1. An order of the Regents of the University of California
requiring every abled-bodied male student who at the time of his
matriculation, is under the age of twenty-four years, and who has
not attained full academic standing as a junior student, to enroll
in and complete a course in military science and tactics
held a statute of a state within the meaning of Jud.Code,
§ 237(a), in view of the relation of the University to the
state government and the legislative powers conferred upon the
Regents by the state constitution in respect of the organization
and government of the University. P.
293 U. S.
257.
2. An appeal will not be dismissed for want of a substantial
federal question unless the federal questions presented are clearly
not debatable and utterly lacking in merit. P.
293 U. S.
258.
3. A state, by accepting the benefits of the Act of July 2,
1862, for the endowment, maintenance, and support of a "land grant"
college, becomes bound, as one of the conditions of the grant, to
offer the students at such college instruction in military tactics,
but remains free to determine the branches of military training to
be offered, the content of the instruction, and the objects to be
attained; whether the state becomes bound to require the students
to take the training is a question not involved in the present
case. P.
293 U. S.
258.
4. Judicial notice is taken of the long established voluntary
cooperation between federal and state authorities in respect of the
military instruction given in the land grant colleges. P.
293 U. S.
259.
5. The War Department has not been empowered to prescribe the
military instruction in these institutions. P.
293 U. S.
259.
6. Each state has authority to train its able-bodied male
citizens of suitable age to fit them, if called upon, for service
in the United states Army, the state militia, or the local
constabulary or police, and, for these purposes, it may, with the
permission of the national government, avail itself of the services
of officers and the use of equipment belonging to the military
establishment of the United states. P.
293 U. S.
260.
Page 293 U. S. 246
7. And, while so acting within its retained powers, and
consistently with exertion of national power and with rights of
individuals safeguarded by the national Constitution, the state is
the sole judge of the means to be employed and the amount of
training to be exacted. P.
293 U. S. 260.
8. The "privileges and immunities" protected by the Fourteenth
Amendment are those that belong to the citizens of the United
States, as distinguished from citizens of the states -- those that
arise from the Constitution and laws of the United States, as
contrasted with those that spring from other sources. P.
293 U. S.
261.
9. If the refusal by a state to allow its citizen to exercise
the privilege of attending the state's university except upon
condition that he take military training, to which he objects on
religious and conscientious grounds, is not repugnant to the due
process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as an undue deprivation
of liberty, it does not violate the privilege and immunities
clause. P.
293 U. S.
261.
10. The liberty guaranteed by the Fourteenth Amendment does not
confer upon a conscientious and religious objector to war and
military training the right to attend a state university without
taking a course in military training required by the state as part
of the curriculum. P.
293 U. S.
262.
11. There is no conflict between the Regents' order involved in
this case and the Briand-Kellogg Peace Pact, 46 Stat. 2343. P.
293 U. S.
265.
219 Cal. 663, 28 P.2d 355, affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment denying a writ of mandate sought as a
means of compelling the Regents of the University of California to
permit Hamilton and Reynolds, Jr., two minors, to study at the
University without taking the required course in military
training.
Page 293 U. S. 250
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal under § 237(a), Judicial Code, 28 U.S.C.
§ 344(a), from a judgment of the highest court of California
sustaining a state law that requires students at its University to
take a course in military science and tactics, the validity of
which was by the appellants challenged as repugnant to the
Constitution and laws of the United States.
The appellants are the above-named minors and the fathers of
each as his guardian
ad litem and individually. They are
taxpayers and citizens of the United States and of California.
Appellees are the regents constituting a corporation created by the
state to administer the University, its president, and its provost.
Appellants applied to the state Supreme Court for a writ of mandate
compelling appellees to admit the minors into the University as
students. So far as they are material to the questions presented
here, the allegations of the petition are:
In October, 1933, each of these minors registered, became a
student in the University, and fully conformed to all its
requirements other than that compelling him to take the course in
military science and tactics in the Reserve Officers Training Corps
which they assert to be an integral part of the military
establishment of the United States, and not connected in any way
with the militia or military establishment of the state. The
primary object of there establishing units of the training corps is
to qualify students for appointment in the Officers Reserve
Page 293 U. S. 251
Corps. The courses in military training are those prescribed by
the War Department. The regents require enrollment and
participation of able-bodied male students who are citizens of the
United States. These courses include instruction in rifle
marksmanship, scouting and patrolling, drill and command, musketry,
combat principles, and use of automatic rifles. Arms, equipment,
and uniforms for use of students in such courses are furnished by
the War Department of the United States government.
