United States v. Holland-America Line

231 F.2d 373, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3395
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 14, 1956
Docket23695_1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 231 F.2d 373 (United States v. Holland-America Line) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Holland-America Line, 231 F.2d 373, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3395 (2d Cir. 1956).

Opinion

MEDINA, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, the United States, brought this suit for reimbursement of the expense of deporting an alien allegedly imported from England on a vessel belonging to the defendant, LIolland-Amcrica Line. Upon the pleadings, affidavits, and records of the Immigration and Naturalization Service, the District Court granted summary judgment for the plaintiff.

The government’s claim is based on Section 20 of the Immigration Act of *374 1917, formerly 8 U.S.C. § 156, 1 which, in pertinent part, reads as follows:

“The deportation of aliens provided for in this chapter shall, at the option of the Attorney General, be to the country whence they came or to the foreign port at which such aliens embarked for the United States; * * * or, if such aliens are held by the country from which they entered the United States not to be subjects or citizens of such country, and such country refuses to permit their reentry, or imposes any condition upon permitting reentry, then to the country of which such aliens are subjects or citizens, or to the country in which they resided prior to entering the country from which they entered the United States. If deportation proceedings are instituted at any time within five years after the entry of the alien * * * the deportation from [the] port shall be at the expense of the owner or owners of such vessels or transportation line by which such aliens respectively came * * *. If deportation proceedings are instituted later than five years after the entry of the alien, or, if deportation is made by reason of causes arising subsequent to entry, the cost thereof shall be payable from said appropriation.”

In September, 1943, the government instituted deportation proceedings against Anna Margaret Stratton, an alien, who, it is alleged, arrived here in 1939 on board the S.S. Veendam. The alien was found to be deportable on three grounds, two of which existed at the time of entry and a third which had not been affirmatively shown to have arisen subsequent to entry. A warrant issued for her deportation, to Argentina, “at the expense of the steamship company on whose vessel she was brought to the United States * * Demands that the defendant either effect or pay for deportation to Argentina having been made without avail, the government deported the alien at its own expense, which it now seeks to recover.

Defendant contends here, as it did before the court below, that it is entitled to a trial on the identity of the alien, as to when she became deportable, and as to whether she was deportable to Argentina at defendant’s expense, all of which it asserts are disputed material facts.

The District Court brushed aside as frivolous any question as to the identity of the alien. We agree that defendant cannot seriously question whether the Anna Margaret Stratton it imported is the same Anna Margaret Stratton who was subsequently deported to Argentina. That she was the same person is amply established by numerous documents, including the manifest of the S.S. Veendam, containing identifying data, fingerprints of the alien and her photograph. Moreover, the alien herself testified, at her deportation hearing, that she had come here in 1939 on the S. S. Veendam and appellant’s counsel in effect conceded this issue on oral argument.

A recurring suggestion in the opinion below is that the defendant lacks standing on the issues of deportability and the place to which deportation may be made under the terms of the statute. The defendant, however, expressly disclaims any attempt to question deport-ability, and its argument, as we understand it, is simply this: that it has a constitutional right to be heard on whether “deportation [was] made by reason of causes arising subsequent to entry” and on whether it was made to an authorized place, because these are the facts on which Section 20 imposes liability on the shipowner, citing Lloyd Sabaudo Societa Anonima Per Azioni v. Elting, 287 U.S. 329, 53 S.Ct. 167, 77 L.Ed. 341. We do not decide this question, however, because the case can be disposed of on non-constitutional grounds.

*375 We hold that there is no material issue of fact as to when the cause for deportation arose. The alien was ordered deported on the ground, inter alia, that she was a person of constitutional psychological inferiority at the time of her entry, and the record sufficiently establishes this fact. In 1942 she was taken to Bellevue Hospital for observation on the request of the F. B. I., to whom the alien had written a number of strange letters. That observation resulted in a recommendation that she be committed to a mental institution, and, very .shortly thereafter, the alien was transferred to Central Islip State Hospital, where she remained as a public charge until she was deported in 1948.

Her clinical history at Central Islip, introduced in evidence at the deportation hearings, relates an interview given by the alien’s only relative in this country, a sister-in-law, at the time the alien was first hospitalized. This relative is quoted as having said that “She [the alien] has delusions of grandeur and persecution. She thinks the ministers are trying to seduce her by television. * * * She has those ideas for iy2 years. She was put in an institution. She has been writing letters to the President, Mayor and Police Commissioner.” The informant also stated that she “always knew that [the alien] was not well-balanced.” This medical history, which was kept from June, 1942, until April, 1943, by a Dr. Smalley, who had the care and supervision of the alien, concludes with the mental diagnosis of “Paranoid Condition.” Dr. Papa, who subsequently assumed immediate supervision of the alien, submitted a sworn statement which is also of record. This too diagnoses the alien as suffering from a chronic paranoid condition. Dr. Papa also attested that the alien “was of constitutional psychopathic inferiority at the time of her entry into the United States.”

To refute the extensive record submitted by the government, defendant offers only an excerpt from a letter by the director of Central Islip to an Immigration Officer stating “apparently since her last entrance to the United States in 1939 [the alien] has developed persecutory delusions * * But the mere fact that certain symptoms developed after 1939 is certainly no evidence that the alien in 1939 was not a person of constitutional psychopathic inferiority, nor, apparently, did the writer intend such an implication.

Defendant also asserts that if it was liable for deportation expense, its liability was only to return the alien to England, whence she had been brought, because that was the country to which the statute directed deportation under the circumstances of this case. The government concedes the defendant’s right to raise this issue, but contends that the record conclusively establishes that the alien was a citizen or native of Argentina. This may be so, but we do not see that it is of much help to the government.

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Bluebook (online)
231 F.2d 373, 1956 U.S. App. LEXIS 3395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-holland-america-line-ca2-1956.