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                  <text>Immigration and Naturalization Service v. Errico
Source: Center for Migration Studies (NY)
Contributed by: United States Court of Appeals for Ninth Circuit
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�214

OCTOBER TERM, 19~6.
I

Opinion of the- Court'.
.

385 U.S.

214

-

IMMIGRATION AND NATURALIZATION
- -.
SERVICE _v. ERRICO ..
.CERTIO.RARL TO----T.HE UNITED STATES-COURT OF APPEALS' FOR

THE NINTH CIRCUIT.
No. 54. _Arg~ed Oct-ob~r

w;

1966 ...:.,.Decided December 12, 1966.*

• &amp;lction ·24f(f)" of the Immigration .and· Nationality Act, which ex.·- empts from deportation .an alien who obtained a -irisa and entry
- ·to the United States by fraud and misrepresentation where the
alien is the spouse, pa.rent or child of an .American citizen or of
an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence, and was
uotherwise admissible at the time of entry," is construed, in the
light of its humanitarian purpose of preventing the breaking up
of families, to save from deportation such aliens \vbo misrepresented their status for the purpose of evading quota restrictions.

Pp. 217-225.
No. 54, 349 F. 2d 541, affirmed; No. 91, 350 F. 2d 279, reversed.

Solicitor General Marshall argued the cause for petitioner in No. 54 and for respondent in No. 91. • With
· him on the briefs were Assi.stant Attorney General Vinson, Louis F. Claiborne, L. Paul Winings and Charles
Gordon.
Frank I erulli argued the cause for respondent in No. 54.
With him on the brief was Edu!'in J. Peterson.
Julius C. Biervliet argued the cause for petitioner in
No. 91. With him on the brief was Edward Q. Carr, Jr.
MR. CHIEF JusTICE WARREN delivered the opinion of
the Court.
We granted certiorari in these cases to resolve a conflict between the Second and Ninth Circuits on their
interpretations of § 241 (f)
the Immigration and

j'

9pinion of the Court.

Nationality Act.' The issue is identical in both case,;
and, therefore, Iends itself to· a _single opinion ..
- Section 24i ( f) reads as :follows:
·"The provisions of this section relating to the deportation of aliens within the United States on the
ground that they were excludable at the time of
_ . •. - ·entry as aliens who have sought to procure, or have
•· ·. procured visas or other documentation, or entry into
the United States by fraud or misrepresentation
shall not apply to an alien othernise admissible at
the time of entry who is the spouse, parent, or a
child of a United States citizen or of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence."
The issue is whether the statute saves from deportation
an alien who misrepresents his status for the purpose
of e:vading quota restrictions, if he has the necessary
familial relationship to a United States citizen or lawful
permanent resident.
Respondent Errico in No. 54, a native of Italy, falsely
represented to the immigration authorities that he was
•a skilled mechanic with specialized experience in repairing foreign automobiles. On the hasis of that misrepresentation he was granted first preference quota status
under the statutory preference scheme then in effect, and
entered the United States in 1959 with his wife. A child
was born to the couple in 1960 and acquired United States
citizenship at birth. In 1963 deportation proc~edings
were commenced against Errico on the ground that he
was excludable at the time of entry as not "of the proper
status under the quota specified in the illh'lligrant visa." '

ot

""'Together with No. 91, Scott, aka Plummer v. Immigration and
Naturalization Ser-vice, on certiorari to -the United States Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit.

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'75 Stat. 655 (1961), 8 U. S. C. § 1251 (f).
2
Section 211 (a) (4) of the Immigration. and Nationality Act, 66
StaL 181 (1952), later amended, 79 Stat. 917 (1965), 8 U. S. C.
§ 1181 (a) (1964 ed., ·Supp. I). Aliens who we~e excludable at the
time of entry under the law then existing are deportable under
§ 241 (a)(!), 66 Stat. 204 (1952), as amended, 8 U. S. C. § 1251 (a)(!).

�IMMIGRATION SERVICE v. ERRICO.

. OCTOBER TERM, 1966.

