Appellant, who was born in Germany, came to this country with
her parents as a child and acquired derivative American
citizenship. She lived abroad since graduation from college, became
married to a German national, and, except for two visits back to
this country, has lived in Germany for the past eight years. The
State Department denied her a passport, certifying that she had
lost her American citizenship under § 352(a)(1) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act of 1952, which provides that a naturalized
citizen, with exceptions not material here, loses citizenship by
continuous residence for three years in the country of origin. She
thereupon sued in the District Court for a declaratory judgment
that she is still an American citizen and has appealed from that
court's adverse decision.
Held by a majority of this Court, that § 352(a)(1) is
discriminatory, and therefore violative of due process under the
Fifth Amendment of the Constitution, since no restriction against
the length of foreign residence applies to native-born citizens,
though some members of that majority believe that Congress lacks
constitutional power to effect involuntary divestiture of
citizenship. Pp.
377 U. S.
164-169.
218 F.
Supp. 302, reversed.
Page 377 U. S. 164
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Immigration and Nationality' Act of 1952, 66 Stat. 163, 269,
8 U.S.C. §§ 1101, 1484, provides by § 352:
"(a) A person who has become a national by naturalization shall
lose his nationality by --"
"(1)
having a continuous residence for three years in
the territory of a foreign state of which he was formerly a
national or in which the place of his birth is situated, except as
provided in section 353 of this title, [
Footnote 1] whether such residence commenced before or
after the effective date of this Act. . . ."
(Italics added.)
Appellant, a German national by birth, came to this country with
her parents when a small child, acquired derivative American
citizenship at the age of 16 through her mother, and, after
graduating from Smith College, went abroad for postgraduate work.
In 1956, while in France, she became engaged to a German national,
returned here briefly, and departed for Germany, where she married
and where she has resided ever since. Since her marriage, she has
returned to this country on two occasions for visits. Her husband
is a lawyer in Cologne, where appellant has been living. Two of her
four sons, born in Germany, are dual nationals, having acquired
American citizenship under § 301(a)(7) of the 1952 Act. The
American citizenship of the other two turns on this case. In 1959,
the United States denied her a passport, the State Department
certifying that she had lost her American citizenship under §
352(a)(1), quoted above. Appellant sued for a declaratory judgment
that she still is an American citizen. The District Court held
against her, 218 F.Supp.
Page 377 U. S. 165
302, and the case is here on appeal. [
Footnote 2] 375 U.S. 893.
The Solicitor General makes his case along the following
lines.
Over a period of many years, this Government has been seriously
concerned by special problems engendered when naturalized citizens
return for a long period to the countries of their former
nationalities. It is upon this premise that the argument derives
that Congress, through its power over foreign relations, has the
power to deprive such citizens of their citizenship.
Other nations, it is said, frequently attempt to treat such
persons as their own citizens, thus embroiling the United States in
conflicts when it attempts to afford them protection. It is argued
that expatriation is an alternative to withdrawal of diplomatic
protection. It is also argued that Congress reasonably can protect
against the tendency of three years' residence in a naturalized
citizen's former homeland to weaken his or her allegiance to this
country. The argument continues that it is not invidious
discrimination for Congress to treat such naturalized citizens
differently from the manner in which it treats native-born
citizens, and that Congress has the right to legislate with respect
to the general class without regard to each factual violation. It
is finally argued that Congress here, unlike the situation in
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martnez, 372 U.
S. 144, was aiming only to regulate, and not to punish,
and that what Congress did had been deemed appropriate not only by
this country, but by many others, and is in keeping with
traditional American concepts of citizenship.
We start from the premise that the rights of citizenship of the
native born and of the naturalized person are of the same dignity,
and are coextensive. The only difference drawn by the Constitution
is that only the "natural born" citizen is eligible to be
President. Art. II, § 1.
