File No. 4062/13–14.

Ambassador Francis to the Secretary of State.

No. 448.]

Sir: Supplementing my No. 225, dated May 8, 1907, I have the honor to inclose a copy (accompanied by a translation) of a note [Page 28] received from the foreign office to-day in the expulsion case of Mr. Selig Fink.

Following the instructions contained in Mr. Bacon’s No. 98 dated April 13, 1907, I addressed Baron Aehrenthal on May 7, 1907, at considerable length not only upon the particular case of Mr. Fink but on the general question involved of former Austrian or Hungarian subjects returning, as American citizens, to the country of their origin. Receiving no answer to my communication mentioned, I addressed several notes upon the subject at different times to the imperial and royal minister of foreign affairs, supplemented by personal effort, to obtain the attitude of the Austrian Government toward the general question involved, but not until to-day have I been able to obtain any word in reply from the Austrian Government.

I am, etc.,

Charles S. Francis.
[Inclosure—Translation.]

The Minister for Foreign Affairs to Ambassador Francis .

Imperial and Royal Ministry for Foreign Affairs.

No. 7925/7.

In the esteemed note F. O. No. 84 of May 7, 1907, his excellency the ambassador of the United States of America was pleased to state the point of view of the Government of the United States of America in the matter of treatment of naturalized citizens of the United States, who were formerly Austrian citizens, upon their return to their former home, in order that the decree of expulsion issued by the imperial and royal Bezirkshauptmannschaft at Grybow against the naturalized American citizen, Selig Fink, might be revoked.

The undersigned has not failed to convey the contents of the above-mentioned esteemed note to the imperial and royal ministry of the interior for its decision in the matter, and in accordance with the report received from that ministry begs most respectfully to present the following to his excellency, the ambassador of the United States of America.

The imperial and royal ministry of the interior agrees entirely with the point of view of the American Government that it would be wrong and unjust to issue a decree of expulsion against every former Austrian citizen who, before he had fulfilled his military service in his native land, had become naturalized in America and returned to Austria as an American citizen. The ministry of the interior is of the opinion that every case of this kind should be specially examined and treated according to its individual merits.

The ministry of the interior can not agree to the view that in the decision of certain cases special consideration shall be given to those individuals who, under the pressure of particular considerations, assume a residence in their former home for a certain time intending to return to the United States after they have completed their business.

From the point of view of the imperial and royal ministry of the interior the case of Selig Fink can not be included in the list of those deserving special consideration.

The above-named Selig Fink, whose true name is Selig Gottlob, came to Grybow in August, 1905. This fact has been determined by papers submitted by the Bezirkshauptmannschaft. The decree of expulsion against Selig Fink was issued by the imperial and royal Bezirkshauptmannschaft in July, 1906, so that he was able to spend 11 months in Grybow. Fink, therefore, had ample time, if, in his case there had been a question or merely temporary residence, to have attended to all his business affairs.

Under these circumstances the imperial and royal ministry of the interior considers that the imperial and royal officials were entirely justified in making an exception in this case by issuing an order of expulsion and in considering that Fink had the intention of residing permanently in Grybow.

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The imperial and royal ministry of the interior wishes in this connection to correct any impression in the mind of his excellency the ambassador of the United States of America of an unfair decision or an evasion of duty on the part of the Austrian officials.

The undersigned avails, etc.

For the minister:
Lad. Müller.