1. A hearing before a Board of Special Inquiry, in an
immigration proceeding, was not rendered unfair by mere delay in
its commencement,
Page 273 U. S. 353
nor by the absence of a friend or relative of the applicant for
entry when the applicant waived his right in that regard, nor by
the introduction before the Board of testimony previously taken by
an inspector, where the applicant made no objection thereto and did
not seek to recall the witness. P.
273 U. S.
355.
2. An applicant for admission who has never resided in the
United States is not entitled under the Constitution to a judicial
hearing of his claim that he is a citizen of the United States by
birth. P.
273 U. S.
357.
3. A petition in habeas corpus based solely on the right of the
petitioner cannot be maintained on the right of another. P.
273 U. S.
358.
4. When a party respondent has since died, the judgment (one of
affirmance) will be
nunc pro tunc as of the date of
submission. P.
273 U. S. 359.
Affirmed.
Appeal from a final order of the district court discharging a
writ of habeas corpus, and remanding Poy, the petitioner, to the
custody of the Commissioner of Immigration.
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
Quon Quon Poy, a Chinese boy fifteen years of age, arrived at
the port of Boston in June, 1924, and applied for admission to the
United States, claiming to be a foreign-born son of Quon Mee Sing,
a native-born citizen -- whose citizenship was conceded -- and
hence, under R.S. § 1993 [
Footnote 1] (U.S.C. Tit. 8, § 6), to be himself a
citizen of the
Page 273 U. S. 354
United States. After a preliminary investigation by an
inspector, his claim was heard, under the provisions of the
Immigration Act of 1917, [
Footnote
2] by a Board of Special Inquiry which decided, on the
evidence, that he was not shown to be the son of Quon Mee Sing, and
should be excluded as a Chinese alien not a member of any of the
exempt classes entitled to enter the United States. On an appeal to
the Secretary of Labor, this finding having been approved by the
Board of Review, the Secretary sustained the decision of the Board
of Special Inquiry and a deportation warrant was issued to the
Commissioner of Immigration.
The applicant then presented to the district court a petition
for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging that he was the son of Quon
Mee Sing and a citizen of the United States; that he had been
denied a fair hearing and opportunity to establish his citizenship
by the Department of Labor; that the procedure in the Department by
which he had been declared an alien denied him the due process of
law to which he was entitled under the Constitution, and that,
under his claim to citizenship he was entitled to an adjudication
by the court as to such procedure and as to his relationship to
Quon Mee Sing. The writ was granted. Upon a hearing on the petition
and return, in which the record of the departmental proceedings was
introduced, the court, finding that the departmental decision was
conclusive as to the petitioner's citizenship,
Page 273 U. S. 355
declined to hear witnesses offered by him for the purpose of
independently establishing his citizenship, and entered judgment
discharging the writ and remanding the petitioner to the custody of
the Commissioner of Immigration. This direct appeal was then
allowed under § 238 of the Judicial Code, prior to the
Jurisdictional Act of 1925.
1. The contention that the petitioner was denied a fair hearing
as to his citizenship by the Department of Labor cannot be
sustained. The record shows that, in September, the inspector to
whom the case was referred in its preliminary stage separately
examined, under oath and at length, the petitioner and his alleged
father and an alleged brother, who offered themselves as witnesses.
Their examination, which was by question and answer, was taken
down, and is in the record. It was conducted in an entirely fair
and impartial manner. Each of them stated at the conclusion of his
examination that he had nothing further to say, and no other
witnesses offered themselves or were produced. The petitioner was
intelligent, had attended school, and stated that he thoroughly
understood the interpreter. At the close of this preliminary
investigation, the case was immediately referred to the Board of
Special Inquiry, consisting of the same inspector and two others.
At the commencement of the hearing before the Board, the petitioner
was informed of his right to have a relative or friend present, and
stated that he did not desire to avail himself of this right and
was willing to proceed with the hearing. He was also informed that
the previous testimony given by himself and his alleged father and
brother would be made a part of the proceedings before the Board,
to which he made no objection. The petitioner was then further
examined by the Board. After a postponement for the purpose of
obtaining a report as to the physical condition of the petitioner,
the Board resumed its hearing, the petitioner being again present,
and after consideration of the entire testimony, being of opinion
that his relationship
Page 273 U. S. 356
to Quon Mee Sing had not been reasonably established, voted to
accord him five days in which to submit additional evidence. Notice
of this was sent to the attorney representing the petitioner, who
had not been present at any of the proceedings, and he replied that
the petitioner had no further testimony to offer. The Board then
recalled the petitioner for further examination, after which he
stated that he had nothing further to say, and again decided that
his claimed relationship to Quon Mee Sing had not been reasonably
established and that he should be excluded, and informed him of his
right to appeal to the Secretary of Labor.
This appeal having been taken, the Board of Review, after
hearing the attorney for the petitioner, made a report in which it
reviewed the entire testimony, found that the record was
"exceptionally unfavorable" to the petitioner, and, after referring
to his lack of knowledge of matters which clearly should have been
within his memory, his unsatisfactory explanations, the
discrepancies between his statements and those of his alleged
father and brother, and to a previous statement by his alleged
father to the effect that he had no such son, concluded that the
petitioner had fallen "far short" of establishing that he was in
truth and fact the son of Quon Mee Sing, and accordingly
recommended that the exclusion decision be affirmed.