These minors are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church and
of the Epworth League and connected religious societies and
organizations. For many years, their fathers have been ordained
ministers of that church. The Southern California Conference at its
1931 session adopted a resolution:
"With full appreciation of the heroic sacrifices of all those
who have conscientiously and unselfishly served their country in
times of war, but with the belief that the time has come in the
unfolding light of the new day for the settlement of human
conflicts by pacific means, and because we as Christians owe our
first and supreme allegiance to Jesus Christ. Because the Methodist
Episcopal Church, in her General Conference of 1928, has declared:
'We renounce war as an instrument of national policy.' Because our
nation led the nations of the world in signing the Paris Peace
Pact, and the Constitution of the United States, Article 6, Section
2, provides that:"
"This Constitution and the laws of the United States which shall
be made in pursuance thereof and all treaties made under authority
of the United States shall be the Supreme Law of the Land,"
"thus making the Paris Pact the supreme law of the land, which
declares: 'The high contracting parties agree that the settlement
of all disputes or conflict shall never be sought except by pacific
means.' "
Page 293 U. S. 252
"Therefore we, the Southern California Conference, memorialize
the General Conference which convenes in Atlantic City in May,
1932, to petition the United States government to grant exemption
from military service to such citizens who are members of the
Methodist Episcopal Church as conscientiously believe that
participation in war is a denial of their supreme allegiance to
Jesus Christ."
And, in 1932, the General Conference of that church adopted as a
part of its tenets and discipline:
"We hold that our country is benefited by having as citizens
those who unswervingly follow the dictates of their consciences . .
. Furthermore, we believe it to be the duty of the churches to give
moral support to those individuals who hold conscientious scruples
against participation in military training or military service. We
petition the government of the United States to grant to members of
the Methodist Episcopal Church who may be conscientious objectors
to war the same exemption from military service as has long been
granted to members of the Society of Friends and other similar
religious organizations. Similarly, we petition all educational
institutions which require military training to excuse from such
training any student belonging to the Methodist Episcopal Church
who has conscientious scruples against it. We earnestly petition
the government of the United States to cease to support financially
all military training in civil educational institutions."
And the Southern California Conference, at its 1933 session,
adopted the following:
"Reserve Officers' Training Corps -- Recalling the action of the
General Conference asking for exemption from military service for
those members of our church to whom war and preparation for war is
a violation of conscience, we request the authorities of our state
universities at Berkeley, Los Angeles and Tucson to exempt
Methodist students from the R.O.T.C. on the grounds of
conscientious
Page 293 U. S. 253
objection, and we hereby pledge the moral and official backing
of this Conference, seeking such exemption, provided that it be
understood that no conscientious objector shall participate in the
financial profits of war. The Secretary of the Conference is asked
to send copies of this paragraph to the governing boards of these
institutions."
Appellants, as members of that church, accept and feel
themselves morally, religiously, and conscientiously bound by its
tenets and discipline as expressed in the quoted conference
resolutions; each is a follower of the teachings of Jesus Christ;
each accepts as a guide His teachings and those of the Bible, and
holds as a part of his religious and conscientious belief that war,
training for war, and military training are immoral, wrong, and
contrary to the letter and spirit of His teaching and the precepts
of the Christian religion.
Therefore, these students, at the beginning of the fall term in
1933, petitioned the University for exemption from military
training and participation in the activities of the training corps
upon the ground of their religious and conscientious objection to
war and to military training. Their petition was denied. Thereupon,
through that church's bishop in California, they and their fathers
petitioned the regents that military training be made optional in
order that conscientious and religious objectors to war, training
for war, and military training might not be confronted with the
necessity of violating and foreswearing their beliefs or being
denied the right of education in the state University to which
these minors are entitled under the Constitution and laws of the
State of California and of the United States.
