1. Under Rev.Stats. § 1993, which provides:
"All children heretofore born or hereafter born out of the
limits and jurisdiction of the United States, whose fathers were or
may be at the time of their birth citizens thereof are declared to
be citizens of the United States, but the rights of citizenship
shall not descend to children whose fathers never resided in the
United States,"
citizenship attaches only where the father has resided in the
United States before the birth of the child. Pp.
274 U. S. 660,
274 U. S. 666,
274 U. S.
675.
Page 274 U. S. 658
2. The section is so legislatively constructed by the Act of
March 2, 1907, c. 2534, § 6. P.
274 U. S.
667.
7 F.2d 369 reversed.
Certiorari (269 U.S. 550) to a judgment of the circuit court of
appeals, which affirmed an order of the district court in habeas
corpus discharging a Chinese boy who had applied for admission to
the United States and was held for deportation by the immigration
authorities.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a writ of certiorari to review a judgment of the United
States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirming an
order for the District Court for the Western District of Washington
allowing a writ of habeas corpus for Chin Bow, a Chinese boy 10
years of age, and granting him a discharge. The petition for
certiorari was filed October 29, 1925, and granted December 7,
1925, 269 U.S. 550, under § 240(a) of the Judicial Code as amended
by the Act of February 13, 1925, c. 229, 43 Stat. 936.
Chin Bow applied for admission to the United States at Seattle.
The board of special inquiry of the Immigration Bureau at that
place denied him admission on the ground that, though his father is
a citizen, he is not a citizen, because, at the time of his birth
in China, his father had never resided in the United States. Chin
Bow was born March 29, 1914, in China. His father, Chin Dun,
Page 274 U. S. 659
was also born in China on March 8, 1894, and had never been in
this country until July 18, 1922. Chin Dun was the son of Chin
Tong, the respondent's grandfather. Chin Tong is 49 years old, and
was born in the United States.
The Secretary of Labor affirmed the decision of the board of
inquiry, and the deportation of the respondent was ordered. He
secured a writ of habeas corpus from the district court. Upon a
hearing, an order discharging him was entered without an opinion.
On appeal by the United States, the circuit court of appeals
affirmed the judgment of the district court, 7 F.2d 369, holding
him to be a citizen under the provisions of § 1993 of the Revised
Statutes, which is as follows:
"All children heretofore born or hereafter born out of the
limits and jurisdiction of the United States, whose fathers were or
may be at the time of their birth citizens thereof, are declared to
be citizens of the United States; but the rights of citizenship
shall not descend to children whose fathers never resided in the
United States."
The rights of Chin Bow are determined by the construction of
this section. The Secretary of Labor, April 27, 1916, asked the
opinion of Attorney General Gregory whether a rule of the Chinese
regulations of his Department, which denied citizenship to
foreign-born children of American Chinese, was a valid one. He
advised that it was not, because § 1993 applied to all children,
and therefore included Chinese children as well. The second
question was whether foreign-born children of American-born Chinese
fathers were entitled to enter the United States as citizens
thereof, when they had continued to reside for some time in China
after reaching their majorities, without any affirmative action on
their part indicating an intention to remain citizens of the United
States, and the Attorney General advised that they were, in spite
of
Page 274 U. S. 660
these circumstances, entitled to enter the United States as
citizens thereof, 30 Op. Attys.Gen. 529.
The United States contends that the proviso of § 1993, "but the
rights of citizenship shall not descend to children whose fathers
never resided in the United States," must be construed to mean that
only the children whose fathers have resided in the United States
before their birth become citizens under the section. It is claimed
for the respondent that the residence of the father at any time in
the United States before his death entitles his son, whenever born,
to citizenship. These conflicting claims make the issue to be
decided.
The very learned and useful opinion of Mr. Justice Gray,
speaking for the court in
United States v. Wong Kim Ark,
169 U. S. 649,
establishes that, at common law in England and the United States,
the rule with respect to nationality was that of the
jus
soli, that birth within the limits of the jurisdiction of the
Crown, and of the United States, as the successor of the Crown,
fixed nationality, and that there could be no change in this rule
of law except by statute; that, by the statute of 7 Anne (1708) c.
