United States ex rel. Lictata v. Hughes

289 F. 808, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1613
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 6, 1923
DocketNo. 9832
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 289 F. 808 (United States ex rel. Lictata v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States ex rel. Lictata v. Hughes, 289 F. 808, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1613 (E.D. Pa. 1923).

Opinion

DICKINSON, District Judge.

This case concerns human liberty. The relator has been ordered deported. The only facts which could justify the order, are that she is" likely to become a public charge or [809]*809is afflicted with trachoma, a contagious disease. The facts are not in controversy, and are found, and indeed admitted at bar, to be as follows : (1) She is not likely to become a public charge. (2) She is not suffering from trachoma.

The Question.

Why, then, should she be deported?

Discussion.

The above fact situation makes it clear that the case is one which is best dealt with through administrative action. Every opportunity has been given for this by the continuance of the hearing from time to time in order, among other reasons, to make sure of the fact that no just cause for deportation existed. Those concerned, however, have expressed the wish that the court should take the responsibility by asking that an order be made. A consequence of the repeated hearings and the desultory manner in which they have been conducted, no orderly method of a development of the facts has been followed and no record of all- the evidence made. The fact findings herein made are almost wholly made from admissions at the bar of the court. There is really no controversy over the facts; offers to establish them being forestalled by the admissions.

The principles of law involved are well settled. Congress has not confided to any official, administrative or judicial, the arbitrary power to deport any one from the territory of the United States. .Admission to our shores, however, is not a right, but a privilege, which Congress can grant or withhold at its pleasure, and the terms and conditions upon which the privilege is granted have been defined with elaborate care and expanded into a system which is complete in itself.

So far as concerns this case, Congress has provided that any intending immigrant who is likely to become a public charge may be deported, and any one afflicted with trachoma must be. The basis of the order in consequence must be one or the other or both these facts. As it is the fact which excludes, Congress has made careful provision for a means of having the fact determined, and has created a tribunal by which the required fact findings shall be made. It follows that no other tribunal, judicial or otherwise has authority to make the findings or power to revise those made by the tribunal to which Congress has committed this'duty. For reasons which lie on the surface, Congress did not impose this duty upon the courts, and for this all concerned feel duly grateful, and surely none would desire to have it otherwise. The power of a writ of habeas corpus, however, is invoked only when human liberty is at stake,- and no court can evade its responsibility when the right to liberty is denied. The limit of duty, however, and of power as well, is marked by the line of what is in accordance with the law.

The inquiry in the instant case is whether this relator has the right to her liberty, and she has unless this order of deportation has been made in accordance with law. The law, so far as affects the present case, may be summarized as providing, as already stated, that any intending immigrant, who is likely to become a public charge, may be [810]*810deported, and any one who has trachoma must be. The administration of this law is committed generally to the Department of Labor; the special duty of inspection and examination being performed by examiners and a corps of trained medical advisers. The machinery provided is that there shall first be an inspection and preliminary examination. The required fact findings are made, but these are merely tentative, and are conclusive neither of the acceptance or rejection of the immigrant, although, if not brought in question, they become final.

Trachoma is a disease, the presence of which commands deportation, as those afflicted with it belong to the excluded class. The likelihood of becoming a public charge may justify such order in the discretion, finally, of the Secretary of Labor. If there is a finding of trachoma at this preliminary, inspection, the applicant has the right to a trial to have the fact determined by a medical board. There is no provision for a review by the courts of the decision reached, nor can any court retry the question of fact, if the right of trial given by the act of Con-, gress is allowed the applicant. This has so, many times been determined by this and other courts that the citation of cases is uncalled for. The relator had by law, however, the right to the trial mentioned, and she cannot be lawfully deported without the fact finding against her of the medical board. A tentative finding on the preliminary inspection will not justify the order. The record disclosed that such tentative finding was made, and that a trial was in due course demanded. It further showed that at the trial the board had regarded this tentative finding as Conclusive, and on this had certified the fact, and the order of deportation followed. This appeared at the return of the writ of habeas corpus, and it was argued that this tentative finding was at least evidence, and that this preliminary evidence was properly persuasive, and' upon it the board could make its finding. The effect of this is to deprive the relator of all the benefits of the trial to which Congress has given her the right. This preliminary finding had in it very little of persuasiveness of the real fact.

i- There is a law of the United States which in effect imposes a fine upon the transportation company which brings to our shores an immigrant who has a contagious disease, and requires an'inspection at the port of embarkation. The preliminary examiners are further required to certify the fact, so that this fine can be imposed. In the same paper and on the same evidence they certified, in exculpation of the transportation company, that the relator did not have trachoma, but that she did have it so as to order her deportation. Such a finding may be understood and explained, but is in itself no evidence of the main fact. * Counsel for the United States sought to explain it on the theory that • the relator had trachoma on her arrival,,but did not have it when accepted on board the ship. This explanation cannot be accepted, however, because trachoma is a chronic trouble, and so rarely acute that the latter may be said never to exist. Its symptoms appear upon inspection, and, if not visually evident, are not present. Upon this we can speak with confidence, because we had the benefit of the opinion of Dr. L. Webster Fox, who, having been in the government service in the alkali plains of the West, and among the Indian tribes, who are [811]*811peculiarly subject to this disease, has had a training and experience in trachoma cases which few, if any, other living specialists have enjoyed.

There are many eye troubles which may be mistaken for trachoma, but no case of true trachoma would develop during an ocean voyage, or exist, so as to escape detection at the commencement of the voyage, and be open to detection at its end. The hearing upon the writ was in consequence continued, with the suggestion that the relator be placed under treatment at the Wills Eye Hospital, where she could be under observation, and the real fact become known, and she could then be given the trial which is her legal right, and the fact found. This was done, and the fact that the relator is not a sufferer from trachoma has been established beyond controversy.

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United States ex rel. Johnson v. Watkins
170 F.2d 1009 (Second Circuit, 1948)

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Bluebook (online)
289 F. 808, 1923 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-lictata-v-hughes-paed-1923.