1. Section 22 of the Internal Security Act of 1950, providing
for the deportation of any alien who has been a member of the
Communist Party at any time after entry, is constitutional -- as
here applied to a resident alien shown to have been willingly a
member of the Communist Py from 1944 to 1946, although not shown to
have been aware of advocacy of violent overthrow of the Government.
Pp.
347 U. S.
523-532.
(a) In the light of the broad power of Congress over the
admission and deportation of aliens, it cannot be said that the
classification by Congress contained in § 22 is so baseless as to
be violative of due process, and therefore beyond the power of
Congress. Pp.
347 U. S.
529-532.
(b) The
ex post facto clause of the Constitution has no
application to deportation. P.
347 U. S.
531.
2. On the record in this case, the evidence adduced at the
administrative hearings was sufficient to support a finding that
petitioner, a resident alien, had been a "member" of the Communist
Party from 1944 to 1946, and therefore was deportable under § 22 of
the Internal Security Act of 1950 even though he may not have known
the full purposes or program of the Communist Party. P.
347 U. S.
523-529.
(a) The word "member" in § 22 cannot be construed as applying
only to aliens who joined the Communist Party fully conscious of
its advocacy of violence. Pp.
347 U. S.
525-529.
(b) It is enough that the alien joined the Party, aware that he
was joining an organization known as the Communist Party which
operates as a distinct and active political organization, and that
he did so of his own free will. P.
347 U. S.
528.
(c) The record in this case does not show a relationship to the
Party so nominal as not to make petitioner a "member" within the
terms of the Act. Pp.
347 U. S.
528-529.
201 F.2d 302 affirmed.
Page 347 U. S. 523
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petitioner, an alien of Mexican birth, first entered the United
States in 1918 and has since resided here with only occasional
brief visits to his native country. In the course of two
questionings, in March, 1948, by the Immigration and Naturalization
Service, he indicated that he had been a member of the Communist
Party from 1944 to 1946. In March of 1949, the petitioner was
served with a deportation warrant, and, on the same day, a
preliminary deportation hearing was held to acquaint him with the
charges against him -- that, after entry, he had become a member of
an organization which advocated the violent overthrow of the United
States Government, and of an organization which distributed
material so advocating. In December, 1950, petitioner had a
de
novo hearing at which the transcripts of all earlier
proceedings were, by agreement, made part of the record. Shortly
after the hearing commenced, the examining officer lodged the
additional charge against the petitioner that, after entry, he had
been a member of the Communist Party, membership in which had been
made a specific ground for deportation by the Internal Security Act
of 1950, 64 Stat. 987, 1006, 1008.
At this final hearing, the evidence against the petitioner was
derived from two principal sources. The first was
Page 347 U. S. 524
his own testimony during the two interrogations by immigration
authorities in 1948. During those interrogations, he had testified
as to the time and place he had joined the Communist Party, talked
freely about his membership in the Party, and indicated generally
that the distinction between the Party and other groups was clear
in his mind; he had explained that the reason he had not applied
for naturalization was that he feared his former Party membership
might be revealed, and had offered to make amends by rejoining the
Party as an undercover agent for the Government. At the hearing in
December of 1950, petitioner denied that, in his prior hearing, he
had admitted joining the Party, insisting that, at the time he,
thought the question related to labor union activities. In response
to a question whether he had ever attended meetings of the Spanish
Speaking Club, an alleged Communist Party unit, he replied: "The
only meetings I attended were relating to the Fair Employment
Practices Committee."
The second source of information was the testimony of a Mrs.
Meza to the effect that she had been present when petitioner was
elected an officer of the Spanish Speaking Club. Petitioner denied
the truth of this and other statements of Mrs. Meza calculated to
establish his active participation in the Communist Party, and
said: "She must have been under great strain to imagine all those
things."
The Hearing Officer found that petitioner had been a member of
the Communist Party from 1944 to 1946, and ordered him deported on
that specific ground. He did not deem it necessary to make findings
on the more general charges contained in the original warrant. The
Hearing Officer's decision was adopted by the Assistant
Commissioner, and an appeal was dismissed by the Board of
Immigration Appeals. A petition for a writ of habeas corpus was
denied by the District Court, and the dismissal
Page 347 U. S. 525
was affirmed by the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. 201
F.2d 302.
