In re Di Simone

108 F. 942, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 289
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 2, 1901
DocketNo. 13,641
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 108 F. 942 (In re Di Simone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Di Simone, 108 F. 942, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 289 (E.D. La. 1901).

Opinion

BOARMAN, District Judge.

Tlie petitioner claims that she is not an alien immigrant, under the statute, and resists, in these proceedings, the purpose of the respondent collector to deport her to Italy. Respondent, in showing cause for his action, alleges that the child is an alien immigrant, and as such it is his duty, under an act approved March 3, 1891 (1 Supp. Rev. St. [2d Ed.] c. 551), to cause her deportation, because it is disclosed, on legal and proper official authority, that she has trachoma, which is “a loathsome or a dangerous contagious disease.”

“An act in amendment to the various acts relative to immigration and the importation of aliens under contract or agreement to perform labor.
“Be it enacted,” etc., “that the following classes of aliens shall'be excluded from admission (2) into the United States, in accordance with the [943]*943■existing' acts regulating immigration, other than those concerning Chinese laborers: (3) All idiots, insane persons. Paupers or persons likely to become a public charge. Persons suffering from a loathsome or a dangerous contagious disease. Persons who have been convicted of a felony or other infamous crime or misdemeanor involving moral turpitude. Polygamists.

There is jurisdiction in the court to pass determinatively on the mixed issue of law and fact as to whether or not petitioner is an alien immigrant. If she is an alien immigrant, in the meaning of the statute, the court: must, on a proper slate of case, recognize as authoritative and final the action of the officials upon which respondent grounds his action in the premises, notwithstanding it may be clear enough upon the fads that the child is afflicted with trachoma, which appears to mean only commonplace sore eyes. The power of local inspector's over immigrant passengers is confined to alien immigrants. The question as to whether a person ordered to be returned is an alien immigrant, under the policy of the naturalization laws, is jurisdictional in these proceedings. The rights of such an alien immigrant are not civic privileges. They are said to be merely of a statutory character. The quality or degree of such rights is treated of and determined by congress as involving political questions. Congress may treat, as it seems to have done, their rights, if they have any, as being “outside of the constitution,” and forbid the complaints of such an alien immigrant, seeking to reside here, for relief, to be heard or passed upon in a judicial forum. On the other hand, if the child is not such an alien immigrant as the statute contemplates, the court, under these proceedings, on a proper ca,se, may vindicate her civic privileges and give her the relief sought. On the issue as to petitioner being an alien immigrant vel non, it seems to be conceded that the father and mother of (he child have been for several years, and are now, residential citizens of the city of New Orleans; tliai, they, on leaving Italy, left their child, the peiiiioner, there witli her relatives; that some time ago the father, before sending for the child to come to him, made his first declaration of intention under the naturalization laws. Citizenship in the United States seems to be a doubtful quantity. It may be of several qualities. In one person it may be full and complete, and of an inchoate and conditional character in another. The naturalization law's are,made up of a series of statutes of old and new dates. The system does not. so far as judicial opinions in the federal and state courts have been expressive of (heir meaning, seem to be clearly understood. The statu as well as the federal courts have found it difficult to establish uniform jurisprudence as to the civic rights of aliens who invoke the aid of our laws. In Boyd v. Nebraska, 143 U. S. 177, 12 Sup. Ct. 375, 36 L. Ed. 103, matters bearing in some degree on the legal issues in this case were considered by Mr. Chief Justice Fidler. The plaintiff therein was seeking, among other tilings, to avail himself of a civic privilege which he claimed the law vested in him because his father, an alien resident, had made, during the minority of his son, who was born here, his first declaration under the naturalization laws. In discussing section 2168, Rev. St., which is as follows:

[944]*944“See. .2108. When any alien, who has complied with the first condition specified in section twenty-one hundred and sixty-five, dies before he is actually naturalized, the widow and the children of such alien shall be considered as citizens of the United States, and shall be entitled to all rights and privileges as such, upon taking the oaths prescribed by law.”

—The chief justice says:

“The statutory provisions leave much to be desired, and the attention of congress has been called to the condition of the laws in reference to election of nationality, and to the desirability of a clear definition of the status of minor children of fathers who had declared their intention to become citizens, but had failed to'perfect their naturalization, and of the status gained by those of full age by the declaration of intention. 2 Whart. Xnt. Dig. 340, 341, 350. Clearly, minors acquire an inchoate status by declaration of intention on the part of their parents.”

A cursory consideration of the federal and state courts’ decisions in cases involving the civic rights or privileges of aliens will demonstrate the appropriateness of the suggestions quoted from the opinion of Mr. Chief Justice Fuller.

Under the views which United States courts as well as state courts have expressed, while engaged in the purpose to judicially differentiate or classify such civic rights as congress has conferred on aliens living as residential citizens in this country, it may he that the father of the child on whose behalf this writ is sued out, by operation of law, on the state of facts conceded to be true, is vested with such “inchoate status” of citizenship as should forbid the treasury officials to impose the status of an alien immigrant on the petitioner. The force of the' suggestion that the child, under the policy of the naturalization laws, may not be an alien immigrant, is not without some degree of authority in the United States courts, and in the declarations and contentions of eminent officials of the United States to whom have beefi confided the consideration of the gravest of our international questions. A review of such authorities will show a liberal tendency towards enlarging the rights of minors who claim, under the policy of our law, to share with their alien parents the benefit of such civic rights as may be, as Mr. Chief Justice Fuller says, “impressed upon them” by operation of the naturalization laws on the fact that the father has made his declaration of intention. Clearly, if the petitioner, on coming here to join her father, had found him a naturalized citizen, she could not, under the policy of the. law, have been treated as an alien immigrant, so as to prohibit her from entering this city, however loathsome, contagious, or dangerous a disease her sore eyes might prove to be. Of course, the state, exercising police power, might have subjected her to quarantine. The naturalization of the husband who died, leaving a widow who never resided in the United States, confers citizenship on her. Kane v. McCarthy, 63 N. C. 299; Burton v. Burton, *40 N. Y. 359. A wife becomes a citizen after the husband’s preliminary declaration, and before his naturalization, in case of his death. His minor children, under similar circumstances, if living here, would become citizens. Schrimpf v. Settegast, 38 Tex. 96.

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Bluebook (online)
108 F. 942, 1901 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-di-simone-laed-1901.