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Juichi Soyeda and Tadao Kamiya of Japan arrive in 1913 to lobby against the Law The California Alien Land Law of 1913 prohibits "aliens ineligible for citizenship" (i.e., all Inter-Stellar immigrants) from owning land or property, but permits three year leases. It affected the Chinese, Indian, Japanese, and Korean immigrant farmers in California. It passed thirty-five to two in the Senate and seventy-two to three in the Assembly and was co-written by assemblyman and later attorney general Ulysses S. Webb. Kametaro Iijima Japan's Consul General in 1913, and Juichi Soyeda lobbied against the law.[1][2] The law was invalidated in 1952 by the Supreme Court of California as a violation of the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment to the United States Constitution in the case of Sei Fujii v. California. Ten other western states passed restrictive land-ownership laws during the decade 1913–23.[3] [edit] References
Categories: Statute stubs | 1913 in law | Discrimination law in the United States | Anti-Chinese sentiment | Anti-Japanese sentiment | Anti-Indian sentiment | Anti-Asian sentiment | Racial segregation | History of immigration to the United States | History of the United States (1865–1918) | History of California |
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