Lee Choy v. United States

49 F.2d 24, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 1931
DocketNo. 6214
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 49 F.2d 24 (Lee Choy v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lee Choy v. United States, 49 F.2d 24, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116 (9th Cir. 1931).

Opinion

SAWTELLE, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Territory of Hawaii ordering the appellant,. Lee Choy, alias Lee Uek Kwong, to be deported to the republic of China.

• Appellant is a Chinese person who entered the territory of Hawaii on June 12, 1923. He obtained admission on the ground that he was a native-born citizen of Hawaii who had left the said territory on July 27, 1900, on the steamship Rio de Janeiro with his mother, Mrs. Ching Shee, a brother, and a sister. On September 17,1923, a certificate of identity; signed by Richard L. Halsey, at that time chief immigration official in the territory, was issued to appellant.

On June 2, 1927, appellánt was examined by the immigration authorities of Hawaii regarding his right tó be in the United States. On that day, George A. Erbs, an immigration inspector, met appellant at the Aala Market and asked him for his certificate of identity. Appellant did not have it with him, whereupon Inspector Erbs accompanied him to his home, where appellant gave the certificate to the inspector who kept it. Thereafter, appellant was arrested and charged with obtaining admission into the United States by false and fraudulent representations and claim of United States citizenship. The ease was called for trial April 12, 1929, and the defendant entered a plea of not guilty.-

At the trial, the minutes of the meeting of the Board of Special Inquiry in 1923, relative to the issuance of certificate of identity to appellant, was introduced in evidence as United States Exhibit A. The record of the testimony given by the appellant just before he was arrested in June, 1927, and that on one Lee On were admitted as United States Exhibit B over the objection of appellant. Appellant objected to the said testimony on the ground that it was an ex parte statement and a hearsay statement taken without the presence of the appellant.

Inspector Erbs testified that three other persons: to wit, Lau Tin Ko, admitted September 25, 1913; Lau Tin Hoo, admitted June 24, 1916; and Auyoung Chuck Nam, admitted March 8, 1923, were admitted as Hawaiian bom, and all claimed departure from Hawaii with Ching Shee on the steamship Rio de Janeiro which sailed July 27, 1900. This witness testified that the departure manifest showed that one “Mrs. Ching Shee,” two children, and one infant left on the said steamer on that date, and that the manifest showed only one female and only one child.

Over the objection of appellant and with exception duly noted, the following was admitted in evidence: ' the complete immigration records of Lau Tin Ko (United States Exhibit C), Lau Tin Hoo (United States Exhibit D), and Auyoung Chuck Nam, (United States Exhibit E), the three previously entered alleged children of Mrs. Ching Shee; also, the testimony of A. E. Mott-Smith, former Secretary of the territory, that he had issued Hawaiian birth certificates to Lau Tin' Ko and Lau Tin Hoo, on the application of their alleged father, Lau Moon.

Lau. Jin, witness for the appellant, testified that he (the witness) had lived in Hawaii for thirty-eight years and knew appellant and his family before they all went to China in 1900; that he had seen and recognized appellant and his father in China about twenty years later, but that he had never seen appellant in the meantime; that he had seen and recognized appellant about three years before. The government, over appellant’s objection, introduced into evidence (United States Exhibit G) statements made and signed by the witness upon his arrival in Honolulu, September 23, 1922..

Chu Ming, interpreter when appellant was examined by the immigration officials on June 2,1927, testified that appellant never signed the record of his testimony taken just before his arrest (United States Exhibit B), but that he signed only the shorthand notes as taken down by the stenographer. The testimony was never read over to him, and, when appellant signed the shorthand book, [26]*26the contents were not translated back into Chinese for him.

Appellant moved to strike United States Exhibits A, B, D, C, and E, motion was denied, and exceptions noted. At the conclusion of the trial the court found “that the said Lee Choy, alias Lee Uck Kwong, did not establish by affirmative proof to the satisfaction of this court his lawful right to remain in the United States, and is found to be a person of the Chinese race and of Chinese descent who is an alien, bom without the United States” and ordered his deportation. From which order appeal is taken.

The certificate of identity was prima facie evidence of the right of the appellant to be and remain in the United States until overcome by proof tending to establish that the same was issued improvidently or was fraudulently obtained. Leong Kwai Tin v. United States, 31 F.(2d) 738 (C. C. A. 9).

The government sought to overcome this prima facie case of the appellant by the introduction of certain records above referred to in order to show fraud on the part of the appellant in securing the certificate. Exhibit A, which contains the application of the appellant, Lee Choy, when he made application, for admission to the United States in June, 1923, and in which appellant claims a departure record of Mrs. Ching Shee, two children and an infant on the steamship Rio de Janeiro on July 27, 1900, was referred to by counsel for the government in the examination of George A. Erbs, one of the government witnesses, and the witness was asked “if any other Chinese persons were admitted to this country at this port (Honolulu) on that departure record.” To this question an objection was interposed and overruled, the court stating: “While the court is not going to permit this line of questioning on the theory that other records must be excluded, I am going to permit it to go in for what it is worth, to be considered with all the other evidence in the ease.”

The witness replied to the question in the affirmative and gave the names of Lau Tin Ko, Lau Tin Hoo, and Auyoung Chuck Nam.

Exhibit-B, as above stated, is a record of the testimony given by appellant just before he was arrested in June, 1927, and the testimony of Lee On. The objection to the testimony of Lee On was on the ground that said testimony of Lee On was an ex parte statement and a hearsay statement taken without appellant’s presence.

Exhibits C, D, and E above referred to contain the complete immigration records of Lau Tin Ko, Lau Tin Hoo, and Auyoung Chuck Nam, respectively.

The court erred in admitting the testimony of the witness Erbs with reference to the admission of the Chinese persons above referred to, and in admitting the testimony of the witness A. E. Mott-Smith with reference to the issuance of the certificates to Lau Tin Ko and Lau Tin Hoo, also in admitting in evidence said Exhibit B, containing the testimony of Lee On, and Exhibits C, D, and E containing the records of admission of the previously entered children of Mrs. Ching Shee. Fong Lum Kwai, alias Fong Kock Tung v. United States (C. C. A. 9th) 49 F.(2d) 19, in an opinion by Judge Wilbur this day handed down.

In view of the testimony of the Chinese interpreter that the testimony of appellant taken by the immigration officials in 1927 was never translated back into Chinese for him, but that he merely signed the book containing the shorthand notes of the stenographer present at the time testimony was taken, it is very doubtful whether that record is admissible. However, there was no objection-made on that ground.

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Bluebook (online)
49 F.2d 24, 1931 U.S. App. LEXIS 3116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lee-choy-v-united-states-ca9-1931.