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British Legal Opinion about Immigration and Sovereignty, 1833–1906

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 October 2025

Duncan Wallace*
Affiliation:
Melbourne Law School, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia
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Abstract

In the early nineteenth century, parliamentarians in Britain debated whether the Crown’s prerogative could be used to exclude and deport aliens. These arguments were later expanded in litigation about the immigration practices of the British colonies. On behalf of the colonies, some lawyers proposed that the executive powers of colonial officials were informed by the writings of Samuel Pufendorf and Emer de Vattel, who had claimed that the state could forbid the entry of foreigners. But across three disputes, from Mauritius (1830s), Australia (1880s), and Canada (1900s), lawyers in the colonies and in London revealed several doubts about this line of thought. In doing so, they expressed a more general skepticism about the relevance of sovereignty to immigration control.

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British lawyers of the nineteenth century argued much about immigration. A recurring theme of their debates was a philosophical one. Did the state have a “sovereign” power to exclude foreigners? Naturally, the question was posed for a practical reason. Lawyers were interested in what the common law had to say about immigration control, for which legislation did not always provide clear support. More especially, they were interested in whether government officials could use the executive power of the “Crown’s prerogative” to exclude and deport aliens. Among those lawyers who defended this use of the prerogative, one strategy proved popular: to say that the prerogative was informed by certain European theories of sovereignty. The most common source of reference was Emer de Vattel’s The Law of Nations (1758), first released in English in 1760 and widely read in an 1833 translation by the lawyer and treatise writer Joseph Chitty.Footnote 1

These legal debates began not in the courtroom but in the British parliament.Footnote 2 In response to the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars, Alien Acts were passed to authorize the exclusion and deportation of aliens between 1792 and 1826. Successive ministries tried to downplay the novelty of the laws by saying that the Crown’s prerogative had already equipped the executive with these powers. Along with the Acts themselves, this claim attracted opposition. Several parliamentarians, many of them lawyers, argued that such an expansive view of the prerogative betrayed the modern distribution of power between Parliament and executive and the protections enshrined in Magna Carta and the Habeas Corpus Act. The controversy generated by these arguments contributed to the lapsing and non-renewal of the final Alien Act in 1826.

Britain did not systematically control immigration for the rest of the century. Many of its colonies, however, did.Footnote 3 Their practices invited legal scrutiny. From at least the 1830s, lawyers who were instructed by colonial governments to defend their exclusion or deportation orders pointed once again to the Crown’s prerogative and in turn to the prerogative’s relationship with state sovereignty. In opposing this argument, lawyers who were instructed by aggrieved aliens would have been aware of the earlier debates at Westminster. Perhaps due to the constraints of legal argument or to mid-century developments in English legislation, these lawyers gave more emphasis than those debates to the factual and procedural dimensions of immigration control and to the substantive rights that aliens enjoyed under colonial law. Notably, some rights, such as the right to buy land, were conferred on aliens in some colonies before those in the metropole.

Between 1833 and 1906, a cycle of legal disputes concerned the immigration practices of Mauritius, Australia and Canada. Lawyers who participated in these disputes arrived at a rough consensus, or so I argue here. Theories of sovereignty did not explain the ambit of the Crown’s prerogative and the corresponding position of aliens under the law. This collective opinion is noticeable even without its clear approval by Britain’s imperial court, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, which was involved in each dispute. The opinion can be constructed from what was argued in the disputes and from what was not, as well as from the curious reasons given by the Judicial Committee in resolving them. This patchwork of evidence reveals that lawyers had three particular concerns. One was that immigration legislation would be undermined if officials were allowed to exercise “sovereign” powers to deal with aliens in contrary ways. Another was that the rights conferred on aliens by other legislation would be hollowed out, causing special unfairness to aliens who had lived in their jurisdictions for many years. For some, this point was reinforced rather than contradicted by Vattel’s theory of sovereignty, which was arguably silent on the power of the state to deport long-term residents. Finally, theories of sovereignty distracted from duties of procedure and reason-giving that were beginning to attach to exercises of British executive power, including but not limited to conduct relying on the Crown’s prerogative. Interestingly, none of these concerns was inextricably linked with the status of the colonies within the British Empire and thus with their doubtful claim to the attributes of state sovereignty. While lawyers were alive to the difficulty of applying a theory of sovereignty to the colonies, and while there was much discussion about this in Australia, it was not a dominant theme of the litigation as a whole.

By contrast with parliamentary debates on the Alien Acts, it was rare for a lawyer involved in these colonial disputes to question the merits of a theory of sovereignty as such: to argue that it was inapplicable not merely to the British state but to others besides. In the period I study here, only one lawyer suggested that a theory of sovereignty might be uninformative for a great many political systems; this was the Melbourne barrister John Madden, and his target was Samuel Pufendorf. By and large, lawyers preferred to make use of Vattel or Pufendorf, and to use them for different ends. These theorists were widely seen as experts on international law, the domain in which claims of sovereign power were comfortably made. But lawyers were troubled by the relevance of the theorists’ ideas of sovereignty to the arrangement of public power within the state. A power to exclude or deport an alien might be a sovereign one, but that did not mean that any particular official or institution could exercise it on behalf of the state, or that its particular exercise could be tolerated by the rights of aliens under the law. In these ways, lawyers came to think that sovereignty was not such a useful idea in understanding the scope and limits of immigration control.

The first of the colonial disputes I focus on is from Mauritius. In 1833, the governor deported a French national who was the leader of a local militia. The deportation was found lawful, but only after provisions of the local law, the Napoleonic Code civil, were belatedly identified. The second dispute is from Victoria and New South Wales. In the 1880s, during a second wave of the Australian gold rushes, both colonies passed laws requiring ships landing in their territories to carry no more than a certain number of Chinese passengers. But the laws also seemed to confer a right of entry on passengers upon payment of a landing fee; and when the SS Afghan arrived in Melbourne and Sydney exceeding the passenger limits, the ship’s master offered to pay this fee for his passengers. Victoria’s refusal to accept the offer and allow passengers to land was eventually validated, but not without an alteration of the common law and the overruling of the colony’s supreme court. The final dispute is from Canada. In the 1890s and 1900s, the country’s federal parliament prohibited employers from soliciting or “prepaying” the immigration of contract laborers and authorized the deportation of some but not all of such prepaid immigrants. After a Canadian judge doubted the legislation’s conformity with imperial law and ruled it invalid, the Judicial Committee intervened once again to overrule a colonial court, holding that there was no constitutional problem with the law.

These bare details allow me to introduce some qualifications to the collective opinion that can be pieced together from the disputes. One concerns the reasoning of the Judicial Committee in the final, Canadian dispute. Lord Atkinson, who delivered the court’s opinion, quoted approvingly from Vattel on the state’s power to forbid the entry of foreigners. Naturally, one might suppose that this case represents an endorsement of the relevance of sovereignty to the lawfulness of immigration control. But things are not so simple. Atkinson used Vattel to explain not the Crown’s prerogative but rather the scope of British legislative power to authorize deportation—a scope that would have been doubted by few lawyers. Atkinson had been prompted to make this analytical move by the case’s special features, most especially by its timing. Decided in the same year as the Aliens Act of 1905 took effect in Britain, the Canadian dispute was an opportunity for colonial immigration practices to be linked with the new initiatives of the metropole.

The disputes involved practical outcomes as well as theoretical debates. Colonial governments were unsuccessful in persuading their own courts and the Judicial Committee of the use of the prerogative in immigration control. Nonetheless, they were successful in defending the legality of their immigration practices. In each case, the Judicial Committee was prepared to identify some reason apart from the prerogative—indeed, each case offered up a different reason—that explained this legality. So the disputes involve more than their discussions of sovereignty and immigration. Aside from the local politics surrounding the disputes, their outcomes may reflect an evolving toleration by the Colonial Office of colonial immigration control. The disputes may also reflect the tendency of discussions of immigration to focus on themes of sovereignty and control precisely when (permitted) rates of immigration are high or increasing.

Finally, it is worth acknowledging that Mauritius, Australia and Canada were far from the only British colonies to regulate immigration during this period. In the early nineteenth century and the late eighteenth, Jamaica enacted numerous laws to limit the arrival of immigrants from modern-day Haiti.Footnote 4 The Channel Islands were frequent sites of deportation; Guernsey, in which the practice was used as a form of criminal punishment as well as of immigration control, expelled about 10,000 people between 1842 and 1880.Footnote 5 In the 1840s, the governor of Malta refused entry to hundreds of political refugees from Italy.Footnote 6 Around the same time, and again in the 1870s and 1880s, Gibraltar deported Spanish aliens who did not hold residence permits.Footnote 7 Between the 1870s and 1900s, immigration legislation, often targeting Chinese immigrants, was passed in New Zealand, Natal, the Cape Colony, and the new Commonwealth of Australia.Footnote 8 There is reason to suppose that these developments (and others) received the attention of legal advisers to the Colonial Office or lawyers practising in the relevant colonies.

There are a few reasons why I have focused on three particular disputes. First, it can be hypothesized that other colonial disputes were not centrally concerned with the relationship between immigration and sovereignty. Many colonial immigration policies were clearly authorized by imperial or colonial legislation, such that there was no need to rely on the Crown’s prerogative to explain their legality.Footnote 9 Second, a more limited focus allows greater attention to the details of each dispute. Third, and most importantly, these disputes were the only immigration litigation of the period to be resolved by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council, the body tasked with bringing legal order to the policy and administration of colonial governments and expounding principles of the British constitution.Footnote 10 The views of both the Judicial Committee and the lawyers who appeared before it offer a window into the legal ideas that were seen as mainstream. These views also form something of a conversation: the Mauritian dispute was considered in the Australian dispute, just as both of these were considered in the Canadian. Apart from treatises, other legal texts on immigration did not attract the same continuous regard.

I will address the disputes in chronological order. But it will be useful first to say a few words about the European theories that inspired arguments over the Crown’s prerogative, as well as the setting in Britain in which these arguments were first aired.

European theories, British law

In thinking about immigration and sovereignty, British lawyers were drawn to the writings of Samuel Pufendorf and Emer de Vattel. Well before the start of the nineteenth century, these theorists were instrumental in popularizing in Britain what was basically Thomas Hobbes’s conception of the state. On this conception, the state was a fictional person who was represented rather than constituted by its “sovereign” and the members of its community. The “sovereign powers” forming part of the state were not simply those exercised by or arrogated to the sovereign from time to time, but derived from the deeper interests and “life” of this fictional person. Roughly put, sovereign powers were the powers necessary to sustain the state and to allow it to flourish. Although Hobbes’s theory of the state was not influential in England in its day, it gained popularity in the eighteenth century. The circulation of Pufendorf’s and Vattel’s writings may have even played a role in this process.Footnote 11 The receptiveness of the British legal community to these theorists’ specific claims about immigration can thus be partly explained by the derivation of those claims from a familiar pattern of political thought.

Another aspect of the theorists’ popularity within the legal community was that they had attempted not merely to describe the state’s powers in a moral sense but to claim that these powers were protected by international law. In the wider project of establishing international law, the theorists were (and still are) associated with Hugo Grotius, even if Grotius’s conception of the state has differences from Hobbes’s and their own.Footnote 12 The legal nature of these theorists’ work would have made it seem a fair exercise to transpose their claims into propositions of law, including, with appropriate caution, the domestic public law of a particular state. In this way, Vattel came to enjoy a reputation among British lawyers that was not far from those of the great treatise writers Hale, Coke, and Blackstone.

