In re Yuen

188 F. 350, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJuly 2, 1910
DocketNo. 322
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 188 F. 350 (In re Yuen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Yuen, 188 F. 350, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22 (D. Mass. 1910).

Opinion

DODGE, District Judge.

The petitioner complains that his minor’ son, Jem Yuen, is unlawfully detained by George B. Billings, United States Commissioner of Immigration at this port.

[1] The commissioner’s return on the writ avers that Jem Yuen is detained for deportation as an alien Chinese person, not entitled to enter the United States, by virtue of an order of the Secretary of Commerce and Uabor on July 11, 1910, which is set forth. The order purports to affirm an excluding decision of the commissioner in Jem Yuen’s case, and to direct that he be deported. The petitioner has filed an answer to the return, in which all the averments thereof are denied, and it is also denied that any such order has been issued, or that Jem Yuen is detained by virtue; of any order of the Secretary of Commerce and Dabor. The answer further sets up that Jem Yuen was denied a fair hearing and was denied appeal to the secretary, and that the pretended hearing on appeal was before an officer not authorized to act, and not upon a proper record; that Jem Yuen is not an alien belonging to any excluded class, and is the minor son of a domiciled Chinese merchant. At the hearing a motion was filed to discharge Jem Yuen from custody, because the return upon the writ showed no sufficient justification for holding him. This motion I overruled. The commissioner then offered, in proof of the averments in his return, a record of the proceedings in the case to which the alleged order of the secretary, refers, duly certified, which is marked “A,” and may be referred to in connection herewith. There is no dispute that Jem Yuen is an alien and a Chinese person. The record shows that he sought to enter the country in April last, coming by steamer from Halifax to the port of Boston. His claim of right to enter was based on allegations that he was the petitioner’s minor son and that the petitioner was a Chinese merchant lawfully within the country. Whether these allegations were true or not was to be decided in the first instance by the immigration commissioner here. That the petitioner is a Chinese merchant lawfully within the country was finally, though not at first, conceded by the authorities. The allegations that Jem Yuen was his son and a minor were held not to have been sustained, and admission was therefore refused. The hearing before the immigration 'authorities here was on May 6, 1910, the decision on May 28th. The petitioner was duly notified of the decision and his right to appeal therefrom. Appeal was claimed May 28th, and the time for preparing it extended, at the petitioner’s request, from time to time until June 25th. Under date of June 29th the record on appeal was transmitted by the commissioner here to the Immigration Bureau of the Department of Commerce and Labor at Washington. Under date, of July 11th the commissioner here was notified by the bureau that his decision was affirmed, in the form set forth in the return to this writ.

[353]*353[2] The petitioner then offered to show before me that Jem Yuen is a minor son of a Chinese merchant, and is not otherwise excluded under the laws and regulations relating to immigration. I excluded the proof offered, on the ground that the questions raised appear by the record to have been determined by the proper authorities and not to be reviewable by the court. There was no further evidence offered by either side. Upon the questions whether Jem Yuen was the petitioner’s son and whether he was a minor, the courts have no jurisdiction to review decisions made by the immigration authorities, provided the hearing before them, however summary its form, has been in good faith and their action not merely arbitrary. This is true even when the applicant claims to be a citizen, as Jem Yuen does not.

[3] The denial of a fair hearing is the only foundation for any jurisdiction in the court to interfere on habeas corpus. Chin Yow v. U. S., 208 U. S. 8, 28 Sup. Ct. 201, 52 L. Ed. 369. “If a fair, full hearing was given and had, full opportunity to present evidence, and a question of fact was presented and decided, and the action taken was not arbitrary, then the decision of the inspector, affirmed by the department, is final.” Ex parte Lung Foot, 174 Fed. 70. Whether there was a fair hearing or not in the present case must be determined by the record, and the record, according to the petitioner’s contention, shows that a fair hearing has been denied. The hearing at Boston is said to have been unfair because inadmissible evidence was considered. The hearing on appeal is said to have been unfair because of alleged improper additions made to the record submitted at Washington, and because the Secretary of Commerce and Labor does not appear to have himself considered or decided it. As to the hearing at Boston there is no complaint that the applicant was in any way hindered in submitting such evidence as he desired, or of any refusal to hear what was submitted. The complaint is that a record of proceedings of similar character at Richford, Vt., in October, 1908, and before the department on appeal, was considered. This record purported to show that Jem Yuen then and there attempted to enter the country, was excluded after a hearing, and the exclusion was affirmed on appeal. VVrliether such a record was admissible or not according to the rules of evidence observed elsewhere is immaterial.

[4] It is well settled that officers of the government, to whom the determination of questions of this kind is entrusted under statutes like those governing these proceedings, are not bound by the rules of criminal procedure, nor by rules of evidence applied in courts. It is not enough for a review of their decision on habeas corpus that there was no sworn testimony, or no record of the testimony or of the decision. No formal complaint or pleadings are required. The alien’s opportunity to he heard need not he upon any regular set occasion, nor according to the forms of judicial procedure; it may be such as will secure the prompt, vigorous action contemplated by Congress and appropriate to the nature of the case. See Nishimura Ekiu v. United States, 142 U. S. 651, 663, 12 Sup. Ct. 336, 35 L. Ed. 1146; Fong Yue Ting v. United States, 149 U. S. 698, 729, 13 Sup. Ct. 1016, 37 [354]*354L. Ed. 905; The Japanese Immigrant Case, 189 U. S. 86, 101, 23 Sup. Ct. 611, 47 L. Ed. 721.

[5] I am unable to believe that the duty of the officers to give a fair hearing required them to shut their eyes to the contents of this former record, or to do so without formal or independent proof of its contents. The same considerations apply to a letter considered at the hearing from the Commissioner of Immigration at San Francisco, giving the result of a search' of the records of departure and arrival at that port kept in his office.

[6] As to the hearing on appeal, one complaint is that a “memorandum for the acting secretary,” dated July 7, 1910, and signed “Daniel J. Keefe, Commissioner General,” was added to the papers from Boston before they were acted upon at Washington. The memorandum contains remarks upon the evidence, and a recommendation that the Boston decision be affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
188 F. 350, 1910 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-yuen-mad-1910.