On certiorari, petitioner challenged the sufficiency of the
evidence to sustain deportation under § 22 of the Internal Security
Act of 1950, and attacked the validity of the Act as applied to
him. [
Footnote 1] These are
issues that raise the constitutionality and construction of the
1950 Act for the first time, and so we granted certiorari. 346 U.S.
812.
Petitioner's contention that there was not sufficient evidence
to support the deportation order brings into question the scope of
the word "member" as used by Congress in the enactment of 1950,
whereby it required deportation of any alien who at the time of
entering the United States, or at any time thereafter, was a
"member" of the Communist Party. [
Footnote 2] We are urged to construe the Act as providing
for the deportation only of those aliens who joined the Communist
Party fully conscious of its advocacy
Page 347 U. S. 526
of violence, and who, by so joining, thereby committed
themselves to this violent purpose.
But the Act itself appears to preclude an interpretation which
would require proof that an alien had joined the Communist Party
with full appreciation of its purposes and program. In the same
section under which the petitioner's deportation is sought here as
a former Communist Party member, there is another provision,
subsection (2)(E), which requires the exclusion or deportation of
aliens who are "members of or affiliated with" an organization
required to register under the Internal Security Act of 1950,
[
Footnote 3]
"unless such aliens establish that they did not know or have
reason to believe, at the time they became members of or affiliated
with such an organization . . . , that such organization was a
Communist organization."
64 Stat. 1007. In describing the purpose of this clause, Senator
McCarran, the Act's sponsor, said:
"Aliens who were innocent dupes when they joined a Communist
Front organization, as distinguished from a Communist political
organization [such as the Communist Party], would likewise not
ipso facto be excluded or deported."
96 Cong.Rec. 14180. In view of this specific escape provision
for members of other organizations, it seems clear that Congress
did not exempt "innocent" members of the Communist Party.
While the legislative history of the 1950 Act is not
illuminating on the scope of "member," considerable light was shed
by authoritative comment in the debates on the statute which
Congress enacted in 1951 to correct what it regarded as the unduly
expanded interpretation by the Attorney General of "member" under
the 1950 Act. 65
Page 347 U. S. 527
Stat. 28. The amendatory statute dealt with certain specific
situations which had been brought to the attention of Congress, and
provided that, where aliens had joined a proscribed organization
(1) when they were children, (2) by operation of law, or (3) to
obtain the necessities of life, they were not to be deemed to have
been "members." In explaining the measure, its sponsor, Senator
McCarran, stated repeatedly and emphatically that "member" was
intended to have the same meaning in the 1950 Act as had been given
it by the courts and administrative agencies since 1918, 97
Cong.Rec. 2368-2374.
See S.Rep. No. 111, 82d Cong., 1st
Sess. 2; H.R.Rep. No. 118, 82d Cong., 1st Sess. 2. To illustrate
what "member" did not cover, he inserted in the Record a memorandum
containing the following language quoted from
Colyer v.
Skeffington, 265 F. 17, 72:
"Congress could not have intended to authorize the wholesale
deportation of aliens who, accidentally, artificially, or
unconsciously in appearance only, are found to be members of or
affiliated with an organization of whose platform and purposes they
have no real knowledge."
97 Cong.Rec. 2373.
This memorandum, as a weighty gloss on what Congress wrote,
indicates that Congress did not provide that the three types of
situations it enumerated in the 1951 corrective statute should be
the only instances where membership is so nominal as to keep an
alien out of the deportable class. For example, the circumstances
under which the finding of membership was rejected in
Colyer v.
Skeffington, supra, would not have been covered by the
specific language in the 1951 Act. In that case, the aliens
passed
"from one organization into another, supposing the change to be
a mere change of name, and that, by assenting to membership in the
new organization, they had not really changed their affiliations or
political or economic activities."
265 F. at 72.
Page 347 U. S. 528
On the other hand, the repeated statements that "member" was to
have the same meaning under the 1950 Act as previously, preclude an
interpretation limited to those who were fully cognizant of the
Party's advocacy of violence. For the judicial and administrative
decisions prior to 1950 do not exempt aliens who joined an
organization unaware of its program and purposes.
See Kjar v.
