1. The act establishing the Naval Reserve Force (August 29,
1916) impliedly empowered the President, at his discretion, or the
Secretary of the Navy, acting for him, to change the status of an
officer of that force from active service in the Navy to the status
of inactive duty. P.
263 U. S.
32.
2. A mere change of status from active service to inactive duty
in the Naval Reserve Force is not a retirement within the meaning
of Rev.Stats., § 1455, which refers to officers in the Regular
Navy, nor under the Acts of July 1, 1918, and June 4, 1920, which
made that section applicable to officers on active service in the
Reserve Force when disabled in the line of duty. P.
263 U. S.
34.
3. An order of the Secretary of the Navy retiring an officer to
inactive duty in the Naval Reserve Force being discretionary, the
Secretary cannot be required by mandamus to revoke it, even though
based on his erroneous belief that such officer was not entitled,
under the Acts of July 1, 1918, and June 4, 1920, to be retired on
pay when disabled in line of duty. P.
263 U. S.
36.
4. A naval regulation providing that, when any officer on the
active list becomes physically incapacitated to perform his duties,
he will
Page 263 U. S. 30
be ordered before a Retiring Board (Nav.Reg.1913, 331[5]) did
not bind the Secretary as a rule of law under R.S. § 1547,
after it was transferred to the instructions to naval Retiring
Boards by order of the President. (Nav. Courts and Board, 1917,
§ 679.) P.
263 U. S.
37.
5. The right of a naval officer, disabled in the line of duty,
to be retired on pay is dependent by statute on the judgment of the
President, not that of the courts, and the remedy of the officer
when his application for a retirement board is disapproved by the
Secretary, is by appeal directly to the President. (Nav. Ins.1913,
§ 5323.) P.
263 U. S.
38.
51 App.D.C. 335, 279 F. 317, reversed.
Error to a judgment of the Court of Appeals of the District of
Columbia, which affirmed, in part, a mandamus issued by the Supreme
Court of the District requiring the Secretary of the Navy to revoke
an order directing the release of the relator, Berry, from active
service in the Navy, and to make an order sending him before a
Retiring Board with a view to his retirement by the President.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TAFT delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a petition for mandamus filed in the Supreme Court of
the District of Columbia by a member and officer of the Naval
Reserve Force, as relator, to compel the Secretary of the Navy to
revoke an order directing the release of the relator from active
service in the Navy and to make an order sending him before a
Retiring Board with a view to his retirement by the President.
Page 263 U. S. 31
The Supreme Court sustained a demurrer to the amended answer of
the Secretary and, the latter electing not to plead further, the
court issued a mandamus as prayed. The Secretary carried the case
on appeal to the Court of Appeals of the District, which affirmed
the part of the mandamus directing revocation of the order of
release and reversed the part requiring that the Secretary send the
relator before a Retiring Board. The Secretary brings this writ of
error to the judgment of the Court of Appeals. The case involves
the construction of the general statutes of the United States
applicable to the Naval Reserve Force and the retirement of its
officers. We therefore have jurisdiction of the writ under §
250, par. 6, of the Judicial Code.
The relator, being an officer in the Naval Reserve Force, was
ordered before a naval board of medical survey, and on October 14,
1919, was found by that board to be under permanent disability,
which was incurred in line of duty and was not the result of his
own misconduct. The board recommended that the relator be sent
before a Retiring Board. The Secretary of the Navy forwarded this
recommendation to the Bureau of Navigation, the executive bureau of
the Navy, disapproved, and directed that "this officer be ordered
to proceed to his home and be released from active duty." The
Bureau of Navigation, on November 17, 1919, accordingly issued to
the relator this announcement:
"You are hereby detached from such duty as may have been
assigned you; you will proceed to your home and regard yourself
honorably discharged from active service in the Navy."
The relator wrote to the Secretary of the Navy requesting that
his case be referred to a Retiring Board for consideration, to
which the Secretary replied, denying the plaintiff's right either
to have his case so considered or to be placed on the retired list.
