Appellee was indicted under § 242(d) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act of 1952 on the charge that, as an alien against
whom a final order of deportation had been outstanding for more
than six months, he had willfully failed to give information
requested by the Immigration and Naturalization Service under the
purported authority of clause (3) of that Section. The information
he was charged with failing to furnish concerned (1) present
membership in and activities on behalf of the Communist Party and
other organizations, and (2) associations with particular
individuals.
Held: construing clause (3) of § 242(d) in the context
of the entire Section and of the scheme of the legislation as a
whole, with due regard to the principle of so construing statutes
as to avoid raising constitutional questions, the information an
alien is required to furnish under clause (3) relates solely to his
availability for deportation, and dismissal of the indictment for
failure to state an offense is sustained. Pp.
353 U. S.
194-202.
140 F.
Supp. 815 affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellee was indicted under § 242(d) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act of 1952, 66 Stat. 163, 208, originally part of § 23
of the Internal Security Act of 1950, 64 Stat. 1010, on the charge
that, as an alien against whom a final order of deportation had
been outstanding
Page 353 U. S. 195
for more than six months, he had willfully failed to give
information to the Immigration and Naturalization Service as
required by that section. Appellee moved to dismiss the indictment
on the grounds,
inter alia, that it failed to state an
offense within the statute, and, in the alternative, if it did so,
that the statute was unconstitutional. The District Court held that
the statute, as construed by it, was not unconstitutional.
140 F.
Supp. 815. Thereupon, the United States filed a motion for
clarification of the court's opinion, and appellee filed a
supplemental motion to dismiss the indictment, claiming that the
statute, as construed by the district judge, did not authorize the
Government to elicit the demanded information. The District Court,
in a second opinion, dismissed the indictment for failure to state
an offense. 140 F. Supp. at 820. The case was brought here, 352
U.S. 817, under the Criminal Appeals Act of 1907, as amended, 18
U.S.C. § 3731.
The section, as amended, 68 Stat. 1232, 8 U.S.C. (Supp. II) §
1252(d), is as follows:
"(d) Any alien, against whom a final order of deportation as
defined in subsection (c) heretofore or hereafter issued has been
outstanding for more than six months shall, pending eventual
deportation, be subject to supervision under regulations prescribed
by the Attorney General. Such regulations shall include provisions
which will require any alien subject to supervision (1) to appear
from time to time before an immigration officer for identification;
(2) to submit, if necessary, to medical and psychiatric examination
at the expense of the United States; (3) to give information under
oath as to his nationality, circumstances, habits, associations,
and activities, and such other information, whether or not related
to the foregoing, as the Attorney General may deem fit and proper;
and (4) to conform to such
Page 353 U. S. 196
reasonable written restrictions on his conduct or activities as
are prescribed by the Attorney General in his case. Any alien who
shall willfully fail to comply with such regulations, or willfully
fail to appear or to give information or submit to medical or
psychiatric examination if required, or knowingly give false
information in relation to the requirements of such regulations, or
knowingly violate a reasonable restriction imposed upon his conduct
or activity, shall be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not
more than one year, or both."
The District Court construed § 242(d) as conferring upon the
Attorney General "power to supervise the alien to make sure he is
available for deportation, and no further power." Accordingly, it
held that clause (3) of this subsection is to be restricted to
require only
"such information as is necessary to enable the Attorney General
to be certain that the alien is holding himself in readiness to
answer the call to be deported when it comes."
140 F. Supp. at 819-820. The court found that the questions
listed in the indictment, which are set forth in the margin,
* were not
relevant to appellee's availability for deportation.
Page 353 U. S. 197
The interpretation that the District Court thus placed on §
242(d) was derived from a consideration of its relation to the
entire statutory scheme of deportation of which it is a part. The
court below was further guided by the principle that requires
courts, when construing statutes, to avoid constitutional
doubts.
"To hold that the statute intended to give an official the
unlimited right to
Page 353 U. S. 198
subject a man to criminal penalties for failure to answer
absolutely any question the official may decide to ask would raise
very serious constitutional questions."
Id., 140 F. Supp. at 821.