216

Opinion of_ the Court.
-

. .

-

'

385 U.S.

217

Opinion of the Court.

214

-

Throughout the. proceedings Errico insisted that he was
. __ .· s:w~cffrom deportat1oii by § 241 (f). -• .The special inquiry .
···• _officer of the Immigrationc'and Naturalization Service
· .• ruled that reliefunder.§ 241 (f) was not availabl~ because
. Errico had. not complied with quota requirements and,
-. hence, was_ not. ':otherwise adm1ssible· at the time of
-•·••entry.". Tlie Board of Irrimigr!l,tion Appeals affirmed the . deportatiorr order but the Court of Appeals for the Ninth
· Circuit reversed, holding that. the construction of the
· statute adopted by the Board would strip it of practically
all mearring, since a material misrepresentation would
presumably be given to conceal some factor that would
bear on admissibility. 349 F. 2d 541. We granted
certiorari. 383 U. S. 941.
Petitioner Scott in No. 91, a native of Jamaica, contracted a marriage with a United States citizen by proxy
solely for the purpose of obtaining nonquota status for
entry into the country. She has never lived. with her
husband and never intended to do so. After entering the
United States in 1958, she gave birth to an illegitimate
child, who became an American citizen at birth. When
the fraud was discovered, deportation proceedings were
begun, and a special inquiry officer of the Immigration ~
and Naturalization Service found her deportable on the
·· ground that she was not a non quota immigrant as specified in her visa.' The Board of Immigration Appeals
affirmed, and the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit affirmed the Board .. 350 F. 2d 279. The -court
agreed with the Board of Immigration Appeals that a
shani marriage contracted solely to circumvent the immigration laws would not confer nonquota status on an
. alien as the spouse of an 1\illerican citizen. It also af. firmed the ruling that Mrs. Scott was not entitled to relief
· . under § 241 ( f) because she was not otherwise admissible
'Section 211 (a) (3), 66 Stat. 181 (1952), later amended, 79 Stat.
917 (1965), 8 U.S. C. § 1181 (a) (196.J. ed., Supp. 1).

at tke time.of entry, since her country's quota was over-•
subscribed. - We granted.certiorari. .. 383 U.S. 941.
At the outset it should be noted that even the Government agrees that § 241 (f) cannot be applied with strict
literalness. Literally, § 241 (f) applies only when the
alien is charged with entering in violation of § 212
(a)(19) of the statute, which excludes from entry "[a]ny
alien who ... has procured a visa or other documentation ... by fraud, or by willfully misrepresenting a
material fact."' Under this interpretation, an alien who
entered by fraud could be deported for having entered
with a defective visa or for other documentary irregularities even if he would have been admissible if he had
not committed the fraud. The Government concedes
that such an interpretation would be inconsistent with
the manifest purpose of the section, and the administrative ·authorities have consistently held that § 241 (f)
waives any deportation charge that results directly from
the misrepresentation regardless of the section of the
statute under which the charge was brought, provided
that the alien was "otherwise admissible at the time of
entry." ' The Government's argument in both cases is
that to be otherwise admissible at the time of entry the
alien must show that he would have been admitted even
if he had not lied, and that the aliens in these cases
would not have been admitted because of the quota restrictions. It is the argument of the aliens that our
adoption of the government thesis would negate the
intention of Congress to apply fair humanitarian standards in granting relief from the consequences of their
fraud to aliens who are close relatives of United States
citizens, and that the statute would have practically no
effect if construed as the Government argues, since it
66 Stat. 183 (1952), as amended; 8 U. S. C. § 1182 (a) (19).
'See Matter of S-, 7 L &amp; N. Dec. 715 (1958); Matter of Y-,
8 L &amp; N. Dec. 143 (1959).
4

233-£53 0 - 67 - 21

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�218

OCTOBER TERM, 1966.
Oplnion of the Court.