The writings of Grotius, Pufendorf, and Vattel were published in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, when comparable discussions about state sovereignty and the treatment of foreigners were not noticeable in British politics. But British writers addressed the topic of foreigners and immigration in other ways. Some believed that England was underpopulated and in need of increased immigration from Protestant Europe. In 1709, Parliament passed an Act that made it easier for aliens to become British subjects. In the very same year, though, over 13,000 German refugees arrived in the country from Rhenish Palatinate, only to be viewed as a burden on public resources. The Act was soon repealed, meaning that aliens (once again) could not become subjects without personalized naturalization bills.Footnote 13 So while the link between immigration and sovereignty was not yet a focus in British politics, a connection had been made between naturalization and immigration. This connection would become firmer in the nineteenth century.Footnote 14

Returning to the European theorists, their conclusions about the powers of the state with respect to “foreigners” or “strangers” conveyed both the possibility of control and the desirability of hospitality. Grotius wrote that states could not exclude refugees and that they “ought” to grant residence to foreigners if their territory amounted to “deserted and unproductive soil.”Footnote 15 Pufendorf wrote that states had the power “to take such measures about the admission of strangers, as they think convenient,” while thinking it “barbarous” to treat all foreign friends and enemies alike and to deport them “unless upon good reason,” such as because of a scarcity of resources, overcrowding, or the “idleness” of foreign workers. “If on the whole,” he continued, “it appears that the persons deserve our favour and pitty, and that no restraint lies on us from good reasons of state, it will be an act of humanity to confer such a benefit on them.”Footnote 16 Christian Wolff, of whom Vattel claimed to be a disciple, was more assertive about the state’s powers, writing that no foreigner “can claim any right for himself in the territory of another” and that his refusal or admission depended “altogether” on the will of the state’s ruler. But Wolff also described foreigners who were granted admission as the state’s “temporary citizens,” liable to be treated in the same manner as other citizens unless special laws were made for them.Footnote 17 Similarly, Vattel wrote that it was for the state to judge “whether her circumstances will or will not justify the admission of [a] foreigner” and to “annex what conditions [it] pleases to the permission to enter.” More in keeping with Pufendorf than with Wolff, though, Vattel also thought it would be wrong for the state to act on “slight reasons, or on groundless or frivolous fears.” This equivocation ran through his view on deportation, which permitted the state to “dismiss” foreigners “at once” but on the seemingly demanding proviso that its territory was “scarcely sufficient for herself.”Footnote 18

A lawyer could read these passages in different ways. Did they mean that the state’s powers were unlimited, or that they were qualified by duties of good reason and conditions of scarcity? Consider the first edition of the Commentaries upon International Law by the English lawyer Robert Phillimore, published in 1854. Vattel was cited for the “received maxim of International Law, that the Government of a State may prohibit the entrance of strangers into the country, and may therefore regulate the conditions under which they shall be allowed to remain in it, or may require and compel their departure from it.” But Phillimore did not elaborate the principle with example, devoting his attention instead to the treatment of foreigners who were residents of the state. This emphasis alone suggested an expectation that admitted foreigners would not face deportation. “It has been the policy of wise States,” he noted in passing, “to open wide the door for the reception and naturalization of foreigners.”Footnote 19

Another question of interpretation arose from the theorists’ focus on the state’s powers in international law, and from their corresponding descriptions of the wielders of these powers. Vattel, for example, wrote of a “lord of the territory” or a “ruler” exercising the powers of exclusion and deportation, leaving it open who these persons were within a state. In nineteenth-century Britain, a lawyer would have had to ignore centuries of struggle to claim that the Crown, and by extension the executive government, was the country’s “ruler” or “lord” in respect of any given area of public policy. Because of the varying role of legislative assemblies in the colonies, it was more plausible to claim that (for some colonies) the governor was its “ruler.” But along with the awkwardness of equating a governor or colony with a state,Footnote 20 there was a legal obstacle to this line of thought. The prerogative powers of colonial governors were derived from the British Crown. Questions about executive power in the metropole were thus entangled with those in the colonies.

As I said earlier, the relevance of European theories to the Crown’s prerogative was repeatedly discussed during the passage and renewal of the British Alien Acts between 1792 and 1826. The topic was introduced by Lord Grenville in support of the very first Alien Bill in December 1792. In spite of evident uncertainty about the question, Grenville claimed that the bill’s measures were also authorized by the prerogative.Footnote 21 While it is possible to see this claim as “somewhat irrelevant,”Footnote 22 since no ministry of the period relied on the prerogative, it yielded a genuine clash of principle. For those who opposed the Alien Acts, the question of the prerogative stood in for wider questions about the place of immigration control in British politics.

The historian Thomas C. Jones has studied the debates on the Alien Acts in detail. Although his main concern was to show the emergence at this time of a concept of asylum, he has highlighted the belief among opponents of the Acts that they were incompatible with legal landmarks such as Magna Carta, habeas corpus, the settlement of 1688 and the right of a person aggrieved by executive action to appeal to the Privy Council.Footnote 23 Near the end of these debates, in 1825, the Edinburgh Review published a lively essay by William Empson, who memorably described the Alien Acts as “monster births of the French revolution” and compared the new position of aliens to the “crawling and dependent existence of a slave.”Footnote 24 Empson anticipated just about every point raised against the use of the Crown’s prerogative to exclude or deport aliens. Not only did he discuss the tension between, on the one hand, granting aliens extensive civil rights and, on the other, rendering them liable to be “torn” from their homes; he also doubted that Pufendorf or Vattel could be used to “put aside the power of Parliament, and prove a prerogative in the crown of England.”Footnote 25 In Parliament, Henry Brougham and James Mackintosh joined in thinking that Pufendorf was no authority on the British constitution.Footnote 26

A representative exchange on the Crown’s prerogative occurred in 1816. Lord Castlereagh introduced a new Alien Bill and repeated the view of the Liverpool ministry that the “Crown, in truth, possessed the right of sending aliens out of the realm on suspicion that they were concerned in practices dangerous to the state; but it had been thought wise … to arm the executive with the countenance of the legislature.” The Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales, Lord Ellenborough, defended this position on “the authority of Vattel” and the need for “not only … the monarch of this country, but … the sovereign of every country,” to enjoy this sort of power. Against this view, Earl Grey announced his surprise that Ellenborough, a man “at the head of the administration of the law of the country,” had sought support from “a French writer upon the law of nations” rather than the annals of the common law or such “eminent law writers” as Bracton, Fortescue, or Coke. He reminded Ellenborough that Vattel believed as well that the raising of money and the maintenance of an army were sovereign powers, and that no one considered these to be part of the Crown’s prerogative. Some sovereign powers belonged to Parliament, or were shared between Parliament and executive. The Earl of Liverpool himself responded that the sovereign power to “send away dangerous aliens” had to “rest with the executive power,” because if it were placed elsewhere, it might be rendered “ineffective.”Footnote 27 Although it is hard to say which of these positions held sway at the time,Footnote 28 Grey’s view prevailed on government positions later in the century. In 1852, the Foreign Secretary, Earl Granville, informed diplomats across Europe that “all foreigners have the unrestricted right of entrance and residence in this country.”Footnote 29

The background to the colonial disputes is nearly complete. But what must also be recalled is the effective absence of immigration control in Britain between 1826 and 1905. Almost continuously throughout these years, no English legislation authorized the exclusion or deportation of aliens, and neither the Alien Office nor any central department presided over a recognizable immigration policy.Footnote 30 By contrast with continental Europe and the United States, nineteenth-century Britain has accordingly been seen as a country of “free immigration.” But the absence of central control did not entail the absence of practical limits on immigration, or the absence of immigration from British politics. Aside from the cost of international travel, an obstacle to immigration was the limited access of aliens to parochial poor relief, which was conditional on their settlement within a parish. Some aliens who did not receive their settlement within a parish (for example because they could not establish a required period of residence) or who were considered to be a burden on parochial resources were “repatriated” with the help of community organizations.Footnote 31 At the insistence of members of the Conservative Party, immigration became a subject of national debate from the 1880s, when a rise in immigration from Eastern Europe and Russia contributed to anti-Semitism and fears of overcrowding in East London. Some combination of these and other factors prompted Arthur Balfour’s government to pass the Aliens Act in 1905.Footnote 32

Finally, the rights of aliens in Britain underwent reform in the middle part of the nineteenth century. In 1844, a landmark statute was passed to recognize the rights of aliens to hold personal property and take out twenty-one-year leases of land; the law also authorized the Home Secretary to issue certificates of naturalization.Footnote 33 Two further significant laws were passed in 1870. One gave aliens the right to buy land. The other authorized the extradition of alien fugitives, except for political refugees.Footnote 34 The topic of aliens’ rights is certainly detachable from the topic of immigration control, insofar as these rights were conferred partly to protect a group of individuals who were increasingly prominent in British society. But as Andreas Fahrmeir has explained, these legal changes also reflected an assumption, if not a policy, that aliens coming into Britain would be wealthy and own property.Footnote 35 The changes also meant that lawyers became accustomed to a position of equality between subjects and resident aliens. As with William Empson, some lawyers believed this equality to be in tension with the practice of deportation. A complication here is that the colonies were permitted to regulate the rights of aliens in their own ways.Footnote 36 But variations in colonial law did not stop lawyers from seeing an incoherence between immigration control and aliens’ rights.

A deportation in Mauritius, 1833

Britain acquired Mauritius from France during the Napoleonic Wars, with its conquest formalized by the Treaty of Paris in 1814. By British law, the island’s local laws survived the conquest, such that (up until Mauritian independence in 1968) many of the rights, duties, and powers of private persons as well as public officials were determined by the Napoleonic Code civil.Footnote 37 By the early 1830s, most of the island’s population consisted of white French nationals and around 70,000 slaves.Footnote 38 (Slavery was not abolished on the island until February 1835.Footnote 39) A local elite of estate owners, newspaper publishers, lawyers, and others resisted the Colonial Office’s “amelioration” policies, which included the setting up of a protector of slaves in 1829, along with other features of British rule. To the embarrassment of the Colonial Office, several local governors acquiesced in some of the elite’s assertions of power.Footnote 40

In April 1832, Governor Charles Coville enabled the formation of a voluntary militia that was designed to protect the elite’s interests. In view of its nearly thousand-strong membership and habit of wearing the uniform of the National Guard, the militia was a blatant challenge to British authority. Its leader, at least for a time, was the merchant and landowner Henry Adam. In what has been termed the “Jeremie affair,” the militia played a part in the departure of John Jeremie, an abolitionist appointed as the island’s procureur-général, and a temporary collapse of order.Footnote 41 Colville was quickly replaced as governor by William Nicolay and the militia was declared unlawful by royal proclamation. Following his arrival in January 1833, Nicolay’s overall response to the elite, and to the local existence and conditions of slavery, does not seem to have been strong.Footnote 42 It is true that under his tenure the island transitioned away from slavery and then from a system of indentured labor (ending in 1839), but these measures were mandated not by his initiative but by the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833.Footnote 43 Nonetheless, working to instructions from the Secretary of State for War and the Colonies,Footnote 44 Nicolay adopted at least one countermeasure. In July 1833, he ordered Mr Adam to leave the island.

