Title: Alien Land Laws and Internment
1Alien Land Laws and Internment
- Asian Americans and the Law
- Dr. Steiner
2- Despite the vocal and universal opposition from
the many residents of the road, the Jefferson
County Commissioners voted unanimously to change
the name. After the vote, Judge Griffith and Jodi
Bernstein suggested a historical marker which
would honor Yoshino Mayumi and his family. - The Commissioners assigned Wayne Wright and Earl
Callahan, leaders of the opposition, to head a
committee of fellow Jap Road residents to suggest
a new road name by July 29th 2004. To the
disappointment of many, 65 of the residents
decided to go with the name Boondocks which was a
popular local catfish restaurant which closed 10
years ago. This name was suggested to the Fannett
residents by Wayne Wright. The Commissioners
formally voted to rename JAP Road to Boondocks
Road on August 2nd - Japanese American Veterans Association website
3Japanese Immigration
- In 1880, 150 Japanese in U.S.
- In 1885, Japanese government legalized emigration
- In 1898, there were 2000 Japanese in U.S.
- In 1900, there were 12,000 Japanese in U.S.
- By 1901, California governor is discussing the
Japanese Problem
4Japanese Population in the United States,
1870-1940
5Dennis Kearney on Japanese Immigration, July 1892
- The foreign Shylocks are rushing another breed of
Asiatic slaves to fill up the gap made vacant by
the Chinese who are shut out by our laws. . . .
Japs . . . are being brought here in countless
numbers to demoralize and discourage our domestic
labor market and to be educated . . . at our
expense. . . . We are paying out money to allow
fully developed men who know no morals but vice
to sit beside our . . . daughters and to
debauch and demoralize them.
6James D. Phelan,Mayor of San Francisco 1900
- The Japanese are starting the same tide of
immigration which we thought we had checked
twenty years ago. . . . The Chinese and Japanese
are not bona fide citizens. They are not the
stuff of which American citizens can be made. . .
. Personally we have nothing against the
Japanese, but as they will not assimilate with us
and their social life is so different from ours,
let them keep a respectful distance.
7Republican Party Platform 1900
- In the further interest of American workmen we
favor a more effective restriction of the
immigration of cheap labor from foreign lands,
the extension of opportunities of education for
working children, the raising of the age limit
for child labor, the protection of free labor as
against contract convict labor, and an effective
system of labor insurance.
8Democratic Platform 1900
- We favor the continuance and strict enforcement
of the Chinese exclusion law, and its application
to the same classes of all Asiatic races.
9Asiatic Coolie Invasion,Japanese and Korean
Exclusion League (1905)
- Thousands of fair minded and well meaning people
who were biased and ignorant on the question of
Japanese immigration have during the last year,
entirely changed their views on the subject. They
have learned the truth that the Japanese coolie
is even a greater menace to the existence of the
white race, to the progress and prosperity of our
country than is the Chinese coolie.
10Asiatic Coolie Invasion,Japanese and Korean
Exclusion League (1905)
- As long as California is white mans country, it
will remain one of the grandest and best states
in the union, but the moment the Golden State is
subjected to an unlimited Asiatic coolie invasion
there will be no more California.
11William P. Canbu,Grand President, Native Sons of
the Golden West, 1920
- California was given by God to a white people,
and with Gods strength we want to keep it as He
gave it to us.
12Rice Farming in Webster, Texas
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15Oregon Constitution of 1857, Art. XV, sec. 8
- No Chinaman, not a resident of the State at the
adoption of this Constitution, shall ever hold
any real estate, or mining claims or work any
mining claim therein. The Legislative Assembly
shall provide by law in the most effectual manner
for carrying out the above provisions.