JNHvllGRATIU~ ~Ei-tVICE v. ElU\.il:U.
385 U.S.

requires a considerable stretch of the imagination to con. ceive of an alien making a material misrepresentation
that did not conceaLsome factor that would make him
inadmissible.
The sharp divergence of opm10n among the circuit
judges in these cases indicates that the meaning of the
words "otherwise admissible" is not obvious. An inter.pretation -0f these words requires close attention to the
· language of § 241 (f), to the language of its predecessor,
§ 7 of the 1957 Act,' and to the legislative history of these
provisions.
The legislative history begins with the enactment of
the Displaced Persons_ Act of 1948, 62 Stat. 1009. This
Act provided for the admission to the United States of
thousands of war refugees, many from countries that had
fallen behind the Iron Curtain. Some of these refugees
misrepresented their nationality or homeland while in
Europe to avoid being repatriated to a Communist country. In so doing, however, they fell afoul of § 10 of the
Act, which provided that persons making wil1ful misrepresentations for the purpose of gaining admission "shall
thereafter not be admissible into the United States."
The plight of these refugees, who were excluded from the
United States for misrepresentations that were generally
felt to be justifiable, inspired recurring proposals for stat- •
utory reform. When the Act was revised and codified in
1952, the House Committee recommended adding a provision to save such refugees from deportation when they
had misrepresented their nationality or homeland only
to avoid repatriation and persecution.' The Conference
Committee deleted the provision, but announced its sympathy with the refugees in the following terms:
"It is also the opipion of the conferees that the
sections of the bill which provide for the exclusion
'Pub. L. 85-316, 71 Stat. 639 (1957).
See H. R. Rep. No. 1365, 82d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 128 (1952).

7

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214

21'..,i

Opinion of the Court.

of aliens who obtained travel documents by fraud
or by willfully misrepresenting a material fact,
should n~t serve to exclude or to deport certain bona
fide refugees who in fear of being forcibly repatriated
to their former homelands misrepresented their place
of birth when applying for a visa and such misrepresentation did not have as its basis the desire to
·• evade the quota provisions of the law or an investi. gation in the place of their ·former residence. · The
conferees wish to emphasize that in applying fair
humanitarian standards in the administrative adjudication of such cases, every effort is to be made to
prevent the evasion of law by fraud and to protect
the interest of the United States." H. R. Rep. No.
2096, 82d Cong., 2d Sess., p. 128 ( 1952).
The Immigration and Naturalization Service and the
Attorney General did not construe the statute as the
Conference Committee had recommended, believing that
the explicit statutory language did not allow for an
exemption for justifiable misrepresentations. Refugees
who misrepresented their place of origin were always
found to have concealed a material fact, since the
misrepresentation hindered an investigation of their
background.'
The misrepresentation section was not the only provision of the 1952 legislation that was widely thought to
be unnecessarily harsh and restrictive, and in 1957 Congress passed legislation alleviating in many respects the
stricter provisions of the earlier legislation. The purpose of the 1957 Act is perfectly clear from its terms,
as well as from the relevant House and Senate Com8
See Matter of B- and p_:., 2 I. &amp; N. Dec. 638 (1947); H. R.
Rep. No. 1199, 85th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 10 (1957).

�IMMIGRATION SERVICE v. ERRICO.

OCTOBER TERM, 1966.

220

Opinion of the Court.

385 U.S.

mittee Reports.' .The most important provisions of the
act provide for _special nonquota status for the adopted
children or illegitimate children of immigrant parents,
and for orphans who have been or are to be adopted by
United States citizens. Other important provisions allow
the Attorney General to waive certain grounds for exclusion
deportation, including ·afiliction with tubercuIos1s or conviction of a crime involving moral turpitude,
on behalf of aliens who are near relatives of United
States citizens or of aliens lawfully admitted for permanent residence. The intent of the Act is plainly to
grant exceptions to the rigorous provisions of the 1952
Act for the purpose of keeping family units together.
Congress felt that 1 in many circumstances, it was more
important to unite famiJje§ and nreserxe family ties than
it was to enfor~e strictly the anota limitations or even
the many restrictive sections that are designed to keep

or

undesirable or harmful aliens Qllt gf

the qguptry.

