Mar Gong v. McGranery

109 F. Supp. 821, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2178
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedDecember 15, 1952
Docket13803
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 109 F. Supp. 821 (Mar Gong v. McGranery) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mar Gong v. McGranery, 109 F. Supp. 821, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2178 (S.D. Cal. 1952).

Opinion

WESTOVER, District Judge.

This is an action filed under Section 503 ■of the United States Nationality Act, Title 8. U.S.C.A. § 903, by which plaintiff seeks judgment and decree of this court, declaring ■ that he is a national of the United States of America.

The case at bar is only one of many filed by Chinese under Section 503, requesting the 'court to declare that they are nationals of the United States of America. Because of the great number of filings in this district on the same subject matter (and for the convenience of the court and litigants) all these cases were assigned to this department for hearing; and this court has now tried a sufficient number of them to establish the pattern they follow.

Evidence in the cases heretofore tried confirms approximately the following mutuality of facts:

The alleged father of these China-bom applicants was born either in the United States of Chinese parentage or in China of an American-citizen.Chinese father (admitted to this country under a certificate of identity reciting that he is in fact the son of an American-citizen Chinese father) and a native Chinese mother.

The alleged father (if a resident of the United States during young adulthood) returns to the ancestral village in China for the purpose of contracting marriage. On his arrival at the village a marriage is usually arranged, either through the efforts of his mother, if she still lives, or through efforts of a marriage broker. The marriage is celebrated according to Chinese custom, and the parties live together as husband and wife.

Within a year or so a child is born. The father usually remains in China until after his wife conceives the second time, and then he returns to the United States. When he re-enters the United States the first child is only a toddler, and the second is not yet born. In making a statement to the Immigration authorities on re-entry, the father gives the name of. the older child and indicates that his wife is pregnant. He then resumes residence in the United States. His .children allegedly grow up in China, and when they are in their mid-teens, or older, application is filed for admittance into the United States as sons of an American-Chinese father and a native Chinese mother.

In many cases the-last-bom child is not seen by the father until the son arrives in •the United States when seeking admission. If the entry-seeking child was born while the father was in China, then father and son have, not seen each, other between the *822 time of the father’s departure from China and the son’s arrival in the United States— usually a period of many years.

In many instances the father makes more than one trip to China- — sometimes three or four — but in each instance of return visits the trip produced another “crop” of sons. If and when the' father returns to China on second and subsequent trips, the children born as the result of his prior trips home are presented to him 'by his wife as his off-spring.

Invariably in these nationality -cases it is asserted that letters have passed between the parents and, sometimes, between the father and the children; but very few of these letters have been introduced in Evidence and, when introduced, refer only to the years immediately preceding the sons’ filing of application to be admitted into the United States.

These alleged fathers also contend they send money for the families’ support; but in only rare instances is there any proof of this, except the word of the alleged father or that of some immediate, close friend.

From evidence introduced in these cases, certain facts seem common to all of them. Although each case involves a different set of individuals and (it would be supposed) individual sets of facts, there is, however, a marked similarity of facts among them:

1. There is apparently no impotence. In all of the cases so far tried by this court, there has been no evidence of a visit to China on the part of the male American-Chinese which failed to produce an off-spring. These visits result in not less than one pregnancy, usually two, and sometimes more. It would appear that all Chinese-American males are very successful in marrying fertile wives and in producing children.

2. The children resulting from these marriages 'are preponderate^ male. In all cases heard by this court to date, not one has sought the entry of a female, and only one or two have mentioned daughters. This male-female ratio is especially startling when compared with the United States average which is approximately fifty-fifty. If a marriage does produce a daughter among the many sons, her entry into the United States is rarely sought. One of the cases before this court reported three generations of male offspring and reported not one female child.

3. These Chinese children usually come from rural villages where the natives live in small dwellings, customarily made of brick. The term “brick” to designate building material -does not have the same connotation in China as does that term in the United States, for the Chinese “brick” is more like mud or adobe. The houses have tile (unbaked mud) floors. There are no-floor coverings. The dwellings have very little ventilation. There are usually two-doors, classified as “greater and lesser gates.” There are few windows, if any,, and there is no such thing as cross-ventilation. In some houses, however, there are-sky-lights. Modern plumbing is unknown. In fact, there is no running water in the houses; the water for domestic use is obtained from a common well in the village.

Public health and health facilities are unknown in the villages from which these children emanate. There are no hospitals: and no doctors, and when births occur only the assistance of a mid-wife or of a relative is available. In spite of this, no infection takes its toll, as mothers and infants invariably survive the birth process. Apparently no deformed and no ailing children are produced by these marriages, for those coming before this court always seem to be well, strong, healthy males.

4. Children’s diseases are apparently unknown in rural villages such as those described above, as none of the sons before this court ever admits having experienced an illness. In a country beset with plagues, droughts and floods, dearth of illness is truly remarkable among these admission-seeking sons. All conceptions-produce healthy, robust, surviving males. Still-birth and death during infancy just never occur in these families. Apparently these people live a charmed life. Accidents never disfigure nor take the lives of their children. For each birth or pregnancy the father has reported to immigration authorities upon returning from a visit to China a strong, healthy, robust individual results *823 —usually male — who later presents himself for admission into the United. States.

Because of the background outlined in paragraphs 1 through 4 above, immigration authorities and the State Department have become suspicious of these applicants. When applicants go to the United States Consul’s office for certificates of identity for entry into the United States, hearings are conducted. At these hearings it is required that each applicant establish the fact that he is the child of an American. If the applicant can do so, he is given a certificate of identity.

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Bluebook (online)
109 F. Supp. 821, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mar-gong-v-mcgranery-casd-1952.