16Alien Land Laws
- In 1913, California passed the first Alien Land
Law that was directed at Japanese immigrants. It
passed 35-2 in the Senate and 72-3 in the
Assembly. - Californias population in 1913 was approx. 2.5
million, which included 50,000 Japanese
immigrants - Out of Californias 27 million acres of land,
Japanese owned 12, 726 acres in 1913
17California Alien Land Law (1913)
- Aliens eligible for citizenship may acquire,
hold, and convey real property in the same manner
as U.S. citizens - All other aliens may acquire property in the
manner prescribed by treaty - Any corporation of which a majority of its
members are ineligible aliens or majority of its
stock is owned by ineligible may acquire land as
prescribed by treaty - Property held in violation of statute will
escheat to state
18States with Ineligible Alien Land Laws
- California 1913
- Arizona 1917
- Louisiana 1921
- New Mexico 1922
- Idaho 1923
- Montana 1923
- Oregon 1923
- Kansas 1925
- Utah 1943
19Washington ConstitutionsAlien Land Provision
- The ownership of lands by aliens, other than
those who in good faith have declared their
intention to become citizens of the United
States, is prohibited in this state, except where
acquired by inheritance, under mortgage or in
good faith in the ordinary course of justice in
the collection of debts and all conveyances of
lands hereafter made to any alien directly or in
trust for such alien, shall be void. . . Every
corporation, the majority of the capital stock of
which is owned by aliens, shall be considered an
alien for the purposes of this prohibition.
20Evading the Land Laws
- Land bought by native-born sons and daughters
- Guardianships were used because they typically
were minors - If you wanted to lease or own land for any
purpose you had to use your childrens name. . .
. A set of books had to be set up for inspection
by the state authorities in order to prove that
you were an employee working for a wage.---I. K.
Ishimatsu. - But by 1919-1920, courts began refusing to grant
guardianships and rescinding those already granted
21Evading the Land Laws
- Borrowing names of American citizens
- Hawaiian-born Japanese (who were older than those
born on mainland) - Sympathetic whites such as L.M. Landsborough who
bought six different parcels (100 acres) for
Japanese farmers
22Evading the Land Laws
- Dummy corporations
- These corporations just needed to have a majority
of stockholders who were the majority of
stockholders (often set up with native-born
children) - Before 1921, 416 such companies held almost
66,000 acres
23California Alien Land Lawof 1920
- Closed loopholes and added criminal penalties
- Denied Japanese aliens all rights of ownership
and leasehold over agricultural land - Ineligible aliens prohibited from membership in
or acquiring shares in any corporation entitled
to own land - Ineligible aliens prohibited from acting as
guardians for minors owning or leasing land
24Continued Evasion of Land Laws
- Use of collusive arrangements where the Japanese
farmer leased the farm but the formal document
showed him acting as a salaried manager - White landlords and Japanese farmers continued to
evade the law
25Terrace v. Thompson (1923)
- And, while Congress has exclusive jurisdiction
over immigration, naturalization and the disposal
of the public domain, each state, in the absence
of any treaty provision to the contrary, has
power to deny to aliens the right to own land
within its borders.
26Terrace v. Thompson (1923)
- Congress is not trammeled, and it may grant or
withhold the privilege of naturalization upon any
grounds or without any reason, as it sees fit.
But it is not to be supposed that its acts
defining eligibility are arbitrary or unsupported
by reasonable consideration of public policy.
27 Terrace v. Thompson (1923)
- The state properly may assume that the
considerations upon which Congress made such
classification are substantial and reasonable.
Generally speaking, the natives of European
countries are eligible. Japanese, Chinese and
Malays are not. Appellants contention that the
state act discriminates arbitrarily against
Nakatsuka and other ineligible aliens because of
their race and color is without foundation. All
persons of whatever color or race who have not
declared their intention in good faith to become
citizens are prohibited from so owning
agricultural lands. The rule established by
Congress on this subject, in and of itself,
furnishes a reasonable basis for classification
in a state law withholding from aliens the
privilege of land ownership as defined in the
act.
