Perez v. Brownell
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Perez v. Brownell | ||||||||||||
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Supreme Court of the United States | ||||||||||||
Argued May 1, 1957 Reargued October 28, 1957 Decided March 31, 1958 |
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Holding | ||||||||||||
Congress has the power to revoke citizenship of those who vote in foreign elections. | ||||||||||||
Court membership | ||||||||||||
Chief Justice: Earl Warren Associate Justices: Hugo Black, Felix Frankfurter, William O. Douglas, Harold Hitz Burton, Tom C. Clark, John Marshall Harlan II, William J. Brennan, Jr., Charles Evans Whittaker |
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Case opinions | ||||||||||||
Majority by: Frankfurter Joined by: Burton, Clark, Harlan, Brennan Dissent by: Warren Joined by: Black, Douglas Dissent by: Douglas Joined by: Black Dissent by: Whittaker |
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Laws applied | ||||||||||||
Nationality Act of 1940; U.S. Const. amend. XIV | ||||||||||||
Overruled by | ||||||||||||
Afroyim v. Rusk, 387 U.S. 253 (1967) |
Perez v. Brownell, 356 U.S. 44 (1958), was a case decided by the Supreme Court of the United States involving citizenship.
Contents |
[edit] Background
Clemente Martinez Perez was born in El Paso, Texas, March 17, 1909, and resided in the United States until 1919 or 1920 when his parents took him to Mexico. In 1928 he was informed that he had been born in Texas.
During World War II he applied for admission and was admitted into the United States as a Mexican alien railroad worker. His application for such entry contained his recitation that he was a native-born citizen of Mexico. By 1947, however, Perez had returned to Mexico and in that year applied for admission to the United States as a citizen of the United States. Upon his arrival in the United States he was charged with failing to register under the Selective Service Laws of the United States during World War II.
Under oath, Perez admitted that between 1944 and 1947 he had remained outside the United States to avoid military service and had voted in an election in Mexico in 1946.
On May 15, 1953, he surrendered to Immigration authorities in San Francisco as an alien unlawfully in the United States but claimed that he was a citizen of the United States by birth and thereby entitled to remain. The U.S. District Court, however, found that Perez had lost his American citizenship, a decision that was affirmed by the court of appeals. The courts held that Congress can attach loss of citizenship only as a consequence of conduct engaged in voluntarily, even if there was no intent or desire to lose citizenship. This law was enacted as the Nationality Act of 1940 (54 Stat 1137, as amended).
[edit] Decision of the Court
In 1958, a divided United States Supreme Court upheld these decisions because Perez "became involved in foreign political affairs and evidenced an allegiance to another country inconsistent with American citizenship, thereby abandoning his citizenship."
Two central holdings of Perez v. Brownell found that
- The provision of the Fourteenth Amendment that "All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States," sets forth the two principal modes (but not the only ones) for acquiring citizenship, but nothing in the terms, the context, the history, or the manifest purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment warrants the inference of a restriction upon the power otherwise possessed by Congress to withdraw citizenship.
- Congress, acting under the Necessary and Proper Clause of Art I, 8, cl 18, of the Federal Constitution, may attach loss of nationality to voting in a foreign political election, since the means, withdrawal of citizenship, is reasonably calculated to effect the end that is within the power of Congress to achieve, the avoidance of embarrassment in the conduct of foreign relations attributable to voting by American citizens in such elections, and the importance and extreme delicacy of the matters sought to be regulated demand that Congress be permitted ample scope in selecting appropriate modes for accomplishing its purpose.
[edit] Subsequent history
However, in Afroyim v. Rusk, 387 U.S. 253 (1967), the court reversed itself when it held that the Nationality Act of 1940 is unconstitutional because the Fourteenth Amendment prevents Congress from taking away citizenship without the citizen's assent.