10

In this context it is not sur rising that Congress% also
re e. to aliens facing exclusion or eporta 10n
9

"The legislative history of the lmmigration and Nationality Act
clearly indicates that the Congress intended to provide for a liberal
treatment of children and was concerned with the problem of keeping
families of United States citizens and immigrants united." H. R.

Rep. No. 1199, 85th Cong., !st Sess., p. 7 (1957). See also S. Rep.
Ne. 1057, S5th Cong., 1st Sess. (1957).
10

It is in this context that the legislative history cited in the

dissent should be understood. The remarks of Senator Eastland and
Congressman Celler quoted in footnote 4 of the dissent in context do
not refer to § 7 of the Act but to the provisions of the bill providing
for the adoption of alien orphans. Furthermore, Senator Eastland
and Congressman Celler did not mean that no exceptions to the
quota requirements were intended to be created, because the basic
purpose of the bill was to relax th~ quota system for adopted children
and for certain other classes of ~liens deemed ··deserving of relief.
They were reassuring their colleagues that no fundamental chancres
0
in the quota system were contemplated. __

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221

Opinion of -the Court.

214

t10n.

ec 10n
- rovided that:
. "The provisions of section 241 of the Immigration
and Nationality Act relating to the deportation of
aliens within the United States on the ground that
they were excludable at the time of entry as
'(1) aliens who have sought to procure, or.have pro. -cured visas or other' documentation, or entry into
the United States by fraud or misrepresentation,
· or (2) aliens who were not of the nationality specified in their visas, shall not apply to an alien otherwise admissible at the time of entry who (A) is the
spouse, parent, or a child of a United States citizen
or of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence; or (B) was admitted to the United States
between December 22, 1945, and November 1, 1954,
both dates inclusive, and misrepresented his nationality, place of birth, identity, or residence in applying for a visa: Provided, That such alien described
in clause (B) shall establish to the satisfaction of
the Attorney General that the misrepresentation
was predicated upon the alien's fear of persecution
because of race, religion, or political opinion if repatriated to his former home or residence, and was
not committed for the purpose of evading the quota
restrictions of the immigration laws or an investigation of the alien at the place of his former home, or
residence, or elsewhere. After the effective date of
this Act, any alien who is the spouse, parent, or
child of a United States citizen or of an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence and who is
excludable because (1) he seeks, has sought to pro. cure, or has procured, a visa or other documentation,
or entry into the United States, by fraud or misrepresentation, or (2) he admits the· commission of

�222

IMMIGRATION SERVICE v. ERRICO.

OCTOBER TERM, 1966.
Opinion of the Court.

385 U.S.

214

223

Opinion of the Court.

•

, _perjury in connection therewith, shall hereafter be
granted a visa and admitted to the United States
for permanent residence, if otherwise admissible, if
the Attorney General in his discretion has consented
. to the alien's applying or reapplying for a visa and
for admission to.the United States."
· ·This section waived deportation under certain circum. stances for two classes of aliens who had entered by·
fraud or misrepresentation. First, an alien who was
"the spouse, parent, or a child of a United States citizen . . ." was saved from deportation for his fraud if
he was "otherwise admissible at the time of entry." Second, an alien who entered during the postwar period
and misrepresented his nationality, place of birth, iden. tity, or residence was saved from deportation if he was
"otherwise admissible at the time of entry" and if he
could
"establish to the satisfaction of the Attorney General that the misrepresentation was predicated upon
the alien's fear of persecution because of race, religion, or political opinion if repatriated to his former
home or residence, and was not committed for the
purpose of evading the quota restrictions of the
immigration laws or an investigation of the alien
at the place of his former home, or residence, or
elsewhere."
This language would be meaningless if an alien who
comIUitted fraud for the. purpose of evadmg quota restnct10ns would be deportable as not "otherwise admissible at the time of entry." t.Congress must have felt
that aliens who evaded quotri'.restrictions by fmnd woulrl
be "otherwise admissibl~ at ·the time of entry) or _it
would not have found 1t necessary to provide further
that, in the case of an alien not possessing a close familial
relationship to a United States citizen or lawful per-