Doak, 61 F.2d 566;
Greco v. Haff, 63 F.2d 863;
In
the matter of O___, 3. I. & N. Dec. 736.
It must be concluded, therefore, that support, or even
demonstrated knowledge, of the Communist Party's advocacy of
violence was not intended to be a prerequisite to deportation. It
is enough that the alien joined the Party, aware that he was
joining an organization known as the Communist Party which operates
as a distinct and active political organization, and that he did so
of his own free will. A fair reading of the legislation requires
that this scope be given to what Congress enacted in 1950, however
severe the consequences and whatever view one may have of the
wisdom of the means which Congress employed to meet its desired
end.
On this basis, the Hearing Officer's finding that petitioner
here was a "member" of the Communist Party must be sustained.
Petitioner does not claim that he joined the Party "accidentally,
artificially, or unconsciously in appearance only," to use the
words in Senator McCarran's memorandum. The two points on which he
bases his defense against the deportation order are, first, that he
did not join the Party at all, and that, if he did join,, he was
unaware of the Party's true purposes and program. The evidence
which must have been believed and relied upon for the Hearing
Officer's finding that petitioner was a "member" is that petitioner
was asked to join the Party by a man he assumed to be an organizer,
that he attended a number of meetings, and that he did not apply
for citizenship because he feared his Party
Page 347 U. S. 529
membership would become known to the authorities. In addition,
on the basis of Mrs. Meza's testimony, the Hearing Officer was
entitled to conclude that petitioner had been active in the Spanish
Speaking Club, and, indeed, one of its officers. Certainly there
was sufficient evidence to support a finding of membership. And
even if petitioner was unaware of the Party's advocacy of violence,
as he attempted to prove, the record does not show a relationship
to the Party so nominal as not to make him a "member" within the
terms of the Act.
This brings us to petitioner's constitutional attack on the
statute.
Harisiades v. Shaughnessy, 342 U.
S. 580, sustained the constitutionality of the Alien
Registration Act of 1940. 54 Stat. 670. That Act made membership in
an organization which advocates the overthrow of the Government of
the United States by force or violence a ground for deportation
notwithstanding that membership in such organization had terminated
before enactment of the statute. Under the 1940 Act, it was
necessary to prove in each case, where membership in the Communist
Party was made the basis of deportation, that the Party did, in
fact, advocate the violent overthrow of the government. The
Internal Security Act of 1950 dispensed with the need for such
proof. On the basis of extensive investigation, Congress made many
findings, including that in § 2(1) of the Act that the
"Communist movement . . . is a worldwide revolutionary movement
whose purpose it is, by treachery, deceit, infiltration into other
groups (governmental and otherwise), espionage, sabotage,
terrorism, and any other means deemed necessary, to establish a
Communist totalitarian dictatorship,"
and made present or former membership in the Communist Party, in
and of itself, a ground for deportation. Certainly, we cannot say
that this classification by Congress is so baseless as to be
violative of due process, and therefore beyond the power of
Congress.
Page 347 U. S. 530
In this respect -- the dispensation with proof of the character
of the Communist Party -- the present case goes beyond
Harisiades. But insofar as petitioner's constitutional
claim is based on his ignorance that the Party was committed to
violence, the same issue was before the Court with respect to at
least one of the aliens in
Harisiades.
The power of Congress over the admission of aliens and their
right to remain is necessarily very broad, touching as it does
basic aspects of national sovereignty, more particularly, our
foreign relations and the national security. Nevertheless,
considering what it means to deport an alien who legally became
part of the American community, and the extent to which, since he
is a "person," an alien has the same protection for his life,
liberty and property under the Due Process Clause as is afforded to
a citizen, deportation without permitting the alien to prove that
he was unaware of the Communist Party's advocacy of violence
strikes one with a sense of harsh incongruity. If due process bars
Congress from enactments that shock the sense of fair play -- which
is the essence of due process -- one is entitled to ask whether it
is not beyond the power of Congress to deport an alien who was
duped into joining the Communist Party, particularly when his
conduct antedated the enactment of the legislation under which his
deportation is sought. And this because deportation may, as this
Court has said in
Ng Fung Ho v. White, 259 U.
