Ex parte Yee Gee

17 F.2d 653, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1007
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedFebruary 7, 1927
DocketNo. 19187
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 17 F.2d 653 (Ex parte Yee Gee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex parte Yee Gee, 17 F.2d 653, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1007 (N.D. Cal. 1927).

Opinion

ST. SURE, District Judge.

Yee Gee, a Chinese alien, was a lawfully domiciled laborer. He departed from the port of San Eraneiseo for China on September 30, 1924, bearing a regularly issued laborer’s return certificate (form 432), which entitled him to return within the period of one year from date of departure, unless an overtime certificate was granted by an American consular [654]*654officer for an additional period not to exceed one year.

In March, 1926, the Chinese applied to the consulate general at Hongkong for an overtime certificate on the affidavits of himself and two others, setting forth that he had been unavoidably detained beyond the year for return “owing to the extreme difficulty in securing a passage from Sunning (the district of his home village) back to Hongkong because of frequent piracies, and communications between Sunning-and Hongkong were interrupted on account of the disturbed conditions existing in the province of Kwong Tung (the province of his native district) caused by the strike and political crisis there. Now that peace has more or less been restored in the province of Kwong Tung, I was able to come back to Hongkong via Maeao (Portugese settlement) as aforesaid.” Further: “And lastly I made this affidavit for the purpose of enabling me to secure my passage back to the United States on the steamship President Lincoln, leaving Hongkong on or about March 27, 1926.”

The original certificate bears the indorsement, “Hongkong, March 25, 1926. Application for overtime certificate refused. J. Cameron Hawkins, American Vice Consul;” also the indorsement “234/1926 American Consulate General, Sept. 21,1926, Hongkong. John J. Muccio.” Attached to the certificate are the affidavits before mentioned, and a document, entitled “American Consular Service No. 234/1926 Chinese Overtime Certificate,” signed by John J. Muccio, Vice Consul, and bearing the seal of the American consulate general, Hongkong. It reads as follows:

“Hongkong, September 21,1926. I, John J. Muccio, American vice consul at Hongkong, hereby certify that Tee Gee, holder of laborer’s return certificate No. 12017/25982, dated September 3, 1924, at San Francisco, California, who departed from said port on September 30,1924, applied at this consulate general for an overtime certificate on March 9, 1926, and asserted that he was unable to return to said port in the period of one year allowed by the return certificate mentioned, by reason of a disability beyond his control, namely, on account of the disrupted communications between, his native village and Hongkong as described in the copies of the affidavits attached. This application was refused for he failed to satisfy this consulate general that there was any disability beyond his control, as contemplated under rule 14 of the Rules Governing the Admission of Chinese then obtaining. Tee Gee is now returning on board the steamship President Taft, leaving here on September 26, 1926.”

Tee Gee left China on the President Taft, and arrived at the port of San Francisco, October 20, 1926, or 20 days after the period of 2 years allowed him under his return certificate and any overtime extension thereof. The Board of Special Inquiry at the port held a hearing and denied him entry,- the statement of the cause of exclusion set forth on the record for appeal being: “Applicant is without status; the time limit on return certificate form 432, presented by him having expired, the reasons for extension being considered insufficient.”

There is no dispute of the identity of Tee Gee as the one to whom the return certificate was granted. His former record shows that he came to the United States in 1881; he has made three trips to China, once as a merchant; and been granted re-entry without question each time except this. On departure he proved debts owing him to the extent of more than $1,000. A certificate of residence dated in 1894 appears.

Tee Gee testified that the reason he gave the consul in March, 1926, upon application for an overtime certificate, was “that my father was ill, and that I myself had been ill for two months, and that when I was able to be around I was not able to get through the-blockade.” He also testified directly to the same effect, both occasions being on hearing before the Board of Special Inquiry. The affidavits before Vice Consul Hawkins merely show inability to return on account of piracies and interrupted communication occasioned by strike and political crisis, with the .result that, when he finally arrived at Hongkong, it was by way of Macao. Whether this was an irregular, roundabout journey is not shown. Neither is there any indication by any certificate of facts after investigation by the vice consul, who first refused the overtime certificate, that the testimony as to illness was not also given before him, nor any other facts bearing on the question of unavoidable detention; nor the granting of any certificate, favorable or unfavorable, as to facts upon which the Chinese might have taken passage in March and arrived at this port long before the expiration of the two-year period, and on which the officer in charge of the port might have been satisfied or dissatisfied with the grounds for delayed return, under rule 14 of the Rules Governing the Admission of Chinese of May 1, 1917, here applicable. This rule provides:

“Whenever a Chinese laborer holding a [655]*655return certificate is detained, by his sickness or by other disability beyond his control for a time in excess of one year after the date of his departure from the United States, the facts shall be fully reported to and investigated by the consular representative of the United States at the port or place from which such laborer departs for the United States, and such consular representative shall certify, to the satisfaction of the officer in charge at the port of return, which must be the port from which such laborer departed, that he has fully investigated the statements of such laborer and believes that he was unavoidably detained for the time specified and for the reason stated, such certificate to be delivered by such consular representative to the master of the vessel on which the Chinese laborer departs for the United States, and by the master delivered to the officer in charge at the port of return.”

It is common knowledge that, without the overtime certificate, it was impossible for Yee Gee to have secured passage; indeed, the affidavits filed before the consul in March indicate that the overtime certificate was a prerequisite for obtaining passage, and the rule above bears this out. The man belonged, except for his return certificate and proceedings thereunder, to an excluded class. It is shown by the papers before me that, following the application in March, and during the summer of 1926, the Secretary of State was applied to for relief from the excess of authority that the vice consul who first refused the overtime certificate was assuming in that he made the determination himself as to whether or-not the applicant should return to the United States, when his duty and power was to investigate and certify the facts to the officer in charge of the port in the United States whence the laborer had departed — an officer in a different branch of the government.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 F.2d 653, 1927 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-yee-gee-cand-1927.