The Government does not support the questions put to the alien
on the basis of the construction that the District Court placed
upon § 242(d). This construction authorizes all questions
reasonably appropriate to keep the Attorney General advised
regarding the continued availability for departure of a deportable
alien. The Government contends that the District Court misconceived
the scope of the statute. It points to what it characterizes as
"the eloquent breadth" of clause (3), whereby the alien is to give
"such other information, whether or not related to the foregoing,
as the Attorney General may deem fit and proper." This, says the
Government, establishes a requirement "in the broadest possible
statutory terms for the furnishing of information by the alien."
And this view, it maintains, fits into the statutory scheme. In the
circumstances defined by § 242(a), an alien may be detained pending
determination of deportability, and § 242(c) authorizes such
detention for six months after the alien has been found deportable.
So, the Government argues, § 242(d), though it does not authorize
detention after six months, is an attempt to accomplish in a
modified form the ends that would justify detention in the earlier
stages of the deportation process. Our decision in
Carlson v.
Landon, 342 U. S. 524, is
heavily invoked. If, so the argument runs, detention of active
alien Communists pending deportation hearings was sustainable under
§ 242(a), the national interest in avoiding recurrence of past
Communist activity for which appellee is being deported should at
least require him to answer questions regarding any present
Communist relationships. For this view of the purpose of
supervision, support is found in two other statutory
provisions:
Page 353 U. S. 199
§ 242(e), making an alien's willful failure to leave the country
a felony but providing for suspension of sentence and release of
the alien upon judicial consideration,
inter alia, of the
effect of release upon the national security and the likelihood of
resumption of conduct that serves as a basis for deportation, and
the recital in § 2(13) of the Internal Security Act of 1950
that
"numerous aliens who have been found to be deportable, many of
whom are in the subversive, criminal, or immoral classes . . . ,
are free to roam the country at will without supervision or
control."
64 Stat. 987.
The language of § 242(d)(3), if read in isolation and literally,
appears to confer upon the Attorney General unbounded authority to
require whatever information he deems desirable of aliens whose
deportation has not been effected within six months after it has
been commanded. The Government itself shrinks from standing on the
breadth of these words. But once the tyranny of literalness is
rejected, all relevant considerations for giving a rational content
to the words become operative. A restrictive meaning for what
appear to be plain words may be indicated by the Act as a whole, by
the persuasive gloss of legislative history, or by the rule of
constitutional adjudication, relied on by the District Court, that
such a restrictive meaning must be given if a broader meaning would
generate constitutional doubts.
The preoccupation of the entire subsection of which clause (3)
is a part is certainly with availability for deportation. Clause
(1) requires the alien's periodic appearance for the purpose of
identification, and clause (2), dealing with medical and
psychiatric examination when necessary, clearly is directed to the
same end, and the "reasonable written restrictions on [the alien's]
conduct or activities" authorized by clause (4) have an implied
scope to be gathered from the subject matter,
i.e., the
object of the statute as a whole. Moreover, this limitation
Page 353 U. S. 200
of "reasonableness" imposed by clause (4) upon the Attorney
General's power to restrict suggests that, if we are to harmonize
the various provisions of the section, the same limitation must
also be read into the Attorney General's seemingly limitless power
to question under clause (3). For assuredly Congress did not
authorize that official to elicit information that could not serve
as a basis for confining an alien's activities. Nowhere in § 242(d)
is there any suggestion of a power of broad supervision like unto
that over a probationer. When Congress did want to deal with the
far-flung interest of national security or the general undesirable
conduct of aliens, it gave clear indication of this purpose, as in
§ 242(e). In providing for the release of aliens convicted of
willful failure to depart, that subsection specifically requires
courts to inquire into both the effect of the alien's release upon
national security and the likelihood of his continued undesirable
conduct.
The legislative history likewise counsels confinement of the
mere words to the general purpose of the legislative scheme of
which clause (d) is a part, namely, the actual deportation of
certain undesirable classes of aliens. Section 242(d), as it was
reported by the House Judiciary Committee and passed by the House
in 1949, was in its present state in all but one significant
respect. It provided for indefinite detention of any alien who
willfully failed to comply with the regulations, to appear, to give
information, or to submit to medical examination, or who knowingly
gave false information or violated a reasonable restriction upon
his activity. H.R.Rep. No. 1192, 81st Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 2-3.