The regents refused to make military training optional or to
exempt these students. Then, because of their religious and
conscientious objections, they declined to take the prescribed
course, and, solely upon that ground, the regents, by formal
notification, suspended them from the
Page 293 U. S. 254
University, but with leave to apply for readmission at any time
conditioned upon their ability and willingness to comply with all
applicable regulations of the University governing the
matriculation and attendance of students. The University affords
opportunity for education such as may not be had at any other
institution in California except at a greater cost which these
minors are not able to pay. And they, as appellees at the time of
their suspension well knew, are willing to take as a substitute for
military training such other courses as may be prescribed by the
University.
Other allegations of the petition need not be stated, as they
merely go to show the grounds upon which appellants under the state
practice sought the writ of mandate.
The University is a land grant college. An act of Congress
(Morrill Act approved July 2, 1862, 12 Stat. 503, 7 U.S.C.
§§ 301-308) donated public lands to the several states in
order that, upon the conditions specified all moneys derived from
the sale of such lands or from the sale of land scrip issued under
the act should be invested and constitute a perpetual fund the
interest of which should be inviolably appropriated by each state
accepting the benefits of the act
"to the endowment, support, and maintenance of at least one
college where the leading object shall be, without excluding other
scientific and classical studies and including military tactics, to
teach such branches of learning as are related to agriculture and
the mechanic arts, in such manner as the legislatures of the states
may respectively prescribe, in order to promote the liberal and
practical education of the industrial classes in the several
pursuits and professions in life. [
Footnote 1] "
Page 293 U. S. 255
March 23, 1868, the Legislature of California passed an act
creating the University "in order to devote to the largest purposes
of education the benefaction made to the state" by the Morrill Act.
St. 1867-68, p. 248. This law of the state, called the organic act,
provides that
"any resident of California, of the age of fourteen years or
upwards, of approved moral character, shall have the right to enter
himself in the University as a student at large, and receive
tuition in any branch or branches of instruction at the time when
the same are given in their regular course, on such terms as the
Board of Regents may prescribe."
§ 3. It declared that the college of agriculture should be
first established, § 4; that the college of mechanic arts
should be next established, § 5,
"and, in order to fulfil the requirements of the said Act of
Congress, all able-bodied male students of the University, whether
pursuing full or partial courses in any college, or as students at
large, shall receive instruction and discipline in military tactics
in such manner and to such extent as the Regents shall prescribe,
the requisite arms for which shall be furnished by the state,"
§ 6. Article 9, § 9, of the State Constitution as
amended November 5, 1918, declares:
"The University of California shall constitute a public trust,
to be administered by the existing corporation known as 'The
Regents of the University of California,' with full powers of
organization and government, subject only to such legislative
control as may be necessary to insure compliance with the terms of
the endowments of the university and the security of its funds; . .
.
provided, that all moneys derived from the sale of
public lands donated to this state by act of Congress approved July
2, 1862 (and the several acts amendatory
Page 293 U. S. 256
thereof), shall be invested as provided by said acts of
Congress, and the income from said moneys shall be inviolably
appropriated to the endowment, support, and maintenance of at least
one college of agriculture, where the leading objects shall be
(without excluding other scientific and classical studies, and
including military tactics) to teach such branches of learning as
are related to scientific and practical agriculture and mechanic
arts, in accordance with the requirements and conditions of said
acts of Congress."
September 15, 1931, pursuant to the provisions of the organic
act and Constitution, the regents promulgated the following
order:
"Every able bodied student of the University of California who,
at the time of his matriculation at the University, is under the
age of twenty-four years and a citizen of the United States and who
has not attained full academic standing as a junior student in the
University and has not completed the course in military science and
tactics offered to freshmen and sophomore students at the
University shall be and is hereby required, as a condition to his
attendance as a student, to enroll in and complete a course in not
less than one and one-half units of instruction in military science
and tactics each semester of his attendance until such time as he
shall have received a total of six units of such instruction or
shall have attained full academic standing as a junior
student."
