Errors alleged to have been committed by the trial court which
do not involve anything fundamental or jurisdictional must be
regarded as waived if they were not presented to the Supreme Court
of the Territory.
An action by the United States to recover penalties under the
Alien Contract Labor Law is civil and attended with the usual
incidents of a civil action.
United States v. Regan, ante,
p.
232 U. S. 37.
Where an action for penalties was tried on the theory that the
defendant
Page 232 U. S. 648
was not liable unless the violations were knowingly committed
and the jury returns a verdict against the defendant after being
charged that knowledge is an essential element of the cause of
action, the petition, if omitting an allegation of knowledge, can
be regarded as amended to conform to the facts, the defendants not
being prejudiced thereby.
It is most unreasonable to reverse a judgment for a defect in
pleading by which the defendant has been in no way prejudiced.
The trial court was right in refusing to suppress depositions
because the notices in regard to taking them were defective in
certain respects which could not and did not mislead the
parties.
While, as a general rule, a judgment binds only the parties and
their privies, a judgment in a prior action may be admissible
against a stranger as
prima facie, although not
conclusive, proof of facts which may be shown by evidence of
general reputation, such as alienage.
The decision of a board of special inquiry that certain persons
were aliens was properly admitted in a suit by the United States to
recover penalties for violations of the Alien Contract Labor Act as
prima facie evidence of the alienage of the persons before
the board.
In this case, it appears from the evidence that there was proof
other than of the acts of the professed agent to show his agency,
and there was also sufficient testimony to make it a question for
the jury to determine whether the instructions given by the
defendant to its agent not to violate the Alien Contract Labor Act
were given in good faith.
Under the Alien Contract Labor Act, a separate penalty shall be
assessed in respect of each alien, and this is so notwithstanding
all the aliens for whose employment penalties are asked were
brought into the United States at one time.
Missouri, Kansas
& Texas Ry. Co. v. United States, 231 U.
S. 112.
There was no error in this case in rendering judgment against
defendants for costs.
13 Ariz. 388 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the validity of a judgment obtained by
the United States for penalties for violation of the Alien Contract
Labor Law, are stated in the opinion.
Page 232 U. S. 656
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
In an action of debt, tried to the court and a jury, in one of
the district courts of the Territory of Arizona, the United States
recovered a judgment against the Grant Brothers Construction
Company, a California corporation, for the prescribed penalty of
$1,000 for each of forty-five alleged violations of § 4 of the
Alien Immigration Act of February 20, 1907, 34 Stat. 898, c. 1134,
and upon an appeal to the Supreme Court of the territory, the
judgment was affirmed. 13 Ariz. 388. The construction company and
the surety upon its supersedeas bond then sued out this writ of
error, claiming that divers errors had been committed by the trial
court which should have been, but were not, corrected by the
appellant court.
Page 232 U. S. 657
The portions of the statute upon which the action was founded
are as follows:
"SEC. 2. That the following classes of aliens shall be excluded
from admission into the United States: . . . persons hereinafter
called contract laborers, who have been induced or solicited to
migrate to this country by offers or promises of employment, or in
consequence of agreements, oral, written, or printed, express or
implied, to perform labor in this country of any kind, skilled or
unskilled; . . .
And provided further, That skilled labor
may be imported if labor of like kind unemployed cannot be found in
this country:
And provided further, That the provisions of
this law applicable to contract labor shall not be held to exclude
professional actors, artists, lecturers, singers, ministers of any
religious denomination, professors for colleges or seminaries,
persons belonging to any recognized learned profession, or persons
employed strictly as personal or domestic servants."
"
* * * *"
"SEC. 4. That it shall be a misdemeanor for any person, company,
partnership, or corporation, in any manner whatsoever, to prepay
the transportation or in any way to assist or encourage the
importation or migration of any contract laborer or contract
laborers into the United States, unless such contract laborer or
contract laborers are exempted under the terms of the last two
provisos contained in section two of this act."
