A commissioned officer in the Navy can waive the provisions of
Art. 60 of § 1624, Rev.Stat., and allow proceedings of a court
of inquiry to be evidence on a court-martial the sentence of which
may extend to his dismissal;
Schick v. United States,
195 U. S. 65; and,
where at the request of such an officer, the Secretary of the Navy
convenes a court-martial to try him on matter which had already
been the subject of a court of inquiry, on condition that the
proceedings of such court of inquiry be evidence, each party having
the privilege, however, of introducing other evidence, the accused
is not deprived of any substantial right so that the sentence of
the court-martial is invalidated. Reduction by the President of the
United States of the dismissal of an officer of the Navy from the
service to reduction to one-half sea pay for five years is a
mitigation of the sentence within the meaning of Art. 54 of §
1624, Rev.Stat.
Quaere whether Art. 54 of § 1624
applies to the action of the President.
Civil courts are not courts of error to review sentences of
legally organized
Page 212 U. S. 517
courts-martial having jurisdiction of the person of the accused
and of the offense.
42 Ct.Cl. 157 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE DAY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is prosecuted to reverse the judgment of the Court
of Claims dismissing the petition of Dennis W. Mullan, appellant.
Full findings of facts were made in the Court of Claims, and, upon
consideration, the claim of the petitioner was dismissed. 42 Ct.Cl.
157. From the findings of fact made by the court, it appears that
Dennis W. Mullan was a commander, serving as commandant at the Navy
Yard at Pensacola, where he served from July 30, 1896, till March
7, 1897. Charges having been preferred against him, at his request,
a court of inquiry was convened to investigate them. The court of
inquiry, after a full investigation and trial, reported adversely
to the appellant. At that time, he was subject to examination for
promotion to the grade of captain, and, unless he could acquit
himself of the charges preferred, he would be liable under §
1447 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (Act of 1882, 22
Stat. 286, c. 391) to be discharged from the service without more
than one year's pay. In this condition of affairs, the appellant
made application to the Secretary of the Navy for a court-martial
to try him upon the charges to be formulated from the finding of
the court of inquiry. Correspondence ensued between the Secretary
of the Navy and the appellant, fully set forth in the report of
this case in the Court of Claims. 42 Ct.Cl. 159
et seq.
The Secretary of the Navy, in answer to appellant's request,
proposed to call a court-martial
Page 212 U. S. 518
at Washington for trial upon such charges as the Department
might designate, provided the record of the court of inquiry should
be admitted as evidence, each party to have the privilege of
introducing other evidence. The appellant advised the Secretary
that he would agree to such court-martial, it being understood that
the privilege of introducing other witnesses should embrace the
right to recall witnesses who had previously testified before the
court of inquiry, and to take depositions upon written
interrogatories. The Secretary of the Navy refused to permit the
recalling of witnesses who had testified before the court of
inquiry, or to permit testimony to be taken by interrogatories, but
permitted the calling of other witnesses. Thereupon the appellant
notified the Department that he acceded to the conditions stated in
the Secretary's letter. The court-martial was ordered by the
Secretary of the Navy to try the appellant upon the charges of
drunkenness and drunkenness on duty. The evidence submitted at the
court-martial consisted of the records of the court of inquiry,
together with one witness called in addition thereto. The
court-martial found the appellant guilty of both charges, and
sentenced him to be dismissed from the Navy; on June 30, 1897, the
Secretary of the Navy approved this sentence. The same was
submitted to the President, who, on July 8, 1897, made the
following order in the premises:
"The sentence in the foregoing case of Commander Dennis W.
Mullan, U.S. Navy, is confirmed, but is mitigated as follows: to be
reduced in rank, so that his name shall be placed at the foot of
the list of commanders in the Navy, and to be suspended from rank
and duty, on one-half sea pay, for a period of five years, during
which time he shall retain his place at the foot of said list."
The appellant protested against the legality of the proceedings.
At the trial before the court-martial, no objection was offered by
the appellant or his attorneys to the introduction of the evidence.
On July 11, 1901, the unexpired period of the sentence was remitted
by order of the President. The suit was
Page 212 U. S. 519
begun in the Court of Claims to recover the difference between
"one-half sea pay" and "waiting orders pay," from July 8, 1897,
when the President's order was made, as above recited, and July 11,
1901, when the President remitted the unexpired period of the
sentence, the amount claimed being the sum of $3,934.14.