5, § 3, extended by the statute of 4 George II (1731) c. 21, all
children born out of the ligeance of the Crown of England whose
fathers were or should be natural-born subjects of the Crown of
England, or of Great Britain at the time of the birth of such
children, respectively, were deemed natural-born subjects of that
kingdom to all intents and purposes whatsoever. That statute was
extended by the statute of 13 George III (1773) c. 21, to
foreign-born grandchildren of natural-born subjects, but not to the
issue of such grandchildren (169 U.S.
169 U. S.
671).
De Geer v. Stone, 22 Ch.D. 243, 252;
Dicey, Conflict of Laws, 178, 781. The latter author says (p. 782)
that British nationality did not pass by descent or inheritance
beyond the second generation. These statutes applied to the
colonies before the War of Independence.
Page 274 U. S. 661
The Act of March 26, 1790, entitled "An act to establish an
uniform rule of naturalization," 1 Stat. 103, c. 3, came under
discussion in February, 1790, in the House, but the discussion was
chiefly directed to naturalization, and not to the status of
children of American citizens born abroad. Annals of First
Congress, 1109, 1110,
et seq. The only reference is made
by Mr. Burke (p. 1121) in which he says:
"The case of the children of American parents born abroad ought
to be provided for, as was done in the case of English parents in
the 12th year of William III. There are several other cases that
ought to be likewise attended to."
Mr. Hartley said (p. 1125) that he had another clause ready to
present providing for the children of American citizens born out of
the United States. A select committee of ten was then appointed to
which the bill was recommitted and from which it was reported. But
no subsequent reference to the provision of the bill which we are
now considering appears. The bill as passed was as follows:
"An Act to establish an uniform Rule of Naturalization."
"Section 1. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of
Representatives of the United States of America in Congress
assembled, that any alien, being a free white person, who shall
have resided within the limits and under the jurisdiction of the
United States for the term of two years, may be admitted to become
a citizen thereof on application to any common law court of record
in any one of the states wherein he shall have resided for the term
of one year at least, and making proof to the satisfaction of such
court that he is a person of good character and taking the oath or
affirmation prescribed by law to support the Constitution of the
United States, which oath or affirmation such court shall
administer;
Page 274 U. S. 662
and the clerk of such court shall record such application and
the proceedings thereon, and thereupon such person shall be
considered as a citizen of the United States. And the children of
such persons so naturalized, dwelling within the United States,
being under the age of twenty-one years at the time of such
naturalization, shall also be considered as citizens of the United
States. And the children of citizens of the United States that may
be born beyond sea or out of the limits of the United States shall
be considered as natural-born citizens:
Provided, that the
right of citizenship shall not descend to persons whose fathers
have never been resident in the United States:
Provided
also, that no person heretofore proscribed by any state shall
be admitted a citizen as aforesaid except by an act of the
legislature of the state in which such person was proscribed."
This Act was repealed by the Act of January 29, 1795, 1 Stat.
415, § 4, but the third section of that act reenacted the
provisions of the Act of 1790 as to children of citizens born
beyond the sea, in equivalent terms. The clauses were not repealed
by the next Naturalization Act of June 18, 1798, 1 Stat. 566, but
continued in force until the 14th of April, 1802, when an Act of
Congress of that date, 2 Stat. 153, repealed all preceding acts
respecting naturalization. After its provision as to
naturalization, it contained in its fourth section the
following:
"That the children of persons duly naturalized under any of the
laws of the United States, or who, previous to the passing to any
law on that subject by the government of the United States, may
have become citizens of any one of the said states under the laws
thereof, being under the age of twenty-one years at the time of
their parents being so naturalized or admitted to the rights of
citizenship, shall, if dwelling in the United States, be considered
as citizens of the United States, and the children of persons who
now are, or have been citizens of the
Page 274 U. S. 663
United States, shall, though born out of the limits and
jurisdiction of the United States, be considered as citizens of the
United States:
Provided, that the right of citizenship
shall not descend to persons whose fathers have never resided
within the United States."