"SEC. 5. That for every violation of any of the provisions of
section four of this act the persons, partnership, company, or
corporation violating the same, by knowingly assisting,
encouraging, or soliciting the migration or importation of any
contract laborer into the United States, shall forfeit and pay for
every such offense the sum of one thousand dollars, which may be
sued for and recovered by the United States, or by any person who
shall first bring his action therefor in his own name and for
his
Page 232 U. S. 658
own benefit, including any such alien thus promised labor or
service of any kind as aforesaid, as debts of like amount are now
recovered in the courts of the United States, and separate suits
may be brought for each alien thus promised labor or service of any
kind as aforesaid. And it shall be the duty of the district
attorney of the proper district to prosecute every such suit when
brought by the United States."
The petition contained forty-five counts, each charging, with
considerable detail, that the defendant, by offers and promises of
employment and by providing transportation and paying expenses,
assisted, encouraged, and solicited the migration and importation
into the United States from Mexico of a designated alien laborer
who was not within the terms of either of the last two provisos in
§ 2 of the statute. A different alien laborer was named in
each count, and the date of the offending act was given in all as
October 29, 1909.
In a preliminary way, the evidence tended to show these facts:
the construction company was building a line of railroad in
southern Arizona, near Naco, a town on the international boundary.
Laborers in large numbers were required for the work, and in
August, 1909, the company employed one Carney to procure laborers
for it and to take them to the vicinity of the work. For this he
was to be paid one dollar in gold for each laborer secured, and
twenty cents for each meal provided while they were en route. It
was contemplated that he would arrange with others to aid him, and
he secured the assistance of Holler, Rupelius, and Randall, who,
like himself, were located at Nogales, another boundary town. Under
this employment Carney procured, and the company accepted, prior to
the transaction in question, about 450 laborers, 95 percent of whom
were Mexicans. Many of these came across the line on their own
initiative and were then engaged by Holler, but a substantial
number were engaged in Mexico
Page 232 U. S. 659
by Rupelius, and then brought into the United States at Nogales.
Only a few days before the transaction in question, Rupelius
gathered together 80 or 90 in Mexico, and induced them to enter the
United States at Nogales by promising that the construction company
would employ them, which it did.
As respects the forty-five laborers named in the petition there
was evidence tending to show the following: these men were citizens
of Mexico, and were unskilled laborers who were not within the
exemptions specified in the last two provisos in § 2 of the
statute. They were secured at Hermosillo, Mexico, by Rupelius,
October 28, 1909, were brought into the United States at Naco by
Randall the next day, were there taken into custody by an
immigration inspector, and were examined before a board of special
inquiry. The board found that they were alien contract laborers,
ordered that they be excluded, and notified them of the order and
of their right to an appeal. After consulting with the Mexican
consul at Naco, they waived that right, and most of them were
returned to Mexico, a few being detained as witnesses. Rupelius had
induced them to leave Hermosillo and come into the United States by
offers and promises of employment by the construction company. They
were brought to Naco upon a railroad pass procured by Carney, and
purporting to have been issued on account of the construction
company, and their only meal en route was provided by Holler at
Carney's suggestion. During the latter part of their journey, they
were in charge of Randall, who had been directed by Carney to
deliver them to McDonald, as agent of the construction company, who
was expected to be at Naco to receive them. McDonald was there,
having come in from one of the company's camps that day. He
endeavored to hasten the proceedings before the board of inquiry in
order that he might get the men out to the camp that afternoon, and
also provided a meal for them while the proceedings
Page 232 U. S. 660
were in progress. This was the first party of Mexicans that
Carney had attempted to bring into the country at Naco. Others had
been brought in at Nogales. According to his statement, the
inspection officers at the latter place had been particularly
liberal in admitting Mexican laborers procured for the construction
company, and he suggested to the inspectors at Naco that like
action on their part would be appreciated, but the suggestion did
not find favor with them.
There were some direct contradictions in the evidence, different
portions gave rise to opposing inferences, and parts of it were
more or less improbable, but, as it was the province of the jury to
pass on such matters, which it did by the verdict, they require no
other notice than they will receive presently.