It is contended by the appellant that the proceedings of the
court-martial are null and void because of the manner in which that
court was convened, upon requirement as a condition precedent that
the appellant should submit to the introduction of the record of
the testimony introduced before the court of inquiry, with the
right to call additional witnesses, as hereinbefore stated. This
contention is based upon Article 60 of § 1624 of the Revised
Statutes, which provides as follows:
"Art. 60. The proceedings of courts of inquiry shall be
authenticated by the signature of the president of the court and of
the judge advocate, and shall, in all cases not capital, nor
extending to the dismissal of a commissioned or warrant officer, be
evidence before a court-martial, provided oral testimony cannot be
obtained."
It is contended that, inasmuch as this case did not come within
the statutory provisions permitting the evidence before a
court-martial to be used, as such right is limited to cases not
extending to the dismissal of a commissioned or warrant officer,
and a capital case, the court-martial was not properly organized,
and its proceedings were null and void. It is insisted that this
provision of the law is to enable the accused, in cases of this
character, to meet his witnesses face to face, and is analogous to
the constitutional right in criminal cases; and, being an enactment
for the benefit of the service and the protection of those engaged
therein, the appellant could not waive its provisions. But we are
of opinion that this was a right which he might waive. In
Schick v. United States, 195 U. S. 65, it
was held that a party might, in the case then before the court,
waive the right to a trial by jury, and, in the course of the
opinion, MR. JUSTICE BREWER, speaking for the Court, said (p.
195 U. S.
71):
Page 212 U. S. 520
"Article six of the amendments, as we have seen, gives the
accused a right to a trial by jury. But the same article gives him
the further right 'to be confronted with the witnesses against him
. . . and to have the assistance of counsel.' Is it possible that
an accused cannot admit, and be bound by the admission, that a
witness not present would testify to certain facts? Can it be that,
if he does not wish the assistance of counsel, and waives it, the
trial is invalid? It seems only necessary to ask these questions to
answer them. When there is no constitutional or statutory mandate,
and no public policy prohibiting, an accused may waive any
privilege which he is given the right to enjoy."
The Secretary of the Navy was under no legal obligation to call
a court-martial to inquire into the charges made against the
accused. The court of inquiry was invoked, as was the court-martial
at the instance of the appellant. He had had a full trial before
the court of inquiry, in which the record disclosed a large number
of witnesses were called; he was represented by counsel; he was
present in person; he had a full opportunity to cross-examine the
witnesses and to make a defense. At the court-martial, he was
permitted to introduce additional witnesses, and had the benefit of
one witness whose testimony was in his favor. We think there was
nothing in the manner in which the court-martial was organized
which deprived the accused of a substantial right in such manner as
to oust its jurisdiction in the premises. The civil courts are not
courts of error to review the proceedings and sentences of
courts-martial where they are legally organized and have
jurisdiction of the offense and of the person of the accused, and
have complied with the statutory requirements governing their
proceedings.
Dynes v.
Hoover, 20 How. 65;
Ex Parte Reed,
100 U. S. 13;
Swaim v. United States, 165 U. S. 553.
It is contended that the order of July 18, 1897, in which the
President undertook to mitigate the sentence of the appellant --
dismissal from the Navy -- to reduction to one-half sea pay for the
period of five years, with reduction in rank and suspension,
Page 212 U. S. 521
as stated, was illegal and unauthorized, because of Art. 54,
§ 1624, of the Revised Statutes of the United States, which
provides:
"Every officer who is authorized to convene a general
court-martial shall have power, on revision of its proceedings, to
remit or mitigate, but not to commute, the sentence of any such
court which he is authorized to approve and confirm."
The Court of Claims was of opinion that this section did not
apply to the action of the President of the United States. If it be
conceded for this purpose that it is applicable to the President
(§ 1624, Arts, 38 and 53 of the Revised Statutes), we are of
the opinion that the President's action did, in fact mitigate the
previous sentence of the court-martial as approved by the Secretary
of the Navy. It may be conceded that there is a technical
difference between the commutation of a sentence and the mitigation
thereof. The first is a change of a punishment to which a person
has been condemned into one less severe, substituting a less for a
greater punishment by authority of law. To mitigate a sentence is
to reduce or lessen the amount of the penalty or punishment. 1
Bouvier's Law Dict. 374; 2
id. 428.
When the President otherwise confirmed the sentence of the Navy
Department from absolute discharge from the Navy to reduction in
rank and duty for the period of five years on one-half sea pay, he
did what in terms he undertook to do; and, by the lessening of the
severe penalty of dismissal from the Navy, approved by the
Department, reduced and diminished, and therefore mitigated, the
sentence which he was authorized to approve and confirm against the
appellant, or mitigate in his favor.
Judgment affirmed.