The next day, November 18, 1919, this action was brought.
Page 263 U. S. 32
The Court of Appeals held that, because the relator, as Naval
Reserve officer, if disabled in the line of duty, was eligible for
retirement under the same conditions as provided for regular naval
officers, and because no officer of the Navy could, under §
1455, Rev.Stats., be retired from active service or wholly retired
without a full and fair hearing before a Navy Retiring Board if he
should demand it, the Secretary had retired him from the service in
violation of law, and that he could be compelled to revoke his
action. This would reinstate him to the status of a Naval Reserve
officer in the active service with full pay as such from October
18, 1919.
The Naval Reserve Force was established by the Naval
Appropriation Act of August 29, 1916 (39 Stat. c. 417, pp. 556,
587). By its provisions, the Naval Reserve Force was to be composed
of citizens of the United States who, by enrollment therein or
transfer thereto, should obligate themselves to serve in the Navy
in time of war or during an emergency declared by the President.
Enrollment was to be for four years. A clothing gratuity was
allowed, and retainer pay of $12 a year or more according to class
was to be paid to those who kept the Secretary advised of their
whereabouts. The same grades and ranks were provided up to the rank
of Lieutenant Commander as existed in the rank and file of the
Navy. The President commissioned the commissioned officers. The
Secretary issued warrants to the warrant officers. During peace, or
when no national emergency existed, members might be discharged at
their own request on return of the clothing gratuity. Members might
be ordered into active service in the Navy by the President in time
of war, or when in his opinion a national emergency existed, and
might be required to perform such service throughout the war, or
until the national emergency ceased to exist. Enrolled members were
to be subject to the laws, regulations, and orders for the
government of the regular Navy
Page 263 U. S. 33
only during such time as they might be required in the active
service. The members of the Force, when in active service, were
entitled to the same pay, allowance, gratuities, and other
emoluments as men of the same rank or grade in the regular Navy,
but when on inactive duty they were entitled only to what was
expressly provided in the act. The Secretary of the Navy was to
make all necessary and proper regulations not inconsistent with law
for the administration of these Naval Reserve Force provisions.
It is quite evident from the foregoing that members of this
force occupied two statuses -- one that of inactive duty and the
other of active service. It is further clear that it was within the
power of the President, and of the Secretary of the Navy acting for
him, to change the members of the Reserve Force from one status to
the other. The power to call them from inactive duty to actual
service was express. The power to order them from actual service to
inactive duty was necessarily implied. How this should be done was
within the discretion of the President and his alter ego in the
Navy Department, the Secretary.
United
States v. Jones, 18 How. 92,
59 U. S. 95. The
vesting of the right to make regulations to carry out the act in
the Secretary shows that he was to act for the President. As a
matter of practice in the department, the method of calling out the
members of the Reserve Force and of sending them back to inactive
duty was, by order of the Secretary of the Navy (Gen. Order No. 237
of October 6, 1916), left to the Bureau of Navigation, and under
that bureau, mobilization and demobilization of the Reserve Force
were carried on under special orders and circulars. Orders
releasing individuals from active service and putting them on
inactive duty were clearly within the power of the President and of
the Secretary of the Navy acting for him in the administration of
the
Page 263 U. S. 34
act. Nowhere is there found any limitation upon the discretion
of the Executive in this regard. The orders in such cases were in
the nature of military orders by the Commander in Chief in the
assignment or withdrawal of available forces to or from duty for
the good of the service. Such orders of withdrawal could not and
did not make members of the Naval Reserve Force civilians. They did
not release them from obligation under their enrollment to render
active service again when ordered to do so by the proper authority.
When the Bureau of Navigation detached relator from active duty and
told him to go home and regard himself as honorably discharged from
active service in the Navy, he was not ousted from the Naval
Reserve Force or the Navy. The words "honorably discharged" were
only to advise him and others that the change of his status from
active to inactive duty was not because of his fault or
misconduct.