The deportation followed some sort of procedure, as part of which a council was formed to hear evidence from Mr Adam and other witnesses. After investigation about the circumstances in which Mr Adam had taken an oath of allegiance to the colony and the oath’s legal effect,Footnote 45 Nicolay was satisfied that Mr Adam was not a British subject and was liable to deportation on that basis. The evidence was also clear that Mr Adam had been “mixed up with parties having for object the subversion of good order, and legitimate authority.” Nicolay was inclined to agree with the suspicion of local police that Mr Adam had also been “hostile to the British Government” even though the “circumstances upon which such opinion was founded, may not be susceptible of legal proof.” Perhaps it was a doubt about the evidence, or Nicolay’s sense of Mr Adam’s “high” standing in the community, that dissuaded him from issuing a formal or written decision. Instead he simply informed Mr Adam that “he must quit this Island” by the start of the following month. Mr Adam made known his intention to go to London to challenge his treatment by way of petition.Footnote 46

It did not take Mr Adam long to find a willing solicitor. Edward Richardson, who ran a practice in the Adelphi Terrace Building on the Strand, thought that his client had grounds for complaint, even if these were “rather constitutional than legal.”Footnote 47 For him, the case did not reduce to whether Mr Adam was a British subject. The sort of question that needed to be asked and answered, Richardson thought, was whether

a Person in the situation of Mr. Adam, a Governor of the Bank [and] a Member of the Chamber of Commerce who during a Residence of sixteen years had contracted many social Relations and acquired the esteem and respect of the whole Colony as well as of the authorit[ies] there should be treated as a mere Foreigner without civil rights and subject at a moment’s notice to be torn from his family and affairs.Footnote 48

Understandably, Richardson believed that a court confined to “technical Rules” and “Precedents & authorities” would be ill-equipped to decide such a case, which he described also as raising a “question of Prerogative arising out of a novel relation of Sovereignty.”Footnote 49 At least by June 1834, before Lord Stanley resigned as Secretary of War and the Colonies, Richardson had corresponded with the Colonial Office about the referral of a petition to the Judicial Committee. Soon after, when Lord Spring Rice was in the Cabinet post, a civil servant formulated two questions that might be (and indeed later were) referred to the court.Footnote 50 These were: “What is the ‘status’ of Mr. Adam?” and “Whether the legal rights incidental to such ‘status’ have been infringed by Mr. Adam’s removal from the Mauritius?” To Richardson’s dismay, the arrival in the Colonial Office first of Lord Aberdeen and then of Lord Glenelg brought concern that these questions would invite the Judicial Committee to veer into matters of “expediency” and “investigate the whole subject in its political as well as in its legal bearings”—and even to make compensation orders that would be viewed unkindly by the Treasury Commissioners.Footnote 51 Lord Glenelg in particular wondered whether the petition would better be determined by a court of common law,Footnote 52 and the canvassing of this option seems to have delayed the consent of the Judicial Committee to hear the case until 1837.

The Law Officers—King’s Advocate John Dodson, Attorney General John Campbell and Solicitor General Robert Rolfe—were instructed to defend the deportation. They actually suggested that the case be settled rather than brought into “public discussion” in view of what they saw as Mr Adam’s “very harsh” experience.Footnote 53 Nonetheless, the lawyers were proven correct in their preliminary advice to the Colonial Office that the legality of Mr Adam’s deportation followed from his status as an alien. They did not doubt that he was. Neither did they doubt that the Crown’s prerogative would authorize the deportation of an alien, or that the prerogative could be used in this way by the colonial governor. They added that their conclusions were subject to the “law of this island at the time when it became part of the British possessions.”Footnote 54 But their advice did not refer to specific provisions of the Code (indeed they admitted to having “no precise information” about it and to “assuming what we believe to be the case”), and those they later cited in court were found to be irrelevant.Footnote 55 Perhaps thinking that the burden lay with the government’s lawyers, the barristers briefed for Mr Adam, William Follett and Stephen Lushington,Footnote 56 did not acquit themselves better in this regard. Their petition was equally low on detail about the Code, pointing instead to the history of deportation in Britain, in which they claimed that the practice had “never been resorted to, even in cases of danger and emergency, without Warrant of Parliament.”Footnote 57 In reply to a request for information about Mauritian law, Dr Lushington wrote to Henry Brougham (who, his political career now over, was one of the judges assigned to the case) that he could not assist other than by noting the existence of relevant materials in the House of Commons library.Footnote 58 In a separate letter Lushington even confessed to being “wholly sick of the Mauritius!”—though this may have been related to his involvement in a separate case about John Jeremie and wider frustrations with the island’s legal system.Footnote 59 Brougham would later hint at the general lack of assistance.Footnote 60

Mr Adam’s lawyers argued first that the governor had not been conferred with a “power of Summary Deportation, even of Aliens,” such that Mr Adam could not have been removed without a trial. Second, they argued that even if the governor had a power to deport aliens without trial, Mr Adam’s enjoyment under the Code of rights equivalent to those of a British subject meant that he was not “liable to be treated” as an alien.Footnote 61 This second contention owed something to a serious engagement by the lawyers—at least by the solicitor Richardson—with Vattel’s theory. In a set of undated notes that must have been sent to the Treasury Solicitor’s Department (since they ended up in its archives) and that were marked “Richardson, 2 Adelphi Terrace, Strand,” the author pondered Vattel’s stipulation that a sovereign could “annex” conditions to the admission of a foreigner. The scope of such conditions could not, Richardson thought, go past a certain point. They could not allow a sovereign the right, at any moment and for any reason, to determine that an admitted foreigner’s residence was no longer lawful. After quoting Vattel’s view that “[i]f the sovereign does not permit aliens to possess immovable property, nobody has a right to complain of such prohibition, for he may have very good reasons for acting in this manner,” Richardson wrote, “Unquestionably, no one can complain of a refusal to permit, but the forcible dispossession after the permission has been accorded by Law, would be an unjustifiable outrage.”Footnote 62

Critically, in a point stressed in the petition,Footnote 63 Mr Adam had been allowed to buy and own land, a right not be given to aliens in Britain until 1870. With references to Blackstone and Calvin’s Case,Footnote 64 Richardson considered that this right must come with a right of “permanent residence and establishment.”Footnote 65 No such rule was or would later be recognized by British law; an alien cannot guarantee their residence in the country by acquiring property. But what Mr Adam’s lawyers thought went beyond property rights. Both Richardson’s correspondence with the Colonial Office and the petition settled by his barristers refer to the length of Mr Adam’s residence on the island, his personal life, and his social connections and contributions as reasons to count against the legality of his deportation.Footnote 66 These points resonate with the demands of contemporary public law, and so it is perhaps surprising that Vattel helped point the lawyers (or Richardson) in this direction.Footnote 67 Apart from a reference to the “Practice of enlightened Nations,”Footnote 68 though, the petition does not reveal the linkage between Vattel and the argument about Mr Adam’s civil rights; neither does Edmund Moore’s law report of the case.

Explaining the Judicial Committee’s decision in July 1837, Thomas Erskine relied on Vattel in a different way, one that seemed to go in the governor’s favor. He began by quoting Vattel’s view that the “lord of the territory” could “forbid its being entered” and “annex” conditions on the entry of foreigners. He transposed the theorist to mean that “the supreme power of every state has a right to make laws for the exclusion or expulsion of a foreigner.” But Erskine did not take the step of identifying the relevant “state” or its “supreme power,” or do much to suggest that Mauritius or its governor had either status. As for the “law” under which Mr Adam’s deportation had been made, this, in the court’s view, was none other than the Code civil. After a searching examination of the Code and commentary in Philippe-Antoine Merlin’s Répertoire de jurisprudence, Erskine held that the Code authorized the governor, who stood in the place of the French executive, to deport aliens “at [his] pleasure, without conviction for any offence.” The only aliens who were immune from this sweeping power were those who had established their domicile on the island, which meant those who had been given “express authority” by the government to settle there. Because Mr Adam had not shown the giving of such authority by the French government (or the British), he was liable to deportation by the governor.Footnote 69

Erskine’s reliance on Vattel is hard to reconcile with the decisive, more legalistic part of his reasoning. It is true that Erskine described the power of deportation as an “inherent prerogative,” but in doing so his concern was to consider whether the Code confirmed or “deprived” the French government of the power, suggesting that it was not foregone that the government could exercise it lawfully. Just as importantly, Erskine did not equate the French law of executive power with the British law of the Crown’s prerogative. British law permitted a colonial governor to exercise powers previously enjoyed by the French government, but that was all; it did not mean that the Crown’s prerogative subsumed all these powers. Erskine did not therefore hold that the Crown’s prerogative generally extended to the deportation of aliens, let alone that the prerogative was informed by Vattel’s theory. After all, the Code was a law “made” by the French government. Only in an unreal sense had a “supreme power” within the British state made or enacted this law; as the case itself attests, neither the governor nor the Law Officers were especially aware of what it said. In this way, the diversity of laws within the British Empire interfered with the transposition of Vattel’s theory into colonial powers over immigration.

In a brief concurring opinion, Henry Brougham recorded his view that Mr Adam had suffered a “great hardship.” The result of the case was “somewhat unexpected” and it was “with much reluctance and regret” that the court had yielded to “peculiar provisions of the French law.”Footnote 70 He did not refer to Vattel. Aside from wondering if the dim view of Pufendorf he had expressed in debate on the Alien Acts extended to other theorists, we can be sure that Brougham did not consider a theory of sovereignty to be relevant to the case. Brougham’s past and future politics are easy to project onto his internal conflict here. The ruling against Mr Adam, a participant in the slave trade, coheres with Brougham’s abolitionism, even if Brougham’s desired reforms had been made by this time. Equally, Brougham believed that aliens were entitled to nearly the same legal rights as subjects, and would go on to advocate for the 1844 Act that brought Britain closer to this position.Footnote 71

So while Mr Adam lost his case, the case is also evidence of two doubts about the relevance of sovereignty to the legality of immigration control. One is that the rights of aliens—in this case those which were derived from French law—did not sit well with the general power of deportation that might be sourced in the theories of Pufendorf and Vattel, and perhaps did not belong in those theories after all. The other is that the interplay of rules and instruments that conferred power on colonial officials made it difficult either to see those officials as a “supreme power” or to see that they had been authorized by such a power to regulate immigration. In the Australian disputes I will now turn to, there were lingering questions about the Judicial Committee’s approach to Mr Adam’s case. In Victoria, Justice Holroyd questioned how the court could have ascribed to an “English Sovereign a power which had been inherent in the Crown of France.”Footnote 72 In argument before the Judicial Committee, the London barrister Horace Davey thought it best for the court to put its previous decision to one side, saying “a right to deport aliens is not claimed in this case; it is a right to exclude them which is now in question.”Footnote 73 Davey’s opponent, Walter Phillimore, posed a question that could have been lifted from Richardson’s letters and notes: “Could a man with [property] rights be prevented … from landing?”Footnote 74 In turn, the Judicial Committee preferred to evade rather than answer such questions.