Page 377 U. S. 166
While the rights of citizenship of the native born derive from §
1 of the Fourteenth Amendment and the rights of the naturalized
citizen derive from satisfying, free of fraud, the requirements set
by Congress, the latter, apart from the exception noted,
"becomes a member of the society, possessing all the rights of a
native citizen, and standing, in the view of the constitution, on
the footing of a native. The constitution does not authorize
Congress to enlarge or abridge those rights. The simple power of
the national Legislature is to prescribe a uniform rule of
naturalization, and the exercise of this power exhausts it so far
as respects the individual."
Osborn v. Bank of United
States, 9 Wheat. 738,
22 U. S. 827.
And see Luria v. United States, 231 U. S.
9,
231 U. S. 22;
United States v. MacIntosh, 283 U.
S. 605,
283 U. S. 624;
Knauer v. United States, 328 U. S. 654,
328 U. S.
658.
Views of the Justices have varied when it comes to the problem
of expatriation.
There is one view that the power of Congress to take away
citizenship for activities of the citizen is nonexistent absent
expatriation by the voluntary renunciation of nationality and
allegiance.
See Perez v. Brownell, 356 U. S.
44,
356 U. S. 79
(dissenting opinion of JUSTICES BLACK and DOUGLAS);
Trop v.
Dulles, 356 U. S. 86
(opinion by CHIEF JUSTICE WARREN). That view has not yet commanded
a majority of the entire Court. Hence, we are faced with the issue
presented and decided in
Perez v. Brownell, supra, i.e.,
whether the present Act violates due process. That, in turn, comes
to the question put in the following words in
Perez:
"Is the means, withdrawal of citizenship, reasonably calculated
to effect the end that is within the power of Congress to achieve,
the avoidance of embarrassment in the conduct of our foreign
relations . . . ?"
356 U.S. at
356 U. S.
60.
Page 377 U. S. 167
In that case, where an American citizen voted in a foreign
election, the answer was in the affirmative. In the present case,
the question is whether the same answer should be given merely
because the naturalized citizen lived in her former homeland
continuously for three years. We think not.
Speaking of the provision in the Nationality Act of 1940, which
was the predecessor of § 352(a)(1), Chairman Dickstein of the House
said that the bill would "relieve this country of the
responsibility of those who reside in foreign lands and only claim
citizenship when it serves their purpose." 86 Cong.Rec. 11944. And
the Senate Report on the 1940 bill stated:
"These provisions for loss of nationality by residence abroad
would greatly lessen the task of the United States in protecting
through the Department of State nominal citizens of this country
who are abroad but whose real interests, as shown by the conditions
of their foreign stay, are not in this country."
S.Rep. No. 2150, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., p. 4.
As stated by Judge Fahy, dissenting below, such legislation,
touching as it does on the "most precious right" of citizenship
(
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, 372 U.S. at
372 U. S.
159), would have to be justified under the foreign
relations power
"by some more urgent public necessity than substituting
administrative convenience for the individual right of which the
citizen is deprived."
218 F.
Supp. 302, 320.
In
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, supra, a divided Court
held that it was beyond the power of Congress to deprive an
American of his citizenship automatically and without any prior
judicial or administrative proceedings because he left the United
States in time of war to evade or avoid training or service in the
Armed Forces. The Court held that it was an unconstitutional use
of
Page 377 U. S. 168
congressional power because it took away citizenship as
punishment for the offense of remaining outside the country to
avoid military service without, at the same time, affording him the
procedural safeguards granted by the Fifth and Sixth Amendments.
Yet even the dissenters, who felt that flight or absence to evade
the duty of helping to defend the country in time of war amounted
to manifest nonallegiance, made a reservation. JUSTICE STEWART
stated:
"Previous decisions have suggested that congressional exercise
of the power to expatriate may be subject to a further
constitutional restriction -- a limitation upon the kind of
activity which may be made the basis of denationalization.
Withdrawal of citizenship is a drastic measure. Moreover, the power
to expatriate endows government with authority to define and to
limit the society which it represents and to which it is
responsible."
"This Court has never held that Congress' power to expatriate
may be used unsparingly in every area in which it has general power
to act. Our previous decisions upholding involuntary
denationalization all involved conduct inconsistent with undiluted
allegiance to this country."
