When the commander-in-chief of a squadron, not in the waters of
the United States, convenes a court martial to try an officer
attached to the squadron, more than half of whose members are
juniors in rank to the accused, the courts of the United States
will assume, when his action in this respect is attacked
collaterally, and nothing to the contrary appears on the face of
the order convening the court, that he properly exercised his
discretion, and that the trial of the accused by such a court could
not be avoided without inconvenience to the service.
The President has power by and with the advice and consent of
the Senate to displace an officer in the army or navy by the
appointment of another person in his place.
Blake v. United States, 103 U.
S. 227, affirmed and followed.
On the 18th of February, 1883, the United States steamer
Ashuelot -- in charge of the appellant as commander in the
United States navy, and attached to the Asiatic squadron under Rear
Admiral Clitz -- ran upon a rock, and was lost, with eleven of the
crew. The Navy Department received, March 16, 1883, from the rear
admiral a message sent by cable from Hong Kong, in these words:
"Inquiry finished. Mullan culpable; others exonerated.
Court-martial impossible. Directions requested." In response to
this message, the department, on the 19th of March, 1883, issued
orders to Capts. William P. McCann and Joseph N. Miller and Master
Samuel C. Lemly to proceed to Yokohama, Japan, and report to the
commander in chief of the Asiatic station. These orders were issued
to enable that officer to organize a court-martial to try Mullan
for the loss of the
Ashuelot.
Subsequently, April 30, 1883, Rear Admiral Pierce Crosby, who
had then assumed command of the United States squadron on the
Asiatic station, ordered a general court-martial to convene on
board the flagship
Richmond at Hong Kong on the second of
May, 1883, for the trial of Mullan. The court was
Page 140 U. S. 241
composed of the following persons, any five of whom were
empowered to act: Capt. William P. McCann, Capt. J. N. Miller,
Lieut. Commanders G. B. D. Gleddin and E. S. Houseon, Lieuts. J. J.
Hunker, S. M. Ackley, and B. Noyes. In the order convening the
court it was stated that "no other officers than those named can be
assembled without manifest injury to the service."
When the court convened, the appellant filed the following
protest:
"I object and protest against the organization of the court as a
whole, and for the following reasons: in case of an officer to be
tried by a court-martial, article 39 of the articles for the
government of the United States Navy provides that in no case where
it can be avoided without injury to the service shall more than
one-half, exclusive of the President, be junior to the officer to
be tried. In time of war, it might frequently occur that officers,
particularly those of the higher grades, could not be detached from
duty and ordered as members of a court without great injury to the
service; but in time of peace, when large numbers of officers are
either off duty or performing such duty as for the necessary time
might be done by a subordinate, no such emergency can possibly
arise. It cannot be claimed by anyone that a sufficient number of
officers senior to myself could not have been ordered upon this
court without injury to the service. I have no desire to reflect on
any individual member of this Court, but since my professional
reputation, my personal character, and the prosperity and happiness
of my family are at stake, I must emphatically protest against
being tried by a court five of whose seven members are junior to
myself."
At the request of the appellant, the court below found that at
the time of the organization of the court, there were twelve naval
officers superior in rank to him on waiting orders in the City of
Washington, and that Medical Inspector Stephen D. Kennedy, of the
navy, was tried in November, 1883, on board the
Hartford
at Panama by a court composed of two commodores, two captains, one
medical director, one medical inspector, and one commander, all of
those officers being detailed for that special duty and directed to
proceed from New York
Page 140 U. S. 242
to Panama because deemed necessary by the Navy Department in
view of the fact, of which it was informed by Rear Admiral Hughes,
that there were not in the squadron under his command the requisite
number of officers of sufficient rank to organize a court-martial
for the trial of Medical Inspector Kennedy.
The charges against appellant for the trial of which the court
at Hong Kong was convened were drunkenness on duty, improperly
hazarding the vessel under his command, in consequence of which it
was run upon a rock and lost, and neglect of duty. Being found
guilty, he was sentenced to dismissal form the service. The
sentence was approved and confirmed by the President on the 6th of
July, 1883.
In December, 1883, the President nominated to the Senate
"Lieutenant Commander Francis M. Green to be a commander in the
navy, from the 7th of July, 1883, vice Commanders T. H. Eastman,
retired, and Horace E. Mullan, dismissed."
