Yuen Boo Ming v. United States

103 F.2d 355
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 1939
DocketNo. 8901
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 103 F.2d 355 (Yuen Boo Ming v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yuen Boo Ming v. United States, 103 F.2d 355 (9th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

DENMAN, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from an order for deportation of one found to be the son of an United States citizen of Chinese descent, and certified as a citizen on August 22, 1922, by a board of three members of the Immigration Bureau in a Chinese exclusion proceeding. The complaint on which the appellant was arrested was filed on August 12, 1937, — that is 15 years after the Board’s determination of his citizenship.

The case is an important one, showing the continuance of the violation of the “fundamental principles of justice embraced within the conception of due process of law,” as expressed by Mr. Justice Hughes in Tang Tun v. Edsell, 223 U.S. 673, 682, 32 S.Ct. 359, 363, 56 L.Ed. 606, and as held in an opinion of Mr. Justice Clarke: “The acts of Congress give great power to the Secretary of Labor over Chinese immigrants and persons of Chinese descent. It is a power tó be administered, not arbitrarily and secretly, but fairly and openly, under the restraints of the tradition and principles of free government applicable where the fundamental rights of men are involved, regardless of their origin or race. It is the province of the courts, in proceedings for review, within the limits amply defined in the cases cited, to prevent abuse of this extraordinary power. * * * It is better that many Chinese immigrants should be improperly admitted than that one natural born citizen of the United States should be permanently excluded from his country." (Italics sup[357]*357plied.) Kwock Jan Fat v. White, 253 U. S. 454, 464, 40 S.Ct. 566, 570, 64 L.Ed. 1010.

We have had occasion to comment upon such conduct of the Immigration Bureau in two cases formerly before us, Lau Hu Yuen v. U. S., 9 Cir., 85 F.2d 327, and Chun Kock Quon v. Proctor, 9 Cir., 92 F. 2d 326. The instant case requires us again to advise the Bureau officials: “Their obligation as enforcers of the immigration laws is as mandatory to establish citizenship, if it exist, as it is to deport the alien.” Lau Hu Yuen v. U.S., supra, page 331 of 85 F.2d.

The complaint on which the appellant was arrested charges nothing actually known as a fact by the party making the oath required by the statute,1 but only the information and belief of the Bureau official and, as will appear, he bases his charge on an unwarranted conclusion of law.

His information and belief extended only to the following facts:- “That Yuen Boo Ming is an alien of the Chinese race with a status of laborer; that on the 12th day of August, 1937, the said Yuen Boo Ming was at Seattle, Washington, in the Northern Division of the Western District of Washington and within the jurisdiction of the United States District Court for said Division and District; that said Yuen Boo Ming was born in China and entered the United States on the Steamship President McKinley at Seattle, Washington on July 21, 1937, at which time he gained admission through a fraudulently obtained citizen’s return certificate and therefore not legally admitted to the United States; * * * »

There is here no allegation of any fraud showing that the arrested man was illegally within the United States. It is elementary that even in ordinary civil suits the use of the words “fraudulently obtained” does not charge a fraud. This phrase states a conclusion which may be satisfied by facts describing one or another of a score of possible frauds. It may be the bribery of one of a dozen persons — federal officers in Seattle or Washington, D. C., in-, terpreters or witnesses. It may be perjury of witnesses. It may mean forgery of documents, or their alteration or substitution of one person for another.

A fortiori is this absence of pleaded fact a violation of our concept of “due process”, where the complaint is made the basis of a warrant of arrest issued without a hearing and under which the arrested man is deprived of his liberty as if he had been indicted for a crime.

The above quoted language of the complaint is followed by a mere conclusion of law: “that the said Yuen Boo Ming is a person prohibited by the laws of the United States from being in or remaining in the United States, and is not now lawfully entitled to be in or remain in the United States;”. This allegation is meaningless unless it is an extension of the matter relating to his status as a laborer. It suggests nothing of his true status- — one found and certified to be a citizen.

In the administration of the deportation provisions of this statute2 it would be well for the Immigration Bureau to remember that Congress as well could have drawn it with the words “Jewish” or “Irish” or “Nordic” or “German” or “Italian” determining the “descent” of those to be imprisoned under its provisions. With the alteration in the statute of but one descriptive word, the friendless citizen grandson or granddaughter of a deceased Italian cobbler or Jewish United States Circuit Judge, under circumstances not infrequent since the depression and working in this country in a gas station or a laundry or on a PWA project, who crosses the border line into Mexico, on his or her return as well could be held imprisoned by the Immigration authorities on an information and belief complaint that he or she is an alien Italian or Jewish laborer who has entered the country fraudulently.

While such procedure may be lacking in some incidents of the “lettres de cachet” of the French Louis, the confinement which ensues is obtained without any preceding hearing in which the Italian, Jewish or other citizen of foreign descent may participate. True, bail may be procured, as her'e in the sum of $3,000, but such bail presumes a citizen of means or with such friends. From his confinement, without charge of any facts of an offense on which he may be deported, he must gather the evidence on which he will be tried. Even assuming a complaint properly charging the facts, the imprisonment without hearing of such Italian or Jewish boy or girl and the compulsion of the preparation of his or her affirmative proof (8 U.S.C.A. § 284) [358]*358while in confinement (8 U.S.C.A. § 282), is an affront to the ordinary citizen’s concept of “due process”. The statute has been held constitutional. What we are considering here are the canons of its administration.

In addition to the injustice of arrest-’ ing appellant, so having been determined to be a citizen, without advising him of the facts of the charge on which he was arrested, we find another violation of the established criterion of administrative conduct in such cases “to prevent abuse of this extraordinary power” of arrest and trial Instead of performing their duty which “is as mandatory to establish citizenship, if it exist, as it is to deport the alien”, the contrary appears. The complaint appears to charge only some unnamed fraud by a Chinese laborer (8 U.S.C.A. §§ 275, 276, 277) to procure a “return certificate”, upon which fraud the record shows not a scintilla of evidence, while the Bureau intended to keep him detained and to proceed against him for a different fraud, not mentioned in the complaint, in a different proceeding in which his citizenship was established and a certificate of identity with the status of citizen issued under the regulation of the Secretary of Labor.. We have held that this cannot be done in Chang Chow v. U.

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103 F.2d 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yuen-boo-ming-v-united-states-ca9-1939.