The report of the House Committee, although in several places
focusing only upon availability for deportation, does indicate
concern over the threat to the national interest represented by
undesirable but undeportable aliens. The Senate Judiciary
Committee, while sharing the desire of the House
Page 353 U. S. 201
to control the activities of such aliens, substituted for the
House bill's detention provision the imposition of criminal
penalties for failure to comply with the conditions of supervision.
The report of the Senate Committee significantly states the reason
for the change: "This provision in the bill, as it passed the House
of Representatives, appears to present a constitutional question."
S.Rep. No. 2239, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., p. 8. This history, although
suggesting a desire to exercise continuing control over the
activities as well as the availability of aliens whose deportation
had been ordered but not effected, shows a strong congressional
unwillingness to enact legislation that may subject the Attorney
General's supervisory powers to constitutional challenge.
Acceptance of the interpretation of § 242(d) urged by the
Government would raise doubts as to the statute's validity. By
construing the Act to confer power on the Attorney General and his
agents to inquire into matters that go beyond assuring an alien's
availability for deportation, we would, at the very least, open up
the question of the extent to which an administrative officer may
inhibit deportable aliens from renewing activities that subjected
them to deportation.
See 70 Harv.L.Rev. 718. This is not
Carlson v. Landon, supra, where the question was whether
an alien could be detained during the customarily brief period
pending determination of deportability. Contrariwise, and as the
Senate and House Committees recognized in passing on § 242(d),
supervision of the undeportable alien may be a lifetime problem. In
these circumstances, issues touching liberties that the
Constitution safeguards, even for an alien "person," would fairly
be raised on the Government's view of the statute.
The path of constitutional concern in this situation is
clear.
"When the validity of an act of the Congress is drawn in
question, and even if a serious doubt of
Page 353 U. S. 202
constitutionality is raised, it is a cardinal principle that
this Court will first ascertain whether a construction of the
statute is fairly possible by which the question may be
avoided."
Crowell v. Benson, 285 U. S. 22,
285 U. S. 62.
See also cases cited in the concurring opinion of Mr.
Justice Brandeis in
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley
Authority, 297 U. S. 288,
297 U. S. 348,
note 8.
Section 242(d) is part of a legislative scheme designed to
govern and to expedite the deportation of undesirable aliens, and
clause (3) must be placed in the context of that scheme. As the
District Court held and as our own examination of the Act confirms,
it is a permissible, and therefore an appropriate, construction to
limit the statute to authorizing all questions reasonably
calculated to keep the Attorney General advised regarding the
continued availability for departure of aliens whose deportation is
overdue. Accordingly, the judgment of the District Court is
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITTAKER took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
*
"(a) Q. Do you subscribe to the Daily Worker?"
"(b) Q. Mr. Witkovich, can you read in any other language other
than Solvene and English?"
"(c) Q. Since the order of supervision was entered on March 4,
1954, have you at any time visited the office of the 'Narodny
Glasnik,' 1413 West 18th Street, Chicago, Illinois?"
"(d) Q. Since the order of supervision was entered on March 4,
1954, Mr. Witkovich, have you ever visited the offices of the
Bohemian publication 'Nova Dova' or the Slovakian publication
'Ludovy Noviny,' 1510 West 18th Street, Chicago, Illinois?"
"(e) Q. Do you know the editor of the 'Narodni Glasnik'?"
"(f) Q. Do you know Leo Fisher?"
"(g) Q. Do you know Anton Minerich?"
"(h) Q. Do you know Nick Rajkovich?"
"(i) Q. Do you know Arsenio Bartl?"
"(j) Q. Do you know John Zuskar?"
"(k) Q. Do you know Calvin Brook?"
"(l) Q. Since the order of deportation was entered in your case
on June 25, 1953, have you attended any meeting of the Communist
Party of the U.S.A.?"
"(m) Q. Since the order of supervision was entered on March 4,
1954, have you attended any meeting of any organization other than
the singing club?"
"(n) Q. Have you addressed any lodges of the Slovene National
Benefit Society requesting their aid in your case, since the order
of deportation was entered June 25, 1953?"
"(o) Q. Have you distributed petitions or leaflets published by
the Slovene National Benefit Society seeking aid for you, in your
behalf, in your deportation case since the order of deportation was
entered June 25, 1953?"
