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No. 8839036
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit

White v. Young Yen

No. 8839036 · Decided February 6, 1922
No. 8839036 · Ninth Circuit · 1922 · FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
February 6, 1922
Citation
No. 8839036
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
GILBERT, Circuit Judge. The appellees, upon arriving at the port of San Francisco from China, made application to enter the United States as citizens, claiming to be the foreign-born sons of Young Fai, a citizen of the United States. Their applications were denied after a hearing before a board of special inquiry, and on appeal to the Sec *620 retary of Tabor the decision of the board was affirmed. Upon habeas corpus proceedings the court below discharged the appellees. From that judgment the Commissioner of Immigration taires this appeal. We are unable to see on what ground it can be held that the proceedings before the board of special inquiry were unfair. That board reached the conclusion that the proofs were insufficient to show that the appellees were the sons of Young Fai. Young Fai testified that they .were his sons, and that he was married in China K. S. 19 — 1—16, which would be March 4, 1893. But it was shown that in 1897, on his return from China, when he was permitted to enter as a citizen of the United States, Young Fai testified: “I am not married.” It was shown also that on March 17, 1909, Young Fai appeared as a witness for another of his alleged sons, Young Nin, at which time he testified that he was married K. S. 19 — 9—20, which would be October 29, 1893. Again in his testimony in this proceeding Young Fai testified that his son Young Soon was horn K. S. 28 — 8—15, and that his son Young Yen was born K. S. 29- — 10—10. In 1907 he testified that Young Soon was born K. S. 28 — 1, and Youngs Yen was born K. S. 29 — 10—20. Young Fai made no explanation of these discrepancies, although he was afforded füll opportunity to do so. 'He denied that he had testified in 1897 that he was not married, but he admitted that in all other respects the record of his testimony taken at that time was correct. The discrepancies in Young Fai’s testimony as to the dates on which his sons were bom may be unimportant, but his contradictory statements as to the fact of his marriage and the date thereof may well have been deemed important by the board of special inquiry, and sufficient to discredit Young Fai’s testimony that the appellees were his sons. We cannot say, in view of such statements of Young Fai, that the conclusion reached by the board was manifestly unfair. It is not the function of this court in habeas corpus proceedings to weigh the evidence or go into the question of the sufficiency of the probative facts. It is sufficient ’in such a case, if there is some testimony to sustain the conclusion reached. Here there was, we think, substantial ground to discredit the testimony which was adduced on behalf of the applicants. The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with instructions to remand the appellees to custody.
Plain English Summary
The appellees, upon arriving at the port of San Francisco from China, made application to enter the United States as citizens, claiming to be the foreign-born sons of Young Fai, a citizen of the United States.
Key Points
Frequently Asked Questions
The appellees, upon arriving at the port of San Francisco from China, made application to enter the United States as citizens, claiming to be the foreign-born sons of Young Fai, a citizen of the United States.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for White v. Young Yen in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on February 6, 1922.
Use the citation No. 8839036 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.
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