In re Hastrup

HamiltoN, Judge,

delivered tbe following opinion:

Tbe petition, whose allegations are not denied, shows that until tbe Act of March 2, 1917, this court bad not granted applications for naturalization since shortly after the passage of tbe Naturalization Law of June 29, 1906 (34 Stat. at L. 596, chap. 3592, Comp. Stat. § 963, 6 Fed. Stat. Anno. 2d ed. p. 940), it having been held by tbe Department of Labor that tbe court bad no such power. It seems that tbe clerk of this court published a notice in tbe newspapers at San Juan that after November 30, 1911, tbe court would cease to grant first papers, and petitioner accordingly applied tbe day before that date. Nothing further was done, however, in tbe matter, and tbe petitioner now makes application for final proof on two grounds: First, that tbe Act qf 1906 did not take away tbe jurisdiction of this court; and, second, that even if it did tbe petitioner was misled by tbe action of tbe court and so is entitled to naturalization under tbe subsequent Act of June 25, 1910.

1. Tbe Act of June 29, 1906, was a thorough revision of the Naturalization Law, and it has been held that its provisions must be strictly complied with inasmuch as a grant of citizenship is a privilege of tbe highest order, and is not to be construed against the government granting it. United State v. Ginsberg, 243 U. S. 472, 61 L. ed. 853, 37 Sup. Ct. Rep. 422; *185Johannessen v. United States, 225 U. S. 227, 56 L. ed. 1066, 32 Sup. Ct. Rep. 613. This act directs that tbe Secretary of Labor shall prescribe rulos and regulations, and rule 10 of the regulations directs that the only forms are those provided by the Bureau of Naturalization. Accordingly it has been held in Re Brefo, 217 Fed. 131-134, that forms in typewriting, although otherwise correct, cannot be used.

So far as the jurisdiction of this court is concerned under the Act of 1906 it is dependent upon § 3, which is as follows:

“That exclusive jurisdiction to naturalize aliens as citizens of the United States is hereby conferred upon the following specified courts:
“United States circuit and district courts now existing, or which may hereafter be established by Congress in any state, United States district courts for the territories of Arizona, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Hawaii, . . . and the United States courts for the Indian Territory; also all courts of record in any state or territory now existing, or which may hereafter be created, having a seal, a clerk, and jurisdiction in actions at law or equity, or law and equity, in which the amount in controversy is unlimited.”

It is clear that the statute omits this district court, because it expressly confers jurisdiction upon those in the states and in certain enumerated territories, of which Porto Rico is not one. The argument is, however, that this court is embraced in the last clause, that is to say, that it is a court of record in a state or territory, having seal, clerk, and unlimited jurisdiction at law and in equity. This court has jurisdiction of the nature indicated, but the proper construction of the section requires that the last clause be restricted to local courts, inasmuch as those in the first *186clause are Federal courts. There would be no need of the first clause if the second embraced Federal as well as local courts.

It would seem, therefore, as if the construction placed by the Department of Labor upon the section as excluding the jurisdiction of this court was correct.

2. The Act of 1910 (36 Stat. at L. 831, chap. 401, Comp. Stat. § 4352, 6 Fed. Stat. Anno. 2d ed. p. 956), provides:

Provided further, That any person belonging to the class of persons authorized and qualified under existing law to become a citizen of the United States who has resided constantly in the United States during a period of five years next preceding May 1st, 1910, who, because of misinformation in regard to his citizenship or the requirements of the law governing the naturalization of citizens has labored and acted under the impression that he was or could become a citizen of the United States and has in good faith exercised the rights or duties of a citizen or intended citizen of the United States because of such wrongful information and belief may, upon making a showing of such facts satisfactory to a court having jurisdiction to issue papers of naturalization to an alien, and the court in its judgment believes that such person has been for a period of more than five years entitled upon proper, proceedings to be naturalized as a citizen of the. United States, receive from the said court a final certificate of naturalization, and said court may issue such certificate without requiring proof of former declaration by or on the part of such person of their intention to become a citizen of the United .States, but such applicant for-naturalization shall comply in all other respects with the law relative to the issuance of final papers of naturalization to aliens.”

The contention is that under this there was no need of what *187are ordinarily called first papers, that is, declaration of intention, so that the fact the one in question is more than seven years •before the present application is immaterial. In He Eoss, 223 Ned. 366, it was held that the five years during which one must be entitled to be naturalized under the new act was not.limited to the five years before 1910, but covers a similar period up to whatever may be the date of application. In Re Fleury, 223 Fed. 803, was the case of a man who in good faith had exercised the duties of a citizen or of a person-who would become a citizen as soon as his petition could be heard. The defect seems to have been that he failed to seek his decree of naturalization within seven years after his first papers, but acted otherwise in all respects as a citizen.

In the case at bar the only act shown to have been done by the applicant was going to Europ'e on an American passport. Under the Act of March 2, 1901 (34 Stat. at L. 1228, chap. 2534, Comp. Stat. § 3958, 2 Fed. Stat. Anno. 2d ed. p. 122), this would not amount to a proof of citizenship or'even a claim of citizenship. There seems to be no misinformation of the applicant shown and has no value after six months. The clerk advertised that applications would not be received after a certain date and the application came in the day before; but the clerk did not, and could not, say that applications before that date would be valid. lie merely fixed a period within which the matter could be tested by those in interest. Moreover, the Act of 1910 was designed to help anyone who, “because of misinformation in regard to his citizenship or the requirements of the law governing the naturalization of citizens, has labored and acted under the impression that he was or could become a citizen of the United States,” and this court must “in its judgment believe *188that such person bas been for a period of more than five years entitled upon proper proceedings to be naturalized.” But the applicant would not have been entitled within those five years- or at any other time since 1907 to be naturalized on the mainland of the United States because he was a resident of Porto Rico, and he would not within the same time have been entitled upon proper proceedings to be naturalized in Porto Rico because this court had no such jurisdiction. So that it follows the applicant does not come within the terms of the Remedial Act of 1910.

3. It is true that the recent Organic Act of 1917 now gives this court power to naturalize aliens, “and for this purpose residence in Porto Rico shall be counted in the same manner as residence elsewhere in the United States.” Section 41 of the Act of March 2, 1917. Does this act enable the court, in its judgment, to believe that the applicant herein has been for a period of more than five years entitled upon proper proceedings to be naturalized as a citizen of the United States, and thereupon to grant him a final certificate of naturalization without requiring proof of former declaration ? He certainly was not during, those five years entitled to any proceedings to be naturalized, because neither this court nor any other could naturalize him. It is true that this court has construed the Act of 1917 as giving it the right to consider residence during the past for the purpose of entitling one to naturalization, and not construing the act only as a grant of power to naturalize upon residence in Porto Rico for the future; but this is applying the words of the statute. The words of the Statute of 1917 do not make it possible for this court to believe that the applicant has for five years past been entitled to be naturalized, no matter where he resided, be*189•cause this court, the only one in which he could have proceeded, was during those five years without power to act. In other words, the disability in the past five years is not in regard to the applicant’s residence in Porto Eico, but in regard to the lack of jurisdiction of this court in Porto Eico to naturalize him, no •matter where he resided. There might have been sufficient residence, but nevertheless there could not have been any proper proceedings.

It follows, therefore, that the applicant is not within the terms of the naturalization laws, and the motion of the district attorney to dismiss the petition should be granted.

It is so ordered.