In re Chow Goo Pooi

25 F. 77, 9 Sawy. 606, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2633
CourtUnited States Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 26, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 25 F. 77 (In re Chow Goo Pooi) 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 Chow Goo Pooi, 25 F. 77, 9 Sawy. 606, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2633 (uscirct 1884).

Opinion

Hoffman, J.

By permission of my associates, I proceed to deliver the opinion of the court on the questions that were argued and submitted on last Saturday. The principal questions which are presented for our determination are probably the most important that can arise under this law. On the solution to be given to them will depend, not merely the mode of procedure to be adopted, but whether the terms of the law are such that its obvious object can be carried into practical effect. But, before proceeding to discuss them, there are some preliminary questions that have been raised which, though their solution is not difficult, yet we have thought it best that they should now be passed upon by this court, and by the unanimous opinion of all the j udges be set at rest so far as any further discussion of them in this court or the district court is concerned.

We are unanimously of opinion that when a Chinese person is detained on board of a ship and refused the right to land, whether by the authority of the master in pursuance of the provisions of the Chinese restriction act, or by the refusal of the collector to grant him permission to land, he is restrained of his liberty under or by color of the authority of the United States, and that he is entitled as of common right to sue out a writ of habeas corpus, that the legality of his detention and restraint may be passed upon by the court. When his body, in obedience to the writ, is produced in court, we are also of opinion that the control of his person remains with the court, and that he may be committed to the custody of the marshal, or be held to bail to await the decision of the court. If, on the investigation, the court should be of the opinion that he had no right to land, it is its duty to remand him to the custody from which he was taken, if the ship be in port, and about to return to the country from whence he came.

We are also of opinion that the court has no right, nor color of right, to detain the ship. The statute confers on us no such power, and in that respect it differs from the statute which relates to cases of prostitutes, or supposed prostitutes, arriving from foreign ports. Not [79]*79only have we no power to inflict this great wrong on the owner of the ship, but the exercise of it would be in the highest degree inexpedient and oppressive. It would be vexatious to detain a ship for one or two or three months, while the numerous investigations with regard to the right of her passengers to land are in progress. It would interrupt our trade and intercourse with China. It would disturb the postal service, and it would do a wrong to the owner of the ship whose master may have, in good faith, brought passengers here, who presented to him certificates which, by the law itself, are prima facie evidence of the holder’s right to land. To detain, therefore, the ship, rotting at the wharves for months, would be as unjustifiable an injury and injustice to the owners as, in onr opinion, it would be unwarranted by law.

I now come to the more important and difficult questions which have been submitted for our decision. It being evident that 200 or 300 cases of persons, claiming that they are unjustly restrained of their liberty, could not be investigated within the interval which usually occurs between the arrival and the departure of the ships that ply between this port and China, it results that in a large majority of cases the court would be unable to remand the passenger to the ship on which be arrived, in case the decision of the court should be against the right to land. The question thou arises, and it is not free from difficulty, what is to be done with those passengers who remain in the custody and under the control of the court after the ship has departed? By the twelfth section of the act it is provided—

“That any Chinese person found unlawfully within the United States shall be caused to bo removed therefrom to the country from whence he came, by direction of the president of the United States, and at the cost of the United States, after being brought before some justice, judge, or commissioner of a court of the United States, and found to be one not lawfully entitled to bo or remain in the United States.”

It will be observed that this section is very vague and inexplicit. It confers no power, in terms, on the “justice, judge, or commissioner” to cause the person to be brought before him. It provides no process by which that object can be effected, nor does it indicate in any way what shall be done by the “justice, judge, or commissioner” in case he shall determine that the person brought before him is not entitled to be or remain in the United States. But the object of the section is apparent, and however inexplicit and indefinite the language is, wo feel called upon to effectuate the unmistakable intention of the act, if we can, by construction, inference, and implication, find a warrant in the language of the act for doing so. We are of opinion that, inasmuch as the president’s action is conditioned on the previous finding by a “justice, judge, or commissioner” that the person is not lawfully entitled to be in the United States, the power is impliedly conferred on the “justice, judge, or commissioner” to cause the man to be brought before him in order that that fact may be de[80]*80termined; and, further, that it also confers, by implication, on Jhe “justice, judge, or commissioner” who shall find that the person is not lawfully entitled to he in the United States, the right to hold that person for a reasona'ble time to await the direction of the president for his removal. For, if, upon ascertaining the fact that the person brought before the “justice, judge, or commissioner” is not entitled to be and remain in the United States, he is thereupon discharged, the execution of the duty- devolved upon the president to cause him to be removed becomes impossible.

We therefore hold, though not without some hesitation, that the act does, by implication, confer upon the “justice, judge, or commissioner” the right, after having determined that the person is not entitled to be or remain in the United States, to commit him to the custody of the marshal, or to hold him to bail for a reasonable time, until the president’s direction can be had. We are also of opinion that the person thus brought before the magistrate has no right to a trial by jury. He is not brought before him as a criminal. No punishment as such is inflicted upon him. The consequence of his being unlawfully here is that he will be sent back to the country from whence he came. The power conferred and exercised is essentially a police power. It is closely analogous to the power freely exercised in the Bast with regard to idiots, imbeciles, lunatics, paupers, and other classes' whose presence is deemed incompatible with the safety or welfare of our own people. The Chinese laborer is met at the frontier, as it were, and, not having the right to enter the country, is denied admission to it. As well might a passenger quarantined in the harbor, or a person sent to the pest-house, as being infected with small-pox, demand the right to trial by jury to ascertain whether he is afflicted with that disease.

We are, therefore, of the opinion that in the investigation before the “justice, judge, or commissioner,” to ascertain and find out whether a person is unlawfully within the United States, he has no right to tri'al by jury.

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Bluebook (online)
25 F. 77, 9 Sawy. 606, 1884 U.S. App. LEXIS 2633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-chow-goo-pooi-uscirct-1884.