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manent resident, the fraud inust not be for the purpose
of evading quota restrictions.
·
This conclusion is reinforced by the fact that Congress
further specified that the aliens who were not close relatives of United States citizens must establish that their
fraud was not committed for the purpose of evading an
investigation. Fraud for the purpose of evading an investigation, if forgiven by the statute, would clearly
leave the alien "otherwise admissible" if there were no
other disqualifying factor. Elementary principles of
statutory construction lead to the conclusion that~-

gress meant to enecif;v two speqifiq types of fraud that
would leave gp @lien "otherwise admissible" bnt t.bat

would nonetheless bar reJief to those aligp§ who could
not
G]aim close reJBtionsbin with a Jinited StateB citi;wn
r
or flljer JawfuJJy ndwiHcd £0- permanent resioenqe
~

The present § 241 (f) is essentially a re-enactment of
§ 7 of the 1957 Act. The legislative history leaves no
doubt that no substantive change in the section was
intended.u The provision dealing with aliens who had
entered the United States between 1945 and 1954, and
had misrepresented their nationality for fear of persecution or repatriation, was omitted because it had accomplished its purpose; the rest of the section was
retained intact.'' It could hardly be argued that Congress intended to change the construction of the statute
by this codification.
,
The intent of § 7 of the 1957-Act !'0t to require that
aliens who are close relatives of United States citizens
have complied with quota restrictions to escape deportation for their fraud is clear from its language, and there
is nothing in the legislative history to suggest that Congress had in mind a contrary result. The only specific
n H. R. Rep. No. 1086, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 37 (1961). See also
107 Cong. Rec. 19653-19654 (1961) (remarks of Senator Eastland).
"H. R. Rep. No. 1086, 87th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 37 (1961).

�224

IMMIGRATION SERVICE v. ERRICO.

OCTOBER TERM, 1966.
Opinion of the Court.

385 U.S.

reference to the part of § 7 that deals with close relatives
of United States citizens
residents is in the House
Committee Report, and it says only that most of the
persons eligible for relief wonld be
"Mexican nationals, who, d~ring the time when
--_bOrder-control operatiaDS- Si1ffered from regrettable.
:-laxity;·were Sbl to ·eff(er the TTni+ed States estab...:
· · lish a family in this country, and were subsequently
found to r ·
· the United States illegally."·
. R. Rep. No. 1199, 85th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 11.
Without doubt most of the aliens who had obtained
entry into the United States by illegal means were Mexicans, because it has always been far easier to avoid
border restrictions when entering from Mexico than when
entering from countries that do not have a common land
border with the United States. There is nothincr in the
Committee Report to indicate that relief under the section was intended to be restricted to J\,fexicans, 110wever.
Neither does it follow that, because Mexicans are not
subject to quota restrictions, therefore nationals of countries that do have a quota must be within the quota
to obtain relief.
The construction o1 the statute that we adopt in these
cases is further reinforced when the section is regarded
in the context of the 1957 Act. The fundamental purpose of this legislation was to unite families. Refugees
from Communist lands were also benefited, but the Act
principally granted relief to persons who would be temporarily or permanently separated from their nearest relatives if the strict requirements of the Immigration and
Nationality Act, including the national quotas, were not
relaxed for them. It was '¾·holly consistent with this
urpose for Congress to provide that immigrants who
ained a mission by misrepresentaf
ou no e
because their countries'
oversubscribed when the

or

0

-

0

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214

STEWART,

225

J., dissenting.

