Ieronimakis v. Spence

257 F.2d 874, 1958 A.M.C. 2086
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1958
DocketNo. 7634
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 257 F.2d 874 (Ieronimakis v. Spence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ieronimakis v. Spence, 257 F.2d 874, 1958 A.M.C. 2086 (4th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

SOBELOFF, Circuit Judge.

By this appeal an alien seaman suffering from active tuberculosis raises the question whether the Immigration Officer-in-Charge at Norfolk, Virginia, abused his discretion in ordering his return to his native country because a cure could not be effected “within a reasonable time.” 8 U.S.C.A. § 1283.1

Michael Ieronimakis, a Greek seaman, arrived at Newport News, Virginia, on September 21, 1957, aboard the S. S. Santhy, a Liberian vessel. Although he was afflicted with active pulmonary tuberculosis, his illness was not discovered by the Examining Medical Officer. He was granted a D-l landing permit, which allowed him to land temporarily for a period that his vessel remained in port. 8 U.S.C.A. § 1282(a).

On September 27, 1957, Ieronimakis was admitted, as a voluntary patient, to the United States Public Health Service Hospital, Norfolk, Virginia, and on the same day he filed a libel in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia against the Santhy, her owners, master, and agents, to recover damages, maintenance and care for his tuberculous condition. Released from the attachment by agreement of counsel, the Santhy departed from Newport News and sailed foreign.

After the seaman had remained in the Norfolk hospital for two and one-half months, Dr. John S. Shuttleworth, Chief of the Medical Service, on December 12, 1957, wrote to Mr. Paul E. Johnson, the Immigration Officer-in-Charge at Norfolk, Virginia, that Ieronimakis was “fit for travel, but not fit for duty,” and that, “it is estimated that it will require a minimum of 18-24 months more treatment.”

[876]*876Five days later, Johnson sent a letter to the Lavino Shipping Company, agent for the Santhy, in which, after reciting the above medical information, he declared that, “[s]ince it is not possible to effect a cure within a reasonable time, you are hereby ordered to enforce this man’s return at the expense of the owners of the SS Santhy and to insure that he will be properly cared for and protected.”

At a hearing on December 19, 1957, in connection with the admiralty suit filed by Ieronimakis, counsel for the shipowner stipulated, on behalf of his client, that if Ieronimakis was repatriated, it would give him proper medical attention, at its own expense, until he reached his maximum state of cure.2 In open court counsel for Ieronimakis filed a “petition for a writ of habeas corpus, application for a declaratory judgment, injunction and/or other appropriate relief,” attacking the order of repatriation. Judge Hoffman immediately issued an order to show cause and held a hearing the same afternoon. At its conclusion, the Judge found that the petitioner was not in the physical custody of any of the defendants and discharged the writ of habeas corpus. He also denied the other relief prayed, holding that “there is nothing arbitrary” in the action taken by Johnson.

Ieronimakis then appealed to this court.3 His principal contention is that the Immigration Officer-in-Charge failed to exercise the discretion which the Immigration and Nationality Act grants him. The statute, notes the appellant, authorizes a return of afflicted alien seamen “ * * * in cases in which it appears to the satisfaction of the immigration officer in charge that it will not be possible within a reasonable time to effect a cure.” (Our emphasis.) He next calls attention to the regulation of the Attorney General of the United States which provided that “if the disability or disease is one in which a cure cannot reasonably be expected within thirty days, an order to deport shall be served * * * ” See 8 C.F.R. (1952), Sec. 253.1. Thus, concludes Ieronimakis, “the immigration officer in charge has abdicated the functions assigned him by Congress 'x' * * and has arbitrarily accepted the fiat of the Attorney General that any period in excess of thirty days is not reasonable.”

This argument is based upon a mistaken premise. On March 1, 1957, more than nine months before Johnson’s order, the regulation cited by the appellant was superseded by a new one which places no time limit on hospitalization and provides only that an afflicted alien seaman is to be hospitalized “for a period initially not to exceed thirty days * * (Emphasis added.) 8 C.F.R. (1957 Supp.), Sec. 253.1.

The effect of the current regulation is entirely opposite to that asserted by Ieronimakis. Instead of preventing the exercise of the Immigration Officer’s statutory authority, the new regulation encourages it. Since the initial hospitalization period is limited to thirty days, the regulation requires some further action by the Immigration Officer-in-Charge at the end of that time, and this, of course, indicates re-appraisal of the seaman’s medical condition. Thus viewed, the regulation does not conflict with the statute but, to the contrary, complements it.

Moreover, upon consideration of the facts, we cannot say that the Immi[877]*877gration Offieer-in-Charge acted arbitrarily or contrary to law.

The medical report to Johnson was that Ieronimakis would require a “minimum of 18-24 months more treatment.” Counsel for the appellant did not dispute the conclusion that such a protracted period of further hospitalization would be necessary, and, at the hearing, freely admitted that Ieronimakis needed “at least” this much further care.

The statute requires that when it has been determined that it will not be possible to effect a cure within a reasonable time “the return of the alien crewman shall be enforced on, or at the expense of, the transportation line on which he came, upon such conditions as the Attorney General shall prescribe, to insure that the alien shall be properly cared for and protected, and that the spread of contagion shall be guarded against.” The seaman contends that this requirement imposes an obligation on the Immigration Officer to insure that the alien shall be properly cared for after his repatriation, as well as during the return voyage, and complains of the Officer’s “lack of knowledge of the competency of Greek hospitals” in the instant case, although he offered no support for his contention.

The appellant contends that the statute imposes on the Immigration Service the obligation to insure that the alien be properly cared for after his repatriation. The Service replies that it has no facilities to supervise treatment in a foreign country, nor the power to control employment contracts made in foreign ports by foreign owners with alien seamen. We find it unnecessary to decide the question in this case. It is sufficient to say that the Immigration Officer should consider as one of the circumstances the facilities for treatment there and here, along with the nature of the disease, whether it is curable or incurable, and the probable length of time necessary to effect a cure, in determining whether or not it will be possible to effect a cure “within a reasonable time.” The Government cites the language of the District Court in Castner, Curran & Bullitt v. Hamilton, D.C.E.D.Va.1921, 275 F. 203, 205, that “ * * * the object and purpose of Congress in passing the act of 1920 (now Section 1283) was not, as claimed by the petitioner, [the shipowner] to enact a seaman’s benefit statute, but to supply an omission in the existing immigration law.

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Related

Aggarao v. MOL SHIP MANAGEMENT CO., LTD.
675 F.3d 355 (Fourth Circuit, 2012)
Ieronimakis v. Spence
257 F.2d 874 (Fourth Circuit, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
257 F.2d 874, 1958 A.M.C. 2086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ieronimakis-v-spence-ca4-1958.