IN RE WY SHII\G.
553
United States, tit. 66, "Extradition," pp. 1021-1023, and that a warrant issue to carry this order into effect; and that the evidence, or a copy thereof, be immedi.ately, or as soon as may be, transmitted to the secretary of state of the United States, to the end that such action may be had by him in the premises as justice may require. And it is so ordered.
In re Wy ln re . «(Jif'6ult (Jourt,
SRING.
WONG GAN·
N. D. Oalifornia. November 8, 1888.)
.1.
CHINESE-CHILDREN BORN IN UNITED STATES-CITIZENSHIP-FoURTEENTH AMENDMENT.
A person born in the United States of Chinese parents residing therein. and not engaged in any diplomatic or official capacity under the government of China or other foreig-n power. is born snbject to the jurisdiction of the United States, and he is a citizen thereof, under the fourteenth amendment to the national constitntion'! The Chinese restriction acts of 1882 and 1884, and the exclusion act of1888, are not applicable to citizens of the United States, though of Chinese parentage.!
2.
SAME-ExCLUSION ACTS-CONSTRUCTION.
8. .
No citizen can be excluded from the United States, except in punishment for crime. (Syllabus by the Oourt.)
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW-RIGHTS OF CITIZENS.
Habea8 CorpU8. Wy Shing was born in San Francisco, Cal., of Chinese parents, who had intermarried at Marysville, in the state of California. After his birth petitioner's parents returned to Marysville, where his mother died when he was three years old. When petitioner was six years old hi,8 fathersent him to China in charge of an elder brother of the father, where he remained till thirteen years old, when he returned to California. In 1885 he went to China again, and remained there till September, 1888, when he took passage a second time for California, before the passage of the late exclusion act. He arrived at San Francisco October 7,-1888, after the approval of said exclusion act, on October 1, 1888. The collector refused hin1 permission to land, on the ground that he was a Chinese laborer, who had departed from the country, and that he was prohibited from returning by the provisions of said act. His father was, and he still is, a laborer, and he was in no way in the service of .peroror government of China at the time of the birth of petitioner or at any other time. . He still resides in California, and he has never been baGk to China or left the state of California since the. birth (If petitioner. ante. 437. 1 See, to'
the same effect, Ex parte Chin King, 35 Fed. Rep. 354; In re Yung . .
..
Hee,
554
FEDERAL REPORTER.
Wong Gan was born in San Francisco in 1868; . He is now 20 years old. His father was a merchant while here, but he labors in the field in China, although he has an interest in a small trading establishment. The petitioner returned to China with his parents when he was 14 years old, where he remained till September, 1888, when he embarked on his return voyage to San Francisco, and arrived at his destination sir.ce the passage of the exclusion act. Neither his father nor his mother has ever returned to San Francisco, since their departure in 1881. They still remain in China. While here they had no connection with the diplomatic service of the Chinese empire. A. H. Ricketts, for petitioners. John T. Carey, U. S. Atty., for the United States. Before SAWYER, Circuit Judge. SAWYER, J., (after stating the facts as above.) In Look Tin Sing's Oase, 10 Sawy. 353,21 Fed. Rep. 905, after a full argument by able counsel, and careful consideration by the court, Mr. Justice FIELD, with the concurrel1ceof the circuit and district judges,held that a person born in the United States,of Chinese parents not engaged in the diplomatic service of any foreign government, is born subject to the jurisdiction of the United -States, and is a citizen thereqf, under the provisions of the four.teenth ,amendment to the national constitution. As such citizen. it was further held that he was not subject to the Chinese restriction laws, and could not be excluded from this country. I am still satisfied with this to overrule Mr. ,l,'ulingj but, if I were in doubt, I should not Justice FIELD upon a question which he has so maturely considered, and decided. If the point was erroneously decided, then children of Caucasian parentage, born under similar circumstances, are not citizens; and hundreds of thousands have, for )rears, been, unlawfully, enjoying and 'ex:ercisingall the rights of citizens,civil and political. The decision in that Case coritrols these cases, which are similar to it. The petitioners are citizens, and are not, and they cannot be, excluded from the United States under the provisions of the late act in question. They are, therefore, illegally restrained of their liberty, nndmust be discharged, and it is so ordered. '
ECLIPSE MANUF'G CO. v.
ADKINS
et aZ.
(Circuit Court, N. D. Illinoi8. October i5, 1888.)
1.. PATENTS
, The court not being able to say from common knowledge that there Is no D0:Vlllty; in the design for a radiator described in letters patent No. 17,270. ¥iantea Apri119, 1887, to Leon H. Prentice, consisting of a plan for ornament'lDg the surface of the radiator pipes by embossed or depressed figures on the upper parts, leaving the lower parts plain. thus forming two rectangular parallelo/,"rams, one above the other, ademurrer to a bill to enjoin the infringement of such a patent should be overruled.
FOR INVENTIONS-NOVELTy-DEMURRER.