall be permitted to re-enter tho United States without producing to the proper officer in charge at the port of such entry tho return certificate herein required. * * * ”

On June 12, 1931, a Special Board of Inquiry at Seattle hoard petitioner’s application for readmission as a returning overtime laborer. The applicant was tho only witness examined. Touching his reasons for remaining overtime the following questions were asked and answered:

“Q. What reason have "you to advance now as to why you failed to return within the time limit stated in the certificate issued to you? A. On account of the death of my first wife.

“Q. When did your first wife die? A. CR 19 — 10—1 (November 20, 1930).

“Q. How long was your wife siek? A. About three months.

[550]*550“Q. Why did you remain in China so long after your wife died in view of the fact that there remained sufficient time for you to return to this country before your certificate expired? A. My two sons were so small — I needed someone to take care of them. I went to the American Consul at Hongkong and reported the matter. I was advised by the Consul that I could stay six months longer so that I could marry again and get someone to take care of my sons.”

On this evidence the Board of Special Inquiry denied readmission, the factual conclusion upon which decision was based being: “Remaining in China for the purpose of marrying is not considered to be an unavoidable cause.”

The sole authority cited by the Board of Special Inquiry, as upholding the ruling, is Nagle v. Toy Young Quen, 23 IP. (2d) 18 (C. C. A. 9th). In other words, the Board of Special Inquiry found as a fact that remaining overtime to get married .was his reason. The evidence is not in the record to support any sueh conclusion, but, instead, that his overtime was to marry a woman, not for the comforts,, pleasures and happiness of marriage, but for the purpose of getting a caretaker for his children.

There is no need to- elaborate as to the absence of evidence to support such finding of the Special Board of Inquiry, since the applicant took an appeal from its decision to the Board of Review at Washington, D. C., and it entirely ignored such ground assigned by the Board of Special Inquiry. In other words, it is evident the Board of Review on examination of the record saw that the ground of the decision could not be upheld, as being based upon any evidence. It did not expressly repudiate the basis of the decision, simply ignored it, basing its decision on entirely different grounds. It follows that the ease of Nagle v. Toy Young Quen, supra, is not applicable. There the overtime was simply to get married, purely for the sake of marriage, with all the relation ordinarily implies. The very suggestion, that to remain overtime for sueh a marriage would constitute “sickness or other cause of disability beyond control,” is absurd on its face. The soundness of that decision, of course, cannot be questioned. It is not absurd, however, for a man to. testify that his purpose in getting married was to provide a caretaker for his children. Men and women marry in our own country for all kinds of reasons and purposes, where necessity and judgment, and not affection, determines the issue; men to get housekeepers; women to get care and protection for themselves; widowers to get caretakers and mothers for their children, where marriage is only a means to some other definite end. To confirm this we need only to resort to our common experience and observation. In all my experience I have never seen a ease where the circumstances made it more imperative for the father to many in order to provide a mother, as an affectionate, interested, caretaker for children. Under the plan, he would only see this wife every three or four years. It would take time to get a suitable woman who would accept sueh a marital arrangement, imposing practically nothing but work and serious obligations, with little of the pleasures and joys and happiness ordinarily incident to the relation.

Now, the Board of Review faced the issue presented by the ‘applicant fairly and without evasion. In other words, they accepted as true the applicant’s assigned reason for his overtime, to wit, the care of his children. It first passed on the matter June 27, 1931. The decision was to dismiss the appeal. In this decision, they cited the applicant’s assigned reason, in their words: “To provide a suitable mother’s care for his two young children.” It will be noted they did not hold, to remain overtime to accomplish this was not a “disability beyond control.” They met that reason with this ruling: “However, it appears that the applicant’s mother is living so that provision for the care of the children might reasonably be made otherwise than by his remarriage. More^ over, according to the statement contained in the overtime certificate, as well as the testimony of the applicant, his first wife died nearly two months before the expiration of the year contemplated in his return certificate when with reasonable expedition he might have made adequate provision for the care of his children without delaying his return beyond that year. It is also to be noted that the applicant’s statement concerning the illness and death of his wife as given at the American Consulate in Hongkong and at the port is uncorroborated.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kwock Jan Fat v. White
253 U.S. 454 (Supreme Court, 1920)
United States ex rel. Schachter v. Curran
4 F.2d 356 (Third Circuit, 1925)
United States ex rel. Duner v. Curran
10 F.2d 38 (Second Circuit, 1925)
Nagle v. Quen
22 F.2d 18 (Ninth Circuit, 1927)
Ex parte Cheung Tung
292 F. 997 (W.D. Washington, 1923)
Hughes v. United States ex rel. Licata
295 F. 800 (Third Circuit, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 F. Supp. 549, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-chin-yoke-tung-wawd-1932.