Exclusion of Chinese immigrants in Australia, 1880s

The Australian colonies regulated Chinese immigration as early as the 1850s. In the 1870s and 1880s, a second wave of gold rushes brought new arrivals and renewed anti-Chinese racism. In view of Britain’s diplomatic ambitions in China, the Colonial Office preferred the colonies’ immigration policies not to explicitly target Chinese aliens or involve racial criteria. At one point, London withheld royal assent to a reserved Queensland bill that would have imposed discriminatory licence fees on Chinese miners. But this was only to encourage the colonies, who at an 1880–81 conference adopted the strategy of limiting Chinese passengers on arriving ships. The arguments against such measures by prominent Chinese Australians, who pointed to the British constitution, to liberalism, and even to passages from Vattel, fell on deaf ears.Footnote 75 Both Victoria and New South Wales laid down passenger limits in legislation. In what proved to be a complication, the laws also sought to restrict Chinese immigration (and raise revenue) by levying a ten-pound landing fee in respect of each passenger.Footnote 76

The SS Afghan and its hundreds of Chinese passengers arrived in 1888, first in Melbourne and then in Sydney. In both cities, colonial officials did not allow passengers to disembark, citing the statutory limits. In turn, several passengers who found themselves confined on the ship, and whose legal costs were funded by Chinese Australian communities, invoked the writ of habeas corpus. In the colonies’ supreme courts, the passengers claimed that they were unlawfully detained on the ship, either because the shipmaster offered to pay their landing fees or because (in the case of a passenger in Sydney) they were returning to the colony with a statutory certificate entitling them to do so.Footnote 77

In court, Victoria gestured towards an argument that the passenger limits took priority over the right of entry on payment.Footnote 78 But neither it nor New South Wales gave this argument much emphasis. Perhaps because the cases gave them the opportunity to do so, both governments argued that the colonial officials had not been exercising statutory executive power but rather the Crown’s prerogative in excluding the passengers. The prerogative allowed the colonies to exercise their “sovereign right … to forbid aliens or foreigners from entering its dominions.” Vattel, along with English and American writers on international law, was cited in support.Footnote 79 The colonies also contended that the prerogative could not “be taken away except by express enactment,” such that their own immigration legislation had no bearing on its use. There was an ambitious suggestion, too, that the exclusion of the passengers was an “act of State” immune from legal challenge, even though neither the queen nor any governor had approved the conduct.Footnote 80 On behalf of New South Wales, the barrister Julian Salomons went so far as to claim that a new form of executive power, a power specifically to prevent the entry of foreigners, should be recognized. This new power, he said, “is inherent in the executive of any territory, and has nothing to do with the Queen,” and its exercise would have to stand “altogether outside the principle of habeas corpus.”Footnote 81 In the company of such grand claims, a modest one is easy to miss. “Of course aliens have a right of entering any country,” conceded the Attorney General Henry Wrixon in Melbourne, “until they are forbidden.”Footnote 82 The Judicial Committee would later resolve the litigation by rejecting this apparently uncontroversial point.

John Madden, then one of Melbourne’s leading barristers, represented the passenger Mr Chung Teong Toy in his case against Victoria. Madden had much to say about an attempt by his opposing counsel to link European theories of sovereignty with the Crown’s prerogative. Addressing Pufendorf rather than Vattel, Madden said that the theorist “was no authority on the law of England, although he was a writer of great eminence and respect on matters on which he treated,” adding that “he wrote at a time when social philosophy was an interesting subject to many persons.”Footnote 83 Echoes of the parliamentary views of Henry Brougham and James Mackintosh are clear. Even if Pufendorf’s claims were notionally relevant to British law, Madden went on, they were disproved by the Alien Acts of 1792–1826 and by the absence of any “instance where this prerogative has been exercised since the reign of Henry IV.” He pointed to the newly popular theorist of the British constitution, Albert Venn Dicey, as “strong authority” for this view, contrasting him with the “not very substantial” authority of Chitty, Blackstone, and Pufendorf.Footnote 84 In Sydney, lawyers for the passengers there did not draw out the same contention, seemingly because they did not need to. In the first case decided by the New South Wales supreme court, the passenger, Mr Lo Pak, held a certificate entitling him to entry under colonial law; his barrister, Charles Pilcher, could rest his case on this statutory right. Mr Lo Pak’s success set a kind of precedent for the next case. Bernard Wise, representing the passenger Mr Leong Kum (who held no certificate but for whom an offer of payment had been made), was informed that no argument needed to be heard from him—the court had questions only for the government.Footnote 85In a third case, involving the passenger Mr Woo Tin, the “identical” facts meant that no argument at all was possible; the government submitted to the court’s judgment and Chief Justice Darley delivered a diatribe against it for acting “in open opposition” to the court’s orders.Footnote 86

In the supreme court of Victoria, one or two judges endorsed the link between sovereignty and prerogative. Justice Kerferd thought it necessary for the Crown’s prerogative to take a form that would “protect the people of this country from an influx of aliens,” reasoning that it was “beyond all question that every nation may exercise the right of excluding aliens without giving offence to the country to which those aliens belong.”Footnote 87 Chief Justice Higinbotham thought along similar lines, preferring to say that the colony’s executive powers over aliens derived from its constitution or its “quasi-sovereign” status rather than from a prerogative power deriving from the British Crown.Footnote 88 These judges, however, were in dissent. Neither of their approaches was taken up by the Judicial Committee in resolving an appeal by Victoria, even after that court had (in granting leave to appeal) implicitly promised to inquire “into the source and origin of the constitutional rights of self-government belonging by law to the people of Victoria.”Footnote 89

The Chinese passengers prevailed in the Australian courts for a combination of reasons. A total rejection of the link between sovereignty and prerogative was not actually prominent among them. Of all the judges who heard these disputes, only Justice Holroyd in Melbourne held that the power of the British government to exclude aliens was “now vested in the Parliament of the United Kingdom, and not in the Sovereign [i.e. the Crown or executive] alone.”Footnote 90 For Holroyd, the legal basis for immigration control was solely legislative, which rendered the relationship between immigration and sovereignty irrelevant to legal analysis. By and large, though, his judicial colleagues preferred to reject the colonies’ arguments in view of other concerns.

One set of concerns was about the colonies’ eligibility to exercise sovereign powers in the first place. In Sydney, Justice Windeyer interrupted the argument of Julian Salomons to say, “You are arguing as if this were a sovereign State.” He went on to explain that even if the British Crown as the “Government of a sovereign State” had a prerogative to exclude aliens, the exercise by the colony of such a prerogative would be “utterly incompatible” with its constitution and “position as a dependency of the mother country.”Footnote 91 Chief Justice Darley agreed, doubting that it was even possible for the imperial government to delegate its prerogative powers.Footnote 92 Justice Foster, who was “disposed to agree” that “the Sovereign has the power to determine whether foreigners shall be received into the territory,” thought nonetheless that the colony had not shown it had been bestowed with this “special power.”Footnote 93 In Melbourne, Justice Williams recorded his racist displeasure in concluding that the terms of Victoria’s constitution meant that the colony lacked “the legal means of preventing the scum or desperadoes of alien nationalities from landing on our territory whenever it may suit them to come here.”Footnote 94 Much the same focus on the local constitution was adopted by Justices A’Beckett and Wrenfordsley. In this way, arguments about immigration control intersected with wider controversies about colonial self-government. It is interesting that the only judges in these disputes who emphasized the subordinacy of the Australian colonies within the British Empire were Australian—the Judicial Committee would make no such overtures. It is interesting, too, that so many of the Australian judges were prepared to assume both that the imperial government had a prerogative to exclude aliens and that this power stemmed from its sovereignty, using this concession to show the limits of colonial power.

By contrast with the judges in Melbourne, those in Sydney saw the disputes as having a less abstract dimension. The very existence of the immigration legislation, and the rights of aliens under it, meant that the prerogative to exclude aliens must have been abrogated in the colonies, even if it had once existed there. Otherwise, reasoned Windeyer, the colonial executive would be “effectively” allowed to “set aside that law.”Footnote 95 Darley wrote that the legislation “legalised” the arrival of Chinese aliens who held entry certificates or whose shipmaster could pay their landing fee. An executive power to treat aliens otherwise would be “opposed to the statute law of the colony.”Footnote 96 Justice Innes similarly said that the “permission” given by the legislation “cannot be over-ridden by the arbitrary action of the executive.”Footnote 97 Foster’s quite different emphasis was on the integrity of executive action. In allowing the Afghan to be kept so long in Sydney harbor, local officials had really decided to admit its passengers into the colony’s jurisdiction and thus not to exercise their supposed prerogative to exclude them.Footnote 98 In these passages, the connection between sovereignty and immigration is nowhere to be seen. The theme is rather that immigration decisions did not respect ordinary demands of the legal system.

When Victoria (but not New South Wales) appealed to the Judicial Committee, its case was headed up by Horace Davey of the London Bar.Footnote 99 While Davey adopted Higinbotham’s dissenting reasons, he did this as an addendum to a new, somewhat strange, argument: that the Crown’s prerogative had been exercised in England to authorize Victorian officials to exclude aliens by refusing to accept payment of the landing fee, or that the prerogative must be “presumed” to have been so exercised.Footnote 100 This may have been inspired by the willingness of some of the colonial judges to assume that a prerogative to exclude aliens existed in England. But the fiction in the argument was obvious. Perhaps Davey simply wished to evade questions about Victoria’s “constitutional rights of self-government” that, even if they had been invited by the Judicial Committee, were awkward to discuss. By further contrast with the arguments in Australia, there is no evidence that Davey drew on theories of sovereignty in developing his arguments about the Crown’s prerogative. Correspondingly, there is only limited evidence that the committee itself contemplated the relevance of such theories to the case. In oral argument, Lord Herschell asked Walter Phillimore, now the leading counsel for Mr Toy, whether “by international law this country has a right to keep the alien out.” Phillimore answered that possession of power on the international plane did not determine the manner or scope of its exercise on the domestic.Footnote 101 The same point had been made in the months leading up to the case by W. F. Craies in the Law Quarterly Review. After laying out a history of English aliens laws, Craies concluded that the prerogative to exclude aliens had been extinguished, and that only legislation stood in the way of aliens’ entry to any part of the British Empire.Footnote 102

The Judicial Committee ruled in favor of Victoria, but not for any reason of prerogative or sovereignty. Its judgment, written by Lord Halsbury, adds to his reputation for inventiveness.Footnote 103 More in keeping with Wrixon’s argument in Melbourne than with Davey’s in London, Halsbury held that the legislative purpose of restricting Chinese immigration would be frustrated by the landing of a passenger on payment of the landing fee. But he did not stop there. The Lord Chancellor wrote that aliens had no right to enter British territory under the common law and thus no corresponding right of action in the British courts to enforce their entry—at least, no such right that would “compel the decision of … delicate and difficult constitutional questions affecting the respective rights of the Crown and Parliament, and the relations of this country to her self-governing colonies.”Footnote 104 In the years since the decision of the Victorian supreme court, the Judicial Committee had become unwilling to tackle such questions. Had the small steps of the Australian colonies towards federation contributed to the change of heart?Footnote 105

For two reasons, Halsbury’s reasoning was a revision of the common law. In all the decades since 1826, no question of aliens needing (or lacking) a legal right to enter Britain had arisen; the common law had never stood in the way of their arrival in Britain. Further, the popular liberal theory of the late nineteenth century held that private persons (unlike public officials) were free to do anything that was not prohibited by law.Footnote 106 Aside from its legal pedigree, Halsbury’s reasoning also seemed redundant. Immigration legislation might simply confer on aliens a right denied to them by the common law. That had been the main problem for the Sydney judges with the use of the prerogative to exclude aliens there. So Halsbury actually needed his first conclusion—that the Victorian legislation did not confer a right of landing on payment of the landing fee—in order to decide the case. If the legislation had conferred such a right (as the Sydney judges had held), the common law’s treatment of aliens would have been superseded.