The Court of Appeals, however, construed this order to be an
effort to retire the relator from the Navy in the sense in which
that term is used in § 1455, Rev.Stats., which reads as
follows:
"No officer of the Navy shall be retired from active service, or
wholly retired from the service, without a full and fair hearing
before such Navy retiring-board, if he shall demand it, except in
cases where he may be retired by the President at his own request,
or on account of age or length of service, or on account of his
failure to be recommended by an examining board for promotion."
This section was adopted in 1861 (c. 42, 12 Stat. c. 42), and
applied to regular officers in the Navy. The retirement from active
service, and complete retirement provided in the section, are to be
understood as they apply to such officers. Officers in the Regular
Navy who have become unfit for service before the retiring age are
subject to three methods of retirement. One is when the disability
is in the line of duty, and their retirement pay is
Page 263 U. S. 35
three-fourths of the pay of their rank on active duty. The other
two are when the disability is not incurred in line of duty, and in
one the retirement pay is furlough or one-half of leave of absence
pay of their rank in active service, and in the other there is full
retirement to civilian life on a year's full pay of their rank.
Sections 1453, 1454, Rev.Stats. Section 1455 was enacted to prevent
an abuse of the power of retirement by superior officers. Section
1455, Rev.Stats., has been made applicable to officers on active
service in the Naval Reserve Force when disabled in line of duty,
first by implication in a proviso of the Act of July 1, 1918, c.
114, 40 Stat. 704, 710, "that no member of the Naval Reserve Force
shall be eligible for retirement other than for physical disability
incurred in line of duty," and then, after this suit was brought,
by direct provision in the Act of June 4, 1920, c. 228, 41 Stat.
834, as follows:
"That all officers of the Naval Reserve Force and temporary
officers of the Navy who have heretofore incurred or may hereafter
incur physical disability in line of duty shall be eligible for
retirement under the same conditions as now provided by law for
officers of the Regular Navy who have incurred physical disability
in line of duty."
By act approved July 12, 1921, c. 44, 42 Stat. 122, 140, the
above was amended by adding a proviso as follows: "
Provided,
however, that application for such retirement shall be filed
with the Secretary of the Navy not later than October 1, 1921." The
proviso shows reflexively that Congress had always intended to give
one entitled to retirement the right to apply for it.
To be retired from active service under the §§ from
1448 to 1455, Rev.Stats., inclusive, means retired with pay, and
has had this meaning for many years.
Brown v. United
States, 113 U. S. 568,
113 U. S. 572.
To be wholly retired means to be removed from the service entirely
on
Page 263 U. S. 36
payment of a lump sum, and to become a civilian.
Miller v.
United States, 19 Ct.Cls. 338, 353; 29 Op. Attys.Gen. 401. No
form of retirement is a removal by way of punishment. Indeed,
§ 1456, Rev.Stats., expressly forbids retirement because of
misconduct on account of which an officer may be sent before a
court-martial. It is very clear, therefore, that a mere change of
status from active service to inactive duty in the Naval Reserve
Force is not a "retirement" in the meaning of § 1455,
Rev.Stats., the Act of July 1, 1918, or that of June 4, 1920.
There was no reason why, after the relator had been ordered to
inactive duty in the Naval Reserve Force, he might not have applied
for retirement under the provision of the Act of 1918, or later
under the Act of June 4, 1920.
But it is said that the Secretary directed the release of the
relator from active service and refused him a Retiring Board
because he was of opinion that, under the Act of July 1, 1918, and
before the Act of June 4, 1920, Reserve Force officers were not
entitled to be retired on pay, but that they must apply for the
relief extended to persons disabled in the service by §§
300 and 302 of the War Risk Insurance Act of October 6, 1917, c.
105, 40 Stat. 405-406. Because the Secretary gave a wrong reason
for his action is not a ground for requiring him by mandamus to
revoke the order putting the relator on inactive duty, if he had
discretion to do this, as we have found he did have.