28 Terrace v. Thompson (1923)
- The quality and allegiance of those who own,
occupy and use the farm lands within its borders
are matters of highest importance and affect the
safety and power of the state itself. - The Terraces, who are citizens, have no right
safeguarded by the Fourteenth Amendment to lease
their land to aliens lawfully forbidden to take
or have such lease. The state act is not
repugnant to the equal protection clause and does
not contravene the Fourteenth Amendment.
29 Terrace v. Thompson (1923)
- Treaty of Commerce and Navigation of 1911
- The citizens or subjects of each of the high
contracting parties shall have liberty to enter,
travel and reside in the territories of the other
to carry on trade, wholesale and retail, to own
or lease and occupy houses, manufactories,
warehouses and shops, to employ agents of their
choice, to lease land for residential and
commercial purposes, and generally to do anything
incident to or necessary for trade upon the same
terms as native citizens or subjects, submitting
themselves to the laws and regulations there
established.
30Other 1923 Supreme Court Decisions on Alien Land
Laws
- Porterfield v. Webb, 263 U.S. 225 (1923)
- California statute upheld against equal
protection challenge in case involving lease
similar to one in Terrace - Webb v. OBrien, 263 U.S. 313 (1923)
- California statute upheld against equal
protection challenge in case involving cropping
contract - Frick v. Webb, 263 U.S. 326 (1923)
- California statute upheld against equal
protection challenge in case involving sale of
corporation owning agricultural land
31Japanese Agricultural Landholdings in California
1920 458, 056 acres
1922 330,653 acres
1925 307,966 acres
32Oyama v. California, 332 U.S. 633 (1948)
- Land taken in escheat action filed while Oyamas
were interned - One of the petitioners was Fred Oyama, a minor
American citizen in whose name title was taken. - The other petitioner was his father and guardian,
Kajiro Oyama, a Japanese citizen ineligible for
naturalization - Majority held that California law violated sons
equal protection rights
33Oyama v. California, 332 U.S. 633 (1948)
- We agree with petitioners' first contention, that
the Alien Land Law, as applied in this case,
deprives Fred Oyama of the equal protection of
California's laws and of his privileges as an
American citizen. In our view of the case, the
State has discriminated against Fred Oyama the
discrimination is based solely on his parents'
country of origin and there is absent the
compelling justification which would be needed to
sustain discrimination of that nature.
34Oyama v. California, 332 U.S. 633 (1948)
- The fact that the father attached no strings to
the transfer was taken to indicate that he meant,
in effect, to acquire the beneficial ownership
himself. The California law purports to permit
citizen sons to take gifts of agricultural land
from their fathers, regardless of the fathers'
nationality. Yet, as indicated by this case, if
the father is ineligible for citizenship, facts
which would usually be considered indicia of the
son's ownership are used to make that ownership
suspect if the father is not an ineligible
alien, however, the same facts would be evidence
that a completed gift was intended.
35Oyama v. California, 332 U.S. 633 (1948)
- The cumulative effect, we believe, was clearly to
discriminate againt Fred Oyama. He was saddled
with an onerous burden of proof which need not be
borne by California children generally. . . . In
short, Fred Oyama lost his gift, irretrievably
and without compensation, solely because of the
extraordinary obstacles which the State set
before him. - The only basis for this discrimination against an
American citizen, moreover, was the fact that his
father was Japanese and not American, Russian,
Chinese, or English. But for that fact alone,
Fred Oyama, now a little over a year from
majority, would be the undisputed owner of the
eight acres in question.
36Oyama v. CaliforniaConcurring opinion by Black
- I concur in the Courts judgment and its opinion.
But I should prefer to reverse the judgment on
the broader grounds that the basic provisions of
the California Alien Land Law violate the equal
protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and
conflict with federal laws and treaties governing
the immigration of aliens and their rights after
arrival in this country.
37Oyama v. CaliforniaConcurring opinion by Murphy
- To me the controlling issue in this case is
whether the California Alien Land Law on its face
is consistent with the Constitution of the United
States. Can a state prohibit all aliens
ineligible for American citizenship from
acquiring, owning, occupying, enjoying, leasing
or transferring agricultural land? Does such a
prohibition square with the language of the
Fourteenth Amendment that no state shall deny to
any person within its jurisdiction the equal
protection of the laws?