372 U.S. at
372 U. S.
214.
This statute proceeds on the impermissible assumption that
naturalized citizens as a class are less reliable, and bear less
allegiance to this country than do the native born. This is an
assumption that is impossible for us to make. Moreover, while the
Fifth Amendment contains no equal protection clause, it does forbid
discrimination that is "so unjustifiable as to be violative of due
process."
Bolling v. Sharpe, 347 U.
S. 497,
347 U. S. 499.
A native-born citizen is free to reside abroad indefinitely without
suffering loss of citizenship. The discrimination aimed at
naturalized citizens drastically limits their rights to live
Page 377 U. S. 169
and work abroad in a way that other citizens may. It creates
indeed a second-class citizenship. Living abroad, whether the
citizen be naturalized or native born, is no badge of lack of
allegiance, and in no way evidences a voluntary renunciation of
nationality and allegiance. It may indeed be compelled by family,
business, or other legitimate reasons.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN took no part in the decision of this
case.
[
Footnote 1]
The exceptions relate,
inter alia, to residence abroad
in the employment of the United States, and are not relevant
here.
[
Footnote 2]
For other aspects of the case,
see 372 U.S.
372 U. S. 224.
MR. JUSTICE CLARK, whom MR. JUSTICE HARLAN and MR. JUSTICE WHITE
join, dissenting.
The appellant, a derivative citizen since 1950, has voluntarily
absented herself from the United States for over a decade, living
in her native Germany for the last eight years. In 1956, she
married a German citizen there; she has since borne four (German
national) sons there, and now says she has no intention to return
to the United States.
I, too, sympathize with the appellant for the dilemma in which
she has placed herself through her marriage to a foreign citizen.
But the policy of our country is involved here, not just her
personal consideration. I cannot say that Congress made her a
second-class citizen by enacting § 352(a)(1) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act of 1952, 66 Stat. 269, 8 U.S.C. § 1484, placing a
"badge of lack of allegiance" upon her because she chose to live
permanently abroad in her native land. If there is such a
citizenship or badge, appellant, not the Congress, created it
through her own actions. All that Congress did was face up to
problems of the highest national importance by authorizing
expatriation, the only adequate remedy. Appellant, with her eyes
open to the result, chose by her action to renounce her derivative
citizenship. Our cases have so interpreted such action for half
Page 377 U. S. 170
a century.
Mackenzie v. Hare, 239 U.
S. 299 (1915). As applied to her, I cannot say, as does
the Court, that the command of Congress in § 352(a)(1) is
discriminatory, and therefore violative of due process.
Mackenzie decided just the contrary, upholding a statute
which provided that, although an American male did not suffer loss
of citizenship during marriage to a foreign citizen, an American
woman did. Here, the appellant had statutory notice of the
requirement; she voluntarily acted in disregard of it for eight
years, intends to continue to do so, and, in my view, has therefore
renounced her citizenship.
I
There is nothing new about the practice of expatriating
naturalized citizens who voluntarily return to their native lands
to reside. It has a long-established and widely accepted history.
Our concept of citizenship was inherited from England, and,
accordingly, was based on the principle that rights conferred by
naturalization were subject to the conditions reserved in the
grant.
See Calvin's Case, 7 Co.Rep. 1 a, 77 Eng.Rep. 377
(1608). It was with this in mind that the Founders incorporated
Art. I, § 8, cl. 4, into our Constitution. This clause grants
Congress the power "[t]o establish an uniform Rule of
Naturalization. . . ." And, as Madison himself said, these words
meant that the
"Natl. Legislre. is to have the right of regulating
naturalization, and can by virtue thereof fix different periods of
residence as conditions of enjoying different privileges of
Citizenship. . . ."
II Farrand, The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787, 235
(1911). This was confirmed during the debate in the First Congress
on the first naturalization bill when Alexander White of Virginia
suggested that, if the residence requirement were stricken,
"another clause ought to be added, depriving [naturalized]
persons of the privilege of citizenship, who left the country and
staid abroad for a given
Page 377 U. S. 171
length of time."
