In re Ah Quan

21 F. 182, 10 Sawy. 222, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 1904
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedAugust 7, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 21 F. 182 (In re Ah Quan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Ah Quan, 21 F. 182, 10 Sawy. 222, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 1904 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Sawyer, J.

Upon earoful consideration of tho act approved July o, 1884, to amend an act entitled “An act to execute certain treaty stipulations relating toOhinese,” etc., we hold and we have determined, in passing upon the right of Chinese to enter the United States, to be governed by the rules as stated in the following propositions:

i. Chinese laborers who were in tho United States on the seventeenth day of November, 1880, and who departed from the United States prior to June G, 1882, before the collector of the port was prepared to give the certificate required by section 4 of the original act, are entitled to re-enter the United States on satisfactory evidence, other than tlie certificate prescribed in said section 4, that they resided in the United Stales on November 17, 1880, or came into the United States between that date and August 4,1882. There is nothing in tlie amendatory act on this point that requires a construction more unfavorable to Chinese laborers than that given by us in Leong Yick Dew, 19 Fed. Rep. 490, to the original act. Dropping the word “and,” after the clause in section 8 in the original act, “the two foregoing sections shall not apply to Chinese laborers who wore in the United States on the seventeenth day of November, 1880,” etc., and substituting therefor in the amendatory act, “nor shall said sections apply to Chinese laborers who shall produce to said master, etc., * * * tlie evidence hereinafter in this act required of his being one of the laborers in this section mentioned,” makes two classes— the general class, embracing all who were in tho United States between the two dates, and the sub-class, being those of that class who could obtain the certificate provided for in the next following section 4. This change renders the propriety of our construction of the origginal act still more apparent, and seems intended to affirm it. Section 4 only applies, and in the nature of things can only apply, to those Chinese laborers in the country at the dates mentioned, who departed from the country after tlie passage of tho act; for as to those who had already departed it was impossible for the collector to go on board of the vessel before their departure and make the prescribed list, or deliver the prescribed certificate. The last clause of section 4, making the prescribed certificate “the only evidence permissible to establish a right of re-entry,” has reference alone to those Chinese laborers provided for in the first part of the same section, and in the nature of things could only refer to that class, for as to no other could the collector possibly go aboard the vessel before her departure and make the list and issue the certificate. The act certainly did not contemplate that the collector should perform these acts upon vessels and in regard to Chinese laborers already gone. The Ian[184]*184guage is, “the said certificate shall be the only evidence,” etc. What is the “said certificate ?” Clearly, the certificate which the collector is to issue to the departing laborer, in pursuance of the provisions of the first clause of the section, upon going aboai'd the vessel and making the required list before her departwre. It could be no other. No other certificate is provided for, and this could not be done, and con-? gross did not do, or intend to do, so unreasonable a thing as to give a right to a certificate, and impose the correlative duty to produce it, ■ as to persons who had already departed before the passage of the act, and could not obtain it. The act imposes a duty and obligation on the government, through the collector, correlative and precedent to the obligation imposed on the Chinese laborer to produce the prescribed certificate, and the obligation of the latter to produce the certificate necessarily arises subsequently to, and is dependent upon, the performance of the correlative and precedent duty and obligation on the part of the government to furnish it. To hold that congress intended to require the performance of the dependent obligation on the part of the Chinese laborer until the government has discharged its correlative and precedent duty and obligation upon which his obligation rests, imposed by the act, by furnishing the certificate and thereby rendering it possible for him to produce it, would be to attribute to congress a deliberate intent to enact a palpable and glaring absurdity, thereby violating one of the most venerable canons of statutory construction, that a statute must not be so construed as to lead to an absurd conclusion. We must conclude, therefore, that it was not intended to require the production of the certificate by those who departed from the country before it was possible to obtain it. And that congress did not intend to exclude such Chinese laborers as were in the country at the time mentioned is clearly manifest, because it has said so in express terms in the provision of section 3, “that the two foregoing sections [excluding Chinese laborers] shall not apply to Chinese laborers who were in the United States on the seventeenth day of November, 1880,” etc. It is clear, from the necessities of the case, that- this section is only applicable to those who departed after the passage of the act, and who had the opportunity to procure the certificate. To hold otherwise would be to render this clause, making the impossible certificate the only evidence as to those who had departed before the passage of the act, absolutely inconsistent with the clause of section 3 referred to, that the preceding sections “shall not apply to Chinese laborers who were in the United States” at the designated period, and render that provision wholly nugatory, as well as to violate the treaty which the act professes to execute and not to abrogate. The different provisions of the statute must be so construed, if possible, that they can stand together, and not so as to nullify each other.

The clause of the amendment making the certificate the only evidence as to those to whom it is applicable of a right to re-enter the [185]*185United States, only declares in express and explicit terms what we held the original act to mean, and in no way changes its effect, in this particular, as we had construed it. Our construction of the original act in Leong Yick Dew, 19 Fed. Rep. 491, was before congress at the time of the passage of the amendatory act. If it liad been intended to make the amendment as to the prescribed certificate being the only evidence of a right to return applicable to those Chinese laborers who were in the country at the date of the treaty, and who departed after that date and before it was possible to obtain the certificate required, as to whom we had before distinctly held it to be inapplicable, congress vrouid certainly have amended the first clause of section 3 so as to read, in substance, as follows:

“The two preceding sections shall not apply to Chinese laborers who were in the United States on the seventeenth day of November, 1880,” etc., “except as to those who departed from, the United States after said seventeenth day of November, 1880, and before the passage of the aet, or before it was possible to obtain such certificate.”

This is, in effect, the way those who insist upon the production of such certificate by that class, as the only evidence of their right to ro-enter the United States, must read it in order to sustain their view. Congress has not introduced any such exception, and we are not authorized to .interpolate it into the act. To do so would be to legislate, not to construe.

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. 182, 10 Sawy. 222, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 1904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ah-quan-uscirct-1884.