"(p) Q. Since the order of supervision, have you attended any
meetings or lectures at the Peoples Auditorium, 2457 West Chicago
Avenue, Chicago, Illinois?"
"(q) Q. Since the order of supervision was entered against you,
have you attended any meetings or socials at the Chopin Cultural
Center, 1547 North Leavitt Street, Chicago?"
"(r) Q. Have you attended any movies, since your order of
supervision was entered, at the Cinema Annex, 3210 West Madison
Street, Chicago?"
"(s) Q. Are you acquainted with an individual named Irving
Franklin?"
"(t) Q. Are you now a member of the Communist Party of
U.S.A.?"
"(u) Q. Are you now or have you ever been a member of the
Slovene American National Council?"
"(v) Q. Are you now or have you ever been a member of the United
Committee of South Slavic Americans?"
MR. JUSTICE CLARK, with whom MR. JUSTICE BURTON joins,
dissenting.
The Congress has authorized the Attorney General to retain an
alien in custody during the pendency of deportation proceedings. 66
Stat. 208, 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a). This Court approved such custody in
Carlson v. Landon, 342 U. S. 524
(1952). The Congress has also authorized the Attorney General to
retain an alien in custody for six months subsequent to a final
order of deportation within which to "effect the alien's
departure." 66 Stat. 210, 8 U.S.C. § 1252(c). The section here in
question further declares that an alien under a final order of
Page 353 U. S. 203
deportation for over six months "shall, pending eventual
deportation, be subject to supervision under regulations prescribed
by the Attorney General." 64 Stat. 1011, as amended, 8 U.S.C.
(Supp. IV) § 1252(d). The Attorney General has implemented this
provision by a regulation requiring the alien,
inter alia,
to
"[g]ive information under oath as to his nationality,
circumstances, habits, associations and activities, and other
information whether or not related to the foregoing as may be
deemed fit and proper."
8 CFR § 242.3(c)(3). This language was taken from subsection (3)
of 8 U.S.C. § 1252(d), the source of the Attorney General's power
of supervision. But today the Court has denied the Attorney General
the right to question the deportee in regard to activities in
conjunction with the deportee's prior conduct on which the
deportation order was based. By its interpretation, the Court has
deleted the crux of this subsection from the Act and limited this
phase of the Attorney General's "supervision" of aliens under final
deportation order for over six months solely to interrogation
relevant to the availability of the alien for deportation. In this
respect, the construction places an alien who has been under a
final order of deportation for more than six months in a more
favorable position than one who is under no order at all. Other
aliens are obliged to report to the Attorney General when called
upon to do so. Indeed, they must testify or claim their privilege.
No privilege was claimed here. The Congress could not have intended
the anomalous result reached today, one which is entirely foreign
to its over-all plan of control over resident aliens. For the power
of the Attorney General over aliens generally,
see 66
Stat. 223-225, 8 U.S.C. § § 1301-1306.
The majority reasons that the entire subsection of which clause
(3) is a part is preoccupied with an alien's availability for
deportation. We believe, however, that "the danger to the public
safety of [the alien's] presence
Page 353 U. S. 204
within the community,"
United States ex rel. Potash v.
District Director of Immigration and Naturalization, 169 F.2d
747, 751 (1948), was the basis on which the Congress placed this
power with the Attorney General. In short, "the alien's anticipated
personal conduct . . . [based on his past action] must be
considered."
See the dissenting opinion in
Carlson v.
Landon, supra, at
342 U. S.
563-564. And so here, highly relevant to the decision
regarding any additional supervision that is to be placed over
appellee, or the removal of any prior supervision, is information
as to whether he has resumed his past activities in the Communist
Party. Yet the Court does not allow inquiry into this and related
areas unless it is necessary to determine appellee's availability
for deportation. The Attorney General is thereby deprived of this
information vital to the exercise of his supervisory duties.