The Australian litigation shows first that lawyers were still taking the theories of Vattel and Pufendorf seriously. By contrast with the Mauritian dispute, a few colonial judges were prepared to connect these theories with the Crown’s prerogative in England, or to assume that such a connection was plausible. Nonetheless, the Australian disputes attest to a continued criticism of this line of thought, as well as to a new preference of the Judicial Committee to evade it altogether. A few years later, in 1897, the barrister Thomas W. Haycraft tried to claim that the committee had in fact confirmed the use of the prerogative to exclude aliens and its theoretical relation to Vattel. But since no word of sovereignty was spoken by Halsbury, this claim is impossible to accept.Footnote 107

I indulge here in an aside. To resolve a dispute in 1899 about trawling in the Moray Firth, the Scottish Court of Session cited Halsbury’s decision for its true holding before recognizing a much wider proposition. Concluding that a German fishing company could not sue the Scottish government for blocking access to local waters, Lord Kyllachy accepted the government’s argument that aliens could not complain about any executive action, not merely about those pertaining to their rights of entry in the country.Footnote 108 “[E]xcept in a question with its own subjects,” Kyllachy wrote, “the sovereign power—the supreme executive—of every state, must be held to be absolute.”Footnote 109 For Kyllachy, there was a vast difference between the powers the executive could exercise over subjects and those it could exercise over aliens. He seemed to be imagining exactly what opponents of the early-century Alien Acts had feared: that subjects and aliens would be treated according to two legal standards. I mention this doctrine only briefly because I am not sure that other jurists of the period agreed with it. In response to a similar suggestion that aliens could not complain in the courts in Sydney about their treatment by the executive, Justice Windeyer replied that this would “carry us back to the days of barbarism.”Footnote 110 Not unlike Halsbury’s idea about the common law, Kyllachy’s doctrine was not to enjoy a long legacy. At least by 1921, the British courts would recognize that aliens could sue government officials in private or public law.Footnote 111 As we will now see, neither of Kyllachy’s and Halsbury’s ideas was relied on by the Canadian government in defending the deportation of two Americans in the 1900s. Indeed, the government’s style of argument in that case showed that the idea of sovereignty had been almost abandoned by lawyers in thinking about immigration.

The Canadian deportation of “prepaid” immigrants, 1900s

Establishing Canada’s federal government, the British North America Act of 1867 dealt with the topic of immigration in an interesting way. Along with the topic of agriculture, Section 95 of the Act conferred legislative power over immigration on both the federal and the provincial governments. As Robert Vipond explains, this gave the provinces “leverage” in areas that were “central to the nation-building objectives” of federation.Footnote 112 Although Canada’s first prime minister, John A. Macdonald, had imagined that the federal government would be given “all the great subjects of legislation” and “all the powers which are incident to sovereignty,” in these respects that government could not exercise its powers alone.Footnote 113 The related topics of “aliens” and “naturalization,” however, were given only to the federal parliament. Like the Australian colonies, British Columbia was interested in restricting Chinese immigration, with measures going beyond the federal “head tax” on Chinese arrivals imposed in 1885.Footnote 114 Predictably, legal disputes arose over whether provincial attempts to restrict the rights of Chinese residents were ineligible laws about “aliens” or eligible laws about “immigration.”

These disputes are part of the background to the dispute I focus on here. In 1878, a British Columbia law required Chinese persons to hold three-month residence permits and precluded employers from engaging Chinese workers who did not hold them. Justice Gray of the province’s supreme court saw the law as a blatant attempt “to drive the Chinese from the country” and in doing so as trampling on the federal parliament’s exclusive power over the “rights of aliens.” In acknowledging the deeper unfairness of the law, Gray turned to a variety of legal sources that included Vattel. While Vattel acknowledged the power of the state to forbid the entry of foreigners to its territory, the theorist also wrote that the state “ought not” to draw foreigners “into a snare”; once they were admitted, the state “engage[d] to protect them as his own subjects, and to afford them perfect security.”Footnote 115 Along with the solicitor Edward Richardson in the Mauritius dispute, Gray saw Vattel as illuminating not the generality but the limits of immigration control. For Gray, Vattel showed that the state had “duties towards foreigners” as well as powers over them. He held the provincial law unconstitutional.

Similar disputes came to the attention of the Judicial Committee in 1899 and 1903. In the first dispute, the court held invalid a British Columbia law banning the employment of Chinese miners.Footnote 116 In the second, it held valid a British Columbia law prohibiting Japanese, Chinese and East Indian residents from voting in provincial elections.Footnote 117 The reasoning in these cases is impossible to reconcile, though scholars have pointed to the court’s apparent concern for the rights of employers over the rights of aliens.Footnote 118 In contrast with Justice Gray, the committee did not consult Vattel or other theorists.

Apart from the federal and provincial laws targeting Chinese immigration, the country’s immigration policy was otherwise open. In the 1890s and 1900s, Wilfrid Laurier’s federal government had ambitions of attracting immigrants from Britain, the United States and Europe to work on the prairies. But it did not strongly enforce these designs; many immigrants settled in towns and cities to work in industry, and the country experienced some of its highest-ever annual levels of immigration. At the insistence of the minister of the interior, Clifford Sifton, though, the federal parliament passed an Alien Labour Act of 1897 to reflect the government’s preference for agricultural labor. This law made it unlawful for employers to solicit or “prepay” the transportation of aliens into Canada for the purposes of contract labor, and authorized the Attorney General to deport certain aliens who had arrived in violation of the rule.Footnote 119

The Alien Labour Act was supposed to make it harder for immigrants to proceed directly to industrial employment, or to attract immigrants who could support themselves before settling on the prairies. The deportation of offending immigrants tended to be carried out informally and restricted to those who had lived in Canada for less than a year and who were “unable to get their living.”Footnote 120 This selective enforcement benefited many employers, whose foreign advertisements were read not as solicitations but as invitations to apply for employment, and did not stand in the way of Canadian “recruitment agencies” that operated in Italy, Eastern Europe, and Russia.Footnote 121 Nonetheless, when the Attorney General was informed that the arrival of two Americans, Everett Cain and James Gilhula, had been solicited or prepaid so that they could work at an Ontario railway company, he issued warrants for their deportation.

By their clear terms, the Alien Labour Act authorized deportation, and the British North America Act authorized the Alien Labour Act. In an answer to an application for the writ of habeas corpus in the High Court of Justice in Ontario, there was no need for the Attorney General to rely on the Crown’s prerogative or revive debates about its relationship with sovereignty.Footnote 122 Instead it was the Americans’ lawyers who thought that the notion of sovereignty might help them, advancing as their first ground of complaint the proposition that the Alien Labour Act was “unconstitutional as a whole” because it “legislate[d] in reference to a matter within the Province of a Sovereign Power”—the suggestion being that Canada was not yet such a power.Footnote 123 But the majority of their many contentions in the High Court concerned the interpretation and factual application of the Alien Labour Act, the regularity of the deportation warrants, the need for a court hearing before the warrants were issued, and the need for the Americans to have been “formally adjudged” as violating the Act before they were removed.Footnote 124 (In respect of Mr Gilhula, the lawyers notably argued that he was a British subject.) But none of these points attracted the interest of the presiding judge, Justice Anglin. He was taken instead by another suggested limitation on the practice of deportation by the Canadian authorities.

According to a controversial doctrine of imperial law, the colonies were not permitted to regulate affairs occurring beyond their own territories. While this doctrine may have been motivated by concerns about international law and conflict between the laws of different colonies, its legal status was uncertain until the Judicial Committee gave it its blessing in a case in 1891. Indeed, the doctrine appears to have been developed by the Law Officers in tandem with the Colonial Office without the guidance of common law or legislation.Footnote 125 As early as 1870, the Law Officers had pressed the doctrine’s relevance to immigration policy upon the Australian colonies.Footnote 126 But the doctrine does not seem to have been understood as an obstacle to deportation until this Canadian case. The lawyers for the Americans pointed to the fact that their removal from Canada would involve their detention in the United States; that is, while the boat carrying them crossed into American waters.Footnote 127 Agreeing, Justice Anglin decided to hold the proposed deportation unlawful on this ground alone.Footnote 128 Whether the judge was quite aware of it, this reasoning threatened to derail the practice of deportation by the colonies.

The lawyers for the Americans were probably surprised to have won their case on this basis. When the Attorney General appealed to the Judicial Committee, their leading barrister, John A. Robinson, was happy to endorse Anglin’s conclusion while pointing out that the Americans had pressed “a number of other grounds” in their original case. (The door was left open for debate about the “province of sovereign power” by their argument that the Canadian parliament lacked power to pass the Alien Labour Act, but this topic is not developed in the records of argument.) The emphasis again was on the Americans’ right to a judicial hearing before the deportation warrants were issued and on the factual application of the Act.Footnote 129 Strangely, none of this detail is apparent from the Appeal Cases report of oral argument in Judicial Committee, which records the lawyers only as endorsing Anglin’s application of the doctrine of extraterritoriality.Footnote 130

Even if it were to rule in favor of the Americans, the Judicial Committee would have been brave to endorse Anglin’s reasoning. The British North America Act, as well as other colonial constitutions, anticipated the making of laws on “immigration”; I am not aware of any evidence that this topic was understood not to exclude deportation, or at least the deportation of immigrants who were not long settled in the state.Footnote 131 Anglin’s application of imperial doctrine thus frustrated a clear grant of legislative power. It is easy to suppose that Lord Atkinson, who wrote the Judicial Committee’s decision, would have wanted to find a reason to adjust (though perhaps not to repeal) the imperial doctrine. But his solution to this conundrum was quite unexpected.

Holding the Americans’ deportation to be lawful, Lord Atkinson wrote,

One of the rights possessed by the supreme power in every State is the right to refuse to permit an alien to enter that State, to annex what conditions it pleases to the permission to enter it, and to expel or deport from the State, at pleasure, even a friendly alien, especially if it considers his presence in the State opposed to its peace, order, and good government, or to its social or material interests.Footnote 132

The proposition was supported with reference to Vattel. Atkinson did not acknowledge those aspects of Vattel’s theory that stressed the state’s duties towards foreigners, including the duty not to act on “groundless or frivolous fears.” But (perhaps with those aspects in mind) he emphasized the unauthorized nature of the Americans’ arrival: “The power of expulsion is in truth but the complement of the power of exclusion. If entry be prohibited it would seem to follow that the Government which has the power to exclude should have the power to expel the alien who enters in opposition to its laws.”Footnote 133 Strictly speaking, then, Atkinson’s reasoning may be limited to the deportation of unauthorized immigrants, though the first of the above passages does seem to encompass the deportation of all “friendly aliens.” It might also be noted that in discussing the power of exclusion, Atkinson repeated Haycraft’s revisionist claim that the “sovereign” nature of this power had been established by Lord Halsbury in the Australian dispute.Footnote 134

Atkinson was clear about the “State” that was relevant to the dispute. It was not Canada, but Britain. The powers of exclusion and deportation belonged in the first instance to the British government, who could “delegate” these powers “to the governor or the Government of one of the Colonies” by royal proclamation, imperial legislation, or assent to colonial legislation.Footnote 135 Atkinson was less clear about the “supreme power” of the British state who was exercising the powers. His three styles of delegation suggest the involvement of both the parliament and the executive, although at another stage he described the power to exclude and deport aliens as a power to “make laws” for these things coupled with a power to “enforce” them (suggesting the need for legislation).Footnote 136 With this ambiguity, Atkinson may have been keeping alive the question of the Crown’s prerogative to exclude and deport aliens, a question he would revisit fifteen years later.Footnote 137 But he did not need to weigh in on the question to resolve this case, in which the hand of the British imperial parliament was clear. Because that parliament enjoyed “sovereign” powers of exclusion and deportation, and because it passed the British North America Act to delegate these powers to Canada’s federal parliament, there was nothing unconstitutional about the use of these powers by the Canadian parliament in passing the Alien Labour Act and authorizing deportation by order of the Attorney General.

This is a fascinating legal text. As I suggested earlier, Atkinson might have simply held that legislative powers over immigration (and thus deportation) had been conferred by valid British legislation on the Canadian federal parliament, and left matters at that. Certainly, the need to reject Anglin’s views about the extraterritoriality doctrine would have been part of the pressure on Atkinson in deciding the case. But I suspect that there were other reasons, too, that pushed Atkinson into a different form of analysis, and into using Vattel to explain the Canadian parliament’s powers.