The Senate, January 18, 1884, advised and consented to this
appointment of Green from the latter date, "Vice-Commanders T. H.
Eastman, retired, and Horace E. Mullan, dismissed," and on the 23d
of January, 1884, the President commissioned him to be a commander
in the navy from the 7th of July, 1883.
The present action was brought by Mullan on the 3d of June,
1885, to recover pay as commander in the navy since the 6th of
July, 1883. It proceeds upon the ground that this action of the
court-martial was illegal and void and that, notwithstanding its
sentence of dismissal, he was at the time of bringing this action,
and had been since the 6th of July, 1883, a commander in the navy,
legally entitled to the compensation provided by law.
The Court of Claims found the above facts, and, holding as a
conclusion of law that appellant was not entitled to recover,
dismissed his petition. 23 Ct.Cl. 34.
Page 140 U. S. 243
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, after stating the facts in the foregoing
language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The principal contention of the appellant is that the
court-martial convened under the order of Rear Admiral Crosby was
an illegal body, without jurisdiction to try him. This contention
is based upon the fact that of the seven members of the court
participating in the trial, five were his juniors in rank. Our
attention has been called to he clause of the fifth section of the
Army Appropriation Act of July 13, 1866, 14 Stat. 92, c. 176,
preserved in § 1229 of the Revised Statutes, providing
that
"No officer in the military or naval service shall in time of
peace be dismissed from service except upon and in pursuance of the
sentence of a court-martial to that effect or in commutation
thereof."
And article 36, for the government of the navy, Rev.Stat. §
1624, reads:
"No officer shall be dismissed from the naval service except by
the order of the President or by sentence of a general
court-martial, and in time of peace no officer shall be dismissed
except in pursuance of the sentence of a general court-martial or
in mitigation thereof."
Article 39 of section 1624 of the Revised Statutes provides:
"A general court-martial shall consist of not more than thirteen
nor less than five commissioned officers as members, and as many
officers, not exceeding thirteen, as can be convened without injury
to the service, shall be summoned on every such court. But in no
case where it can be avoided without injury to the service shall
more than one-half, exclusive of the president, be junior to the
officer to be tried. The senior officer shall always preside, and
the others shall take place according to their rank."
These provisions are cited by the appellant in support of his
contention that the court-martial at Hong Kong was an illegal
tribunal. He insists that it appears from the record before us that
a court consisting of not less than five commissioned officers --
more than one-half of them, exclusive of the president, being his
seniors in rank -- could have been convened without injury to the
service, and therefore the court which tried him was unauthorized
by the statute. This is supposed to be established by the fact that
at the time of the
Page 140 U. S. 244
organization of the court at Hong Kong, there were twelve naval
officers superior in rank to the appellant on waiting orders in the
City of Washington, but this does not show that any of those
officers could at that time have been sent from the national
capital to the Asiatic station "without injury to the service." The
public interests may have required them to be held at Washington
for assignment to other duty than service upon the court-martial to
be convened for the trial of the appellant. Of that the Navy
Department was necessarily the judge, and its discretion could not
be controlled nor its action reviewed by the courts. The presence
of those officers in Washington, on waiting orders at the time the
court-martial at Hong Kong was ordered, must be conclusively
presumed to have been required by the Navy Department, and
therefore by the exigencies of the naval service. Some stress is
laid upon the circumstance, stated in the findings of the court
below, that certain officers were detailed by the Navy Department,
in November, 1883, to proceed from New York to Panama for service
upon a court-martial, ordered for the trial of a medical inspector,
such detail being deemed necessary by reason of the fact that in
the squadron to which the inspector was attached there were not
"the requisite number of officers of sufficient rank to organize a
court-martial" to try him. But that only tends to show that a
court-martial a majority of whose members, exclusive of the
president, were senior in rank to the inspector could at that time
be convened "without injury to the service." It does not show what
were the requirements of the service at the time the court-martial
was ordered to be held at Hong Kong in May, 1883, for the trial of
the appellant. It results that there is no ground for the
contention that the record shows that the organization of a court
with more than one-half of its members junior in rank to appellant
could have been avoided without injury to the service.
