Civil courts may inquire, under a writ of habeas corpus, into
the jurisdiction of the court over the party condemned, but cannot
inquire into or correct errors in its proceedings.
An enlistment is a contract between the soldier and the
government which involves, like marriage, a change in his status
which cannot be thrown off by him at his will, although he may
violate his contract.
An enlisted soldier cannot avoid a charge of desertion by
showing that at the time when he voluntarily enlisted, he had
passed the age at which the law allows enlisting officers to enlist
recruits.
A recruit who voluntarily goes before a recruiting officer,
expresses his desire to enlist, undergoes a physical examination,
is accepted by the officer, takes the oath of allegiance before
him, signs the clothing rolls, and is placed in charge of a
sergeant, has thereby enlisted and has become a soldier in the army
of the United States, although the articles of war have not been
read to him.
Tyler v. Pomeroy, 8 Allen 480, distinguished from this
case.
Habeas corpus. The prisoner, a recruit in the army of the United
States, being discharged, the United States took this appeal. The
objections to the validity of the enlistment are stated in the
report of the argument of the appellee's counsel. The statutes
regulating enlistments will be found in the opinion of the
Court.
Page 137 U. S. 149
MR. JUSTICE BREWER delivered the opinion of the Court.
John Grimley, the appellee, was, on the 28th day of May, 1888,
found guilty by a court-martial of the crime of desertion, and
sentenced to be imprisoned six months. While serving out this
sentence at Fort Warren, Massachusetts, he sued out
Page 137 U. S. 150
a writ of habeas corpus from the District Court of the United
States for the District of Massachusetts. That court, on June 25,
1888, discharged him from custody. The United States appealed to
the circuit court for said district, which, on the 27th day of
February, 1889, affirmed the decree of the district court. 38 F.
84. From this decision the United States has brought this
appeal.
The circuit court found that the petitioner was forty years of
age at the time of his alleged enlistment, although he represented
himself to be but 28, and, under section 1116 of the Revised
Statutes, ruled that the enlistment was void, and that Grimley
never became a soldier, and was not subject to the jurisdiction of
the court-martial. That section reads: "Recruits enlisting in the
army must be effective and able-bodied men and between the ages of
sixteen and thirty-five years at the time of their enlistment."
It cannot be doubted that the civil courts may in any case
inquire into the jurisdiction of a court-martial, and, if it
appears that the party condemned was not amenable to its
jurisdiction, may discharge him from the sentence. And, on the
other hand, it is equally clear that by habeas corpus the civil
courts exercise no supervisory or correcting power over the
proceedings of a court-martial, and that no mere errors in their
proceedings are open to consideration. The single inquiry, the
test, is jurisdiction. That being established, the habeas corpus
must be denied, and the petitioner remanded. That wanting, it must
be sustained, and the petitioner discharged. If Grimley was an
enlisted soldier, he was amenable to the jurisdiction of the
court-martial, and the principal question, the one ruled against
the government, is whether Grimley's enlistment was void by reason
of the fact that he was over thirty-five years of age. This case
involves a matter of contractual relation between the parties, and
the law of contracts, as applicable thereto, is worthy of notice.
The government, as contracting party, offers contract and service.
Grimley accepts such contract, declaring that he possesses all the
qualifications prescribed in the government's offer. The contract
is duly signed. Grimley has made an untrue statement in regard to
his qualifications.
Page 137 U. S. 151
The government makes no objection because of the untruth. The
qualification is one for the benefit of the government, one of the
contracting parties. Who can take advantage of Grimley's lack of
qualification? Obviously only the party for whose benefit it was
inserted. Such is the ordinary law of contracts. Suppose A, an
individual, were to offer to enter into contract with persons of
Anglo-Saxon descent, and B, representing that he is such descent,
accepts the offer and enters into contract; can he thereafter, A
making no objection, repudiate the contract on the ground that he
is not of Anglo-Saxon descent? A has prescribed the terms. He
contracts with B upon the strength of his representations that he
comes within those terms. Can B thereafter plead his disability in
avoidance of the contract? On the other hand, suppose for any
reason it could be contended that the proviso as to age was for the
benefit of the party enlisting, is Grimley in any better position?
The matter of age is merely incidental, and not of the substance of
the contract. And can a party by false representations as to such
incidental matter obtain a contract, and thereafter disown and
repudiate its obligations on the simple ground that the fact in
reference to this incidental matter was contrary to his
representations? May he utter a falsehood to acquire a contract,
and plead the truth to avoid it, when the matter in respect to
which the falsehood is stated is for his benefit? It must be noted
here that in the present contract is involved no matter of duress,
imposition, ignorance, or intoxication. Grimley was sober, and of
his own volition went to the recruiting office and enlisted. There
was no compulsion, no solicitation, no misrepresentation. A man of
mature years, he entered freely into the contract.