No change was made in the law until 1855. Mr. Horace Binney had
written an article, which he published December 1, 1853, for the
satisfaction of fellow citizens and friends whose children were
born abroad during occasional visits by their parents to Europe.
169 U.S.
169 U. S. 665.
He began the article as follows:
"It does not probably occur to the American families who are
visiting Europe in great numbers, and remaining there frequently
for a year or more, that all their children born in a foreign
country are aliens, and when they return home will return under all
the disabilities of aliens. Yet this is indisputably the case, for
it is not worthwhile to consider the only exception to this rule
that exists under the laws of the United States,
viz., the
case of a child so born whose parents were citizens of the United
States on or before the 14th day of April, 1802."
"It has been thought expedient, therefore, to call the attention
of the public to this state of the laws of the United States that,
if there are not some better political reasons for permitting the
law so to remain than the writer is able to imagine, the subject
may be noticed in Congress and a remedy provided."
Mr. Binney demonstrates that, under the law then existing, the
children of citizens of the United States born abroad, and whose
parents were not citizens of the United States on or before the
14th of April, 1802, were aliens because the Act of 1802 only
applied to such parents, and because, under the common law, which
applied in this country, the children of citizens born abroad were
not citizens, but were aliens. Mr. Binney was not interested
Page 274 U. S. 664
in the citizenship of the second generation of children of
citizens of the United States born abroad, and nothing in this
article was directed to the question of the meaning of the words
contained in the Act of 1802, "provided, that the right of
citizenship shall not descend to persons whose fathers have never
resided within the United States."
The Act of February 10, 1855, 10 Stat. 604, passed presumably
because of Mr. Binney's suggestion, was entitled "An act to secure
the right of citizenship to children of citizens of the United
States born out of the limits thereof," and read as follows:
"That persons heretofore born, or hereafter to be born, out of
the limits and jurisdiction of the United States whose fathers were
or shall be at the time of their birth citizens of the United
States shall be deemed and considered and are hereby declared to be
citizens of the United States:
Provided, however, that the
rights of citizenship shall not descend to persons whose fathers
never resided in the United States."
"Sec. 2. . . . That any woman who might lawfully be naturalized
under the existing laws, married, or who shall be married to a
citizen of the United States, shall be deemed and taken to be a
citizen."
The part of the Act of 1855 we are interested in was embodied in
the Revised Statutes as § 1993.
It is very clear that the proviso in § 1993 has the same meaning
as that which Congress intended to give it in the Act of 1790,
except that it was then retrospective, as it was in the Act of
1802, while, in the Act of 1855, it was intended to be made
prospective as well as retrospective. What was the source of the
peculiar words of the proviso there seems to be no way of finding
out, as the report of the discussion of the subject is not
contained in any publication brought to our attention. It is
evident, however,
Page 274 U. S. 665
from the discussion in the First Congress, already referred to,
that there was a strong feeling in favor of the encouragement of
naturalization. There were some congressmen, although they did not
prevail, who were in favor of naturalization by the mere
application and taking of the oath. The time required for residence
to obtain naturalization was finally limited to two years. In the
Act of 1795, this was increased to five years, with three years for
declaration of intention. Congress must have thought that the
questions of naturalization and of the conferring of citizenship on
sons of American citizens born abroad were related.
Congress had before it the Act of George III of 1773, which
conferred British Nationality not only on the children, but also on
the grandchildren of British-born citizens who were born abroad.