effect of deportation .would be to se arate families compose m-par.t of American citizens or lawful permanen
residents.
· · ..
Even if there were some doubt as to the correct construction of the statute, the doubt should be resolved
in favor. of the alien. As this Court has held, even where
a punitive section is being construed:
. " .• · ..
- . . ''We resolve
doubts in favor of that constru~~
tion because deportation is a drastic measure and
at times the equivalent of banishment or exile,
DelgadiU.o v. Carmic/w,el, 332 U. S. 388. It is the
forfeiture for misconduct of a residence in this
·country. Such a forfeiture is a penalty. To construe this statutory provision less generously to the
alien might find support in logic. But since the
. stakes are considerable for the individual, we will
not assume that Congress meant to trench on his
freedom beyond that which is required by the narrowest of several possible meanings of the words
used." Fong Haw Tan v. Phelan, 333 U. S. 6, 10.
See also Barber v. Gonzales, 347 U. S. 637, 642-643.
The 1957 Act was not a punitive statute, and § 7 of that
Act, now codified as § 241 (f), in particular was designed
to accomplish a humanitarian result. We conclude that
to give meaning to the statute in the light of its humanitarian purpose of preventing the breaking up of families
composed in part at least of American citizens, the conflict between the circuits must be resolved in favor of
the aliens, and that the Errico decision must be affirmed
and the Scott decision reversed.
It is so ordered.

the

with whom MR. JUSTICE
and Ma. JusTICE WHITE join, dissenting.
The ,facts in one of these cases (No. 91) vividly illustrate the effect of the Court's interpretation of § 241 (f)
MR.

HARLAN

JusTICE STEWART,

�226

OCTOBER TERM, 1966.
STEWART,

J., dissenting.

l;\,1MIGRATION SERVICE v. ERR1CO.
385 li.

s.

of the Immigration and Nationality Act. The petitioner, a resident of Ja:rnaica, paid for a sham marriage
with an American citizen. A ceremony was held, but the
petitioner and her "husband" parted immediately and
have not seen eac.c'i other since. However, the pretended
marriage served its. purpose; the petitioner was admitted
into this· country as a nonquota immigrant upon her
false representation that she was the wife of a United
States citizen. After this fraudulent entry she managed·
to become the actual parent of a United States citizen
by conceiving and bearing an illegitimate child here.
The Court holds that this unsavory series of events
gives the petitioner an unqualified right under § 241 (f)
to remain in this country ahead of all the honest people
waiting in Jamaica and elsewhere to gain lawful entry.'
I can find no support in the statute for such an odd and
inequitable result.
Section 241 ( f) provides as follows:
•
"The provisions of this section relating to the
deportation of aliens within the United States on
the ground that they were excludable at the time
of entry as aliens who have sought to procure, or
have procured visas or other documentation, or
entry into the United States by fraud or misrepresentation shall not apply to an alien otherwise admissible at the time of entry who is the spouse,
parent, or a child of a United States citizen or of
an alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence."
It seems clear to me, for two separate and independently sufficient reasons, that this statute does not operate
to bar the deportation of the aliens in the cases now
\
1

When "1irs. Scott" made her fr~udulent entry in 1958, Jamaica

had an annual quota of 100-im.migrants and a waiting list of 21,759
hopeful applicants. The corresponding :figures for Italy in 1959,
the year of 11r. Errico's entry, were 5,666 and 162,612.

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214

STEWART,

J., dissenting.

227

..

before us. In the first place, § 241 (f) has applicat10n
only to the deportation provisions which are based upon
fraudulent entry, and the aliens in these two cases were
not ordered to be deported under those provisions.
Secondlv even if it were generally applicable, § 241 (f)
does n;t' cover the aliens involved in these two cases,
because neither of them was "otherwise admissible" at
the time of entry.