38Oyama v. CaliforniaConcurring opinion by Murphy
- The negative answer to those queries is dictated
by the uncompromising opposition of the
Constitution to racism, whatever cloak or
disguise it may assume. The California statute in
question, as I view it, is nothing more than an
outright racial discrimination. As such, it
deserves constitutional condemnation. And since
the very core of the statute is so defective, I
consider it necessary to give voice to that fact
even though I join in the opinion of the Court.
39Oyama v. CaliforniaConcurring opinion by Murphy
- The California Alien Land Law was spawned of the
great anti-Oriental virus which, at an early
date, infected many persons in that state. The
history of this anti-Oriental agitation is not
one that does credit to a nation that prides
itself, at least historically, on being the
friendly haven of the tired and the oppressed of
other lands. Beginning in 1850, with the arrival
of substantial numbers of Chinese immigrants,
racial prejudices and discriminations began to
mount. . . .
40Oyama v. CaliforniaConcurring opinion by Murphy
- It was not until 1900 that Japanese began to
arrive in California in large numbers. By that
time the repressive measures directed at the
Chinese had achieved much of their desired
effect the Chinese population had materially
decreased and the antipathy of the Americans was
on the decline. But the arrival of the Japanese
fanned anew the flames of anti-Oriental
prejudice. History then began to repeat itself.
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42Los Angeles Times headlinesafter Pearl Harbor
- JAP BOAT FLASHES MESSAGE ASHORE
- ENEMY PLANES SIGHTED OVER CALIFORNIA COAST
- JAP AND CAMERA HELD IN BAY CITY
- VEGETABLES FOUND FREE OF POISON
- CAPS ON JAPANESE TOMATO PLANTS POINT TO AIR BASE
- CHINESE ABLE TO SPOT JAP
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46G.P.O. War Production Board, 1943
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49How to Tell Your Friends from the JapsTime
Magazine, Dec. 22, 1941
- Virtually all Japanese are short. Japanese are
likely to be stockier and broader-hipped than
short Chinese. Japanese are seldom fat they
often dry up and grow lean as they age. Although
both have the typical epicanthic fold of the
upper eyelid, Japanese eyes are usually set
closer together. The Chinese expression is likely
to be more placid, kindly, open the Japanese
more positive, dogmatic, arrogant. Japanese are
hesitant, nervous in conversation, laugh loudly
at the wrong time. Japanese walk stiffly erect,
hard heeled. Chinese, more relaxed, have an easy
gait, sometimes shuffle
50- Pocket Guide to China
- U.S. Army publication
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52General Delos Emmons (Dec. 21, 1941)
- There is no intention or desire on the part of
the federal authorities to operate mass
concentration camps. . . . While we have been
subjected to a serious attack by a ruthless and
treacherous enemy, we must remember that this is
America and we must do things the American Way.
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54Executive Order 9066 (Feb. 19, 1942)
- Secretary of War may prescribe military areas
to protect against espionage and sabotage - Secretary of War may determine which persons can
be excluded from those areas - It isnt clear what would occur next, but that
decision already had been made
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57- General John L. DeWitt,
- Feb. 14, 1942
- In the war in which we are now engaged racial
affinities are not severed by migration. The
Japanese race is an enemy race and while many
second and third generation Japanese born on
United States soil, possessed of United States
citizenship, have become Americanized, the
racial strains are undiluted. . . . It,
therefore, follows that along the vital Pacific
Coast over 112,000 potential enemies, of Japanese
extraction, are at large today.
58Grower-Shipper Vegetable Association, May 1942
- Weve been charged wanting to get rid of the Japs
for selfish reasons. We might as be honest. We
do. Its a question of whether the white man
lives on the Pacific Coast or the brown man.