Congress was not willing to make so liberal a provision. It was
natural that it should wish to restrict the English provision,
because, at the time that this phrase was adopted, there were
doubtless many foreign-born children of persons who were citizens
of the seceding colonies, with respect to whose fathers there was a
natural doubt whether they intended to claim or enjoy American
citizenship, or indeed were entitled to it. The last provision of
the Act of 1790 manifested this disposition to exclude from the
operation of the act those who were citizens or subjects in the
states during the Revolution, and had been proscribed by their
legislatures. It is not too much to say, therefore, that Congress
at that time attached more importance to actual residence in the
United States as indicating a basis for citizenship than it did to
descent from those who had been born citizens of the colonies or of
the states before the Constitution. As said by Mr. Fish, when
Secretary of State, to Minister Washburn, June 28, 1873, in
speaking of this very proviso,
"The heritable blood of citizenship
Page 274 U. S. 666
was thus associated unmistakably with residence within the
country which was thus recognized as essential to full
citizenship."
Foreign Relations of the United States, pt. 1, 1873, p. 259. It
is in such an atmosphere that we are to interpret the meaning of
this peculiarly worded proviso.
Only two constructions seem to us possible, and we must adopt
one or the other. The one is that the descent of citizenship shall
be regarded as taking place at the birth of the person to whom it
is to be transmitted, and that the words "have never been resident
in the United States" refer in point of time to the birth of the
person of whom the citizenship is to descend. This is the adoption
of the rule of
jus sanguinis in respect to citizenship,
and that emphasizes the fact and time of birth as the basis of it.
We think the words "the right of citizenship shall not descend to
persons whose fathers have never been resident in the United
States" are equivalent to saying that fathers may not have the
power of transmitting by descent the right of citizenship until
they shall become residents in the United States. The other view is
that the words "have never been resident in the United States" have
reference to the whole life of the father until his death, and
therefore that grandchildren of native-born citizens, even after
they, having been born abroad, have lived abroad to middle age and
without residing at all in the United States, will become citizens
if their fathers, born abroad and living until old age abroad,
shall adopt a residence in the United States just before death. We
are thus to have two generations of citizens who have been born
abroad, lived abroad, the first coming to old age, and the second
to maturity, and bringing up of a family without any relation to
the United States at all until the father shall in his last days
adopt a new residence. We do not think that such a construction
accords with the probable attitude of Congress at the time of the
adoption of this proviso into the statute. Its construction
Page 274 U. S. 667
extends citizenship to a generation whose birth, minority, and
majority, whose education, and whose family life have all been out
of the United States and naturally within the civilization and
environment of an alien country. The beneficiaries would have
evaded the duties and responsibilities of American citizenship.
They might be persons likely to become public charges or afflicted
with disease; yet they would be entitled to enter as citizens of
the United States. Van Dyne, Citizenship of the United States, p.
34.
As between the two interpretations, we feel confident that the
first one was more in accord with the views of the First Congress.
We think that the proviso has been so construed by a subsequent Act
of Congress of March 2, 1907, c. 2534, § 6, 34 Stat. 1229, which
provides:
"That all children born outside the limits of the United States
who are citizens thereof in accordance with the provisions of §
1993 of the Revised Statutes of the United States and who continue
to reside outside the United States shall, in order to receive the
United of this government, be required upon reaching the age of
eighteen years to record at an American consulate their intention
to become residents and remain citizens of the United States, and
shall be further required to take the oath of allegiance to the
United States upon attaining their majority."
Now if this Congress had construed § 1993 to permit the
residence prescribed to occur after the birth of such children, we
think that it would have employed appropriate words to express such
meaning, as for example, "all children born who are or may become
citizens." The present tense is used, however, indicating that
citizenship is determined at the time of birth. Moreover, such
foreign-born citizens are required, upon reaching the age of
eighteen years, to record their intention to become residents and
remain citizens of the United States and take
Page 274 U. S. 668
the oath of allegiance to the United States upon attaining their
majority. If the residence prescribed for the parent may occur
after the birth of the children, the father may remain abroad and
not reside in the United States until long after such children
attain their majority. Thus, they could not register or take the
oath of allegiance, because the rights of citizenship could not
descend to them until their fathers had resided in the United
States. This class of foreign-born children of American citizens
could not, then, possibly comply with the provisions of the Act of
1907. Nor could such children "remain citizens," since they are
expressly denied the rights of citizenship. We may treat the Act of
1907 as being
in pari materia with the original act, and
as a legislative declaration of what Congress in 1907 thought was
its meaning in 1790.