But in this transaction something more is involved than the
making of a contract whose breach exposes to an action for damages.
Enlistment is a contract, but it is one of those contracts which
changes the status, and where that is changed, no breach of the
contract destroys the new status or relieves from the obligations
which its existence imposes. Marriage is a contract, but it is one
which creates a status. Its contract
Page 137 U. S. 152
obligations are mutual faithfulness, but a breach of those
obligations does not destroy the status or change the relation of
the parties to each other. The parties remain husband and wife no
matter what their conduct to each other -- no matter how great
their disregard of marital obligations. It is true that courts have
power, under the statutes of most states, to terminate those
contract obligations and put an end to the marital relations. But
this is never done at the instance of the wrongdoer. The injured
party, and the injured party alone, can obtain relief and a change
of status by judicial action. So also a foreigner by naturalization
enters into new obligations. More than that, he thereby changes his
status; he ceases to be an alien, and becomes a citizen, and when
that change is once accomplished, no disloyalty on his part, no
breach of the obligations of citizenship, of itself, destroys his
citizenship. In other words, it is a general rule accompanying a
change of status that when once accomplished, it is not destroyed
by the mere misconduct of one of the parties, and the guilty party
cannot plead his own wrong as working a termination and destruction
thereof. Especially is he debarred from pleading the existence of
facts personal to himself, existing before the change of status,
the entrance into new relations, which would have excused him from
entering into those relations and making the change, or, if
disclosed to the other party, would have led it to decline
admission into the relation, or consent to the change.
By enlistment, the citizen becomes a soldier. His relations to
the state and the public are changed. He acquires a new status,
with correlative rights and duties, and although he may violate his
contract obligations, his status as a soldier is unchanged. He
cannot of his own volition throw off the garments he has once put
on, nor can he, the state not objecting, renounce his relations and
destroy his status on the plea that, if he had disclosed truthfully
the facts, the other party, the state, would not have entered into
the new relations with him or permitted him to change his status.
Of course, these considerations may not apply where there is
insanity, idiocy, infancy, or any other disability which, in its
nature, disables a
Page 137 U. S. 153
party from changing his status or entering into new relations.
But where a party is
sui juris, without any disability to
enter into the new relations, the rule generally applies as stated.
A naturalized citizen would not be permitted, as a defense to a
charge of treason, to say that he had acquired his citizenship
through perjury, that he had not been a resident of the United
States for five years, or within the state or territory where he
was naturalized one year, or that he was not a man of good moral
character, or that he was not attached to the Constitution. No more
can an enlisted soldier avoid a charge of desertion and escape the
consequences of such act by proof that he was over age at the time
of enlistment, or that he was not able-bodied, or that he had been
convicted of a felony, or that before his enlistment he had been a
deserter from the military service of the United States. These are
matters which do not inhere in the substance of the contract, do
not prevent a change of status, do not render the new relations
assumed absolutely void, and in the case of a soldier, these
considerations become of vast public importance. While our regular
army is small compared with those of European nations, yet its
vigor and efficiency are equally important. An army is not a
deliberative body. It is the executive arm. Its law is that of
obedience. No question can be left open as to the right to command
in the officer, or the duty of obedience in the soldier. Vigor and
efficiency on the part of the officer, and confidence among the
soldiers in one another, are impaired if any question be left open
as to their attitude to each other. So, unless there be in the
nature of things some inherent vice in the existence of the
relation, or natural wrong in the manner in which it was
established, public policy requires that it should not be
disturbed. Now there is no inherent vice in the military service of
a man forty years of age. The age of thirty-five, as prescribed in
the statute, is one of convenience merely. The government has the
right to the military service of all its able-bodied citizens, and
may, when emergency arises, justly exact that service from all. And
if, for its own convenience and with a view to the selection of the
best material, it has fixed the age at 35, it is a matter
Page 137 U. S. 154
which in any given case it may waive, and it does not lie in the
mouth of anyone above that age, on that account alone, to demand
release from an obligation voluntarily assumed, and discharge from
a service voluntarily entered into. The government, and the
government alone, is the party to the transaction that can raise
objections on that ground. We conclude, therefore, that the age of
the petitioner was no ground for his discharge.
A minor question arises on these facts as to whether the
petitioner was in fact enlisted. It appears that on Saturday,
February 18, 1888, the petitioner entered the recruiting rendezvous
in Boston and expressed a desire to enlist. He underwent a physical
examination. He took the oath of allegiance before the recruiting
officer, signed the clothing rolls, and was placed in charge of the
sergeant. The latter took him to the clothing room, and selected
for his uniform a cap, trousers, blanket, shirt, and pair of
stockings, and laid them before him. He put none of these articles
on except the cap, and that in a few minutes he took off. He then
asked permission to go away and see his friends, and the sergeant
told him to go, and be back on Monday. He went away in his
citizen's clothes, returned to his mother's house and told her what
he had done. She was very much grieved, and after some conversation
with him went to the recruiting office, and finding three men
there, told them her errand, and was advised substantially that
Grimley need not come back, and might go to work. Who these men
were is not disclosed. On the strength of that, he did not return,
but went off and engaged in service as a coachman. He was arrested
as a deserter on May 16, 1888, brought before a court-martial, and
found guilty, as heretofore stated. The oath of allegiance which he
took was as follows:
"
The United States of America"
"State of Massachusetts"
"City or Town of Boston
ss."