The most important is the enactment in Britain of the Aliens Act of 1905, which came into effect just months before Atkinson’s decision. This legislation conferred power on immigration officials to exclude “undesirable immigrants” and authorized the Home Secretary to deport aliens convicted of certain offences or found within a year of their arrival to have drawn on parochial relief.Footnote 138 As I said earlier, proposals for measures of these kinds had featured in British politics (and especially in the Conservative Party) since the 1880s. The passing of the Aliens Act by the Balfour government, and the earlier recommendations of a Royal Commission on Alien Immigration (1902–3), represented the defeat of a long consensus that immigration control was unnecessary or antithetical to British liberalism.Footnote 139 Aretas Akers-Douglas, Balfour’s Home Secretary, gave official emphasis to a sense that Britain had lagged behind other countries, particularly America, in regulating immigration, such that only the world’s “worst” immigrants were coming to the country. Even with its unique protection of political refugees,Footnote 140 the Act marked a new consensus in Britain about the desirability of controlling immigration—indeed, about the need for Britain to engage in this practice in the world of modern governments.

These were ideal conditions for a renewed interest in the relationship between immigration and sovereignty.Footnote 141 Atkinson’s judgment reads as a telegraph that Britain was now engaging in the sort of practices that the Canadian government had brought to the imperial court. His logic of the delegation of power from Britain to Canada makes Britain, not Canada, seem the prime mover in this realm of public policy, when of course the opposite was true. In the same year, a judge in the new High Court of Australia would cite Atkinson’s judgment with apparent approval, only to explain that it was the former Australian colonies’ own experience with the “sovereign” exercise of immigration control that explained the legislative powers in the country’s federal constitution.Footnote 142 I have not found direct evidence of Atkinson’s personal views on immigration. But his prior membership of the Conservative Party (from which he resigned on his judicial appointment in 1905) and close links with Balfour, for whom he once acted as private secretary and whose government he served as Attorney General for Ireland, make his sympathy for the Act likely.Footnote 143 While the Act’s administration was softened by the Campbell–Bannerman government,Footnote 144 this bureaucratic development would not have materialized by the time of the decision in April 1906.

There were two or three other probable influences on Atkinson’s thinking. One was that the Supreme Court of the United States had, in the late 1880s and early 1890s, already made use of Vattel in explaining the immigration powers of the Congress and the federal executive under the American Constitution. Atkinson made no reference to the pair of decisions in which that court had described the control of immigration as a sovereign power, but, given the court’s international prominence, I doubt he would have been unfamiliar with them.Footnote 145 The Judicial Committee’s own history with Canadian provincial legislation may have alerted Atkinson to the somewhat contrary use of Vattel by Justice Gray in British Columbia; if so, that reference also went unacknowledged. But it would not have been straightforward for Atkinson to endorse the American legal analysis. For one thing, the American Constitution dealt with immigration differently than the British North America Act, conferring legislative power over that topic exclusively on the federal government. For another, there was a division of opinion in America about deportation. Justice Stephen Johnson Field, who in 1889 explained the unanimous opinion of the Supreme Court that the exclusion of aliens was a sovereign power, found himself in dissent in 1893 in holding that the deportation of resident aliens should be subject to procedural limits that did not attach to their exclusion. Given that Atkinson’s case was one of deportation, he may have been content to extract references from Vattel without signaling the controversy surrounding the theorist’s use in American law.

Finally, Atkinson may have believed that a popular theory of the British constitution, the theory of parliamentary sovereignty, was not adequate for his task. On this theory, the British parliament had power to pass legislation on any topic whatsoever and in spite of any rule of the common law to the contrary. Viewed in the light of this theory, the imperial parliament’s conferral of the power of immigration (and thus the power of deportation) on the Canadian parliaments would have been unencumbered by the doctrine of extraterritoriality. But the theory’s chief exponent, Albert Venn Dicey, was also a noted critic of immigration control. Among other writers, Dicey argued that restrictions on immigration were contrary to British liberalism; more idiosyncratically, he suggested that such restrictions were contrary to the British constitution, insofar as the constitution required “coercive” immigration legislation to be temporary.Footnote 146 Dicey’s constitutional views on immigration did not enjoy wide support in the legal community. But what may appear to us today as a simple route to Atkinson’s desired conclusion may not have seemed as such in his day.

In this case, the relationship between immigration and sovereignty experienced a sort of resurgence in legal thought. But the case does not represent a vindication of earlier, criticized views about the Crown’s prerogative. After all, the prerogative was not invoked. Unlike Lord Atkinson, the lawyers for the Canadian government did not even think to use a theory of sovereignty to explain the federal parliament’s powers over immigration. What the case rather represents is an acknowledgment that Britain had become involved in the project of immigration control. Importantly, it had done so by legislation and not by the prerogative. Unfortunately, the procedural or factual points raised by the lawyers for the Americans did not receive a proper answer from Atkinson, whose account of legislative power over immigration seems perfectly compatible with the finer points the lawyers were proposing. Indeed, this answer would only arrive in the second half of the twentieth century, when the British courts recognized that statutory powers to exclude or deport aliens (and, from 1962, Commonwealth immigrants) came with duties of legality, procedural fairness, and legal reasonableness.Footnote 147 But the very raising of these points, and their resonance with those made in the Mauritian and Australian disputes, shows that lawyers were thinking of the limits that public law might impose on immigration control.

Conclusion

I conclude with three reflections. One concerns the imperial politics of these disputes. I think it is too simple to say that the Judicial Committee did not endorse some relationship between the Crown’s prerogative and sovereignty because it was the colonies’ powers (and not the imperial government’s) that were at stake. The awkwardness of suggesting that the colonies were sovereign states surely played some role in legal thought about immigration, but I do not see this as a defining feature of the litigation. As I have argued, lawyers made points that applied as much to the use of the prerogative in Britain as to its use in the colonies, claiming that immigration decisions needed to respect legislation, the rights of aliens, and other limits on executive power. Nonetheless, the litigation makes it apparent how imperial policy had evolved to tolerate colonial immigration control. It is striking how in each dispute the Judicial Committee offered a quite different reason for the colonial government’s success: the provisions of unfamiliar French law, the rights of aliens at common law, the imperial parliament’s sovereign power to enact immigration legislation. To be sure, the laws implicated in each dispute were quite different, but in each case the imperial court was equally prepared to find a route to the colony’s success.

What was the legacy of these disputes for British law? Lord Atkinson’s judgment is occasionally cited in contemporary legal argument, typically as authority for the immigration powers enjoyed by Britain at international law.Footnote 148 In a formal sense, the question of the Crown’s prerogative to exclude or deport aliens became mostly irrelevant from the beginning of the twentieth century, after legislation was used ever more expansively to regulate the entry and admission of aliens in both Britain and its (former) colonies. But not only did British governments equip themselves with statutory power to regulate immigration; the same legislation gave aliens some protections in the face of its exercise. For example, Britain’s Aliens Act made provision for an appeal board, such that immigrants could challenge their exclusion or deportation, and Canada’s Immigration Act of 1906 set out procedural and substantive rules for deportation decisions.Footnote 149 Giving clarity to the persons who were exposed to immigration control, Britain legislated in 1914 to define the persons who were British subjects and to set out criteria for naturalization.Footnote 150 These measures reflect some of the concerns in arguments about the prerogative. In time, lawyers would agree that even wide statutory powers to exclude and deport aliens were limited by duties of procedure or reason-giving not reflected in the legislation itself.Footnote 151

Lastly, a rough parallel can be drawn between the legal opinion of this period and contemporary discussions of immigration. In recent decades, many countries have heard their politicians and indeed their lawyers claim that immigration control is a “sovereign” function, and therefore (so it is said) that governments are justified in carrying out a wide array of immigration practices, including those that can be described as extreme and cruel. Philosophers of immigration have thought it important to address and reject such claims. The appeal to sovereignty, they have said, assumes what is meant to be proved, which is that there is some good reason for the particular ways in which immigrants are treated by the state.Footnote 152 In the nineteenth century, British lawyers did not argue about this topic of political morality. But in realizing that the idea of sovereignty did not go far in explaining the legality of a particular immigration decision, it is hard to think the topic never crossed their minds.

Acknowledgments

This article is based on a chapter of my PhD thesis, which was completed at the University of Cambridge in 2023. For their comments and encouragement at this earlier stage of my research, I would like to thank David Feldman, Robert Thomas, Matilda Gillis, Çağrı Gürkanlı, and especially Mark Elliott. I also benefited from the feedback of participants at a graduate workshop in law, history, and politics at UCL in 2022. Finally, I would like to acknowledge the suggestions of the journal’s referees, which helped me make many improvements to the article.

References

1 I will refer to an 1844 edition of this translation: Emer de Vattel, Le droit des gens (1758), trans. Joseph Chitty (Philadelphia, 1844).

2 Informing these debates, William Blackstone had already suggested an expansive view of the prerogative with reference to Samuel Pufendorf. See his Commentaries on the Laws of England (1765), ed. David Lemmings (Oxford, 2016), Bk 1, Ch. 7, 168.

3 On the influence of colonial policies on British law see Alison Bashford and Catie Gilchrist, “The Colonial History of the 1905 Aliens Act,” Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 40 (2012), 409–37.

4 Jan C. Jansen, “Aliens in a Revolutionary World: Refugees, Migration Control and Subjecthood in the British Atlantic, 1790s–1820s,” Past and Present 255 (2022), 189–231, at 205–6.

5 Rose-Marie Crossan, Guernsey, 1814–1914: Modernisation and Migration (Woodbridge, 2007), Ch. 8.

6 A. V. Laferla, British Malta, vol. 1 (Malta, 1938), Ch. 6; Caroline Shaw, Britannia’s Embrace: Modern Humanitarianism and the Imperial Origins of Refugee Relief (Oxford, 2015), 125–32.

7 Stephen Constantine, Community and Identity: The Making of Modern Gibraltar since 1704 (Manchester, 2009), Ch. 4.

8 Bashford and Gilchrist, “The Colonial History of the 1905 Aliens Act,” 413–14.

9 This was also true of the decision that gave rise to the Canadian dispute I study here. But matters were complicated there by a decision of the High Court of Justice of Ontario, as I will explain.

10 See P. A. Howell, The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (Cambridge, 1979), 40–42, 218–33; Thomas Poole, Reason of State: Law, Prerogative and Empire (Cambridge, 2015), Ch. 1.

11 I owe this paragraph to Quentin Skinner, “The Sovereign State: A Genealogy,” in Hent Kalmo and Quentin Skinner, eds., Sovereignty in Fragments: The Past, Present and Future of a Contested Concept (Cambridge, 2011), 26–46, at 34–40. On Vattel’s regard among diplomats and lawyers see J. T. Abdy, ed., Kent’s Commentary on International Law (Cambridge, 1877), Ch. 1, 36; Marco Barducci, “Reception of Vattel in Eighteenth- and Early Nineteenth-Century England and Scotland,” in Peter Schröder, ed., Concepts and Contexts of Vattel’s Political and Legal Thought (Cambridge, 2021), 258–76.

12 Annabel Brett, “The Subject of Sovereignty: Law, Politics and Moral Reasoning in Hugo Grotius,” Modern Intellectual History 17/3 (2020), 619–45; Richard Tuck, The Rights of War and Peace: Political Thought and the International Order from Grotius to Kant (Oxford, 1999), Chs. 5–6; Vincent Chetail, “Sovereignty and Migration in the Doctrine of the Law of Nations,” European Journal of International Law 27 (2017), 901–22.

13 Daniel Statt, Foreigners and Englishmen: The Controversy over Immigration and Population, 1660–1760 (Newark, 1995), esp. Chs. 1–2. See also Stephanie DeGooyer, Before Borders: A Legal and Literary History of Naturalization (Baltimore, 2022), 55–61.

14 See Andreas Fahrmeir, Citizens and Aliens: Foreigners and the Law in Britain and the German States, 1789–1870 (New York, 2000); and Fahrmeir, Citizenship: The Rise and Fall of a Modern Concept (New Haven, 2007), esp. Ch. 3.

