In re Koichi Maekawa
This text of 4 D. Haw. 226 (In re Koichi Maekawa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Hawaii primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The petitioner is a Japanese alien, who alleges that he has been domiciled in the Territory of Hawaii from July 1906 to September 1908; and that he then returned to Japan on a visit intending to return to Hawaii, and did so return January 28, 1913, to the port of Honolulu, Hawaii, when he was refused a landing by the respondent.
The, return to a writ of habeas corpus granted him upon his application directed to the respondent, states that upon his arrival he was examined as to his physical and mental condition and also as to his right to land as an alien domiciled in Hawaii, and that the board of special inquiry found, upon the certificate of the duly appointed officer of the United States marine hospital service, that the petitioner was afflicted with a dangerous contagious disease known as unciniarisis; and “also received and heard evidence as to whether or not the said” petitioner “had returned to Japan with the intention of returning to Hawaii;” and also whether he “had returned from Japan with the intention of permanently remaining in the United States;” and thereupon did determine that he “was an alien immigrant afflicted with a dangerous contagious disease,” and that he “was not a bona fide resident of the Territory of Hawaii at the time of his return to Japan, and did not, on returning to Hawaii, intend to take up a permanent resi[228]*228dence therein;” and thereupon ordered his deportation. The return further alleges that such decision had been sustained by the Secretary of Commerce and Labor on appeal to him by. the petitioner.
The petitioner has demurred to the return on the general ground that the same is not sufficient in law to discharge the writ. In his argument on the demurrer, counsel for the petitioner laid special stress upon the failure of the return to state facts relative to the question of domicil of the petitioner in Hawaii.
As recited above, the return shows no facts pertaining to such question, but states conclusions, merely, of the board of special inquiry, which are, that he was an alien immigrant, was not a bona fide resident of Hawaii at the time of his return and did not on returning intend to take up a permanent residence therein. . The doubt as to the sufficiency - of "the return arising from the absence of facts is not lessened by the nature of the examination of the petitioner by the board of special inquiry as there set forth, substantially as follows: The board also received and heard evidence as to whether or not the said alien “had returned to Japan with the intention of returning to Hawaii;” and also whether he “had returned from Japan with the intention of permanently remaining in the United States.”
“The return should show and express a certain course of commitment; and it is said in general that upon the return of the writ of habeas corpus the cause of imprisonment ought to appear as specifically and certainly to the judge before whom it is returned as it did to the court or person authorized to commit.” Church on Habeas Corpus, 2d ed., sec. 148, p. 225.
In The King v. Lyme Regis, Doug. 150, Justice Buller, speaking of returns to mandamus in which he said the same certainty was required as in returns to writs of habeas corpus, says:
“It is one of the first principles of pleading that you have only occasion to state facts; which must be done for the purpose of informing the court whose duty it is to declare the law arising upon those facts, and to apprise the opposite party of what is meant to be proved in order to give him an opportunity to answer or traverse it.” Hurd on Habeas Corpus, 2d ed., p. 255.
“ ‘Minute correctness’ is not required; but the facts necessary to warrant the detention must in substance be alleged. They will not be presumed.” Hurd on Habeas Corpus, 2d ed., pp. 256, 257.
“The decision of the department is final, but that is on [230]*230the presupposition that the decision was after a hearing in good, faith, however summary in form. As between the substantive right of citizens to enter and of persons alleging themselves to be citizens to have a chance to prove their allegation on the one side and the conclusiveness of the commissioner’s fiat on the other, when one or the other must give way, the latter must yield. In such a case something must be done, and it naturally falls to be done by the courts.” Chin Yow v. United States, 208 U. S. 8, 12.
Under the foregoing considerations the demurrer is sustained.
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4 D. Haw. 226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-koichi-maekawa-hid-1913.