The statute was motivated by national security problems with
which the Congress felt impelled to deal. In § 1252(d), Congress
was not concerned with "actual deportation," but with that class of
deportees who could not be deported because no country would permit
them entrance. It believed that an alien finally ordered deported,
but who could no longer be held in custody pending eventual
effectuation of the order, should be under the supervision of the
Attorney General. All aliens, regardless of their status, are under
some supervision, and must answer inquires in respect to: (1) the
date and place of their entry into the United States; (2) the
activities in which they have been and intend to be engaged; (3)
the length of time they expect to remain in the United States; (4)
their police or criminal record, if any; and (5) such additional
matters as may be prescribed. 66 Stat. 224, 8 U.S.C. § 1304(a). In
addition, all aliens must register [
Footnote 1] and be
Page 353 U. S. 205
fingerprinted, 66 Stat. 224, 8 U.S.C. § 1302; they must notify
the Attorney General of their address annually, and any change must
be filed within 10 days thereof, 66 Stat. 225, 8 U.S.C. § 1305.
Criminal penalties are imposed for willful failure to comply with
any of these registration provisions, 66 Stat. 225, 8 U.S.C. §
1306. Congress thought that deportees should have closer
supervision than other aliens. As the Court indicated in
Carlson v. Landon, supra, at
342 U. S. 538,
"aliens arrested for deportation would have opportunities to hurt
the United States. . . ." Deportees have a stronger motivation for
carrying on subversive activities than other persons, and are more
likely to adopt old habits, return to old haunts, and resume old
activities. Since 1939, Congress had been considering the
tightening of controls over such aliens. Even then, a bill
introduced in Congress referred to "the likelihood of the alien's
resuming the course of conduct which made him deportable." H.R.
5643, 76th Cong., 1st Sess.; 84 Cong.Rec. 5179. In the Eighty-first
Congress, a House Committee declared in comment on its bill which
contained a provision similar to that here involved,
"The situation has now become so serious . . . that the
committee feels that the enactment of legislation of this type is a
necessity not only to the proper administration of the immigration
laws, but from the standpoint of the national security of the
United States."
H.R.Rep. No. 1192, 81st Cong., 1st Sess. 8. Before the
presidential veto of the proposed Internal Security Act of 1950,
H.R. 9490, 81st Cong., 2d Sess., of which this provision was a
part,
Page 353 U. S. 206
but to which the President expressed no opposition on
constitutional grounds, [
Footnote
2] a substitute bill had been offered in the Senate. [
Footnote 3] This proposal contained the
identical language which this Court now reads out of the Act,
i.e., requiring the alien to give
"information under oath as to his nationality, circumstances,
habits, associations, and activities, and such other information,
whether or not related to the foregoing, as the Attorney General
may deem fit and proper."
While this substitute bill was not enacted, the same language
was included within the present Act, showing that the section here
involved has long been acceptable to all sides. In view of the
legislative history of the forerunners of the present provision, it
is surprising that the Court now reads out of the Act the identical
language which has repeatedly been included by the Congress. In so
doing, the Court deprives the Attorney General of a power of
supervision over deportees that he possesses and exercises every
day over other aliens not under deportation orders.
The Court takes the position that any construction other than
that today adopted
"would, at the very least, open up the question of the extent to
which an administrative officer may inhibit deportable aliens from
renewing activities that subjected them to deportation."
But no such question is involved here. As the trial judge puts
the issue, it is whether the Congress may constitutionally
Page 353 U. S. 207
give the Attorney General "the unlimited right to subject a man
to criminal penalties for failure to answer absolutely and
question. . . ." 140 F. Supp. at 821. There is nothing in the
record to indicate that the Attorney General attempted further to
"inhibit" the appellee "from renewing activities that subjected
[him] to deportation." It may be that the Attorney General would
have tried further to "inhibit" appellee if the answers put to him
had indicated any necessity therefor in the interest of national
security. But that stage was never reached. All the Attorney
General undertook was to question appellee. He got no answers. And
the Court, in affirming, prevents the Attorney General from
obtaining any answers to the questions. It is for this reason that
we dissent. The scope of the Attorney General's right to inquiry is
the sole issue here. The Congress, beyond any question, gave the
Attorney General the authority he exercised. Whether it placed
further authority in his hands to "inhibit" the alien's activities
is not involved. We therefore see no necessity of invoking the rule
of avoidance of constitutional questions. There are none to avoid,
for the Attorney General clearly has the right to question as to
activities indicated by past conduct. It will be soon enough to
pass on other supervisory powers when they are here.