I.
Section 241 (f) by its terms neutralizes only those
"provisions ... relating to the deportation of aliens
within the United States on the ground that they ...
sought to procure ... entry into the United States by
fraud or misrepresentation . . . . " Although the aliens
in these two cases could have been deported under those
"provisions," the deportation proceedings in both cases
were in fact brought on grounds unrelated to their procurement of fraudulent visas. Both aliens were ordered
to be deported, not because of their fraud, but because
they were not properly within their countries' quotas.
The plain terms of § 241 (f), therefore, do not even
potentially apply to these aliens.' To hold that§ 241 (f)
is relevant to these cases is tantamount to holding that
2

The Court states that the Government "concedes,, and that
"administrative authorities have consistently held that § 241 (f)
waives any deportation charge that results directly from the misrepresentation." Ante, at ·217. But this concessiol! and administrative practice fall far short of covering these cases. - For here
the grounds for deportation did not "[result] directly from the misrepresentation." They antedated and were the reason for the misrepresentation. The (/administrative authorities11 cited by the Court

turned upon this distinction. In Matter of Y-, 8 I. &amp; N. Dec. 143
(1959), for example, the Board of Immigration Appeals broadener!

§ 241 (f) enough to cover fraud-related administrative procedural
defects in the alien's ·entry. It is this construction of § 241 (!) which
the Government concedes, not_ the Court's construction which broadens the statute to excuse all disqualifications for entry.

�228

IMMIGRATION SERVICE v. ERRICO.

OCTOBER TERM, 1966.
385 U.S.

itis applicable to bar deportation based on any ground at
all so long as the alien lied about that ground aUhe time
of his unlawful entry.' I think nothing could befurther
from the statutory language or the congressional purpose,

II.
· Eut evenif § 241 ( f) were gene~ally applicable, these
aliens could not claim its benefits because they·were not
within their respective national immigration quotas andtherefore were not "otherwise admissible" at the time
they entered the United States. That is the clear import
of the statutory qualification, if its words are to be taken
at their face value. That, too, has been the uniform
and consistent administrative construction of the statute.
See Matter of D'O-, 8 I. &amp; N. Dec. 215 (1958); Matter
of Slade, IO I. &amp; N. Dec. 128 (1962).
To except quota requirements of admissibility from
the statutory qualification of "otherwise admissible"
would undercut the elaborate quota system »'hich was
for years at the heart of the immigration laws. Yet the
legislative history of the predecessor of § 241 (f), § 7 of
the 1957 Act, makes clear that the limited relief given
by the statute was t_o have no effect at all on the quota
system.'
3

Thus, a Communist who had lied to the immigration authorities
about his party membership at the time of entry could invoke
§ 241 (f) and reIDJ1in in this country, while one who had told the
truth, but was admitted by virtue of an administrative error, .could

be deported. See §212 (a)(28), Immigration and Nationality Act.
4
Senator Eastland, Chairman of the Committee which sponsored
the 1957 amendments to the Immigration Act, stated, .-ithe bill does
not modify the national origins quota provisions." 103 Coner Rec
15487 (Aug. 21, 1957). See also\ 103 Cong. Rec. 16300 (A~~- 28.
1957) (remarks of Congressman \Celler), "[The bill] makes n;
changes-no changes whatsoever, in the controversial issue of the
national origins quota system."
Pub. L. 89-236, 79 Stat. 911 1 made substantial changes .. in the
quota system. But that statute, passed in 1965, hardly indicates a

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214

STEWART,

229

J., dissenting.

Moreover, the consistent use of the same qualifying
phrase; "otherwise admissible" in other sections of the
Immigration and Nationality Act makes clear that, as a
term of art, it includes quota adnli.ssibility. The term
typically follows a definition of grounds for admissibility
or for exceptions to deportation, to insure that all the
other relevant requirements of the Act are imposed upon
the alien.' ·
·
Thus the plain meaning of the "otherwise admissible"
qualification, as well as legislative policy and legislative
history, all indicate that the term serves the same basic
function in § 241 ( f) as in other sections of the Act.
Fraud is removed as a ground for deportation of those
with the requisite family ties, and "otherwise admissible"
insures the integrity of the remainder of the statutory
scheme.'
congressional intent in 1957 or in 1961 (when the present statute
was revised) to abandon quota requirements.