United States v.
Freeman, 3 How. 556,
44 U. S. 564,
et seq.; Cope v. Cope, 137 U. S. 682,
137 U. S.
688.
Counsel for the respondent insist that the Act of 1907 is not an
act that reflects on the construction to be placed on § 1993; that
there is a distinction between citizenship and the enjoyment of it
in this country, on the one hand, and the rules that should limit
the protection of it abroad by our government, on the other. This
may well be conceded. It is illustrated in the opinion of Attorney
General Hoar, 13 Op. Attys.Gen. 90, in which he advised that, even
if applicants were citizens, they were not entitled to the
protection of passports under the circumstances of that case. But
we do not think that this distinction detracts from the
argumentative weight of the Act of 1907 as a Congressional
interpretation of the proviso of 1855, 1802, and 1790.
In answer to the reasons which influence us to the conclusion
already indicated, counsel for the respondent say, first, that the
hypothesis that the foreign-born fathers and sons may all live
abroad from birth to middle age and
Page 274 U. S. 669
bring up families without any association with the United
States, and that the sons may then become citizens by the ultimate
residence of their fathers in the United States, is not a possible
one, because such children must have signified their intention to
become citizens when they reached eighteen years of age, or at
majority, at any rate. But these provisions with respect to
election of citizenship by those coming to majority were not in the
statute when the proviso was enacted, and we must construe it as of
1790, with reference to the views that Congress may be thought to
have have at that time.
Then it is urged that the State Department has held that § 1993
refers only to children, and not to adults. This would be a narrow
construction of the proviso as it was intended to operate in 1790,
when the act was passed, and, although this was suggested as a
possible view by Secretary of State Bayard, it would limit too much
the meaning of the word "children" at a time when no provision had
been made by law for election of citizenship by those coming of
age. Nor does it seem to be in accord with Attorney General
Gregory's opinion already referred to. 30 Op. Attys.Gen. 529.
It is said that it would be illogical and unnatural to provide
that the father, having begotten children abroad before he lived in
the United States at all, and then having gone to the United States
and resided there and returned and had more children abroad, should
have a family part aliens and part citizens. As this is entirely
within the choice of the father, there would seem to be no reason
why such a situation should be anomalous. As the father may
exercise his option in accordance with the law, so citizenship will
follow that option.
Counsel for the respondent, in their learned and thorough brief,
have sought to sustain their conclusion in favor of the
latitudinarian view of the proviso by many references, all of which
we have examined. They point
Page 274 U. S. 670
to the language of Mr. Justice Gray in delivering the majority
opinion in
United States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U.
S. 649. The majority in that case, as already said, held
that the fundamental principle of the common law with regard to
nationality was birth within the allegiance of the government, and
that one born in the United States, although of a race and of a
parentage denied naturalization under the law, was nevertheless,
under the language of the Fourteenth Amendment, a citizen of the
United States by virtue of the
jus soli embodied in the
amendment. The attitude of Chief Justice Fulley and Mr. Justice
Harlan was that, at common law, the children of our citizens born
abroad were always natural-born citizens from the standpoint of
this government, and that, to that extent, the
jus
sanguinis obtained here; that the Fourteenth Amendment did not
exclude from citizenship by birth children born in the United
States of parents permanently located here who might themselves
become citizens, nor, on the other hand, did it arbitrarily make
citizens of children born in the United States of adults who,
according to the will of their native government and of this
government, are and must remain aliens. Section 1993 is referred to
both in the majority opinion and in the minority opinion. Speaking
of the Act of 1855, the majority opinion says (p.