However, since the majority has enlarged the issue to include
the power to restrict the alien's activities, we feel it necessary
to comment thereon. We believe that the purpose of the Act was to
prevent a deportable alien from using the period of his further
residence for the continuation of subversive, criminal, immoral, or
other undesirable activities which formed the basis of his ordered
deportation. This is a part of the "congressional plan" with
reference to control of subversive activities within the United
States.
Pennsylvania v. Nelson, 350 U.
S. 497,
350 U. S.
503-504 (1956). Several thousand alien Communists who
have
Page 353 U. S. 208
been finally ordered deported will from now on, due to the
Court's decision today, be under virtually no statutory
supervision. Still they will, in all probability, remain among us,
for neither they nor the countries of which they are nationals wish
them to leave. To their countries, they are potential agents. The
House Committee on the Judiciary recognized this danger in its
report on facilitating the deportation of aliens. H.R.Rep. No.
1192, 81st Cong., 1st Sess. 8-13. Case histories set out in this
report indicate that aliens ordered deported were refused visas by
their native countries so that they might remain in the United
States and carry on the very activities for which they were ordered
deported.
See also Hearings before the Senate Subcommittee
on Immigration and Naturalization of the Committee on the Judiciary
on S.1832, 81st Cong., 1st Sess. 323. Were the deportee to cease
the activity, no doubt his native land would issue the requisite
visa and deal with him when he was returned.
In our view, the power of the Congress with respect to aliens is
exceedingly broad. Nothing points this out more forcibly than our
own cases. Congress may expel any noncitizen it may determine is
undesirable. The power given here is merely supplemental to that of
expulsion, and is a necessary concomitant thereof under the
circumstances here presented. It gives to the Attorney General
supervision of alien deportees whose past record discloses
activities dangerous to our people. The appellee does not contest
the charge as to his past activities. As we see it, the Congress
has merely provided limited supervision which might prevent the
alien from resuming the activity which brought on his ordered
deportation. It may turn out that further limited supervisory
precautions need not be exercised over appellee. However, we are in
no position to know. The Attorney General himself does not know,
because he was prevented
Page 353 U. S. 209
from requiring the alien to give him the information. It is
vital to effective supervision by the Attorney General for him to
have the information he sought here. We believe that the
counterbalancing necessity of preventing further detrimental
conduct, or at least providing the authorities charged with the
internal security of our country with some warning signal of it,
substantially outweighs "issues touching liberties" which might be
raised by the interrogation. Like
"the police establishment of fire lines during a fire . . . ,
the validity of the restraints . . . depends on all the conditions
which obtain at the time. . . ."
Hirabayashi v. United States, 320 U. S.
81,
320 U. S. 99
(1943).
To us, jailing alien deportees on the basis of our safety
pending deportation proceedings as well as for six months
thereafter, admittedly valid, is largely futile if the Attorney
General cannot subsequently supervise them effectively. Certainly
the Congress intended no such stultification.
We regret that the Court has used the rule of avoidance of
constitutional issues to strip the Attorney General of this
important power so necessary in the performance of his duty to
protect our internal security.
[
Footnote 1]
The alien registration form includes a long series of questions
requiring answer under oath by the alien. It covers virtually every
type of question involved here, except those directed at whether
the appellee knew a specific person. One of the questions requires
disclosure of the alien's participation in clubs, organizations, or
societies; another is directed at any criminal convictions of the
alien either in or outside of the United States; still another
inquires as to the alien's affiliation or activity in organizations
influencing or furthering in any way the political activities,
public relations, or public policy of a foreign government.
[
Footnote 2]
The President, in his message to the Congress explaining his
veto of the Internal Security Act of 1950, stated that he would "be
glad to approve" § 23, the forerunner of the section here involved,
"although the language of [§ 23] is in some respects weaker than is
desirable." H.R.Doc. No. 708, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. 3.
[
Footnote 3]
S. 4130, 81st Cong., 2d Sess. This substitute was proposed by
Senators Benton, Douglas, Graham, Humphrey, Kefauver, Lehman, and
the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, Senator Kilgore.
For a discussion of the effect of the bill on the problem here
presented,
see the remarks of Senator Humphrey at 96
Cong.Rec. 14486.