Where the right of a person of Chinese descent to enter this
country depends, as in this case, upon the statutes regulating
Chinese immigration, and not upon the construction of provisions of
treaties relating thereto, a direct appeal will not lie to this
Court under § 238, Jud.Code, from a judgment dismissing a
petition for habeas corpus of a Chinese person detained for
deportation.
The status of a Chinese merchant, as defined by the treaty with
China of 1880, is that acquired in China, and not in this
country.
The facts, which involve the jurisdiction of this Court of
appeals from the district court under § 238, Judicial Code,
are stated in the opinion.
Page 241 U. S. 2
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appeal from a judgment dismissing a petition for habeas corpus
and remanding petitioner to the custody of the Commissioner of
Immigration for the Port of San Francisco, in whose custody he was,
pending petitioner's deportation.
A summary of the petition made by the district court is as
follows:
"Petitioner Chin Fong, who had been a resident of the United
States for a number of years, departed for China in November, 1912;
that, before he left, he applied for a pre-investigation as to his
status as a merchant, and a certificate was denied him on the
ground that his original entry into this country was surreptitious;
that, notwithstanding this denial, the petitioner left the country,
and is now endeavoring to reenter as a returning Chinese merchant;
that he presents the affidavits of a member of the New York firm to
which he claims to belong and of two reputable Americans supporting
his claim; that, notwithstanding these facts, he has been denied
admission and ordered deported on the same ground that his
pre-investigation certificate was denied -- that is to say because
his original entry was surreptitious; that, in so deciding, the
immigration department has exceeded its authority, as that question
can only be determined under the exclusion laws by a justice,
judge, or commissioner."
A demurrer was interposed to the petition, which was sustained,
the court saying:
"Had the petitioner been content to remain in this country, he
could have been deported only after a hearing before a justice,
judge, or commissioner. But, as he left the country voluntarily,
and even after a pre-investigation certificate was denied him, the
question of his right to reentry lies peculiarly with the
immigration department, and as they have found
Page 241 U. S. 3
that he is not entitled to reenter, such finding cannot be
disturbed. A different rule prevails, and a different tribunal
determines, in the case of a Chinese applying to enter, from that
of one already in this country whom it is sought to deport, under
the exclusion laws."
The decision of the court is contested, and it is asserted (1)
that the petition was sufficient to entitle petitioner to a
discharge; (2) that the Commissioner of Immigration and Secretary
of Labor could not require a greater and different degree of proof
than that specified in § 2 of the Act of Congress of May 5,
1892, entitled, "An Act to Prohibit the Coming of Chinese Persons
into the United States;" (3) that petitioner furnished the degree
of proof required by the law; (4) that the rights guaranteed
petitioner under the treaty between the United States and China
concerning immigration, November 17, 1880, were unduly and
unlawfully infringed, and (5) that the decision of the Commissioner
was against the law and was an abuse of discretion.
The appeal is direct from the district court, and can only be
sustained against the motion of the United States to dismiss for
want of jurisdiction in this Court if there is a substantial
question under the Constitution of the United States or a treaty
made under their authority, § 238 of the Judicial Code,
permitting an appeal from a district court when a constitutional
question is involved and in any case "in which . . . the validity
or construction of any treaty made under its [United States]
authority is drawn in question."
It will be observed that appellant based his right to land
solely on the ground that he had been a merchant in the United
States before his departure to China, and that therefore it was not
competent for the immigration officers to inquire or determine
whether his original entry into the United States was open or
surreptitious and his stay therein legal or illegal. "The principal
proposition that
Page 241 U. S. 4
we desire to maintain," counsel say,
"and which has apparently been ignored by the Department of
Labor, is that, when Congress has definitely fixed the tests and
qualifications attendant upon the determination of a given act, it
is not within the power of an administrative officer to add to or
subtract from the congressional rule."
The case of
Lau Ow Bew v. United States, 144 U. S.
47, is cited. For the "congressional rule," counsel
refer to § 2 of the act of November 3, 1893 (28 Stat. 78),
which reads as follows:
"Where an application is made by a Chinaman for entrance into
the United States on the ground that he was formerly engaged in
this country as a merchant, he shall establish by the testimony of
two credible witnesses other than Chinese the fact that he
conducted such business as hereinbefore defined for at least one
year before his departure from the United States, and that, during
such year, he was not engaged in the performance of any manual
labor except such as was necessary in the conduct of his business
as such merchant, and, in default of such proof, shall be refused
landing."
It is contended that the section requires proof by a Chinaman
seeking entrance into the United States of two facts only: (1) that
he had been a merchant for one year before his departure, and (2)
that, during such time, he had not engaged in manual labor except
such as was necessary in the conduct of his business as such
merchant. These were the only conditions of the right to enter, it
is contended, and it was an irrelevant inquiry whether he
"originally entered as a laborer or even surreptitiously." And, in
emphasis, counsel say: "The manner of entry was entirely ignored by
Congress."
These being the conditions, it is hence asserted that, if the
Department of Labor may superadd one qualification, it may another,
"until the law becomes entirely unrecognizable." So far manifestly
there is nothing but an appeal to the statute, but the treaty is
attempted to be invoked
Page 241 U. S. 5
by the following:
"Such a course [the addition to the qualifications of the
statute] would be in plain derogation of the treaty obligations
between the United States and China, allowing to Chinese merchants
freedom of egress and ingress in the manner permitted to citizens
of the most favored nations, the essential fact by law and treaty
being merely that of mercantile status."
No provision of the treaty is cited from which the contention is
an applicable deduction, nor are we disposed to quote and comment
on the entire treaty in answer to the contention.
See 22
Stat. 826; also
Lau Ow Bew v. United States, supra. The
"merchant" defined by it does not include petitioner. It was the
definition of the status acquired in China, not acquired in the
United States, and, having been acquired in China, gave access to
the United States, and after access, freedom of movement as
citizens of the most favored nations. And this privilege was given
as well to Chinese laborers then (1880) in the United States.
We think, therefore, there is no substantial merit in the
contention that the case involves the construction of a treaty, and
that the rights of petitioner can rest only upon the statutes
regulating Chinese immigration. So concluding, we are not called
upon to decide or express opinion whether petitioner's original
entry into the United States and his subsequent residence therein
were illegal, and whether he could acquire by either a status which
the immigration officers were without power to disregard.
Dismissed.
MR. JUSTICE McREYNOLDS took no part in the consideration and
decision of this case.