S. 276,
259 U. S. 284,
deprive a man "of all that makes life worth living"; and, as it has
said in
Fong Haw Tan v. Phelan, 333 U. S.
6,
333 U. S. 10;
"deportation is a drastic measure, and at times the equivalent of
banishment or exile".
In light of the expansion of the concept of substantive due
process as a limitation upon all powers of Congress, even the war
power,
see Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse
Co., 251 U. S. 146,
251 U. S. 155,
much could be said for the view, were we writing on a clean slate,
that the Due Process
Page 347 U. S. 531
Clause qualifies the scope of political discretion heretofore
recognized as belonging to Congress in regulating the entry and
deportation of aliens. And since the intrinsic consequences of
deportation are so close to punishment for crime, it might fairly
be said also that the
ex post facto Clause, even though
applicable only to punitive legislation, [
Footnote 4] should be applied to deportation.
But the slate is not clean. As to the extent of the power of
Congress under review, there is not merely "a page of history,"
New York Trust Co. v. Eisner, 256 U.
S. 345,
256 U. S. 349,
but a whole volume. Policies pertaining to the entry of aliens and
their right to remain here are peculiarly concerned with the
political conduct of government. In the enforcement of these
policies, the Executive Branch of the Government must respect the
procedural safeguards of due process.
The Japanese Immigrant
Case, 189 U. S. 86,
189 U. S. 101;
Wong Yang Sung v. McGrath, 339 U. S.
33,
339 U. S. 49.
But that the formulation of these policies is entrusted exclusively
to Congress has become about as firmly imbedded in the legislative
and judicial tissues of our body politic as any aspect of our
government. And whatever might have been said at an earlier date
for applying the
ex post facto Clause, it has been the
unbroken rule of this Court that it has no application to
deportation.
We are not prepared to deem ourselves wiser or more sensitive to
human rights than our predecessors, especially those who have been
most zealous in protecting civil
Page 347 U. S. 532
liberties under the Constitution, and must therefore under our
constitutional system recognize congressional power in dealing with
aliens, on the basis of which we are unable to find the Act of 1950
unconstitutional.
See Bugajewitz v. Adams, 228 U.
S. 585, and
Ng Fung Ho v. White, 259 U.
S. 276,
259 U. S.
280.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE REED concurs in the judgment of the Court and in the
opinion as written, except as to the deductions drawn from Senator
McCarran's citation of
Colyer v. Skeffington, 265 F. 17,
72.
[
Footnote 1]
In his petition, petitioner also contended that the procedure
used against him was unfair because of the new charge lodged by the
Examining Officer in the December, 1950, hearing. Apart from the
fact that this claim was not pressed in the argument or
petitioner's brief, it is sufficient to note that there was no
element of surprise in the additional charge, since it was simply
in more specific terms the same ground for deportation that
petitioner already knew he had to defend against, namely,
membership in the Communist Party. Furthermore, petitioner declined
the Hearing Officer's offer of a continuance to meet the new
charge.
[
Footnote 2]
Section 22 of the Internal Security Act of 1950 provides that
the Attorney General shall take into custody and deport any
alien
"who was, at the time of entering the United States, or has been
at any time thereafter, . . . a member of any one of the classes of
aliens enumerated in section 1(2) of this Act. . . ."
Subparagraph (C) of § 1(2) lists "Aliens who are members of or
affiliated with (i) the Communist Party of the United States. . .
." The substance of this provision was incorporated in the
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, 66 Stat. 163, 205, 8
U.S.C. § 1251(a)(6)(C).
[
Footnote 3]
Under § 7 of the Internal Security Act of 1950, "Communist
action" and "Communist front" organizations are required to
register as such with the Attorney General. Section 13 provides
that, where such an organization fails to register, the Attorney
General may institute proceedings requiring such registration.
[
Footnote 4]
First in
Ogden v.
Saunders, 12 Wheat. 213,
25 U. S. 271,
and again in
Satterlee v.
Matthewson, 2 Pet. 380, 686 (appendix -- omitted),
a characteristically persuasive attack was made by Mr. Justice
Johnson on the view that the
ex post facto Clause applies
only to prosecutions for crime. The Court, however, has
undeviatingly enforced the contrary position, first expressed in
Calder v. Bull,
3 Dall. 386. It would be an unjustifiable reversal to overturn a
view of the Constitution so deeply rooted and so consistently
adhered to.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, with whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS concurs,
dissenting.
