Higashi v. United States

44 Fed. Cl. 238, 1999 U.S. Claims LEXIS 159, 1999 WL 463417
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJuly 7, 1999
DocketNo. 98-639C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 44 Fed. Cl. 238 (Higashi v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higashi v. United States, 44 Fed. Cl. 238, 1999 U.S. Claims LEXIS 159, 1999 WL 463417 (uscfc 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

YOCK, Judge.

This Japanese internment case comes before the Court on the plaintiffs and the defendant’s cross-motions for summary judgment, pursuant to United States Court of Federal Claims Rule (“RCFC”) 56. The plaintiff contends that the Civil Liberties Act of 1988 entitles her to' redress payment and an apology as the result of the Federal Government excluding her from her parents’ original place of residence, Sacramento, California, during World War II. For the reasons set forth below, the defendant’s motion is granted, the plaintiff’s motion is denied, and the plaintiffs Complaint is to be dismissed.

Factual Background

This case involves the Federal Government’s policy concerning persons of Japanese ancestry during World War II (“WWII”), as well as the Government’s attempt to atone for that policy many years later. Although the plaintiff was a child of internment victims, the timing of her birth after the termination of the internment policy resulted in no legal detriment meriting award to the plaintiff under the Government’s statutory program.

On February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order No. 9066, 3 C.F.R. 1092-93 (1938-1943), which permitted the Secretary of War to exclude any groups of people from designated military areas. Under that Executive Order, the United States Government prevented persons of Japanese ancestry from living, working, or traveling on the West Coast. In the implementation of this prohibition policy, the United States Army (“Army”) removed citizens of Japanese ancestry and their resident alien parents to “relocation centers” — barracks camps surrounded by barbed wire and under military guard. The War Relocation Authority (“WRA”), a civilian agency, administered the camps.

On December 17, 1944, Public Proclamation No. 21, 10 Fed.Reg. 53 (1945); see also 62 Fed.Reg. 19,928, 19,931 (1997), rescinded the mass exclusion orders and replaced them with individual exclusion orders. The Western Defense Command (“WDC”) placed 4,963 individuals on the individual exclusion lists. See Administrative Record (“AR”) at 42. The Army revoked the remaining individual exclusion orders with Public Proclamation No. 24, issued on September 4,1945. See 10 Fed.Reg. 11,760 (1945).1

In ending the Japanese internment policy, the United States sought to slow resettlement in the evacuated areas and to disperse some of the evacuees across the country in order to avoid a concentration of the minority group on the West Coast. Mr. Harold L. Ickes, the Secretary of the Interior, stated in a press release on December 18, 1944, however, that “[p]eople of Japanese ancestry both at the relocation centers and elsewhere who have been found eligible by the [WDC] for residence in the West Coast area are of course free to go back at any time.” AR at 69.

One of the families affected by the Government’s internment policy during WWII was the plaintiffs immediate family, the Tsumuras. Pursuant to Executive Order No. 9066, the plaintiffs parents and older sisters were evacuated from their home in Sacramento, California, and interned at the Tule Lake relocation center (“Tule Lake”) in northern California. On June 1, 1943, the plaintiffs father (“Mr. Tsumura”) was granted a work [241]*241furlough from Tule Lake and moved to Boise, Idaho, to work as an automobile mechanic. Upon his arrival in Boise, Mr. Tsumura checked in with the WRA. Mr. Tsumura believed that the Government never made him or his family aware that his indefinite leave was permanent.2 He understood that the Government provided his work furlough subject to travel restrictions and that he was to return to Tule Lake if he lost his job.

Mr. Tsumura’s family reunited and grew in Boise, Idaho. On July 5, 1943, the plaintiffs mother (“Mrs.Tsumura”) and sisters received indefinite leave from Tule Lake and permission to join Mr. Tsumura in Idaho. On February 6, 1945, while in Boise, Mrs. Tsumura gave birth to the plaintiff. The plaintiff is currently a United States citizen of Japanese ancestry.

While in Boise, the Tsumuras continued to believe that they fell under the jurisdiction of the WRA and that the Government could compel them to return to Tule Lake at any time. As an example, the plaintiff points to a particular time between 1943 and 1945 when her mother attempted to purchase a kitchen knife in a store, which resulted in the store owner calling the FBI and the police. See Pl.’s Proposed Findings of Uncontroverted Fact at ¶ 43. Those agencies looked to the WRA as the authority to decide whether or not Mrs. Tsumura could purchase the knife. Even though the WRA apparently cleared up the dispute by showing that Mrs. Tsumura was not subject to any such restrictions similar to those imposed on aliens by Proclamation No. 2525, see supra note 1, this incident led the family to believe that the WRA maintained jurisdiction over them.

The family also considered themselves internees because of a visit Mr. Tsumura made to Tule Lake in July 1945. Mr. Tsumura had stated that he returned to Tule Lake with his family and that, while there, the family considered themselves internees. See AR at 210, 214. However, there is no formal documentation in Government files showing when Mr. Tsumura came to Tule Lake, with whom he traveled, or how long he stayed at Tule Lake. The files instead -suggest that Mr. Tsumura went to Tule Lake in July 1945 in order to pick up the plaintiffs grandparents, who had received terminal leave with a relocation grant to move to Idaho, and that he returned with them to Boise on July 17,1945. See AR at 126. The Tsumuras could not have been legally reinducted at Tule Lake because the WRA policy, as of February 1, 1945, prohibited all further reinductions or inductions of residents to the relocation centers. See AR at 36, 51.

Until January 1946, when the Tsumuras indicated that they learned from relatives that they could move back to California, the family was apparently unaware that the Government had eliminated the military exclusion of persons of Japanese ancestry from California. The plaintiff points out that the WRA knew the Tsumura’s residential address and Mr. Tsumura’s work address, but that neither the WRA nor any other agent of the Government gave them actual notice about the lifting of the exclusion. See Pl.’s Proposed Findings of Uncontroverted Fact at ¶45. The defendant counters that the Government provided widespread public notice of the lifting of the exclusion restrictions in December 1944 and January 1945. The Associated Press Wire Service distributed news of the release of Public Proclamation No. 21 nationally on December 17, 1944. Within two days, all the major newspapers in the United States prominently reported the lifting of the exclusions. See 62 Fed.Reg. 19,928, 19,930 (1997). Dissemination of Public Proclamation No. 21 included its publication in Japanese-American newspapers, see id. at 19,931, and in the Idaho Daily Statesman, which was published and circulated in Boise, Idaho. See Def.’s Reply in Supp. of It’s [sic] Opp’n to Pl.’s Reply in Supp. of S.J. on the AR and Def.’s Cross-Mot. for J. Upon the AR, App.A. The Daily Statesman ran" the story on its front page, trumpeting the proclamation in large print: “U.S. Revokes Order Excluding All Nisei from Pacific Coast.” Id. Furthermore, the Government published Public Proclamation No. 21 in the [242]*242Federal Register on January 2,1945. See 10 Fed.Reg. 53 (1945).

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44 Fed. Cl. 238, 1999 U.S. Claims LEXIS 159, 1999 WL 463417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higashi-v-united-states-uscfc-1999.