Court Opinion

ID: 9420767
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-08-02 22:55:55.635697+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:22:26.994436
License: Public Domain

Mr. Chief Justice Vinson,
with whom Mr. Justice Black and Mr. Justice Burton join,
dissenting.
The threshold question in this case is whether petitioner renounced his United States citizenship and became expatriated by reason of acts committed in Japan during the War. Prior to 1943, petitioner was regarded by Japanese authorities as an enemy alien. In March, 1943, petitioner gave official notice of his allegiance to Japan by having his name registered in the family Koseki. Thereafter, petitioner had his name removed from police *746records as an enemy alien, secured employment subject to military control at a munitions plant, traveled to China on a Japanese passport, and prayed daily for the Emperor’s health and a Japanese victory. These facts and petitioner’s heinous treatment of American prisoners of war, recited in the opinion of the Court, convince us that petitioner, for over two years, was consistently demonstrating his allegiance to Japan, not the United States. As a matter of law, he expatriated himself as well as that can be done.
Petitioner’s statements that he was still a citizen of the United States — made in order to obtain a United States passport after Japan had lost the War — cannot restore citizenship renounced during the War. Because we conclude, on this record, that petitioner’s whole course of conduct was inconsistent with retention of United States citizenship, we would reverse petitioner’s conviction of treason against the United States.