As several of the alleged errors, not involving anything
fundamental or jurisdictional, were not presented to the appellate
court for consideration, they must be regarded as waived, and will
be passed without further notice.
Montana Railway Co. v.
Warren, 137 U. S. 348,
137 U. S. 351;
Gila Valley Railway Co. v. Hall, 232 U. S.
94,
232 U. S.
98.
It is complained that the trial court permitted the government
to read in evidence the depositions of absent witnesses, instructed
the jury to return a verdict for the government if the evidence
reasonably preponderated in its favor, and in other ways treated
the case as civil in substance as well as in form. But the trial
court was right. An action such as this is civil, and is attended
with the usual incidents of a civil action.
United States v.
Regan, 232 U. S. 37.
The petition did not allege that the acts charged against the
construction company were knowingly done, and it is said that this
operated to render the recovery erroneous. No doubt the petition
was defective. A right to the penalty arises only where § 4 is
violated "by knowingly assisting, encouraging, or soliciting the
migration or importation"
Page 232 U. S. 661
of an alien contract laborer into the United States. Knowledge
being an element of what is penalized, it must be included in the
statement of a cause of action for the penalty. But there are
reasons why the defect did not render the recovery erroneous. The
defect was not pointed out in the trial court. On the contrary, the
case was tried as if the omitted allegation were in the petition.
Both parties introduced evidence bearing upon the company's
knowledge, both presented requests for instructions treating it as
an essential factor in the case, and the jury was instructed upon
that theory. In its charge, the court said that, before any verdict
could be returned for the government, it must appear from the
evidence that some representative of the defendant company, for
whose act it would be responsible,
"knowingly assisted, or knowingly encouraged, or knowingly
solicited, or knowingly caused others to assist or encourage or
solicit, the migration or importation of an alien Mexican contract
laborer into the United States."
And again:
"Where knowledge is an essential ingredient of a cause of
action, the existence of the knowledge becomes a question to be
determined by the jury upon a consideration of all the facts and
circumstances in the case."
It is therefore quite plain that the jury found from the
evidence that the acts charged against the defendant were knowingly
done, and the petition may well be treated as amended to conform to
the facts. Ariz.Rev.Stat. 1901, §§ 1288, 1293;
Reynolds v. Stockton, 140 U. S. 254,
140 U. S. 266.
The defendant was in no wise prejudiced by the defect, and to make
it a ground for reversing the judgment, notwithstanding the theory
upon which the trial proceeded, would be most unreasonable.
San
Juan Light Co. v. Requena, 224 U. S. 89,
224 U. S. 96;
Campbell v. United States, 224 U. S.
99,
224 U. S.
106.
Complaint is made of the denial of a motion to suppress certain
depositions, subsequently read in evidence, which the government
had taken under a commission issued by
Page 232 U. S. 662
the clerk. The only ground for the motion to which our attention
is invited is that the preliminary notice described the case as
pending in the second district when it was pending in the first.
The case had been brought in the former, and was transferred to the
latter at the defendant's instance. The notice and accompanying
interrogatories were prepared before and served after the transfer.
The purpose of the notice was to inform defendant's counsel of the
intended application for a commission, and of the proposed
interrogatories, and to give opportunity for filing cross
interrogatories.
See Ariz.Rev.Stat. 1901, §§
2507, 2513. No cross-interrogatories were filed in either district,
and after the expiration of the time allowed for them, the clerk of
the district in which the case was pending issued the commission.
Counsel for the defendant could not have been misled or confused by
the error in the notice, for they were fully informed of the
transfer, having perfected it the day before the notice was served.
In these circumstances, the trial court, as also the supreme court
of the territory, held that the error was inconsequential and did
not require the suppression of the depositions. We perceive no
reason for disturbing that conclusion. On the contrary, we think it
was plainly correct.