1 Annals of Congress 1110 (1790). James Madison answered:
"It may be a question of some nicety how far we can make our law
to admit an alien to the right of citizenship, step by step; but
there is no doubt we may, and ought to require residence as an
essential."
Id. at 1112. The records show not only that it was the
consensus of the members of the House that step-by-step
naturalization was permissible, but also that not a word was spoken
against the Madison statement that required residence was
constitutionally allowed. This debate points up the fact that
distinctions between naturalized and native-born citizens were
uppermost in the minds of the Framers of the Constitution.
The right to renounce citizenship acquired at birth was a
serious question during the War of 1812. In 1814, the Government,
through Secretary of State Monroe, circulated an anonymous
pamphlet, A Treatise on Expatriation, which declared that
"[e]xpatriation . . . is nothing more than emigration, with an
intention to settle permanently abroad." At 21. Since that time, it
has traditionally been our policy to withdraw diplomatic protection
from naturalized citizens domiciled in their native states.
See, e.g., letter from Secretary of State Adams to Shaler
(1818), III Moore, Digest of International Law 735-736 (1906);
letter from United States Minister to Prussia Wheaton to Knoche
(1840), S.Exec.Doc. No. 38, 36th Cong., 1st Sess., 6-7; letter from
Secretary of State Fish to Wing (1871), II Wharton, Digest of
International Law of the United States 361-362 (2d ed. 1887);
communication from Secretary of State Hay to American diplomats
(1899), III Moore,
supra, at 950. During all this period,
the United States protected all citizens abroad except naturalized
ones residing in their
Page 377 U. S. 172
native lands. In 1868, the Bancroft treaty was negotiated with
the North German Confederation. It provided that each country would
recognize naturalization of its native-born citizens by the other
country. It further provided that,
"[i]f a German naturalized in America renews his residence in
North Germany, without the intent to return to America, he shall be
held to have renounced his naturalization . . . [and] [t]he intent
not to return may be held to exist when the person naturalized in
the one country resides more than two years in the other
country."
15 Stat. 615, 616-617. The United States has similar rights
under existing treaties with 20 countries. All of these rights will
be stricken by the decision today.
In the late nineteenth century, the Government adopted a
practice of informing naturalized citizens residing in their native
lands without intent to return that they had expatriated
themselves. The doctrine underlying this procedure has since been
followed on several occasions by commissions arbitrating the claims
of American citizens against foreign governments.
See III
Moore, History and Digest of International Arbitrations 2562-2572,
2579-2581 (1898).
As early as 1863, President Lincoln had suggested to Congress
that it
"might be advisable to fix a limit beyond which no citizen of
the United States residing abroad may claim the interposition of
his Government."
7 Messages and Papers of the Presidents 3382 (Richardson ed.
1897). However, no legislation was enacted in the nineteenth
century. In 1906, at the request of Congress, Secretary of State
Elihu Root appointed a "citizenship board" to consider this and
other related matters. The Board's report stated:
"Expressed renunciation of American citizenship is, however,
extremely rare; but the class of Americans who separate themselves
from the United States
Page 377 U. S. 173
and live within the jurisdiction of foreign countries is
becoming larger every year, and the question of their protection
causes increasing embarrassment to this Government in its relations
with foreign powers."
H.Doc. No. 326, 59th Cong., 2d Sess., 25.
The Board's recommendations led to the enactment of the
Nationality Act of 1907, 34 Stat. 1228. That Act included a
rebuttable presumption that residence for two years in the foreign
state from which a naturalized American citizen came constituted a
forfeiture of American citizenship. This provision proved difficult
to administer, and, in 1933, President Roosevelt appointed a
cabinet committee (the Secretary of State, the Attorney General and
the Secretary of Labor) to review the nationality laws. The
committee issued an extensive report and draft statute which
provided for expatriation of naturalized citizens who resided
continuously in their country of origin for three years. This
provision was incorporated into the Nationality Act of 1940, 54
Stat. 1137, 1170, and was carried over into the Immigration and
Nationality Act of 1952, modified so as not to require
"uninterrupted physical presence in a foreign state. . . ." 66
Stat. 163, 170, 269.
