Judges: Pound
Filed Date: 3/15/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The above applicant for naturalization came to the United States September 25, 1906, from Germany.
On October 10, 1913, he filed his petition for naturalization in this court, but did not file with said petition a certificate of his arrival in- the United States, as required by section 4 of the Naturalization Act of June 29, 1906 (34 Stat. pt. 1, p. 597), which reads, in part, as follows: “At the time of filing his petition there shall be filed with the clerk of the court a certificate from the Department of Commerce and Labor, if the petitioner arrives in the United States after the passage of this Act, stating the date, place, and manner of his arrival in the United States.”
The case came on for hearing March 4, 1914. The government’s representative objected to the admission of the applicant on the ground that he had not complied with the law in the filing of his petition. The government’s representative then had in his possession a certificate of arrival from the department relating to this applicant, and offered to deliver it to the court for filing with the petition, if the court should hold, against the government’s contention, that such certificate could then be filed with the petition as of the date the petition was actually filed.
In my opinion this would not be a suficient compliance with the law. The law is plain in its terms, that the certificate shall be filed "at the time of filing his petition.” To hold otherwise, and.allow him to file his petition on one day and the certificate of arrival on some subsequent day would be one step in-the direction of frittering away the provisions of a very wholesome and useful law.
In United States v. Spohrer, 175 Fed. Rep. 440, the
This language, from the Spohrer case, is quoted at length, with approval, by the Supreme Court of the Hnited States in the case of Johannessen v. United States, 225 U. S. 227. See also the case of Matter of Liberman, 193 Fed. Repr. 301.
The fact that the applicant’s declaration was about to expire by reason of the seven-year limitation at the time he filed his petition is insufficient to move the court to disregard the conditions with respect to the certificate of arrival which congress has taken the pains to stipulate. Aliens are on notice as to the requirements of the naturalization law, and if they neglect to take the necessary steps toward citizenship, including the procuring of a certificate of arrival, until the last minute — when it is too late — they must bear the consequences.
The petition must, therefore, be denied.
Petition denied.