Nor was the Secretary of the Navy under obligation to order the
relator before a Retiring Board because a board of medical survey
recommended it.
Section 1448, Rev.Stats., provides that, whenever an officer
reports himself unable to perform his duties, or whenever in the
opinion of the President he is incapacitated, the President may, in
his discretion, direct the Secretary of the Navy to refer the case
to a Retiring Board. By the following sections, 1449 to 1454, the
board is to report its finding as to the incapacity of the officer,
and,
Page 263 U. S. 37
if it exists, whether it was an incident of the service. The
record is to be transmitted to the Secretary, and by him laid
before the President, whose approval is necessary to the
retirement.
The mode of dealing with cases of disability is covered by the
regulations of the Navy approved by the President, to which the
statute gives the force of law. Section 1547, Rev.Stats. Naval
Regulation 361 of 1913 gave authority to the commander in chief of
a fleet, commandant of a station, or other commanding officer, to
order a medical survey of any person in his command. Under
regulation 364, the Board of Survey of an officer was authorized to
recommend treatment or sick leave, but, if the disability was
deemed permanent, it might recommend that the officer be ordered
before a Retiring Board. By Regulations 365, when a person surveyed
was within the United States or the waters thereof, or in the
Caribbean or adjacent waters, and was found unfit for duty, and the
commanding officer approved the finding and recommendation of the
board as to what should be done, this was to be carried out,
"except in cases involving discharge, travel, leave, or retirement,
which shall be referred to the department."
Regulation 331, subdivision 5, once provided:
"When any officer on the active list becomes physically
incapacitated to perform the duties of his office, and the probable
future duration of such incapacity is permanent or indefinite, he
will immediately be ordered before a Retiring Board, and pending
final action upon the question of his retirement will not be
examined for promotion."
Counsel for the relator has maintained that the Secretary, by
reason of this regulation, is under a statutory duty to order a
Retiring Board for an officer physically incapacitated, and that he
has no discretion in the matter. Its history and the abuse it was
intended to stop, as well as § 1448, would make such a
construction hard to sustain, but we need not go into this. It
suffices to say that,
Page 263 U. S. 38
adopted in 1915, it has since lost its statutory force. By order
of the President dated January 14, 1916, it was stricken from the
Navy Regulations, and was thereafter embodied in instructions to
naval Retiring Boards. Section 679, Naval Courts and Boards, 1917.
Even if it could have been construed as claimed, when it had the
effect of law, it could not now be made the basis of a proceeding
in mandamus against the Secretary. It governs his subordinates
only, and may be ignored by him.
United
States v. Burns, 12 Wall. 246,
79 U. S. 252;
Smith v. United States, 24 Ct.Cls. 209. A board of medical
survey is simply an executive instrumentality which the Secretary
may use to obtain an expert opinion as to the physical capacity of
an officer or man. Its recommendations involving retirement must
always come to the Secretary for his approval. In the due course of
business in the Navy Department, applications for retirement
dependent on disability must also come before the Secretary, who,
acting for and in aid of the President, makes preliminary inquiry
into the need of ordering a Retiring Board. The statute does not
require the President to direct the Secretary of the Navy to refer
a case to a Retiring Board. It expressly puts it in the discretion
of the President to do so or not to do so. It would be a curious
inconsistency in the procedure if the Secretary were compelled by
law to order a Retiring Board to consider an officer's case which
the President is given discretion to grant or withhold.
But it is argued that an officer disabled in the line of his
duty is, by § 1455, entitled as of right to retirement on pay,
and that the courts should secure him that right. The right is one
dependent by statute on the judgment of the President, and not on
that of the courts. If, on the preliminary inquiry of the
Secretary, he disapproves the application for a Retiring Board, the
officer may appeal directly to the President for action on his
petition. This opportunity was provided by § 5323, Naval
Instructions 1913, and would exist without it.
Page 263 U. S. 39
For these reasons, we think that the demurrer to the answer
should have been overruled.
Judgment reversed and the cause remanded for further
proceedings.