Lapina v. Williams

232 U.S. 78, 34 S. Ct. 196, 58 L. Ed. 515, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1462
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 5, 1914
Docket7
StatusPublished
Cited by104 cases

This text of 232 U.S. 78 (Lapina v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lapina v. Williams, 232 U.S. 78, 34 S. Ct. 196, 58 L. Ed. 515, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1462 (1914).

Opinion

Me. Justice Pitney

delivered the opinion of the court.

The petitioner, an unmarried woman and a native of Russia, came to the United States in the year 1897 or 1898, at the age of about twelve years, accompanied by *83 a man who had promised to marry her, and during the four years immediately following she practiced prostitution in the City of New York and supported her companion with the proceeds of her prostitution; she then left that city, and thereafter continuously practiced prostitution in various parts of the United States, including different towns and cities in the States of Washington, Arizona, and Texas. In the month of March, 1908, she returned to Russia for the purpose of visiting her mother, intending at the same time to return to this country; she reentered the United States at the port of New York in June, 1908, accompanied by her mother, at which time petitioner falsely represented, for the purpose of facilitating her landing, that she was Mrs. Joseph Fiore, and the wife of an American citizen; at the time of this, her second entry, she intended to continue the practice of prostitution in the United States, and almost immediately upon being admitted she engaged in that practice, and was continually engaged in it until September 21, 1909, on which date she was arrested in a house of prostitution in Phoenix, Arizona, upon a warrant of arrest duly issued by the Acting Secretary of Commerce and Labor under the provisions of the Immigration Act of February 20, 1907, c. 1134, 34 Stat. 898. Upon a hearing properly accorded to her, the foregoing facts were established, and an order of deportation was made upon the ground that she was a prostitute and was such at the time of her entry into the United States; that she entered the United States for the purpose of prostitution; and that she had been found an inmate of a house of prostitution and practicing the same within three years after her entry. She obtained a writ of habeas corpus, which, after a hearing, was dismissed by the District Court for the Southern District of New York. Upon appeal, the Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the order of dismissal (sub nom. Ex parte Hoffman, 179 Fed. Rep. 839). The present writ of cer *84 tiorari was then allowed because of the division of judicial opinion upon the question presented, which is whether the provisions of the Immigration Act of 1907 respecting admission and deportation apply to an alien such as the petitioner, who, having remained in this country for more than three years (in this instance for more than ten years), after first entry, and having gone abroad for a temporary purpose and with the intention of returning, again seeks and gains admittance into the United States.

The pertinent provisions of the act of 1907 are set forth in the margin. 1 So far as the present question is concerned, the act is not materially different from — certainly not less stringent than — the act of March 3, 1903 (32 Stat. 1213, c. 1012). The Circuit Court of Appeals in the present case followed its own decision in Taylor v. United States, 152 Fed. Rep. 1, which was based upon the act of *85 1903, and in which it was held that while the provisions of the act of March 3,1891 (26 Stat. 1084, c. 551) had benn construed as restricted to “alien immigrants,” the act of 1903 had been so framed as to cover aliens whether immigrants or not. In behalf of the petitioner it is contended that the court erred in its judgment as to the purpose of Congress in modifying the language of previous acts on adopting the revision of 1903, arid that this act and the act of 1907, as well as those that preceded them, when properly construed, refer to “alien immigrants” exclusively.

The acts of 1903 and 1907 being revisions or compilations (with some modifications), of previous acts pertaining to the same general subject-matter, a reference list, in chronological .order, is for convenience set forth in the margin. 1

*86 In a number of cases in the Federal District and Circuit Courts, it was held that the provisions of the act of March 3, 1891, and the acts that preceded it, relating to the exclusion and deportation of persons arriving in the United States from foreign countries, were confined in their operation to “alien immigrants”; and that this term did not include aliens previously resident in this country, who had temporarily departed with the intention of returning. In re Panzara (1892), 51 Fed. Rep. 275; In re Martorelli (1894), 63 Fed. Rep. 437; In re Maiola (1895), 67 Fed. Rep. 114; In re Ota (1899), 96 Fed. Rep. 487. The same view was expressed by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit in Moffitt v. United States (1904), 128 Fed. Rep. 375.

Upon the reasoning and authority of these cases, a similar construction was given to the act of 1903 in United States v. Aultman Co. (1906), 143 Fed. Rep: 922 (affirmed by the Circuit Court of Appeals, 148 Fed. Rep. 1022), the attention of the court apparently not having been directed to the question whether any significant change had been made in the law by the revision of 1903.

But in Taylor v. United States (1907), 152 Fed. Rep. 1, which was a review by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit of a judgment of conviction upon an indictment for a misdemeanor for permitting an alien sailor to land in New York, contrary to § 18 of the act of *87 1903, which made it the duty of the owners, officers, and agents of any vessel bringing an alien to the United States to adopt due precautions to prevent the landing of any such alien, etc., the court reviewed the changes made by Congress in the. revision of 1903,. “following decisions of the courts which tended to relax the provisions of earlier acts,” and, finding that § 18 of the act of 1903 substantially reenacted a part of § 8 of the act of 1891, employing the term “alien” in the place of the term “alien immigrant,” and that similar changes were made in other parts of the act, came to the conclusion that the change evinced an intent of Congress to use the word “alien” in its ordinary and unqualified meaning. This decision was reviewed in this court, and the judgment was reversed, but upon the ground (207 U. S. 120, 124) that § 18 did not a,pply to the ordinary case of a sailor deserting while on shore leave.

Shortly after the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals in the Taylor Case, the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, in Rodgers v. United States, ex rel. Buchsbaum (1907), 152 Fed. Rep.

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Bluebook (online)
232 U.S. 78, 34 S. Ct. 196, 58 L. Ed. 515, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lapina-v-williams-scotus-1914.