15 Hugo Grotius, De iure belli ac pacis (1625), trans. Francis W. Kelsey (Cambridge, 2012), Bk 2, Ch. 2, 101 §§16–17.

16 Samuel von Pufendorf, De jure naturae et gentium libri octo (1672), trans. Basil Kennett (Oxford, 1703), Bk 3, Ch. 3, 193–4 §§9–10.

17 Christian Wolff, Jus gentium methodo scientifica pertractatum (1764), trans. Joseph H. Drake (Oxford, 1934), 149–50 §§293, 297–8, 152–3 §§303–4.

18 Vattel, Le droit des gens, Bk 1, Ch. 19, 107–9 §§230–31; Bk 2, Ch. 7, 169 §94, Ch. 8, 171 §100, Ch. 9, 180–81 §125.

19 Robert Phillimore, Commentaries upon International Law (London, 1854), 192–3 §219, 263 §323.

20 Vattel, Le droit des gens, Bk 1, Ch. 1, 3, noted that communities “under the dominion” of others were not states.

21 Thomas C. Jones, “Establishing a Constitutional ‘Right of Asylum’ in Early Nineteenth-Century Britain,” History of European Ideas 46 (2020) 545–625, at 553.

22 J. R. Dinwiddy, Radicalism and Reform in Britain, 1780–1850 (London, 1992), 163.

23 Jones, “Establishing a Constitutional ‘Right of Asylum’.” The specific claim as to Magna Carta was rebutted in print by Joseph Chitty, who wrote that the relevant protection applied only to foreign merchants: see his A Treatise on the Law of the Prerogative (London, 1820), Ch. 4, 49. See also David Ferch, “The English Alien Acts, 1793–1826” (MA thesis, College of William & Mary in Virginia, 1978); Elizabeth Sparrow, “The Alien Office, 1792–1806,” Historical Journal 32 (1990), 361–84, at 375.

24 William Empson, “On the Alien Bill. By an Alien,” Edinburgh Review 42 (1825), 99–174, at 100–1.

25 Ibid., 103, 142–3. On the unfairness of the laws to settled aliens see also A Few Thoughts on the Probable Renewal of the Alien Bill: By a Member of Parliament (London, 1822), 10.

26 Jones, “Establishing a Constitutional ‘Right of Asylum’,” 553.

27 T. C. Hansard, ed., Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time (London, 1816), vol. 33, col. 1230 (Lord Castlereagh); vol. 34, 11 June 1816, cols. 1068–71 (Lord Ellenborough and Earl Grey).

28 It was only in 2012 that the UK’s Supreme Court confirmed that the prerogative cannot be used to exclude or deport aliens: R (Munir) v. Home Secretary [2012] UKSC 32, [2012] 1 W.L.R. 2192, at paras 23–6.

29 Letter from Earl Granville to Her Majesty’s Ministers at Vienna and St Petersburg, and Her Majesty’s Chargés d’Affaires at Paris and Frankfurt, 13 Jan. 1852, in British and Foreign State Papers (Great Britain, 1852–3), vol. 42, 421.

30 In response to the 1848 European revolutions, an Act authorized the exclusion and deportation of aliens but lapsed without use in 1850. A statute of 1826 required the registration of aliens with the Alien Office, but enforcement was minimal and the agency closed in 1836. Fahrmeir, Citizenship, 73.

31 Roger Wells, “Migration, the Law, and Parochial Policy in Eighteenth- and Early Nineteenth-Century Southern England,” Southern History 15 (1993) 86–139; David Feldman, “Was the Nineteenth Century a Golden Age for Immigrants?”, in Andreas Fahrmeir, Olivier Faron and Patrick Weil, eds., Migration Control in the North Atlantic World (New York, 2003), 167–77.

32 See Lloyd A. Gartner, The Jewish Immigrant in England 1870–1914 (London, 1960); John A. Garrard, The English and Immigration 1880–1910 (London, 1971); Bernard Gainer, The Alien Invasion: The Origins of the Aliens Act 1905 (London, 1972).

33 Aliens Act 1844 (7 & 8 Vict, c 66), ss. 2, 4–6. See also Margrit Schulte Beerbühl, “British Nationality Policy as a Counter-revolutionary Strategy during the Napoleonic Wars,” in Fahrmeir, Faron, and Weil, Migration Control in the North Atlantic World, 55–70.

34 Naturalisation Act 1870 (33 Vict, c 14), s. 2; Extradition Act 1870 (33 & 34 Vict., c 52), s. 3. See Shaw, Britannia’s Embrace, Ch. 8; Alison Bashford and Jane McAdam, “The Right to Asylum: Britain’s 1905 Aliens Act and the Evolution of Refugee Law,” Law and History Review, 32 (2014), 309–50.

35 Fahrmeir, Citizens and Aliens, 70–5, 131–2.

36 Aliens Act 1847 (10 & 11 Vict, c 83); Naturalisation Act 1870 (33 Vict, c 14), s. 16.

37 Donegani v. Donegani (1835) 3 Knapp 63 [12 ER 571]. See also Alexander Wood Renton, “French Law within the British Empire,” Journal of the Society of Comparative Legislation 10 (1909), 93–119.

38 Anthony J. Barker, Slavery and Anti-slavery in Mauritius, 1810–33: The Conflict between Economic Expansion and Humanitarian Reform under British Rule (Cambridge, 1996), 155.

39 Slavery Abolition Act 1833 (3 & 4 Will 4, c 73), s. 65.

40 Richard B. Allen, “Capital, Illegal Slaves, Indentured Labourers and the Creation of a Sugar Plantation Economy in Mauritius, 1810–60,” Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 36 (2008), 161–80, at 152–4, 161; Adele Smith Simmons, Modern Mauritius: The Politics of Decolonization (Bloomington, 1982), 19.

41 Peter Burroughs, “The Mauritius Rebellion of 1832 and the Abolition of British Colonial Slavery,” Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 4 (1976), 243–65. Jeremie had himself been tasked with investigating Mr Adam’s legal status: letter from William Nicolay to Lord Goderich, 9 July 1833, extracted in the Case Respecting the removal of Mr. Adam from the Mauritius: For the Opinion of The King’s Advocate and The Attorney & Solicitor General (“Brief to Law Officers”), The National Archives (TNA), TS 11/390/1218.

42 See further Richard B. Allen, “Creating Undiminished Confidence: The Free Population of Colour and Identity Formation in Mauritius, 1676–1835,” Slavery and Abolition 32 (2011), 519–33.

43 See further Hugh Tinker, A New System of Slavery: The Export of Indian Labour Overseas, 1830–1920 (London, 1974); Vijaya Teelock, Bitter Sugar: Slavery and Emancipation in 19th Century Mauritius (Moka, 1998); Clare Anderson, Convicts in the Indian Ocean: Transportation from South Asia to Mauritius, 1815–1853 (London, 2000).

44 Letter from George Dick to William Nicolay, 29 Oct. 1832, extracted in The Humble Petition of Henry Adam, an Inhabitant of the Mauritius (“Henry Adam’s Petition”), TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

45 An investigation finding that Mr. Adam had been informed by a local judge that the oath did not confer on him the rights of a British subject: letter from William Nicolay to Lord Goderich, 9 July 1833, extracted in the Brief to Law Officers, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

46 Letter from William Nicolay to Lord Goderich, 9 July 1833, extracted in the Brief to Law Officers, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

47 Letter from Edward Richardson to Clerk of the Privy Council, 3 July 1835, copied in the Brief to Law Officers, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

48 Letter from Edward Richardson to Clerk of the Privy Council, 3 July 1835, quoting a letter Richardson claimed to have written to Lord Stanley, copied in the Brief to Law Officers, TNA, TS 11/390/218. See also the similar narration of Mr. Adam’s life in Henry Adam’s Petition, 19, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

49 Letter from Edward Richardson to Clerk of the Privy Council, 3 July 1835; letter from Edward Richardson to Lord Glenelg, 15 Feb. 1836, both copied in the Brief to Law Officers, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

50 Letter from John Lefevre to Edward Richardson, 4 July 1834; letter from Edwardson to Lord Glenelg, 15 Nov. 1836, both copied in the Brief to Law Officers, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

51 Letter from E. Gladstone (Colonial Office) to Edward Richardson, 14 April 1835; letter from George Grey (Colonial Office) to C. C. J. Greville (Privy Council), 29 Oct. 1835; letter from George Grey to Edward Richardson, 24 Nov. 1836, all copied in the Brief to Law Officers, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

52 Letter from George Grey to Edward Richardson, 24 Nov. 1836; letter from George Grey to the Treasury Solicitor’s Department, 9 Jan. 1837, both copied in the Brief to Law Officers, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

53 The lawyers’ preliminary advice, dated 26 Aug. 1836, is handwritten on the Brief to Law Officers, 37, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

54 Brief to Law Officers, 37, TNA, TS 11/390/1218. For the claim that Mr Adam’s status made him vulnerable to an “inherent power of the Governor and Council … to remove at pleasure all aliens not protected by any special privileges” see In re Adam (1837) 1 Moo. P.C. 460, at 466, 470 [12 ER 889, at 891, 893].

55 In re Adam, 471–2 [893–4]. Though the lawyers had been briefed on an earlier attempt to deport a resident of Mauritius, which had been frustrated by local judges without doubt being cast over the governor’s power to deport aliens. See the “Case of Pieretti” in the Brief to Law Officers, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

56 The name of prominent barrister James Scarlett was also on the petition, but he did not appear for Mr Adam before the Judicial Committee. Henry Adam’s Petition, 20, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

57 Henry Adam’s Petition, 14, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

58 Letter from Stephen Lushington to Henry Brougham, 1838, University College London Special Collections (UCLSC), Brougham Papers, 8146.

59 Undated letter from Stephen Lushington to Henry Brougham, UCLSC, Brougham Papers, 8149. See further Parliamentary Debates, vol. 31, 15 Feb. 1836, cols. 420–25; Stephen M. Waddams, “Stephen Lushington: A Civilian in the Last Years of Doctors’ Commons,” in Mark Hill and R. H. Helmholz, eds., Great Christian Jurists in English History (Cambridge, 2017), 253–76, at 257; S.M. Waddams, Law, Politics and the Church of England: The Career of Stephen Lushington 1782–1873 (Cambridge, 1992).

60 “[T]heir Lordships … give the judgment … after much delay and uncertainty.” In re Adam, 477 [895].

61 Henry Adam’s Petition, 14–15, 20, TNA, TS 11/390/1218; In re Adam, 463–5 [890–91].

62 “Further Additional Note,” in “Re Adam—Additional Notes,” 5, TNA, TS 11/390/1218. See further Vattel, Le droit des gens, Bk 2, Ch. 8, 177 §114.

63 Henry Adam’s Petition, 19, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

64 (1608) Co Rep 1a [77 ER 377].

65 “Additional Notes” in “Re Adam—Additional Notes,” 1, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

66 See note 48 above.

67 With reference to this case, the Queensland barrister Charles Stumm would later claim that Vattel did not “in truth” address the deportation of resident aliens. Robtelmes v. Brenan (1906) 4 C.L.R. 395, at 397.

68 Henry Adam’s Petition, 15, TNA, TS 11/390/1218.

69 In re Adam, 471–3 [893–4].

70 Ibid., 477 [895].

71 Fahrmeir, Citizens and Aliens, 72 n. 25.

72 Chung Teong Toy v. Musgrove (1888) 14 V.L.R. 349, at 424.

73 Musgrove v. Toy [1891] A.C. 272, at 275.

74 Ibid., 277.

75 L. Kong Meng, Cheok Hong Cheong and Louis Ah Mouy, eds., The Chinese Question in Australia, 1878–79 (Melbourne, 1879), esp. 16–20, 28–31 (citing Vattel), discussed in Mae Ngai, The Chinese Question: The Gold Rushes and Global Politics (New York, 2021), 164, 174–5.

