United States ex rel. Vounas v. Hughes

116 F.2d 171, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4739, 1941 A.M.C. 1421
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 2, 1940
DocketNo. 7470
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 116 F.2d 171 (United States ex rel. Vounas v. Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit 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. Vounas v. Hughes, 116 F.2d 171, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4739, 1941 A.M.C. 1421 (3d Cir. 1940).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge.

There are no “harder cases” than those resulting from the operation of the Immigration laws.1 Particularly is this so when the application is to expulsion rather than exclusion. To be shown the 'promised land is bad; to have loved and lost it is worse.2 Fortunately, the appeal of the case at bar is not to the judicial heart, hut to the judicial mind.

[172]*172The relator is an alien seaman. The findings of fact and conclusions of law of the learned District Judge are correct by concession. So, the legal position therein described must be accepted. They are set forth in United States ex rel. Vounas v. Hughes, D.C., 33 F.Supp. 420, and the pertinent ones read as follows:

Findings of Fact
“1. That relator, a citizen of Greece, arrived in the United States at the Port of New York as a seaman aboard the Steamship Nicholas on January 9, 1938. * * *
“4. That he was not admitted to the United States as an immigrant or non-immigrant, but only as a seaman to return to his vessel or to reship.
“5. That he deserted his ship and remained in the United States until his arrest in deportation proceedings on August 2, 1939.”
Conclusions of Law
“In this proceeding there is no claim that the relator is not deportable, as being an alien seaman who has remained in the United States for a longer time than permitted by the 1924 Act and regulations made thereunder, nor is there any suggestion that .the relator was not given a fair hearing before Franklin K. Riley, an immigrant inspector, in pursuance of which hearing the warrant of deportation was issued.”

The seaman, therefore, cannot enjoy our hospitality permanently. He, or, in fairness, we suppose his counsel, prefers that he enjoy for a while longer that sector of it represented by the immigration service detention pen. That while longer will be, of course, the time necessary for this appeal, and if the decision is favorable to the relator the further time required for the decision of three immigrant inspectors instead of one. Our decision is not favorable and so we are constrained to do our part in abbreviating this questionable boon.

Relator, as we have seen, admits that he is deportable. He desires, however, to select the headman. This, he maintains, is by statute a board of special inquiry rather than the single immigrant inspector who actually wielded the ax.3 This is the second reported case — so far as we know at least —where an alien seaman has attempted such a delaying tactic. In the case of United States ex rel. Filippini v. Day, D.C., 18 F.2d 781, a Circuit Judge in the Second Circuit brushed it aside on the ground that the alien seaman had had a fair hearing. We cannot quite concur in the view that this is dispositive. Population control (in the non-biological sense) is an attribute of sovereignty. Fong Yue Ting v. United States, 149 U.S. 698, 13 S.Ct. 1016, 37 L.Ed. 905; Attorney General of Canada v. Cann, [1900] A.C. 542 (Eng.); Musgrove v. Chung Tewng Fox, [1891] A.C. 272.4 In some countries it is considered a prerogative of the executive.5 In the United States the Constitution assigns it to the legislative branch.6 Adherence to the statutory prescription is therefore mandatory. Rodgers v. United States, 3 Cir., 152 F. 346. If an alien seaman is entitled to three boots rather than to one only, three boots he must have.7- By the same token, however, any condition precedent to the operation of the statute is of equal importance. The condition here, as in the case in the Second Circuit, is a qualification for admission. It requires no dictionary to demonstrate that one cannot “examine” as to a non-disputed fact.8

This would suffice to dispose of the ap•peal. Since the appellant, entirely, and the learned District Judge, mostly, dealt with a different point, some further discussion [173]*173thereof would seem courteous. Moreover, the contention is one of a general application not called for by the specialized facts of the principal case. That contention is one of an implied repeal of Section 34 of the Act of 1917, 8 U.S.C.A. § 166, by Section 14 of the Act of 1924.9

To pierce a screen of words in order to ascertain the intention of the user is always difficult. It is especially so when, as is the case with statutes, that intention is the collective one of a legislative body. The statutory scheme for immigrant control exhibits a sharp administrative difference10 between exclusion11 and expulsion.12 So the alien was excluded by three immigrant inspectors and expelled by one, Van Vleck, above cited, pp. 33, 83. This difference has been criticized as being the exact opposite of a distinction, Van Vleck, above cited, pp. 210, 219, 247. The probabilities indicate a practical approximation of the two processes in the Labor Department’s board of review.13 Furthermore, it may have been intended to acknowledge the seriousness of deportation by making it the Secretary’s own act, Van Vleck, above cited, p. 83. Curiously enough, the one exception to the general rule is found where the ties that bind, and so the hardships, are least. Seamen, those wards of admiralty,14 were especially favored and they could do pretty well as they pleased. Taylor v. United States, 207 U.S. 120, 28 S.Ct. 53, 52 L.Ed. 130, United States ex rel. Danikas v. Day, 2 Cir., 20 F.2d 733, 735. The opportunity for evasion proved too tempting and the leak in the dike widened.15 In closing it, tenderness toward the seafaring man tainted the legislative toughness toward the superfluous. The non-maritime alien had always, of course, been concentrated for inspection purposes and any attempt on his' part to evade such concentration had consequently been assigned as statutory cause for deportation. In the case of the seaman such concentration is inconsistent with the conditions of the calling (boat comes up to wharf). The individual seaman is or should be conscious of what he must or must not do to preserve his right to admission. One of the things he clearly must not do is to abandon his profession and undertake life as a landlubber without benefit of immigrant inspection. lie might then have been punished for so doing by deportation. Such punishment savors of the very thing Congress in another connection was engaged in prohibiting, namely, a more than monetary penalty for desertion,16 the same Act by which he avoided the inspector. On the horns of this dilemma Congress decided to overlook the past evasion and emphasize the present status. Hence the alien seaman’s right to insist upon proof of “excludability”. As that, under time honored statu[174]*174tory pattern, belonged to a three-man board of inquiry rather than-to one inspector of “expulsability”, it was so provided.17

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116 F.2d 171, 1940 U.S. App. LEXIS 4739, 1941 A.M.C. 1421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-vounas-v-hughes-ca3-1940.