169 U. S.
674):
"It thus clearly appears that, during the half century
intervening between 1802 and 1855, there was no legislation
whatever for the citizenship of children born abroad, during that
period, of American parents who had not become citizens of the
United States before the Act of 1802, and that the Act of 1855,
like every other act of Congress upon the subject, has, by express
proviso, restricted the right of citizenship thereby conferred upon
foreign-born children of American citizens to those children
themselves, unless they became residents of the United States. Here
is nothing to countenance the theory
Page 274 U. S. 671
that a general rule of citizenship by blood or descent has
displaced in this country the fundamental rule of citizenship by
birth within its sovereignty."
The minority opinion said (p.
169 U. S.
714):
"Section 1993 of the Revised Statutes provides that children so
born"
"are declared to be citizens of the United States, but the
rights of citizenship shall not descend to children whose fathers
never resided in the United States."
"Thus, a limitation is prescribed on the passage of citizenship
by descent beyond the second generation if then surrendered by
permanent nonresidence, and this limitation was contained in all
the acts from 1790 down."
It is very clear that the exact meaning of the proviso upon the
point here at issue was not before the Court. The section itself
and the policy of the United States in the sections that preceded
it were important in the discussion only in showing how restricted
or otherwise was the application of the
jus sanguinis in
our law. There is nothing in the opinion of the Court that contains
an intimation as to what period is covered by the expression,
"never resided in the United States." We cannot regard such a
doubtful expression as that of Chief Justice Fuller in his dissent
as authoritative in respect to the issue here.
Reference is then made to the very admirable opinion presented
by Secretary Fish to President Grant, on July 27, 1868, of the
legislation afterwards embodied in the Revised Statutes, §§ 1999,
2000, and 2001, in reference to the right of expatriation prompted
by the Fenian and other international differences and intended to
apply especially to the expatriation of persons coming from
European countries to the United States and seeking and receiving
naturalization in the United States. U.S. Foreign Relations, 1873,
pt. II, pp. 1191, 1192. President Grant solicited opinions from all
of his Cabinet officers. That of Secretary Fish is relied on in
this discussion. We do not find it specifically directed to the
issue here. It
Page 274 U. S. 672
is rather occupied in a consideration of the point which was
then very much mooted, as to what constituted expatriation and what
rules should be adopted in determining whether citizens or subjects
of other countries coming to the United States were expatriated,
and whether, after having been admitted to citizenship, they lost
their rights of citizenship by reason of a return to the country of
their birth and a residence there. The only important reference to
the proviso of § 1993 is the suggestion by Secretary Fish that the
proviso was a recognition by Congress of the right of foreign
countries to fix for themselves what constituted allegiance to
their country of persons living in their country, without regard to
the laws of this country extending citizenship of this country to
such persons within their allegiance. Nor do we find anything more
definite upon the meaning of the proviso in § 1993 in the letter,
already cited, of Secretary Fish to Mr. Washburn under date of June
28, 1873. Foreign Relations of the United States, 1873, Pt. I, p.
256. Reference is also made to the opinion of Attorney General
Hoar, already cited, which was rendered to Secretary Fish in a case
that did not present this question at all. 13 Op. Attys.Gen. 90.
The Secretary asked the Attorney General whether four persons
residing in the Island of Curacao, for whom application was made
for passports, were citizens of the United States and entitled as
such to have passports issued to them. They were over twenty-one
years of age, and were born in the islands of Curacao. Four of them
were children of native citizens of the United States domiciled at
Curacao who had not resided in the United States since 1841 (the
opinion was given in 1869), and it did not appear affirmatively
that any of the applicants had resided or intended to reside in the
United States, or that more than one of them had ever been in the
country. The Attorney
Page 274 U. S. 673
General expressed the opinion that, if the fathers of the
applicants at the time of their birth were citizens of the United
States and had "at some time" resided within the United States, the
applicants were citizens of the United States under the provisions
of the statute and entitled to the privileges of citizenship. As
their fathers were native-born citizens of the United States, the
applicants were probably citizens under § 1993 whether their
fathers at any time resided in the United States or not after the
time of their birth. The point in the opinion by the Attorney
General relied on by respondent's counsel is the intimation that
these fathers should have "at some time" resided in the United
States, without restricting that residence to the time before their
birth. The conclusion was that, as these applicants had never been
in the United States, there was no obligation to give them
passports, even though they were citizens of the United States. We
can hardly regard that as a decision upon the point we are
considering.