II
This historical background points up the international
difficulties which led to the adoption of the policy announced in §
352(a)(1). Residence of United States nationals abroad has always
been the source of much international friction, and the ruling
today will expand these difficulties tremendously. In 1962 alone,
919 persons were expatriated on the basis of residence in countries
of former nationality. The action of the Court in voiding these
expatriations will cause no end of difficulties, because thousands
of persons living throughout the world will come under the broad
sweep of the Court's
Page 377 U. S. 174
decision. It is estimated that several thousand of these
American expatriates reside in iron curtain countries alone.
Hearings before the Subcommittee on Constitutional Rights of the
Senate Committee on the Judiciary on S.Res. 49, 85th Cong., 1st
Sess., 133. The protection of American citizens abroad has always
been a most sensitive matter, and continues to be so today. This is
especially true in Belgium, Greece, France, Iran, Israel,
Switzerland and Turkey, because of their refusal to recognize the
expatriation of their nationals who acquire American citizenship.
The dissension that springs up in some of these areas adds
immeasurably to the difficulty.
Nor is the United States alone in making residence abroad cause
for expatriation. Although the number of years of foreign residence
varies from 2 to 10 years, 29 countries, including the United
Kingdom and 7 Commonwealth countries, expatriate naturalized
citizens residing abroad. Only four -- Czechoslovakia, Poland,
Afghanistan, and Yugoslavia -- apply expatriation to both
native-born and naturalized citizens. Even the United Nations
sanctions different treatment for naturalized and native-born
citizens; Article 7 of the United Nations Convention on the
Reduction of Statelessness provides that naturalized citizens who
reside abroad for seven years may be expatriated unless they
declare their intent to retain citizenship.
III
The decisions of this Court have consistently approved the power
of Congress to enact statutes similar to the one here stricken
down. Beginning with
Mackenzie v. Hare, supra, where the
Court sustained a statute suspending during coverture the
citizenship of a native-born American woman who married a
foreigner, the Court has invariably upheld expatriation when there
is a concurrence on the part of the citizen. In
Mackenzie,
exactly the
Page 377 U. S. 175
same argument was made that appellant urges here. Indeed, the
Court uses the same opinion in this case to strike down § 352(a)(1)
as was urged in
Mackenzie, namely,
Osborn v.
Bank of the United States, 9 Wheat. 738 (1824),
where Chief Justice Marshall remarked: "The constitution does not
authorize Congress to enlarge or abridge . . . [the] rights" of
citizens. At
22 U. S. 827.
But the Court in
Mackenzie, without dissent on the merits,
held:
"It may be conceded that a change of citizenship cannot be
arbitrarily imposed, that is, imposed without the concurrence of
the citizen. The law in controversy does not have that feature. It
deals with a condition voluntarily entered into [marriage], with
notice of the consequences. We concur with counsel that citizenship
is of tangible worth, and we sympathize with plaintiff in her
desire to retain it and in her earnest assertion of it. But there
is involved more than personal considerations. As we have seen, the
legislation was urged by conditions of national moment. . . . This
is no arbitrary exercise of government. It is one which, regarding
the international aspects, judicial opinion has taken for granted
would not only be valid, but demanded."
At
239 U. S.
311-312. And later, in
Savorgnan v. United
States, 338 U. S. 491
(1950), we approved the doctrine of
Mackenzie, supra. Six
years ago, in
Perez v. Brownell, 356 U. S.
44 (1958), we held that an American citizen voting in a
foreign election expatriated himself under § 401 of the Nationality
Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 1137. We again cited
Mackenzie,
supra, with approval, describing the central issue in
expatriation cases
"as importing not only something less than complete and
unswerving allegiance to the United States, but
Page 377 U. S. 176
also elements of an allegiance to another country in some
measure, at least, inconsistent with American citizenship."