Over the defendant's objection, the decision of the board of
special inquiry was admitted in evidence as tending to prove that
the forty-five men were aliens, and it is said that this was error
because the defendant was not a party to the proceeding. One of the
questions committed by law to the board for decision, subject to an
appeal to the Secretary of Commerce, was whether the men were
aliens. The document admitted in evidence disclosed that, after a
hearing, the board determined that question in the affirmative, and
that the men acquiesced by waiving their right to an appeal. In
that way, their status as aliens was conclusively established as
between themselves and the United States. It is true that the
defendant was not a
Page 232 U. S. 663
party to that proceeding, and that, as a general rule, a
judgment binds only the parties and their privies. But it is
equally true that a judgment in a prior action is admissible, even
against a stranger, as
prima facie, but not conclusive,
proof of a fact which may be shown by evidence of general
reputation, such as custom, pedigree, race, death, and the like,
and this because the judgment is usually more persuasive than mere
evidence of reputation. 1 Starkie, Ev. 386; 1 Greenleaf Ev.
§§ 139, 526, 555;
Patterson v.
Gaines, 6 How. 550,
47 U. S. 599;
Pile v. McBratney, 15 Ill. 314, 319;
McCollum v.
Fitzsimons, 1 Rich. 252. In principle, alienage is within the
latter rule, and so the board's decision was properly admitted in
evidence for the purpose stated.
Considerable evidence was admitted, over the defendant's
objection, of the acts and declarations of Carney and his
assistants while they were procuring laborers in Mexico and
bringing them into the United States, and it is contended that this
was violative of the rule that the acts and declarations of a
professed agent are not admissible to prove the existence or extent
of his agency.
See United States v.
Boyd, 5 How. 29,
46 U. S. 50. But
the contention rests upon a misconception of what the record
discloses. This evidence was not admitted to establish the agency
or its extent, but to show that the laborers came into the United
States in circumstances which rendered their migration or
importation unlawful. Whether the defendant was responsible for
what was done was another question. The trial court recognized
this, and expressly ruled that the agency must be otherwise shown,
and we agree with the territorial courts in thinking there was
other evidence tending to prove the agency, and that it embraced
what was done.
The evidence disclosed that, when the arrangement was made with
Carney, and on one or two occasions thereafter, he was in terms
instructed not to engage any laborer
Page 232 U. S. 664
in Mexico, and not to induce or assist any laborer to migrate
thence into the United States, and because of this it is said that
the evidence afforded no basis for holding the defendant
responsible for the Acts of Carney and his assistants in inducing
and aiding the migration or importation of the laborers named in
the petition. In dealing with this point, the courts below held
that, under the evidence as a whole, it was an admissible
conclusion that the instructions to Carney were not given in good
faith, or were in effect abrogated by acquiescence in their
nonobservance. An examination of the evidence as set forth in the
record satisfies us that it afforded reasonable support for either
of these conclusions, and therefore that the question was properly
one for the jury. And, upon looking at the court's charge as
incorporated into the record, we find that the matter was fairly
and adequately submitted.
Although conceding that there was evidence that ten of the men
were citizens of Mexico, the company claims that there was no
evidence of the alienage of the other thirty-five. It must be held
otherwise. Not only did the decision of the board of inquiry
constitute such evidence, but it was distinctly testified by some
of the men, who became witnesses at the trial, that "they were all
Mexicans," meaning thereby, as the context shows, that they were
all citizens of Mexico.
Still another contention is that, as all the men named in the
petition were brought into the United States at one time, there was
but a single violation of the statute, and only one penalty could
be recovered. The statute declares that "separate suits may be
brought for each alien thus promised labor or service," and this
plainly means that a separate penalty shall be assessed in respect
of each alien whose migration or importation is knowingly assisted,
encouraged, or solicited in contravention of the statute.
See
Missouri, Kansas & Texas Ry. Co. v. United States,
231 U. S. 112.
Page 232 U. S. 665
The action of the court in rendering judgment against the
defendant for the costs is challenged, but this was so clearly
right as to render discussion of it unnecessary. Ariz.Rev.Stat.
1901, §§ 1543, 2639;
Kittredge v. Race,
92 U. S. 116,
92 U. S. 121;
United States v. Verdier, 164 U.
S. 213,
164 U. S.
219.
As we find no prejudicial error in the record, the judgment
is
Affirmed.