The entire record discloses a painstaking and impartial effort
to ascertain the merits of the petitioner's claim. There is no
contention here that the decision of the Board of Special Inquiry
had no adequate support in the evidence. The arguments made as to
the unfairness of the hearing, insofar as they are based upon
anything properly appearing in the record before us, relate to the
delay in commencing the hearing, the absence of a friend or
relative of the petitioner at the hearing, and the introduction
before the Board of the testimony previously taken by the
Page 273 U. S. 357
single inspector. These are not well taken. Clearly the mere
delay in the commencement of the investigation. although involving
the detention of the petitioner, had no bearing upon the fairness
of the hearing itself. The argument as to the necessity for the
presence of a kinsman or friend of the petitioner at the hearing is
based upon the provision in § 17 of the Immigration Act that,
while the hearing "shall be separate and apart from the public,"
the applicant for admission "may have one friend or relative
present under such regulations as may be prescribed by the
Secretary of Labor." Here, however, the Board, at the outset of the
hearing, informed the petitioner of his right to have a relative or
friend present, and he expressly waived this right and stated that
he was willing to proceed with the hearing.
And see United
States .v Sing Tuck, 194 U. S. 169.
The contention that the hearing was invalid because the greater
part of the testimony was taken before a single inspector and
introduced before the Board is based upon a provision in the same
section of the Act that, on an appeal from the Board of Special
Inquiry, the decision shall be rendered "solely upon the evidence
adduced before the Board." There is, however, no suggestion
whatever in the Act that the evidence adduced before the Board of
Special Inquiry must be taken in its presence. We see no reason to
doubt that evidence properly taken before an inspector, § 16
-- which has substantially the same effect as a deposition taken in
an ordinary case -- may be introduced before the Board and
considered by it.
See Kwock Jan Fat v. White, 253 U.
S. 454,
253 U. S. 458.
And here the petitioner offered no objection to the introduction of
such testimony and no application was made to recall the witnesses
for reexamination by the Board.
2. It is also contended that as the petitioner claimed the right
of admission to the United States as a citizen thereof under R.S.
§ 1993, the Immigration Act, in vesting
Page 273 U. S. 358
in the Board of Special Inquiry the authority to determine the
question of his citizenship and making its decision when approved
by the Secretary of Labor final, is unconstitutional in that it
deprives him of the right to a judicial hearing to which he is
entitled as due process under the Constitution, and that it was
therefore the duty of the district court to proceed, independently
of the departmental decision, to an adjudication as to his
citizenship. It is clear, however, in the light of the previous
decisions of this Court, that when the petitioner, who had never
resided in the United States, presented himself at its border for
admission, the mere fact that he claimed to be a citizen did not
entitle him under the Constitution to a judicial hearing, and that,
unless it appeared that the departmental officers to whom Congress
had entrusted the decision of his claim had denied him an
opportunity to establish his citizenship at a fair hearing, or
acted in some unlawful or improper way or abused their discretion,
their finding upon the question of citizenship was conclusive, and
not subject to review, and it was the duty of the court to dismiss
the writ of habeas corpus without proceeding further.
United
States v. Sing Tuck, 194 U. S. 161,
194 U. S. 168;
United States v. Ju Toy, 198 U. S. 253,
198 U. S. 263;
Chin Yow v. United States, 208 U. S.
8,
208 U. S. 11;
Tang Tun v. Edsell, 223 U. S. 673,
223 U. S. 675,
and
Ng Fung Ho v. White, 259 U. S. 276,
259 U. S.
282.
3. It is also urged in argument that, apart from the
petitioner's own claim, Quon Mee Sing was independently entitled to
maintain the petition for habeas corpus in enforcement of his right
to the custody of a minor child, and to obtain to that end an
adjudication of his kinship to the petitioner. It suffices to say
that no such question is here presented. The petition was filed
solely in the right of the petitioner. No right was asserted in
behalf of Quon Mee Sing. No such question appears to have been
presented in the hearing in the district court, and none was raised
by the assignments of error.
Page 273 U. S. 359
The judgment of the district court must accordingly be affirmed.
But, the Court being advised that the appellee, the Commissioner of
Immigration, has died since December 10, 1926, the day on which
this case was argued and submitted, the judgment here will be
entered
nunc pro tunc as of that day.
Mitchell v.
Overman, 103 U. S. 62,
103 U. S. 65;
Richardson v. Green, 130 U. S. 104,
130 U. S. 116;
Bell v. Bell, 181 U. S. 175,
181 U. S. 179;
Cuebas v. Cuebas, 223 U. S. 376,
223 U. S. 390.
Judgment affirmed nunc pro tunc.
[
Footnote 1]
By this section -- with an exception not here material -- all
children born out of the limits and jurisdiction of the United
States, whose fathers are at the time of their birth citizens
thereof, are declared to be citizens of the United States.
[
Footnote 2]
This Act provides that any alien, including "any person not a
native-born or naturalized citizen of the United States," who may
not appear to the examining immigration inspector to be clearly and
undoubtedly entitled to land, shall be detained for examination in
relation thereto by a board of special inquiry, which shall have
authority to determine whether he shall be allowed to land or shall
be deported, and that in the event of his rejection by the board of
special inquiry he may appeal to the Secretary of Labor, whose
decision, where the deportation is ordered, shall be final. Act of
February 5, 1917, c. 29, 39 Stat. 874, §§ 1, 16, 17,
19.