They came into this valley to work, and they
stayed to take over. . . . If all the Japs were
removed tomorrow, wed never miss them in two
weeks, because the white farmers can take over
and produce everything the Jap grows.
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75Go for Broke The 442nd Regiment
- 18,143 individual decorations
- 21 Congressional Medal of Honor
- 52 Distinguished Service Crosses
- 560 Silver Stars
- 4000 Bronze Stars
- 9,486 Purple Hearts
76Gordon Hirabayashi
- Quaker and conscientious objector
- Went to FBI office to refuse to comply with
exclusion order - As an American citizen, I wanted to uphold the
principles of the Constitution, and the curfew
and evacuation orders which singled out a group
on the basis of ethnicity violated them. It was
not acceptable to me to be less than a full
citizen in a white mans country.
77Gordon Hirabayashi
- If I were to register and cooperate under these
circumstances I would be giving helpless consent
to the denial of practically all the things which
give me incentive to live. I must maintain my
Christian principles. I consider it my duty to
maintain the democratic standards for which this
nation lives.
78Hirabayashi v. United States (1943)
- The questions for our decision are whether the
particular restriction violated, namely that all
persons of Japanese ancestry residing in such an
area be within their place of residence daily
between the hours of 800 p. m. and 600 a.m.,
was adopted by the military commander in the
exercise of an unconstitutional delegation by
Congress of its legislative power, and whether
the restriction unconstitutionally discriminated
between citizens of Japanese ancestry and those
of other ancestries in violation of the Fifth
Amendment.
79Hirabayashi v. United States (1943)
- Public Proclamation No. 3
- All alien Japanese, all alien Germans, all alien
Italians, and all persons of Japanese ancestry
residing or being within the geographical limits
of Military Area No. 1 . . . shall be within
their place of residence between the hours of
800 P.M. and 600 A.M., which period is
hereinafter referred to as the hours of curfew'.
80Hirabayashi v. United States (1943)
- Executive Order No. 9066, promulgated in time of
war for the declared purpose of prosecuting the
war by protecting national defense resources from
sabotage and espionage, and the Act of March 21,
1942, ratifying and confirming the Executive
Order, were each an exercise of the power to wage
war conferred on the Congress and on the
President, as Commander in Chief of the armed
forces, by Articles I and II of the Constitution.
81Hirabayashi v. United States (1943)
- The actions taken must be appraised in the light
of the conditions with which the President and
Congress were confronted in the early months of
1942, many of which since disclosed, were then
peculiarly within the knowledge of the military
authorities. On December 7, 1941, the Japanese
air forces had attacked the United States Naval
Base at Pearl Harbor without warning, at the very
hour when Japanese diplomatic representatives
were conducting negotiations with our State
Department ostensibly for the peaceful settlement
of differences between the two countries. . . .
82Hirabayashi v. United States (1943)
- The challenged orders were defense measures for
the avowed purpose of safeguarding the military
area in question, at a time of threatened air
raids and invasion by the Japanese forces, from
the danger of sabotage and espionage. As the
curfew was made applicable to citizens residing
in the area only if they were of Japanese
ancestry, our inquiry must be whether in the
light of all the facts and circumstances there
was any substantial basis for the conclusion, in
which Congress and the military commander united,
that the curfew as applied was a protective
measure necessary to meet the threat of sabotage
and espionage which would substantially affect
the war effort and which might reasonably be
expected to aid a threatened enemy invasion.
83Hirabayashi v. United States (1943)
- There is support for the view that social,
economic and political conditions which have
prevailed since the close of the last century,
when the Japanese began to come to this country
in substantial numbers, have intensified their
solidarity and have in large measure prevented
their assimilation as an integral part of the
white population. In addition, large numbers of
children of Japanese parentage are sent to
Japanese language schools outside the regular
hours of public schools in the locality.
