Wong Bick Ling v. Dulles
Decision Date | 08 March 1954 |
Docket Number | Civ. A. No. 2427-52. |
Citation | 119 F. Supp. 513 |
Parties | WONG BICK LING et al. v. DULLES, Secretary of State. |
Court | U.S. District Court — District of Columbia |
Robert Watson and William F. McDonnell, Washington, D. C., for plaintiffs.
Leo A. Rover, U. S. Atty., Frank H. Strickler, Asst. U. S. Atty., George E. Hamilton, Asst. U. S. Atty., Washington, D. C., for defendant.
This action seeks a declaratory judgment that plaintiffs are citizens of the United States. It is brought under Section 503 of the Nationality Act of 1940,1 reading, so far as material, as follows:
Plaintiffs were born in China, where they now reside, and claim United States citizenship by reason of the alleged citizenship at the time of their birth of a person whom they claim to be their father, who is a resident of the United States.
After the institution of their suit, they filed a motion to require defendant to issue to them certificates of identity under Section 503, supra. This motion was denied on the record as it then existed. Thereupon plaintiffs filed an amendment to their complaint, alleging facts designed to make the requisite averments under Section 503.
Among other things, they alleged in the amendment that they had submitted to the American Consul in Hong Kong their "sworn applications, showing that their claim to nationality was presented in good faith and had a substantial basis," which, as will be noted, are prerequisites under Section 503 to the issuance of certificates of identity. In answer to the amendment, defendant denied that the applications "showed that plaintiffs' claims to citizenship were presented in good faith and had substantial basis."
The case thereafter came before the Court for a pretrial hearing, at which time plaintiffs orally renewed their motion to require defendant to issue certificates of identity. The "good faith" and "substantial basis" of their claims having been put in issue by defendant, the Court concluded that testimony should be taken on these factual issues, and offered the parties an opportunity to submit evidence. Thereupon plaintiffs called upon defendant to produce its files, which was done, and plaintiffs selected therefrom two exhibits which were offered in evidence along with a third exhibit from their own files. There being no objection by defendant, they were thereupon received in evidence. Two of these exhibits were copies of the sworn applications of plaintiffs, respectively, with reports thereon by the American Consul. The remaining exhibit was a letter addressed by defendant's Director of Passport Office to plaintiffs' counsel in Boston. The reports set forth certain facts and concluded that the claims of plaintiffs had not been made in good faith and did not have a substantial basis. The third exhibit, the letter from the Director of Passport Office, stated among other things that plaintiffs had not established their claimed identities and relationship to their alleged father, and that the State Department consequently was unable to determine that their claims to citizenship were advanced in good faith and had substantial basis. The exhibits also disclose that the Consulate-General wrote the alleged father of plaintiffs, informing him that the evidence did not justify the issuance of a certificate of identity and asking him to submit additional evidence of the legitimacy of his claim, but no reply was ever made to the letter; that the plaintiffs were asked to present their mother as a witness for blood testing, but she did not appear; that one of Washington counsel for plaintiffs conferred with a representative of defendant, at which time the lack of evidence of early family association and discrepancies in testimony were discussed, and that at the conclusion of the conference he indicated he had additional...
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