Petitioner has lived in this country thirty-six years, having
come here from Mexico in 1918 when only seven years of age. He has
an American wife to whom he has been married for twenty years, four
children, all born here, and a stepson who served this country as a
paratrooper. Since 1940 petitioner has been a laborer at the Van
Camp Sea Food Company in San Diego, California. In 1944, petitioner
became a member of the Communist Party. Deciding that he no longer
wanted to belong to that party, he got out sometime around 1946 or
1947. As pointed out in the Court's opinion, during the period of
his membership, the Communist Party functioned "as a distinct and
active political organization."
See Communist Party v.
Peek, 20 Cal. 2d
536, 127 P.2d 889. Party candidates appeared on California
election ballots, and no federal law then frowned on Communist
Party political activities. Now, in 1954, however, petitioner is to
be deported from this country solely because of his past lawful
membership in that party. And this is to be done without proof or
finding that petitioner knew that the party had any evil purposes,
or that he agreed
Page 347 U. S. 533
with any such purposes that it might have had. On the contrary,
there is strong evidence that he was a good, law-abiding man, a
steady worker and a devoted husband and father loyal to this
country and its form of government.
For joining a lawful political group years ago -- an act which
he had no possible reason to believe would subject him to the
slightest penalty -- petitioner now loses his job, his friends, his
home, and maybe even his children, who must choose between their
father and their native country. Perhaps a legislative act
penalizing political activities legal when engaged in is not a bill
of attainder.
But see United States v. Lovett,
328 U. S. 303,
328 U. S.
315-316. Conceivably an Act prescribing exile for prior
innocent conduct does not violate the constitutional prohibition of
ex post facto laws.
Cf. American Communications Assn.
v. Douds, 339 U. S. 382,
339 U. S.
412-415. It may be possible that this deportation order
for engaging in political activities does not violate the First
Amendment's clear ban against abridgment of political speech and
assembly. Maybe it is not even a denial of due process and equal
protection of the laws.
But see dissenting opinions in
Carlson v. Landon, 342 U. S. 524, and
Harisiades v. Shaughnessy, 342 U.
S. 580. I am unwilling to say, however, that, despite
these constitutional safeguards, this man may be driven from our
land because he joined a political party that California and the
Nation then recognized as perfectly legal.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK concurs,
dissenting.
As MR. JUSTICE BLACK states in his dissent, the only charge
against this alien is an act that was lawful when done. I agree
that there is therefore no constitutional basis for deportation, if
aliens, as well as citizens, are to be the beneficiaries of due
process of law.
Page 347 U. S. 534
The case might, of course, be different if the past affiliation
with Communism now seized upon as the basis for deportation had
continued down to this date. But, so far as this record shows, the
alien Galvan quit the Communist Party at least six years ago. There
is not a word in the present record to show that he continued his
affiliations with it sub rosa or espoused its causes or joined in
any of its activities since he ceased to be a member of it.
I cannot agree that, because a man was once a Communist, he
always must carry the curse. Experience teaches otherwise. It is
common knowledge that, though some of the leading Socialists of
Asia once were Communists, they repudiated the Marxist creed when
they experienced its ugly operations, and today are the most
effective opponents the Communists know. So far as the present
record shows, Galvan may be such a man. Or he may be merely one who
transgressed and then returned to a more orthodox political faith.
The record is wholly silent about Galvan's present political
activities. Only one thing is clear: Galvan is not being punished
for what he presently is, nor for an unlawful act, nor for
espionage or conspiracy or intrigue against this country. He is
being punished for what he once was, for a political faith he
briefly expressed over six years ago and then rejected.
This action is hostile to our constitutional standards, as I
pointed out in
Harisiades v. Shaughnessy, 342 U.
S. 580,
342 U. S. 598.
Aliens who live here in peace, who do not abuse our hospitality,
who are lawabiding members of our communities, have the right to
due process of law. They too are "persons" within the meaning of
the Fifth Amendment. They can be molested by the government in
times of peace only when their presence here is hostile to the
safety or welfare of the Nation. If they are to be deported, it
must be for what they are and do, not for what they once
believed.