At
356 U. S. 61.
The present case certainly meets this test. Appellant's prolonged
residence in her former homeland, the allegiance her husband and
children owe to it, and her intention not to return to the United
States all show some measure of allegiance to Germany. At the very
least, these factors show much less than "unswerving allegiance to
the United States," and are "inconsistent with American
citizenship." Indeed, in this respect, the instant case is much
stronger than
Mackenzie, supra.
The Court bases its decision on the fact that § 352(a)(1)
applies only to naturalized, not native-born, citizens. It says
this results in a discrimination in violation of the Due Process
Clause of the Fifth Amendment. I think that, in so doing, the Court
overspeaks itself. If Congress has the power to expatriate all
citizens, as the Court's position implies, it would certainly have
like power to enact a more narrowly confined statute aimed only at
those citizens whose presence in their native homelands can embroil
the United States in conflict with such countries. As the history
shows, the naturalized citizen who returns to his homeland is often
the cause of the difficulties. This fact is recognized by the
policy of this country and of 25 others, and by a United Nations
Convention as well. Through § 352(a)(1), Congress has restricted
its remedy to correction of the precise situations which have
caused the problem. In adopting the classification "naturalized
citizen," has the Congress acted with reason? Many times this Court
has upheld classifications of more significance.
Hirabayashi v.
United States, 320 U. S. 81 (1943)
(curfew imposed on persons of Japanese ancestry, regardless of
citizenship, in military areas during war);
Heim v.
McCall, 239 U. S. 175
(1915) (aliens not employable on public works projects);
Terrace
Page 377 U. S. 177
v. Thompson, 263 U. S. 197
(1923), and
Porterfield v. Webb, 263 U.
S. 225 (1923) (aliens who were ineligible for
citizenship not permitted to hold land for farming or other
purposes);
Ohio ex rel. Clarke v. Deckebach, 274 U.
S. 392 (1927) (aliens not permitted to conduct pool and
billiard rooms). As in
Mackenzie v. Hare, supra, these
cases were sustained on the basis that the classification was
reasonably devised to meet a demonstrated need. Distinctions
between native-born and naturalized citizens in connection with
foreign residence are drawn in the Constitution itself. Only a
native-born may become President, Art. II, § 1. A naturalized
citizen must wait seven years after he obtains his citizenship
before he is eligible to sit in the House, Art. I, § 2. For the
Senate, the waiting period is nine years, Art. I, § 3. Do these
provisions create a second-class citizenship, or place a "badge of
lack of allegiance" on those citizens? It has never been thought so
until today. As I have shown, in the debate in the First Congress
on the first naturalization bill, it was proposed to expatriate
naturalized citizens who resided abroad. During the entire
nineteenth century, only naturalized citizens were, as a general
rule, expatriated on the grounds of foreign residence, and, for
nearly 100 years, our naturalization treaties have contained
provisions authorizing the expatriation of naturalized citizens
residing in their native lands. Indeed, during the consideration of
the 1952 Act, not a single witness specifically objected to §
352(a)(1). Even the Americans for Democratic Action suggested that
it was a reasonable regulation. It is a little late for the Court
to decide in the face of this mountain of evidence that the section
has suddenly become so invidious that it must be stricken as
arbitrary under the Due Process Clause.
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, 372 U.
S. 144 (1963), is not apposite. There, expatriation for
the offense of remaining outside the country to avoid military
service
Page 377 U. S. 178
was held to constitute punishment without a criminal trial. The
majority here indicates that a reservation made by MR. JUSTICE
STEWART in his dissent in that case supports its present view. I
think not. Indeed, my Brother STEWART's conclusion that our cases
"upholding involuntary denationalization all involved conduct
inconsistent with undiluted allegiance to this country," at
372 U. S. 214,
fits this case like a glove. Here appellant has been away from the
country for 10 years, has married a foreign citizen, has
continuously lived with him in her native land for eight years, has
borne four sons who are German nationals, and admits that she has
no intention to return to this country. She wishes to retain her
citizenship on a standby basis for her own benefit in the event of
trouble. There is no constitutional necessity for Congress to
accede to her wish.
I dissent.