MORTON, District Judge.
[1] A prior petition for a writ of habeas corpus, filed on behalf of this alien, was dismissed without prejudice for reasons stated in my opinion thereon. This petition was thereafter filed and was heard upon agreed facts and statements of counsel. It clearly appeared at the hearing upon this petition that the board of special inquiry had, in rendering its decision, assumed that it was absolutely bound by the medical certificate. Following my decision in the Nora Joyce Case, 212 Fed. 285 (to which reference may be made), I thereupon ruled that there had been such a fundamental error of law as prevented the hearing before the board of special inquiry from being fair to the alien, and ordered the writ to issue.
[2] The writ accordingly issued, the petitioner was produced in court, and there was a second hearing upon the question whether the petitioner was entitled to admission into the United States. At this hearing both parties were represented by counsel and such evidence was heard as either party desired to offer. For the petitioner two physicians testified that they had examined him and observed him, and saw nothing in the least abnormal or peculiar in his mental processes. They were both clearly of the opinion that he was not feeble-minded.. From the testimony of other witnesses, which was not contradicted, it appeared that the petitioner had been married 23 or 24 years and had a wife and several children in Russia; that his trade, was that of pot-maker (or potter), making earthenware from clay upon an old fashioned potter’s wheel;- that he had been continuously employed at this occupation in Russia before coming to this country, at the same place for 31 years; and that he had never been supposed or reputed to be naturally deficient in intelligence or understanding. During the period between his release and his re-arrest he worked for his brother-in-law, and after his release on bail he continued to work for his brother-in-law, sorting junk, peddling alone, and doing other jobs. The petitioner testified before me, and I was unable to detect any natural deficiency in intelligence or any indications of a subnormal intellect. The petitioner appeared to be fully as bright as other members of his race and class, and to have made unusual progress in learning English for the time which he had been in the country. No evidence whatever was offered on behalf of the respondent.
I therefore found and ruled that Simon Sitner is not a feeble-minded person, nor liable on account of feeble-mindedness to become a public charge; that he is not within any of the excluded classes and is entitled to admission. I directed an order’ to be entered discharging him from custody.
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