United States v. Loo Way

68 F. 475, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 119
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedMay 21, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 68 F. 475 (United States v. Loo Way) 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
United States v. Loo Way, 68 F. 475, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 119 (S.D. Cal. 1895).

Opinion

WELLBORN, District Judge.

The defendant, Loo Way, was arrested at the city of San Diego, in this district, April 4,1895, upon a complaint under oath, charging that said defendant, “on or about the 12tb day of December, 1893, knowingly and unlawfully came into the United States from a foreign country, to wit, China, lie, the said Loo Way, then and there being a Chinese laborer, and a person not, entitled to enter the United States,” and, after a hearing before S. S. Knoles, circuit court commissioner, who found the facts to be as charged in the complaint, was ordered to be removed from th<* United Btates to China. By an appeal, under section 13 of the act of congress of September 13, 1888, the case has been brought into this court. The evidence adduced upon the trial here establishes tlm following facts, to wit: The defendant is a native of China. Ho first came to the United States about the year 3878, and reside*: continuously in this country up to some time between the 26th of December. 1892, and the 1st of January, 3893. In March or February, 1894, and for the five years next preceding, he was the owner of an interest in a mercantile business in San Diego, carried on under the name and style of Hop Wo Chung & Co., a firm consisting of six partners, and for Ms interest in this firm he paid §1,500. For six years previous to the acquisition of this interest he was ■employed as a cook, and, with the savings thereby accumulated, he purchased the aforesaid interest. Some time between the 26i:h and the last day of December, 1892, he left the United States for China, from the port of San Francisco, intending to return, and having, prior to his departure, to wit, on the 26tb day of Decern-[476]*476ber, 1892, for purposes of Ms identification, procured a certificate, bearing Ms photograph, signed by five citizens of San Diego, to the effect that they had known him for about two years as a resident of said city of San Diego, and that he was a merchant and "member of Hop Wo Chung & Co., a firm engaged in a general merchandise business at said city.” For about four months of the year next preceding Ms departure from the United States he was employed as cook at a restaurant in said city of San Diego. This employment terminated some three or four months before his departure, and for the said last-mentioned three or four months he lived at the store belonging to .the firm of which he was a member, and aided in the conduct of its business. He returned to San Francisco in December, 1893, and on the 12th day of that month, after an examination of the above-mentioned certificate by the customhouse officials, who detained him half a day, he was permitted to land. He then went for a short wMle to Sacramento, to visit an uncle, and from there to San*Diego. On the 16th of February, 1894, at San Diego, he applied for and received a certificate of residence as a Chinese laborer under the amendatory act of November 3, 1893. A short time before that he sold his interest in the mercantile business aforesaid, and a few months thereafter began working'again as a cook, and was so employed at the time of his arrest.

The first section of the act of October 1, 1888, which act is supplementary to the act of May 6, 1882, provides:

“That from and after the passage of this act, it shall be unlawful for any Chinese laborer who shall at any time heretofore have been, or who may now or hereafter be, a resident within the United States, and who shall have departed, or shall depart, therefrom, and shall not have returned before the passage of this act, to return to, or remain to, the United States.” 25 Stat. 504.

The defendant claims to be exempt from said section on the grounds:

First. That the lawfulness of his entrance into the United States, or, more specifically, whether he was a merchant or a laborer, cannot be made the’ subject of inquiry in this proceeding, because the question was adjudicated by the collector of customs at San Francisco, whpse duty it was to pass upon the sufficiency of his proof when 'the defendant was permitted to land. This contention of the defendant finds support in the case of U. S. v. Lee Hoy, 48 Fed. 825. In that case the court enunciates as applicable thereto and cites authorities in support of the general doctrine that, “when the law has confided to a special tribunal authority to hear and determine certain matters arising in' the course of its duties, the decision of that tribunal within the scope of its authority is conclusive upon all others.” A careful reading of the decision, however, shows that it was rested mainly on section 12 of the act of September 13, 1888, which is as follows:

“That before any Chinese passengers are landed from any such vessel, the collector, or his deputy, shall proceed to examine such passengers, comparing the certificates with the list and with the passengers; and no passenger shall be allowed to land in the United States from such vessel in violation of law; and the collector shall in person decide ali questions in dispute with regard to the right of any Chinese passenger to enter the United States, and his de-[477]*477cisión shall he subject to review by the secretary of the treasury, and not otherwise.” 25 Stat. 478.

The circuit court of appeals of this circuit, on an appeal of the case last cited, held that said section 12 was never in force. On this subject the court says:

“In 1he opinion of the court which accompanied the findings of fact and conclusions of law the court appears to have assumed that section 12 of the act of September 13, 1888, is in force, and that consequently the action of the collector in admitting Gee Lee was final, and not reviewable by the court. But we are of opinion that such section never went into force. It occurs in a statute entitled ‘Ail act io prohibit the coming of Chinese laborers to the United States,’ the taking effect of which so far is made to depend upon the ratification of a treaty then pending between the United States and the emperor of China, which ratification had never taken place. Particular provisions of the act may be in force, as not being within the purview thereof, as declared in section 1, as follows: ‘It shall be unlawful for any Chinese person, whether a subject of China or any other power, to enter the United States except- as hereinafter provided.’ Such is section 13 of the act. which provides for the arrest and deportation of ‘any Chinese person * * * found unlawfully in the United States,’ and under which this proceodmg was instituted. It' follows that section 12 of the statute, which is wholly taken up with the future landing or excluding of Chinese passengers by the collector, is not in force, and his act in admitting or refusing Gee Lee to enter the United Slates is not final; but the truth of the matter may be inquired into in any appropriate judicial proceeding, of which habeas corpus and arrest for being unlawfully in the United States are two.” U. S. v. Gee Lee, 1 C. C. A. 516, 50 Fed. 271.

This decision, of course, is authoritative. But, even had the question not been so decided by the appellate court of this circuit, I should still hold the general doctrine enunciated in the case in -1-8 Fed., above cited, to be inapplicable to the action of a collector of customs in permitting or refusing to permit a Chinese person to land.

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68 F. 475, 1895 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-loo-way-casd-1895.