The statute permits an officer of the navy to be tried by a
court-martial more than one-half of whose members are his juniors
in rank if it cannot be avoided without injury to the service. Rear
Admiral Crosby, being commander in chief
Page 140 U. S. 245
of a squadron not operating or stationed "in the waters of the
United States," had the power, without express authority from the
President, to convene a general court-martial for the trial of the
appellant. Rev.Stat. § 1624, Art. 38. That is not disputed.
Whether the interests of the service admitted of a postponement of
his trial until a court could be organized of which at least
one-half of its members, exclusive of the president, would be his
seniors in rank, or whether the interests of the service required a
prompt trial upon the charges preferred by such officers as could
be then assigned to that duty by the commander in chief of the
squadron, were matters committed by the statute to the
determination of that officer. And the courts must assume --
nothing to the contrary appearing upon the face of the order
convening the court -- that the discretion conferred upon him was
properly exercised, and therefore that the trial of the appellant
by a court the majority of whom were his juniors in rank could not
be avoided "without injury to the service." "Whenever," this Court
said in
Martin v. Mott,
12 Wheat. 19,
25 U. S. 31,
"a statute gives a discretionary power to any person, to be
exercised by him upon his own opinion of certain facts, it is a
sound rule of construction that the statute constitutes him the
sole and exclusive judge of the existence of those facts."
The result of these views is that the sentence of the
court-martial, and its approval by the President, cannot be
regarded as void.
But, independently of the question as to the legal character of
the court-martial, there is another ground upon which the
affirmance of the judgment of the Court of Claims can rest. In
Blake v. United States, 103 U. S. 227,
103 U. S. 235,
it was held upon full consideration that the fifth section of the
Army Appropriation Act of July 13, 1866, c. 176, 14 Stat. 92, above
quoted, meant
"that whereas, under the Act of July 17, 1862, as well as before
its passage, the President alone was authorized to dismiss an army
or naval officer from the service for any cause which, in his
judgment, either rendered such officer unsuitable for, or whose
dismissal would promote, the public service, he alone shall not
thereafter, in time of peace, exercise
Page 140 U. S. 246
such power of dismissal except in pursuance of a court-martial
sentence to that effect or in commutation thereof."
Again, in the same case:
"Our conclusion is that there was no purpose by the fifth
section of the Act of July 13, 1866, to withdraw from the President
the power, with the advice and consent of the Senate, to supersede
an officer in the military or naval service by the appointment of
some one in his place. If the power of the President and Senate in
this regard could be constitutionally subjected to restrictions by
statute -- as to which we express no opinion -- it is sufficient
for the present case to say that Congress did not intend by that
section to impose them. It is, in substance and effect, nothing
more than a declaration that the power theretofore exercised by the
President, without the concurrence of the Senate, of summarily
dismissing or discharging officers of the army or navy whenever in
his judgment the interest of the service required it to be done,
shall not exist or be exercised in time of peace except in
pursuance of the sentence of a court-martial or in commutation
thereof. There was, as we think, no intention to deny or restrict
the power of the President, by and with the advice and consent of
the Senate, to displace them by the appointment of others in their
places."
These principles were affirmed in the subsequent case of
Keyes v. United States, 109 U. S. 336,
109 U. S.
339.
In view of these adjudications, the judgment below may be
sustained without reference to the inquiry whether the
court-martial that tried Mullan was legally constituted, or whether
he ceased to be an officer of the navy in consequence of the
approval of the sentence by the President. The fact appears that
Francis M. Green, under the appointment of the President, by and
with the advice and consent of the Senate, was commissioned
commander in place of Eastman, retired, and Mullan dismissed. The
circumstance that Green was appointed in place of one commander
retired and another dismissed is explained by the Naval
Appropriation Act of August 5, 1882, c. 391, 22 Stat. 284, 286,
requiring a reduction of the number of officers in certain grades
of the navy, including the grade of commander. Green was appointed
by the President,
Page 140 U. S. 247
by and with the advice and consent of the Senate, and
was commissioned in place of Mullan. This, under the above
decisions, to which we adhere, put Mullan out of the navy even if
the proceedings of the court-martial had been void.
Judgment affirmed.