Naturalization acts of the United States have limited admission
to citizenship to those within its limits, and under its
jurisdiction.
An alien's right to acquire citizenship is purely statutory, and
extension of the effect of naturalization to minor children of the
person naturalized not included in the statute must come from
Congressional legislation, and not judicial decision.
Section 2172, Rev.Stat., and the naturalization laws of the
United States, do not confer citizenship on the minor children of a
naturalized alien who were born abroad and remain abroad until
after their parent's naturalization; such children are aliens,
subject as to their entrance to the United States to the provisions
of the Alien Immigration Act of March 3, 1903, 32 Stat. 1213, and
may be excluded if afflicted with contagious disease.
Page 204 U. S. 171
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from an order of the Circuit Court of the
United States for the District of Massachusetts denying a
petition
Page 204 U. S. 172
for a writ of habeas corpus filed by Charles Zartarian in behalf
of Mariam Zartarian, his daughter, who, it was alleged, was
unlawfully imprisoned, detained, and restrained of her liberty at
Boston by the United States Commissioner of Immigration, which
imprisonment was alleged to have been in violation of the
constitutional rights of the said Mariam Zartarian without due
process of law, and contrary to the provisions of § 2172 of
the Revised Statutes of the United States, which section, it is
alleged, made said Mariam a citizen of the United States by virtue
of the citizenship of her father, the petitioner.
The United States District Attorney and the attorney for the
petitioner stipulated the following facts:
"The petitioner, Charles Zartarian, formerly a subject of the
Sultan of Turkey, became a naturalized citizen of the United States
on September 12, 1896 at the Circuit Court of Cook County, in the
State of Illinois. That his daughter Mariam, on whose behalf this
petition is brought, is a girl between fifteen and sixteen years of
age, and was born just prior to the petitioner's leaving Turkey.
That, in the latter part of the year 1904, the Turkish government,
at the request of the United States minister at Constantinople,
granted permission to the petitioner's wife, minor son, and his
said daughter Mariam to emigrate to the United States, it being
stipulated in the passport issued to them that they could never
return to Turkey. That on March 22, 1905, the Hon. G. V. L. Meyer,
then United States Ambassador at Rome, Italy, issued a United
States passport to your petitioner's said wife and daughter. That
said Mariam arrived at Boston from Naples, Italy, on April 18,
1905, and that, on April 18, 1905, she was found to have trachoma,
and was debarred from landing by a board of special inquiry
appointed by the United States Commissioner of Immigration for the
port of Boston."
The petitioner's child, Mariam Zartarian, was debarred from
landing at the port of Boston under the provisions of the Act of
March 3, 1903, c. 1012, 32 Stat. 1213, U.S.Comp.Stat.Supp.
Page 204 U. S. 173
1903, p. 170, entitled "An Act to Regulate the Immigration of
Aliens into the United States."
Section 2 of that act, among other things, provides that certain
classes of aliens shall be excluded from admission to the United
States, including "persons afflicted with a loathsome or with a
dangerous contagious disease." Upon the finding of the board of
inquiry that said Mariam had trachoma, she was debarred from
landing.
The contention is that she does not come within the terms of
this statute, not being an alien, but entitled to be considered a
citizen of the United States, under the provisions of section 2172
of the Revised Statutes, which provides:
"The children of persons who have been duly naturalized under
any law of the United States . . . being under the age of
twenty-one years at the time of the naturalization of their
parents, shall, if dwelling in the United States, be considered as
citizens thereof."
As Mariam was born abroad, a native of Turkey, she has not
become a citizen of the United States, except upon compliance with
the terms of the act of Congress, for, wanting native birth, she
cannot otherwise become a citizen of the United States. Her right
to citizenship, if any she has, is the creation of Congress,
exercising the power over this subject conferred by the
Constitution.
United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.
S. 649,
169 U. S.
702.
The relevant section, 2172, which it is maintained confers the
right of citizenship, is the culmination of a number of acts on the
subject passed by Congress from the earliest period of the
government. Their history will be found in Vol. 3, Moore's
International Law Digest, p. 467.