84Hirabayashi v. United States (1943)
- As a result of all these conditions affecting the
life of the Japanese, both aliens and citizens,
in the Pacific Coast area, there has been
relatively little social intercourse between them
and the white population. The restrictions, both
practical and legal, affecting the privileges and
opportunities afforded to persons of Japanese
extraction residing in the United States, have
been sources of irritation and may well have
tended to increase their isolation, and in many
instances their attachments to Japan and its
institutions.
85Hirabayashi v. United States (1943)
- The extent of that danger could be definitely
known only after the event and after it was too
late to meet it. Whatever views we may entertain
regarding the loyalty to this country of the
citizens of Japanese ancestry, we cannot reject
as unfounded the judgment of the military
authorities and of Congress that there were
disloyal members of that population, whose number
and strength could not be precisely and quickly
ascertained. We cannot say that the war- making
branches of the Government did not have ground
for believing that in a critical hour such
persons could not readily be isolated and
separately dealt with, and constituted a menace
to the national defense and safety, which
demanded that prompt and adequate measures be
taken to guard against it.
86Hirabayashi v. United States (1943)
- Today is the first time, so far as I am aware,
that we have sustained a substantial restriction
of the personal liberty of citizens of the United
States based upon the accident of race or
ancestry. Under the curfew order here challenged
no less than 70,000 American citizens have been
placed under a special ban and deprived of their
liberty because of their particular racial
inheritance. In this sense it bears a melancholy
resemblance to the treatment accorded to members
of the Jewish race in Germany and in other parts
of Europe. The result is the creation in this
country of two classes of citizens for the
purposes of a critical and perilous hour-to
sanction discrimination between groups of United
States citizens on the basis of ancestry. In my
opinion this goes to the very brink of
constitutional power. Original draft of dissent
said it went beyond the brink.
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88Fred Korematsu
- Born in Oakland
- Studied welding at a trade school and became a
shipyard welder and member of Boilermakers Union - Began dating Ida Boitano in 1941, a
second-generation Italian American - Korematsu disobeyed the evacuation order,
initially planning to go to the Midwest with Ida - He underwent plastic surgery and obtained a draft
card with the name Clyde Sarah, telling people
he was from Las Vegas and was of Spanish-Hawaiian
origin - After he was arrested three weeks later, local
paper ran headline Jap Spy Arrested.
89Korematsu v. United States (1944)
- What order did Korematsu violate?
- According to the majority opinion, why was this
order issued? - What provides the constitutional basis for
sustaining the exclusion order?
90Korematsu v. United StatesMajority opinion
- It wasnt beyond the war power of Congress and
the Executive to exclude those of Japanese
ancestry from the West Coast war area at the time
they did. Exclusion from a threatened area, no
less than curfew, has a definite and close
relationship to the prevention of espionage and
sabotage. The military authorities, charged with
the primary responsibility of defending our
shores, concluded that curfew provided inadequate
protection and ordered exclusion.
91Korematsu v. United States
- What is the difference between the majority
opinion and the dissenting opinions on what
deference should be given military authorities? -
- What is the difference between the majority
opinion and the dissenting opinions on the
question of whether racism influenced the
decision by the military to exclude Japanese from
certain areas of the West Coast?
92Korematsu v. United StatesMurphy dissent
- This exclusion of all persons of Japanese
ancestry, both alien and non-alien, from the
Pacific Coast area on a plea of military
necessity in the absence of martial law ought not
to be approved. Such exclusion goes over the very
brink of constitutional power and falls into the
ugly abyss of racism.
93Korematsu v. United StatesMurphy dissent
- According to Murphy, what should the military
authorities have done differently? - No adequate reason is given for the failure to
treat these Japanese Americans on an individual
basis by holding investigations and hearings to
separate the loyal from the disloyal, as was done
in the case of persons of German and Italian
ancestry. Yet nearly four months elapsed after
Pearl Harbor before the first exclusion order was
issued nearly eight months went by until the
last order was issued and the last of these
subversive persons was not actually removed until
almost eleven months had elapsed.