76 Chinese Act 1881 (45 Vict, No. 723); Influx of Chinese Restriction Act 1881 (45 Vict, No. 11). I owe this paragraph to Myra Willard, History of the White Australia Policy to 1920 (Melbourne, 1923), 41–9, 62–8; Benjamin Mountford, Britain, China, and Colonial Australia (Oxford, 2016), Ch. 3.

77 See further Mark Finnane, “‘Habeas Corpus Mongols’: Chinese Litigants and the Politics of Immigration in 1888,” Australian Historical Studies 45 (2014), 165–83.

78 Chung Teong Toy v. Musgrove, 360–61 (argument of Henry Wrixon). Victoria also originally denied that the offer of payment was made by the shipmaster. See the Defence, 28 May 1888, copied as Record No. 2 in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee, TNA, PCAP 6/273.

79 Chung Teong Toy v. Musgrove, 358–9 (argument of Henry Wrixon); Ex parte Lo Pak, 230 (argument of Julian Salomons).

80 Chung Teong Toy v. Musgrove, 364–5. See also Ex parte Leong Kum (1888) 9 L.R. (NSW) 250, at 254.

81 Ex parte Lo Pak (1888) 9 L.R. (NSW) 221, at 232.

82 Chung Teong Toy v. Musgrove, 359.

83 A Copy of the Report of the Arguments and Judgment in the case of Ah Toy v Musgrove—Supreme Court of Victoria (Legislative Assembly Paper No. 23, Parliament of Victoria, 9 Oct. 1888), 7.

84 Chung Teong Toy v. Musgrove, 354–5, 366–7.

85 See Ex parte Lo Pak, 225–6; Ex parte Leong Kum, 252.

86 Ex parte Woo Tin (1888) 9 L.R. (NSW) 493, at 495.

87 Chung Teong Toy v. Musgrove, 411–12.

88 Ibid., 377, 393–8. On the case’s legacy for the Australian law of responsible government see John Waugh, “Chung Teong Toy v Musgrove and the Commonwealth Executive,” Public Law Review 2 (1991), 160–78.

89 See the report granting leave to appeal, quoted in the report of C. L. Peel at Osborne House, Isle of Wight, 29 Jan. 1889, in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee, TNA, PCAP 6/273.

90 Chung Teong Toy v. Musgrove, 426–7.

91 Ex parte Lo Pak, 230, 244; Ex parte Leong Kum, 260–3.

92 See Ex parte Lo Pak, 238; Ex parte Leong Kum, 255–6.

93 Ex parte Lo Pak, 248–9.

94 Chung Teong Toy v. Musgrove, 422–3, original emphasis.

95 Ex parte Lo Pak, 243.

96 Ex parte Leong Kum, 257–9.

97 Ibid., 268.

98 Ex parte Lo Pak, 249.

99 There was no need for New South Wales to appeal because the premier, Henry Parkes, was able to pass and obtain royal assent for the Chinese Restriction and Regulation Act 1888 (52 Vict, No. 4) by July 1888. This law “fully indemnified” public officials who acted to prevent the landing of Chinese immigrants, while also prohibiting the naturalization of Chinese aliens and increasing the landing fee from ten to one hundred pounds.

100 Case for the Appellant, 5 (see reason 2), in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee, TNA, PCAP 6/273; Musgrove v. Toy, 274–5

101 Musgrove v. Toy, 277. He otherwise argued that the customs collector had no statutory power to exclude Mr Toy given the willingness of his shipmaster to pay the landing fee. See Case for the Respondent, 2–3, in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee, TNA, PCAP 6/273.

102 W. F. Craies, “The Right of Aliens to Enter British Territory,” Law Quarterly Review, 6 (1890), 27–41, at 36–7.

103 See John Hostettler, Lord Halsbury (Chichester, 1998), 102–3.

104 Musgrove v. Toy, 282–3.

105 See e.g. J. A. La Nauze, The Making of the Australian Constitution (Carlton, 1972), Chs. 2–3.

106 Christopher Vincenzi, Crown Powers, Subjects and Citizens (London, 1998), 110 n. 35; Eve Lester, Making Migration Law: The Foreigner, Sovereignty, and the Case of Australia (Cambridge, 2018), 96.

107 Thomas W. Haycraft, “Alien Legislation and the Prerogative of the Crown,” Law Quarterly Review 13 (1897), 165–86, at 174–5. See also Stephen H. Legomsky, Immigration and the Judiciary: Law and Politics in Britain and America (Oxford, 1987), 89–90.

108 Pleas in Law for Respondents in Poll v. Lord Advocate, National Records of Scotland, CS46/1898/1/99.

109 Poll v. Lord Advocate (1899) 1 F. 823, at 828.

110 Ex parte Lo Pak, 245.

111 See Green v. Lord Advocate (1918) S.C. 667, at 699; Johnstone v. Pedlar [1921] 2 A.C. 262, at 276–7, 284–5, 289, 296–8.

112 Robert Vipond, “1867: Confederation,” in Peter Oliver, Patrick Macklem, and Nathalie Des Rosiers, eds., The Oxford Handbook of the Canadian Constitution (Oxford, 2017), 91–2.

113 Parliamentary Debates on the Subject of the Confederation of the British North American Provinces (Quebec, 1865), 33 (John Macdonald).

114 Chinese Immigration Act 1885 (48 and 49 Vict, c 71).

115 Tai Sing v. Maguire (1878) 1 B.C.R. 101, quoting from Vattel, Les droits des gens, Bk 2, Ch. 8.

116 Union Colliery v. Bryden [1899] A.C. 580.

117 Cunningham v. Tomey Homma [1903] A.C. 151.

118 Ninette Kelley and Michael Trebilcock, The Making of the Mosaic: A History of Canadian Immigration Policy (Toronto, 1998), 141–2.

119 Alien Labour Act 1897 (60 & 61 Vict, c 11). See further Kelley and Trebilcock, The Making of the Mosaic, Ch. 4.

120 Kelley and Trebilcock, The Making of the Mosaic, 158.

121 Ibid., 158, 512 n. 147, discussing Shin Imai, “Canadian Immigration Law and Policy: 1867–1935” (LL.M. thesis, York University, 1983), 50; Downie v. Vancouver Engineering Works (1904) 10 B.C.R. 367; 8 C.C.C. 66, 68.

122 I have not seen a record of the Attorney General’s argument in the Ontario High Court, but his argument in the Judicial Committee reveals his reliance on the general grants of power in the British North America Act (i.e. the powers of “trade and commerce,” “naturalization and aliens,” and “immigration”). See Case of the Appellant, 8, in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee, TNA, PCAP 6/47.

123 Notice of Motion, In the High Court of Justice, In the Matter of Everett E. Cain (ground 1), copied as Record No. 6 in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee, TNA, PCAP 6/47.

124 Notice of Motion, In the High Court of Justice, In the Matter of Everett E. Cain (grounds 5–11), copied as Record No. 6 in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee, TNA, PCAP 6/47.

125 D. P. O’Connell, “The Doctrine of Colonial Extra-territorial Legislative Incompetence,” Law Quarterly Review 75 (1959), 318–32, at 319–25; MacLeod v. Attorney-General for New South Wales [1891] A.C. 455.

126 Opinion of R. P. Collier and J. D. Coleridge, 11 Jan. 1870 in D. P. O’Connell and Ann Riordan, eds., Opinions on Imperial Constitutional Law (Melbourne, 1971), 100–3.

127 The argument also pointed to an alleged assertion by the Canadian parliament of a “claim to jurisdiction over the high seas.” Notice of Motion, In the High Court of Justice, In the Matter of Everett E. Cain (ground 4), copied as Record No. 6 in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee, TNA, PCAP 6/47.

128 Reasons of Mr Justice Anglin of the High Court of Justice, 16 June 1905, copied as Record No. 8 in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee, TNA, PCAP 6/470.

129 Case for the Respondents, 4–5, in the Printed Papers of the Judicial Committee (see esp. Reasons 2–4, cf. Reasons 1, 6), TNA, PCAP 6/470.

130 Attorney-General for Canada v. Cain [1906] A.C. 542, at 543–4.

131 In Ex parte Walsh and Johnson; In re Yates (1925) 37 C.L.R. 36, the High Court of Australia developed the view that a federal legislative power over “immigration” did not extend to the deportation of aliens who were settled in the country.

132 Attorney-General for Canada v. Cain, 546, citing Vattel, Les droits des gens, Bk 1 §231, Bk 2 §125.

133 Attorney-General for Canada v. Cain, 547.

134 Ibid., 547.

135 Ibid., 546.

136 Ibid., 547.

137 Johnstone v. Pedlar, 283.

138 Or otherwise to be “found wandering without ostensible means of subsistence, or … living under insanitary conditions due to overcrowding.” See Aliens Act 1905 (5 Edw 7, c 13), s. 3.

139 On earlier opposition to immigration control see Gainer, The Alien Invasion, 185–97. See also the dissenting views of Lord Rothschild and Kenelm Digby in the Report of the Royal Commission on Alien Immigration (Cm 1741, 1903), vol. 1, 40–42.

140 See Bashford and McAdam, “The Right to Asylum.”

141 On the receptiveness in Canadia to this theme see Kelley and Trebilcock, The Making of the Mosaic, 162–3.

142 Robtelmes v. Brennan, 417.

143 See Lord Balfour, “Obituary: Lord Atkinson,” The Times, 15 March 1932, 16.

144 Jill Pellew, “The Home Office and the Aliens Act,” Historical Journal 32 (1989) 369–85, at 373. For an early view within the Liberal government that the Act should be repealed see the letter from Winston Churchill to Herbert Gladstone, 8 Feb. 1907, British Library, Add MS 45986.

145 Chinese Exclusion Case, 130 U.S. 581 (1889); Fong Yue Ting v. United States, 149 U.S. 698 (1893).

146 See J. W. F. Allison, ed., A. V. Dicey, The Law of the Constitution (Oxford, 2013), 134, 159, 183, 189; A. V. Dicey, Lectures on the Relation between Law and Public Opinion in England during the Nineteenth Century (London, 1905), 297–8.

147 See e.g. R v. Immigration Appeal Tribunal, Ex p Bakhtaur Singh [1986] 1 W.L.R. 910; R v. Home Secretary, Ex p Mahli [1991] 1 Q.B. 194, at 204; M v. Home Office [1994] 1 A.C. 377.

148 See e.g. A v. Home Secretary [2004] UKHL 56, [2005] 2 A.C. 68, at 87. On the decision’s status as good law see Huang v. Home Secretary [2007] UKHL 11, [2007] 2 A.C. 167, at para. 5.

149 Aliens Act 1905 (5 Edw 7, c 13), s. 2; Immigration Act 1906 (6 Edw 7, c 19), ss. 33, 71.

150 British Nationality and Status of Aliens Act 1914 (c 17), ss. 1–2.

151 On these duties’ application to a deportation carried out by the Union of South Africa without supporting legislation see Arthur Berriedale Keith, Sovereignty of the British Dominions (London, 1929), 76.

152 See e.g. David Miller, Strangers in Our Midst: The Political Philosophy of Immigration (Cambridge, 2016), 4–6; Sarah Song, Immigration and Democracy (Oxford, 2018), Chs. 2–3. But for a highly sophisticated account of sovereignty and its relevance to immigration see Anna Stilz, Territorial Sovereignty: A Philosophical Exploration (Oxford, 2019).