The act of 1872 is practically the same as the Act of April 14,
1802, 2 Stat. 153, which provided:
"The children of persons duly naturalized under any of the laws
of the United States . . . being under the age of twenty-one years
at the time of their parents being so naturalized . . . shall, if
dwelling in the United States, be considered as citizens of the
United States, and the children of persons who are now
Page 204 U. S. 174
or have been citizens of the United States shall, though born
out of the limits and jurisdiction of the United States, be
considered as citizens of the United States."
In
Campbell v.
Gordon, 6 Cranch 176, it was held that this act
conferred citizenship upon the daughter of an alien naturalized
under the Act of January 29, 1795, she being in this country at the
time of the passage of the Act of April 14, 1802, and then
"dwelling in the United States."
The act has also been held to be prospective in its operation,
and to include children of aliens naturalized after its passage,
when "dwelling in the United States."
Boyd v. Nebraska,
143 U. S. 135,
143 U. S.
177.
The construction of this law and the meaning of the phrase
"dwelling in the United States" have been the subject of much
consideration in the executive department of the government having
to do with the admission of foreigners and the rights of alleged
naturalized citizens of the United States. The rulings of the State
Department are collected in Prof. Moore's Digest of International
Law, Vol. 3, pp. 467
et seq.
The Department seems to have followed a rule established at an
early period, and formulated with fullness in Foreign Relations for
1890, p. 301, in an instruction from Mr. Blaine to Minister Phelps
at Berlin, in which it was laid down that the naturalization of the
father operates to confer the municipal right of citizenship upon
the minor child if at the time of the father's naturalization
dwelling within the jurisdiction of the United States, or if he
come within that jurisdiction subsequent to the father's
naturalization and during his own minority.
Whether in the latter case a child not within the jurisdiction
of the United States at the time of the parent's naturalization,
but coming therein during minority, acquires citizenship is not a
question now before us.
The limitation to children "dwelling in the United States" was
doubtless inserted in recognition of the principle that citizenship
cannot be conferred by the United States on the citizens of another
country when under such foreign jurisdiction,
Page 204 U. S. 175
and is also in deference to the right of independent
sovereignties to fix the allegiance of those born within their
dominions, having regard to the principle of the common law which
permits a sovereignty to claim, with certain exceptions, the
citizenship of those born within its territory.
It is pointed out by Mr. Justice Gray, delivering the opinion in
United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.
S. 649,
169 U. S. 686,
that the naturalization acts of the United States have been careful
to limit admission to citizenship to those "within the limits and
under the jurisdiction of the United States."
The right of aliens to acquire citizenship is purely statutory,
and the petitioner's child, having been born and remained abroad,
clearly does not come within the terms of the statute. She was
debarred from entering the United States by the action of the
authorized officials, and, never having legally landed, of course,
could not have dwelt within the United States.
Nishimura Ekiu
v. United States, 142 U. S. 651.
It is urged that this seems a harsh application of the law; but
if the terms of the statute are to be extended to include children
of a naturalized citizen who have never dwelt in the United States,
such action must come from legislation of Congress, and not
judicial decision. Congress has made provision concerning an
alien's wife or minor child suffering from contagious disease, when
such alien has made a declaration of his intention to become a
citizen, and when such disease was contracted on board the ship in
which they came, holding them under regulations of the Secretary of
the Treasury until it shall be determined whether the disorder will
be easily curable, or whether such wife or child can be permitted
to land without danger to other persons, requiring that they shall
not be deported until such facts are ascertained (32 Stat. 1221,
U.S.Comp.Stat. Supp. of 1903, p. 185). But Congress has not said
that an alien child who has never dwelt in the United States,
coming to join a naturalized parent, may land when afflicted with a
dangerous contagious disease.
As this subject is entirely within congressional control,
the
Page 204 U. S. 176
matter must rest there; it is only for the courts to apply the
law as they find it.
It is suggested that the agreed finding of facts contains no
stipulation as to the dangerous or contagious quality of trachoma,
but the petition shows that the petitioner's daughter was debarred
from landing because it was found that she had a dangerous
contagious disease -- to-wit, trachoma. Furthermore, the statute
makes the finding of the board of inquiry final so far as review by
the courts is concerned, the only appeal being to certain officers
of the Department. 32 Stat. 1213;
Nishimura Ekiu v. United
States, 142 U. S. 651.
Finding no error in the order of the Circuit Court, it is
Affirmed.