In the court below, appellants assailed the laws and order above
referred to as repugnant to specified provisions of the California
Constitution and Political Code. And they adequately challenged the
validity of the state Constitution, organic act, and regents'
order, insofar as they were by the regents construed to require
these students to take the prescribed course in military science
and tactics, as repugnant to the Constitution and laws of the
United States.
Page 293 U. S. 257
The state court, without announcing an opinion, denied the
petition for a writ of mandate. Appellants applied for a rehearing.
The court, denying the application, handed down an opinion in which
it held that Article IX, § 9, reposes in the regents full
powers of organization and government of the University subject to
legislative control in respect of its endowments and funds; that,
by § 6 of the organic act and Article IX, § 9, military
tactics is expressly required to be included among the subjects
which shall be taught at the University, and that it is the duty of
the regents to prescribe the nature and extent of the courses to be
given and to determine what students shall be required to pursue
them, and that the suspension of the petitioning students because
of their refusal to pursue the compulsory courses in military
training involved no violation of their rights under the
Constitution of the United States.
By their assignment of errors, appellants call upon this Court
to decide whether the challenged provisions of the state
Constitution, organic act, and regents' order, insofar as they
impose compulsory military training, are repugnant to the
privileges and immunities clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, the
due process clause of that amendment, or the treaty that is
generally called the Briand-Kellogg Peace Pact. 46 Stat. 2343.
Appellees contend that this Court has no jurisdiction because,
as they say, the regents' order is not a "statute of any state"
within the meaning of § 237(a), Judicial Code. But, by the
California Constitution, the regents are, with exceptions not
material here, fully empowered in respect of the organization and
government of the University which, as it has been held, is a
constitutional department or function of the state government.
Williams v. Wheeler, 23 Cal. App. 619, 623, 138 P. 937;
Wallace v. Regents, 75 Cal. App. 274,
Page 293 U. S. 258
277, 242 P. 892. The assailed order prescribes a rule of
conduct, and applies to all students belonging to the defined
class. And it was because of its violation that the regents by
resolution suspended these students. The meaning of "statute of any
state" is not limited to acts of state legislatures. It is used to
include every act legislative in character to which the state gives
sanction, no distinction being made between acts of the state
legislature and other exertions of the state lawmaking power.
King Mfg. Co. v. Augusta, 277 U.
S. 100;
Sultan Ry. Co. v. Dept. of Labor,
277 U. S. 135. It
follows that the order making military instruction compulsory is a
statute of the state within the meaning of § 237(a).
And the appellees insist that this appeal should be dismissed
for the want of a substantial federal question. But that contention
cannot be sustained, for we are unable to say that every question
that appellants have brought here for decision is so clearly not
debatable and utterly lacking in merit as to require dismissal for
want of substance. [
Footnote
2]
The allegations of the petition do not mean that California has
divested itself of any part of its power solely to determine what
military training shall be offered or required at the University.
While, by acceptance of the benefits of the Morrill Act of 1862 and
the creation of the University in order appropriately to comply
with the terms of the grant, the state became bound to offer
students in that University instruction in military tactics, it
remains untrammeled by federal enactment, and is entirely free
Page 293 U. S. 259
to determine for itself the branches of military training to be
provided, the content of the instruction to be given, and the
objectives to be attained. That state -- as did each of the other
states of the Union -- for the proper discharge of its obligations
as beneficiary of the grant made the course in military instruction
compulsory upon students. Recently, Wisconsin and Minnesota have
made it elective. [
Footnote 3]
The question whether the state has bound itself to require students
to take the training is not here involved. The validity of the
challenged order does not depend upon the terms of the land
grant.
