In re Ho King

14 F. 724, 8 Sawy. 438, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 219
CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJanuary 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 14 F. 724 (In re Ho King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Ho King, 14 F. 724, 8 Sawy. 438, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 219 (D. Or. 1883).

Opinion

Deady, D. J.

This is a proceeding by habeas corpus to procure the deliverance of one Ho King for an alleged unlawful restraint upon his liberty. The writ issued upon the petition of Lo Wy, a subject of the Chinese empire, residing in Portland, and upon the allegation therein that King was mot permitted to bring it himself, and was directed to W. Jarvis, the master of the steam-ship T. C. Hook, under whose restraint King was alleged to be. The respondent brings the body into court, and for return to the writ says that on November 25, 1882, at the port of Hong Kong, Ho King took passage on the steam-ship T. C. Hook, whereof the respondent then was and now is the master, for a voyage to Honolulu via Victoria, B. C., and Portland, Oregon; that said vessel has proceeded on said voyage as far as this port, where it arrived on January 9, 1883, with said King on board*; that said King is an actor or theatrical performer by occupation or profession, and is not provided with a certificate from the Chinese government showing his right to land in the United States, as is required by section 6 of the act of May 6, 1882, “to execute certain treaty stipulations relating to China,” and therefore the respondent, being advised and believing that said King was not entitled to land in the United States, and that it would be unlawful to permit him to go ashore in this port, has and does restrain him of his liberty so far as to detain him on board said steam-ship, and not otherwise. To this [725]*725return there is a demurrer filed. Upon the argument of the demurrer two questions were made.

(1) Is an actor a “ laborer-” within the meaning of that term as used, in the Chinese treaty and act of May 6, 1882; and (2) is the certificate prescribed in section 6 of that act the only competent means of proving that a Chinese desiring to come and reside in the United States is not such a laborer.

The term “laborer” is defined by Worcester as follows: “One who labors’; one regularly employed at some hard work; a workman; an operative; — often used of one who gets a livelihood at coarse manual labor, as distinguished from an artisan or professional man;” and the definition given by Webster is to the same effect. The term “laborer” is used in the supplementary treaty with China of November 17, 1880, and also of the act of May 6, 1882, by section 15 of which it is made to include “both skilled and unskilled laborers,” in its popular sense, and includes only persons who perform physical labor for another for wages. It does not, therefore, include an actor any more than it does a merchant or teacher.

In the matter of Lee Yip, lately decided by Mr. Chief Justice Geekne, of Washington, and reported in the Seattle Chronicle of January 4,1883, the learned judge, in speaking of the word “laborer,” as used in this treaty and act, says:

“ The term lias been used'in common English speech time out of mind, and in the statutes of English-speaking people from the iirst statute of laborers of 23 Edw. III. till to-day, to denote a comprehensive, varied, and varying class in society, rather difficult accurately to define. There is nothing in the treaty to indicate that it is used in other than that prescriptive sense. That is the sense, therefore, that should be given it both in the treaty and in tho statute. This sense is a much narrower one than etymologically belongs to the word. Etymologically, a laborer is one wlxo labors. He may labor physically or mentally, -gratuitously or for reward, for himself or for another, freely or under control. However he labors he is in the broad sense a laborer. But that sense is never imputed in ordinary speech or writing, unless there is something in the context or the circumstances to imply that it is intended. * * * A laborer, in the sense of this statute and this treaty, is one that hires himself out or is hired out 1q do physical toil. Physical toil is essential to the definition. So, also, is a contract, express or implied, to submit for wages the person who is to do the toil to him for whom it is to be done. i: * * He is not a laborer, who works' with his hands in his own business, but he is one who is hired out or hires himself out to that in another’s business.”

Neither the treaty nor the act have in view the protection of what are called the professional or mercantile classes, or those engaged in mere mental labor, from competition with the Chinese. No grievance of this kind was ever complained of, and the language of the remedy [726]*726provided) plainly indicates that it was not contemplated by either of the parties to the treaty, or the congress that passed the act. As was said by me In re Moncan, 14 Fed. Rep. 46, the concession in the supplementary treaty was only made to allow the United States “to limit or suspend the existing right of Chinese laborers to come and be within its territory, for the purpose of laboring therein and thereby competing with the labor of its citizens for the local means of livelihood.” A Chinese actor engaged in dramatic representations upon the stage of a Chinese theater seems as far removed from such competition as it is' possible for a person to be.

It only remains to consider what effect is to be given to the fact alleged in the return that King has not the certificate prescribed in section 6 of the act of 1882.

In the case, In re Low Yam Chow, 13 Fed. Rep. 605, it was held by Justices Field and Hoeesian that Chinese, not laborers, who at the passage of the act did not reside in China, were not required to produce this certificate to prove they were non-laborers, prior to being allowed to land.

The reasoning by which this conclusion is reached would justify the conclusion that the certificate is not absolutely necessary in any case.

The non-laboring classes of Chinese are still entitled by treaty stipulation to come to and reside in the United States, and to enjoy all the “rights, privileges, immunities and exemptions” which may be accorded to “the citizens and subjects of the most favored nation.” U. S. Pub. Treat. 148; Treaty of Nov. 17,1880; Sess. Laws, 1881-2, p. 12.

If section 6 of the act of 1882 is construed to absolutely require the production of the certificate therein provided for, before a Chinese who is not a laborer can come within the United States, then it will operate as a serious restriction upon the right and privilege given hiin by the treaty, because in this respect no such condition or restriction is imposed upon any subject of any other nation.

Indeed, the fact of being compelled to make proof of his condition or character at all, is a burden and inconvenience upon the Chinese coming to the United States which is not required of any other immigrant or visitor coming to this country. But probably this much is unavoidable under the circumstances, and must be submitted to as a necessary incident of the right of the United States, under the amended treaty, to exclude from the country Chinese laborers. But the treaty, (article 1,) in conceding this right, is careful to specify [727]*727that “legislation taken in regal'd to Chinese laborers will be of such a character only as is necessary to enforce the regulation, limitation, or suspension of immigration.” It may be admitted that, taken literally, section 6 of the act of 1882 does impose this condition. But in construing a statute it is often necessary to go deeper into the matter than the mere letter. As was said In re Moncan, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
14 F. 724, 8 Sawy. 438, 1883 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-ho-king-ord-1883.