"I, John Grimley, born in Armagh, in the State of Ireland, aged
twenty-eight years and _____ months, and by occupation
Page 137 U. S. 155
a groom, do hereby acknowledge to have voluntarily enlisted,
this eighteenth day of February, 1888, as a soldier in the army of
the United States of America for the period of five years, unless
sooner discharged by proper authority, and do also agree to accept
from the United States such bounty, pay, rations, and clothing as
are or may be established by law. And I do solemnly swear (or
affirm) that I will bear true faith and allegiance to the United
States of America, and that I will serve them honestly and
faithfully against all their enemies whomsoever, and that I will
obey the orders of the President of the United States, and the
orders of the officers appointed over me, according to the rules
and articles of war."
"JOHN GRIMLEY [Seal]"
"Subscribed and duly sworn to before me this 18th day of
February, A.D. 1888."
"JAMES MILLER"
"Captain, 2d Infantry, Recruiting Officer"
The question presented is whether the petitioner had in fact
enlisted and become a soldier. It will be noticed that in this oath
of allegiance is an acknowledgment that he had enlisted, and that
it was not an agreement to enlist. In this respect, this case
differs from that of
Tyler v. Pomeroy, 8 Allen 480, in
which the plaintiff, with others, had signed a paper by which, in
terms, they agreed to serve for a period of three years "from the
date of our being mustered into the United States' service." In
that case, MR. JUSTICE GRAY, then a member of the Supreme Court of
Massachusetts, in an opinion reviewing all the authorities in
England and in this country, drew a distinction between an
agreement to enlist, which, if broken, simply gives a right of
action for damages, and an enlistment, which changes the status of
the party, transfers him from civil to military life, and renders
him amenable to military jurisdiction. Section 1342 of the Revised
Statutes provides that the army of the United States shall be
governed by certain rules and articles thereafter stated. Article 2
provides:
"These rules and articles shall be read to every enlisted man at
the time of, or within six days after, his enlistment,
Page 137 U. S. 156
and he shall thereupon take an oath or affirmation,"
etc. Obviously the oath is the final act in the matter of
enlistment. Article 47, respecting desertion, reads: "Any officer
or soldier who, having received pay, or having been duly enlisted
in the service of the United States, deserts the same," etc. By
this, either receipt of pay or enlistment determines the status,
and after enlistment the party becomes amenable to military
jurisdiction although no actual service may have been rendered and
no pay received.
It is insisted that the articles of war were not read to him,
but that is not a prerequisite. "Within six days after" is the
statute. The reading of the one hundred and twenty-eight articles,
many of which do not concern the duty of a soldier, is not
essential to his enlistment. Paragraph No. 766 of the army
regulations of 1881 is as follows:
"The forms of declaration, and of consent in the case of a
minor, having been signed and witnessed, the recruit will then be
duly examined by the recruiting officer and surgeon, if one be
present, and, if accepted, the 47th and 103d articles of war will
be read to him, after which he will be allowed time to consider the
subject until his mind appears to be fully made up before the oath
is administered to him."
That this was complied with is probable from the testimony.
The petitioner testifies that something was read to him out of a
book, though he is unable to say what it was, and Captain Miller,
the recruiting officer, testifies that he is under the impression,
though not positive, that he read the forty-seventh article to him.
He also says that he had quite a conversation with him, inquiring
as to his past life and why he had decided to enlist. No
solicitations were used, no advantage taken of him. The enlistment
was a deliberate act. No specified amount of time for the purpose
of consideration is prescribed by the regulation. The oath is not
to be administered until his mind is fully made up, and that is all
that is required. There is nothing in the circumstances surrounding
the enlistment to vitiate the transaction. We conclude therefore,
upon the whole case, that the age of the petitioner was no bar to
his enlistment of which he can take advantage; that the taking
Page 137 U. S. 157
of the oath of allegiance is the pivotal fact which changes the
status from that of civilian to that of soldier; that the
enlistment was a deliberate act on the part of the petitioner, and
that the circumstances surrounding it were not such as would enable
him, of his own volition, to ignore it or justify a court in
setting it aside.
The judgment of the circuit court will be
Reversed, and the case remanded, with instructions to
reverse the decree of the district court and take such further
proceedings as shall be in conformity with the opinion of this
Court.