See, e.g., §§ 211 (a) and (b); The War Brides Act, 59 Stat. 659.
'Under § 7 of the 1957 Act certain aliens had to establish both
that they were "otherwise admissible" and that they had not lied to
5

evade quota restrictions. The Court reasons from this that quota
restrictions are not embodied in the "othernise admissible" qualification. But this reasoning is inconsistent with the Court's conclusion
concerning the general applicability of § 241 (f), discussed in Part I

of this dissent.
Section 7 of the earlier Act provided as follows:
"The provisions of section 241 of the Immigration and Nationality
Act relating to the deportation of aliens within the United States

on the ground that they were excludable at the time of entry
as (1) aliens who have sought to procure, or have procured visas
or other documentation, or entry into the United States by fraud
or misrepresentation, or (2) aliens who were not of the nationality
specified in their visas, shall not apply to an a.lien otherwise 2.dmis-

sible at the time of entry who . . . ." (Emphasis supplied.)
If the present meaning ·of "otherwise admissible" is to be determined
by the 1957 Act, so then must other parts of the statute be similarly determined.

Section 241 (f) begins with words almost identical

�230

. ,OCTOBER TERM, 1966.
STEWART,

FORTSON v. MORRIS.
385 U.S.

J., dissenting.

, The Court justifies its disregard of the plain meaning
and consistent administrative construction of § 241 (f)
by resort to the spirit of humanitarianism which is said
to have moved Congress to enact the statute. No doubt
Congress in 1957 was concerned with giving relief to some
aliens who had entered this country by illegal means and
_established families here.· But the people who were to
benefit from this genuine human concern were those
from countries like Mexico, which had no quota restric- ·
tions, and those who had misrepresented their national
origins in order to avoid repatriation to Iron Curtain
countries. There is nothing to indicate that Congress
enacted this legislation to allow wholesale evasion of the
Immigration and Nationality Act or as a general reward
for fraud.
I respectfully dissent.
♦

231

Syllabus.

•

FORTSON, _SECRETARY OF STATE OF GEORGIA
v, MORRIS ET AL.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GEORGIA.

No. -SOO. Argued Decemher 5, 1966.-Decided December 12,-1966.

Georgia's Co~stitution

sine~

1824 has provided that a majority bf -

the state legislature shall select the Governor irom the two candidates with the highest number of votes in a general election whe!e

no gubernatorial candidate received a majority vote, a situation
which arose in the November 8, 1966, general election. On equal
protection grounds a three-judge District Court invalidated the
provision. Held: Georgia1s provision for selecting a Governor is
not invalid under the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth

Amendment. Pp. 233-236.
. (a) A State can permit its legislative body to elect its Governor,

there being no federal constitutional provision prescribing the
method a State must use to select its Governor. Gray v. Sanders,
372 U. S. 368, distinguished.

Pp. 233-234.

(b) The Georgia Legislature is not disqualified for malapportionment to elect a Governor, since under Toombs v. Fortson, 384

U. S. 210, this Court held that it could function until May 1, 1968.
P. 235.
(c) The obligation under an oath ta.ken by Democratic members

of the legislature to support party candidates ended -with the last
general election, which is over.

Pp. 235-236.

262 F. Supp. 93, reversed.
to those quoted above. But the second ground of applicability-to
'~aliens who were not of the nationality specified in their visas"-is
omitted. Thus, lies about nationality were not forgiven by the
first part of the 1957 Act and are not, by the Court's reasoning,
excused by§ 241 (f), the successor statute. And since there is nothing to distinguish lies about natiori4lity that avoid quota restrictions
from other lies with the same effect, the reasoning that leads to the
Court's conclusion that the aliens were "otherwise admissible" leads
also to the conclusion that § 241 (f) is not applicable at all in
these cases.

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Harold N. Hill, Jr., Assistant Attorney General of
Georgia, argued the cause for appellant. With him on
the briefs were Arthur K. Bolton, Attorney General,
G. Ernest Tidwell, Executive Assistant Attorney General, Coy R. Johnson, Assistant Attorney General, and
Gerald H. Cohen and Alexander Cocalis, Deputy Assistant
Attorneys General.
Charles Morgan, Jr., argued the cause for appellees
Morris et al. With him on the briefs were Morris Brown

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