In a work by Mr. Borchard, formerly Assistant Counsellor of the
State Department, we find this:
"To confer citizenship upon a child born abroad, the father must
have resided in the United States. This limitation upon the right
of transmitting citizenship indefinitely was intended to prevent
the residence abroad of successive generations of persons claiming
the privileges of American citizenship while evading its duties. It
seems not to have been judicially determined whether the residence
of the father in the United States must necessarily have preceded
the birth of the child, but, by the fact that the statute provides
that citizenship shall not 'descend,' it is believed that the
residence prescribed must have preceded the birth of the child, and
such has been the construction of the Department."
Diplomatic Protection of Citizens Abroad, p. 609.
Page 274 U. S. 674
In his notes under this passage, Mr. Borchard correctly points
out that, while the case of
State v. Adams, 45 Iowa 99,
cited for the respondent herein, may have presented facts involving
the point we are considering, it was not considered or discussed by
the court.
Mr. Borchard also refers to special consular instructions of the
State Department, No. 340, July 27, 1914, entitled "Citizenship of
Children Born of American Fathers Who Have Never Resided in the
United States." These were instructions issued by Mr. Bryan when
Secretary of State, ruling on the question whether residence by the
father in Jerusalem, where the United States exercised by treaty
extraterritorial powers, was residence within the United States
satisfying the requirement of § 1993, and it was held not to be so,
reversing former rulings. In these instructions, Mr. Bryan
indicated his view that foreign-born persons claiming citizenship
under § 1993 must fail if their fathers, citizens of the United
States, had never resided in the United States when such persons
were born, although this was not necessary to the decision he was
making.
Mr. Bryan's instructions were based on an opinion of Mr. Cone
Johnson, Solicitor of the State Department, printed at 41 and 42 of
a compilation concerning citizenship issued by the Department in
1925 in which Mr. Johnson suggested that § 1993 might be construed
to mean
"all children heretofore or hereafter born out of the limits or
jurisdiction of the United States whose fathers, having resided in
the United States, were or may be at the time of their birth
citizens thereof, are declared to be citizens of the United
States."
Mr. Borchard's statement in his text that the construction of
the Department has since been that the residence of the father must
have preceded the birth of the child whose American citizenship is
claimed rests on his personal experience and knowledge as an
official of the Department, and not on any subsequent printed
publication
Page 274 U. S. 675
of the Department to which we have been referred.
It would seem then that the question before us is one that has
really not been authoritatively decided except by two circuit
courts of appeals -- that of the Ninth Circuit which is here under
review and that of the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit (
Johnson v. Sullivan, 8 F.2d 988), which adopted
the view of the Ninth Circuit Court and followed it.
The opinion in the Ninth Circuit says (p. 369):
"The statute refers to the descent of the rights of citizenship.
The term 'descend' has a well defined meaning in law. As defined by
Webster, it means: 'To pass down, as from generation to generation,
or from ancestor to heir.' If the term 'descend' is given that
meaning in this connection, the status of the appellee would not
become definitely fixed until his father became a resident of the
United States or died without becoming such. In this former event,
he would become vested with all the rights of citizenship as soon
as his father became a resident, while, in the latter event, his
claim to citizenship would be forever lost."
The expression "the rights of citizenship shall descend" cannot
refer to the time of the death of the father, because that is
hardly the time when they do descend. The phrase is borrowed from
the law of property. The descent of property comes only after the
death of the ancestor. The transmission of right of citizenship is
not at the death of the ancestor, but at the birth of the child,
and it seems to us more natural to infer that the conditions of the
descent contained in the limiting proviso, so far as the father is
concerned, must be perfected and have been performed at that
time.
This leads to a reversal of the judgment of the circuit court of
appeals and a remanding of the respondent.
Reversed.