In re Look Wong ex rel. Look Say

4 D. Haw. 568
CourtDistrict Court, D. Hawaii
DecidedAugust 30, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 4 D. Haw. 568 (In re Look Wong ex rel. Look Say) 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.

Bluebook
In re Look Wong ex rel. Look Say, 4 D. Haw. 568 (D. Haw. 1915).

Opinion

Clemons, J,

This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of an immigrant, Look Wong, denied a landing at the port of Honolulu, for having “failed to prove a status which entitles him to admission.” The order of the immigration inspector denying admission was affirmed on appeal tó the Secretary of Labo'r. In the testimony on which the order was based, the following facts appear:

The immigrant, a minor, male, was born in China August 3, 1898, of Chinese parents. His mother was a resident of China, and was married to his father there in 1891. At the time of the marriage the father who was, had for some time been, and is now, a resident merchant of Hawaii, had here an Hawaiian wife, to whom he had been married for twenty years or more but from whom he was divorced by decree of the Circuit Court of the First Circuit of the Republic of Hawaii, dated February 21, 1898. In 1898 the father returned to Hawaii, after a year’s absence in China, and in 1903 again went to China, where he lived with the immigrant’s mother until 1913, then returning to Hawaii.

The inspector’s decision in full follows:

“It is a maxim that the law favors matrimony. This is based on public policy. The present case presents peculiar conditions, and, in common with others, I have an aversion against doing violence to human feelings. However, a careful consideration of the record in this case leads me to conclude that the applicant, Look Wong, is the natural and not the lawful son of Look Say, whose mercantile status is satisfactorily established. The fact of cohabitation raises a presumption of marriage only in cases where the cohabitation is not meretricious and the subsequent cohabitation with a woman with whom a man had illicit relations would not of itself constitute a common law marriage as it would if the first cohabitation were free from former marital impediment. This matter is comprehensively discussed in the case of Randlett v. Rice, 141 Mass. 385. The applicant is a minor.
“Look Wong is hereby denied a landing as a Chinese person who has failed to prove a status which entitles him [570]*570to admission to the United States and he is ordered deported to China, the country whence he came.”

[1] [2] As to the basis of that decision, two arguments may be possible, (1) for a finding of illegitimacy from want of marriage of the parents, and (2) even if such marriage existed, for a finding of illegitimacy by reason of the existence of a prior marriage. A finding such as the former, being a finding of fact, would be conclusive and preclude 'review by this court; a finding such as the latter, so far as it is a conclusion of law, would not be conclusive if erroneous. De Bruler v. Gallo, 184 Fed. 566, 570. And see Bouve, Exclusion of Aliens, 530-535.

In support of an argument for a finding of no marriage, (1) supra, the presumption in favor of the validity of official acts might be invoked And so it might be supposed that although the testimony tended to prove marriage, the inspector, who was the judge of the credibility of the witnesses, was not convinced' — especially as under the 'regulations of the bureau of immigration governing the admission of Chinese, the inspector should “in every instance” require “exacting evidence of the relationship claimed.” Rule 9 (a), (b). Moreover, the language of the decision might be taken to indicate that the inspector did not regard the marriage as established; for it reads: “the fact of cohabitation [i.e., apparently, with the Chinese wife before the divorce of the Hawaiian wife] raises a presumption of marriage only in cases where the cohabitation is not meretricious, and the subsequent cohabitation [i. e., after the divorce] with a woman with whom a man had illicit relations would not of itself constitute a common law marriage as it would if the first cohabitation were free from marital impediment.”

However, in view of the fact that the decision may not be so definite as to preclude the possibility of the two arguments above stated, as also in view of the fact that, while the only direct evidence of the marriage was the say-so of [571]*571the immigrant’s father and the bare say-so of the immigrant himself and two others, there were still no inherent inconsistencies in the testimony on this point and no contradiction of it, and in view of the fact that the examining official made no effort to test the witnesses as to the basis of their conclusion of marriage and as to their means of knowledge, etc. (see In re Jiro Miragusuku, ante, p. 344), it is more fair to assume that the inspector would not have made a finding of fact so contrary to what evidence there was (weak as it may be) and a finding of fact absolutely determinative of the case, without a definite statement of such finding, — especially as it is not an unreasonable contention that the immigrant was entitled to air express determination of the fact of the alleged marriage upon which his right to enter is based. See Bouve, Exclusion of Aliens, 517, also Id. 510. For these reasons, as well as because it is possible to view the decision as a finding of illegitimacy, based on the existence of the father’s prior marriage, we shall consider the case in the latter aspect, and then endeavor to determine whether the inspector’s decision would be valid as a matter of law. In other words, admitting the fact of the second marriage, would the child of such marriage be entitled to enter the United States?

It may be said here that in spite of the above suggestion, of the use of the words of the decision last quoted as an argument for á finding of no marriage, the word “cohabitation”, as first used in the quotation (in reference to the relation between the father and mother before the dissolution of the prior, Hawaiian, marriage), might imply merely that, because of the existence of the prior marriage, the relation based upon the alleged marriage in China could not be called a valid marriage relation, but only a state of cohabitation. With that sense of the word “cohabitation” as applied to the marriage in China, the only question is one of law, (2) supra.

[572]*572It is urged that the marriage, being lawful in China where entered into (as appears from the certificate of the Chinese consul at Honolulu submitted to the Secretary of Labor on the appeal), is lawful here and everywhere, and that the immigrant, born of that marriage and being legiti'mate there, must be regarded as legitimate here; also, that if the immigrant is legitimate by the law of his domicile, it is immaterial how he came to be. so; also, that in applying considerations of policy against polygamy, the court should look no further than the immediate parties, father and mother, and should not look to those one degree removed, who are innocent parties.

Of course, the inspector’s decision would be in error in broadly characterizing as illegitimate the issue of such a marriage valid in China. But in the opinion of the court the effect of the decision is esentially sound; for an exception to the rule of recognition of a foreign marriage arises when the marriage contravenes the spirit and policy of our laws and institutions. This polygamous marriage in China is within such exception, and the immigrant here whose status is derived from this marriage must be governed accordingly.

Story says:

“The general principle certainly is that between persons sui juris,

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Bluebook (online)
4 D. Haw. 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-look-wong-ex-rel-look-say-hid-1915.