Tulsidas v. Insular Collector of Customs

262 U.S. 258, 43 S. Ct. 586, 67 L. Ed. 969, 1923 U.S. LEXIS 2638
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 21, 1923
Docket77
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 262 U.S. 258 (Tulsidas v. Insular Collector of Customs) 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
Tulsidas v. Insular Collector of Customs, 262 U.S. 258, 43 S. Ct. 586, 67 L. Ed. 969, 1923 U.S. LEXIS 2638 (1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice McKenna

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Petition in habeas corpus in which petitioners pray to be delivered from the custody of the Insular Collector of Customs, by whom they aver that they are detained for deportation from Manila, at which place they are entitled to land and remain under the Immigration Act of February 5, 1917, c. 29, 39 Stat. 874, being merchants. 1

*260 Petitioners arrived at Manila, September 26, 1919, and were taken before a Board of Special Inquiry formed by the Insular Collector of Customs, constituted of three officers of the Bureau of Customs, duly designated and qualified to serve on such Board at the port of Manila in accordance with law, to determine whether petitioners should be allowed to land, or should be deported.

The right of petitioners to land was considered by the Board separately and decided separately, but for convenience we have considered their applications and the proceedings thereon as joint, and, therefore, it is only necessary, in representation of the applications and the proceedings, to say that the Board after consideration of the applications and the testimony given in support thereof, decided as to Tulsidas that it appeared that he had no business in India, and none in the Philippines, that his passport showed that he was only a salesman, and that it was clear that he was “ not a merchant within the meaning of the Immigration Law, and, therefore, not an exempt and entitled to landing.” He was refused landing.

The Board also refused landing to Lekhraj and Sukh-rani, deciding that they were salesmen, not industrial partners as they claimed to be, of Wassiamall Assomall & Co., but salesmen in that store. The Board further decided that they had no business of their own and that industrial partners were not merchants within the meaning of the Immigration Law,

From the decisions of the Board, petitioners prosecuted appeals to the Insular Collector of Customs and it appearing to him, as he said, that the decisions of the *261 Board were “ reasonable and proper ” in that petitioners being natives of India, failed to show that they belonged to any exempted classes under the provisions of § 3 of the Immigration Act of February 5, 1917, he refused them landing, and ordered that they be “returned to their port of embarkation in accordance with law.”

It will be observed, therefore, that the officers on whom was imposed the duty of administering the Immigration Law and passing upon the right of an alien applicant to admission into the United States, decided that the petitioners were of the class excluded from admission, and refused them landing.

In question of the legality of that ruling, proceedings were instituted in the Court of First Instance by a petition for habeas corpus. To the petition, the Attorney General of- the Islands, as representative of the Insular Collector of Customs, and in his official capacity, opposed the decision rendered by the Board of Special Inquiry and the Insular Collector of Customs, and denied the allegations of the petition “ except as same may be admitted in, or appear to be true from, the proceedings of the immigration officials in this case.”

The Court of First Instance reversed the rulings of the immigration officials and definitely ordered that the petitioners be placed at liberty.”

The court assigned especial probative force to the partnership agreement introduced in the case, “ the genuineness of which ” the court said was not questioned, according to which the court further said, “ the petitioners were admitted as industrial partners of said partnership, the first having a right to fifteen per cent of the profits, the second ten per cent, and the third five per cent.” And the court was of the view that industrial partners ” were as much merchants as “ capitalist partners.”

The Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands to which the case was appealed, revoked the granting of the writ *262 of habeas corpus, and ordered and decreed that the judgment of the Department of Customs ordering deportation of petitioners be affirmed.

The court based its decision on two grounds: (1) Granting that appellees (petitioners) are merchants, they did not present as proof of the fact the certificate issued under § 6 of the Act of Congress of May 6, 1882, c. 126, 22 Stat. 58, 60, as amended by § 6 of the Act of July 5, 1884, c. 220, 23 Stat. 115, 116, which, it is provided, shall be the sole evidence permissible to establish the exemption of an aben from the prohibition of the Immigration Law. (2) The court considered that, independently of the requirement, appellees (petitioners) had failed to show that they were merchants in the country from which they had come, and that was necessary because the law did “ not contemplate that aliens who claim to belong to an exempted class, or aliens otherwise prohibited from entering the United States, shall be permitted to enter the territory of the United States to become merchants.” And the court construed the partnership agreement as creating a condition or status after landing in Manila, 1 and concluded that, There is absolutely nothing in the record which .shows that the depart *263 ment of customs abused its power, authority or discretion in the slightest degree.”

The conclusion has pertinent signification, for counsel admit that “ under the express provisions of the statute, the decision of a Board of Special Inquiry, such as that now under consideration, is final, when affirmed on administrative appeal”, and only to be reviewed upon habeas corpus when the administrative officers have manifestly abused the power and discretion conferred upon them.

It would seem, therefore, as if something more is necessary to justify review than the basis of a dispute. The law is in administration of a policy which, while it confers a privilege, is concerned to preserve it from abuse and, therefore, has appointed officers, to determine the conditions of it, and speedily determine them, and on practical considerations, not to subject them to litigious controversies, and disputable, if not finical, distinctions. Keeping in mind the admonition of this, we pass to the consideration of the rulings of the officials and the courts.

In the ruling of the Supreme Court that a “ Section-Six certificate,” as the court and counsel call it, is the prescribed evidence for admission under the Immigration Law, we do not concur, but in the ruling of the court that an applicant for admission as a merchant must be such at the time of his application, we do concur.

*264 The law defines the classes of aliens which shall be excluded from admission to the United States, but provides that the exclusion shall not apply to persons having the “ status or occupations ” of “ merchants.” This means, necessarily, having the “ status ” at the time admission is sought, not a status to come, or to be established.

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Bluebook (online)
262 U.S. 258, 43 S. Ct. 586, 67 L. Ed. 969, 1923 U.S. LEXIS 2638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tulsidas-v-insular-collector-of-customs-scotus-1923.