In re Krausse

36 F.2d 407, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1704
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 18, 1929
DocketNo. 91641
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 F.2d 407 (In re Krausse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Krausse, 36 F.2d 407, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1704 (E.D. Pa. 1929).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This applicant admittedly possesses all the qualifications for citizenship, with a possible noncompliance with one of the conditions of admission.

The conditions of admission to citizenship in the order set forth in the act of Congress are (among others) :

I. The filing of' a declaration of intention to become a citizen, setting forth inter alia “the date of arrival with the name of the vessel, if any, in which the applicant eame to the United States.”

2. After two and within seven years of this declaration, the filing of a petition to he naturalized, incorporated with which must be the required “certificate” of arrival together with the above declaration.

There are, among others, two requisites to admission: (1) A five years’ continuous residence within the United States, and (2) this required declaration of intention. These two facts must be evidenced in the application by a certificate of arrival and declaration of intention attached thereto.

This alien has resided in the United States for the required length of time, and did declare his intention to become a citizen, and has attached to his petition a certificate of arrival, together with his declaration of intention. Why then should he not be admitted?

The answer made is the objection that the declaration was premature. The applicant physically arrived October 16, 1922. He made the required declaration November 9, 1922. The remaining fact we state in the words of the objectors: “Attached to the pe[408]*408tition is the required certificate of arrival issued by direction of the Secretary of Labor showing that (the applicant) arrived at the port of New York on October 16th, 1922, on the S. S. Oswego. The following statement is endorsed on the face of the certificate. 'This alien is admitted for permanent residence and head tax paid December 26th, 1922. Verified for permit. Member of crew.’ ”

A very sharp point is thus presented. If the declaration of intention bore date December 27,1922, the applicant would properly be admitted, but, as it bears the date of November 9th, he may not be. The representative of the Bureau of Naturalization understands the very point presented to have been ruled by this court adversely to the applicant. This, however, is a mistake. The point here presented has not been so ruled or ruled at all. There is now legislative direction on the subject. The amendment of March 2, 1929, expressly provides (section 4, 8 USCA § 377 (b) that “no declaration of intention shall be made by any alien * * * or, if made, be valid, until the lawful entry for permanent residence of such alien shall have been established, and a certificate showing the' date, place, and manner of his arrival shall have been issued.” The act is however not retroactive and cannot be accepted as a declara^ tion of the legislative will before its date. If it has any bearing on declarations before made, it is that of a change in the law.

The very fair-minded representative of the Bureau of Naturalization has likewise directed our attention to the ease arising in this district of In re Cassovel, 33 F. (2d) 1002, which is read as favorable to the admission of the present applicant, but the ruling in which is thought to have been changed by the subsequent rulings above mentioned. We do not so read the cited ease, nor see in it any bearing upon the question now presented. The Cassovel Case was ruled upon the' authority of the previously ruled McPhee Case (D. C.) 209 F. 143, which in turn followed the, Schmidt Case (D. C.) 207 F. 678, which arose in the Western District.

To these may be added the case of In re Fanariotis (D. C.) 33 F.(2d) 313. The thought in all of them was to have the same rule applied throughout the Third Circuit. The Schmidt, MePhee, and Cassovel Cases each turned upon the form of the attached certificate. The Fanariotis ruling expressly recognized the rulings in the other eases, but it was based not (as were the other cases) upon the form of the certificate, but its substance. So far as affects the precise point now presented, it has not been ruled in this district, nor so far as we are advised, in this Circuit. We have, however, been referred to the following cited cases, together with other unreported rulings in the Southern District of New York and in the New Jersey and Delaware Districts in this circuit. Respecting these unreported rulings, we have no means of confirming them, and they may turn out to be, as in the instance of the unreported eases in this district, mistaken inferences of what was ruled.

The reported eases are the following: In re Connal (D. C.) 8 F.(2d) 374; In re Jensen (D. C.) 11 F.(2d) 414; In re Olsen (D. C.) 18 F.(2d) 425; In re Demanis (D. C.) 21 F.(2d) 876; In re Reader (D. C.) 21 F. (2d) 877.

Before considering these rulings, it will ' be helpful to recall the precise point now presented. It is whether for declaration purposes an arrival in this Country is to be the date of actual arrival or taken to be the date of- payment of the head tax and the issuance of the formal certificate of arrival. In other words, whether the provision in section 4 of the Act of March 2, 1929, is to be read into the Act June 29, 1906 (34 Stat. 596) as amended prior to 1922.

Recurring to the helpful aid to construction of having in mind the old law, the mischief arising thereunder, and the remedy provided in the law to be construed, we had before the requirement that a certificate of arrival be incorporated in the petition for naturalization the fact of arrival to be found as a fact. When the time came, as it did, when some restrictions upon immigration were called for, the question of whether an alien had entered the country in compliance with the immigration laws became important, because there were doubtless instances among applications for naturalization of those who had entered the country without a compliance with these laws. The fact and time of entry was, because of this, changed from a fact to be found to one of certification by the immigration officials. We have in the instant case such certificate to the fact of entry on October 16, 1922. Whether the applicant was in this country at the time of his declaration of intention was a vital fact to be established, and could be established only by the certificate of the Secretary of Labor. It is of common knowledge that frequent calls were made upon the department for such certificates long after the date of arrival, and it is a fair assumption that because of this the amendment of 1929' was passed, making the date of arrival for declaration purposes not the date of arrival in fact, but the date of the [409]*409issuing of the arrival certificate, so that now we can have no valid declaration of intention until after the date of such certificate. If this was the law before March 2, 1929, the present applicant has made no valid declaration of intention, and in consequence cannot at this time be admitted to citizenship. If such was not the law on November 9, 1922, he may be admitted.

With these thoughts in mind, let us examine the cited eases. A reading of them at once discloses that none of them, except the Olsen Case, touch the question before us. Each of the other eases presents the question of whether an applicant who was never in fact accepted as an immigrant, or of whose entry there was no official record, could be admitted to citizenship.

In the Olsen Case, there were five applicants whose petitions were discussed in one opinion — Olsen, Koch, Rose, Esteller, and Munz.

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Bluebook (online)
36 F.2d 407, 1929 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-krausse-paed-1929.