The petition is not to be understood as showing that students
required by the regents' order to take the prescribed course
thereby serve in the Army or in any sense become a part of the
military establishment of the United States. Nor is the allegation
that the courses are prescribed by the War Department to be taken
literally. We take judicial notice of the long established
voluntary cooperation between federal and state authorities in
respect of the military instruction given in the land grant
colleges. [
Footnote 4] The War
Department has not been empowered
Page 293 U. S. 260
to determine, or in any manner to prescribe, the military
instruction in these institutions. The furnishing of officers, men,
and equipment conditioned upon the giving of courses and the
imposing of discipline deemed appropriate, recommended, or approved
by the Department does not support the suggestion that the training
is not exclusively prescribed and given under the authority of the
state. The states are interested in the safety of the United
States, the strength of its military forces, and its readiness to
defend them in war and against every attack of public enemies.
Gilbert v. Minnesota, 254 U. S. 325,
254 U. S. 328;
State v. Holm, 139 Minn. 267, 273, 166 N.W. 181.
Undoubtedly every state has authority to train its able-bodied male
citizens of suitable age appropriately to develop fitness, should
any such duty be laid upon them, to serve in the United States Army
or in state militia (always liable to be called forth by federal
authority to execute the laws of the Union, suppress insurrection,
or repel invasion, Constitution, Art. I, § 8, cls. 12, 15 and
16.
Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U.
S. 366,
245 U. S.
380-383;
State v. Industrial Comm'n, 186 Wis.
1, 202 N.W.191) or as members of local constabulary forces or as
officers needed effectively to police the state. And, when made
possible by the national government, the state, in order more
effectively to teach and train its citizens for these and like
purposes, may avail itself of the services of officers and
equipment belonging to the military establishment of the United
States. So long as its action is within retained powers and not
inconsistent with any exertion of the authority of the national
government and transgresses no right safeguarded to the citizen by
the Federal Constitution, the state is the sole judge of the means
to be employed and the amount of training to be exacted for the
effective accomplishment of these ends. Second Amendment;
Houston v.
Moore, 5 Wheat. 1,
18 U. S. 16-17;
Dunne v.
Page 293 U. S. 261
People, 94 Ill. 120, 129; 1 Kent's Commentaries, 265,
389.
Cf. Presser v. Illinois, 116 U.
S. 252.
The clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment invoked by appellants
declare:
"No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the
privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor
shall any state deprive any person of life, liberty, or property,
without due process of law."
Appellants' contentions are that the enforcement of the order
prescribing instruction in military science and tactics abridges
some privilege or immunity covered by the first clause and deprives
of liberty safeguarded by the second. The "privileges and
immunities" protected are only those that belong to citizens of the
United States, as distinguished from citizens of the states --
those that arise from the Constitution and laws of the United
States, as contrasted with those that spring from other sources.
Slaughter House
Cases, 16 Wall. 36,
83 U. S. 72-74,
83 U. S. 77-80;
McPherson v. Blacker, 146 U. S. 1,
146 U. S. 38;
Duncan v. Missouri, 152 U. S. 377,
152 U. S. 382;
Twining v. New Jersey, 211 U. S. 78,
211 U. S. 97;
Maxwell v. Bugbee, 250 U. S. 525,
250 U. S. 538;
Prudential Ins. Co. v. Cheek, 259 U.
S. 530,
259 U. S. 539.
Appellants assert -- unquestionably in good faith -- that all war,
preparation for war, and the training required by the University
are repugnant to the tenets and discipline of their church, to
their religion, and to their consciences. The "privilege" of
attending the University as a student comes not from federal
sources, but is given by the state. It is not within the asserted
protection. The only "immunity" claimed by these students is
freedom from obligation to comply with the rule prescribing
military training. But that "immunity" cannot be regarded as not
within, or as distinguishable from, the "liberty" of which they
claim to have been deprived by the enforcement of the regents'
order. If the regents' order is not repugnant to the due process
clause, then it does not violate the privileges and immunities
Page 293 U. S. 262
clause. Therefore we need only decide whether, by state action,
the "liberty" of these students has been infringed.
There needs be no attempt to enumerate or comprehensively to
define what is included in the "liberty" protected by the due
process clause. Undoubtedly it does include the right to entertain
the beliefs, to adhere to the principles, and to teach the
doctrines on which these students base their objections to the
order prescribing military training.
Meyer v. Nebraska,
262 U. S. 390,
262 U. S. 399;
Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.
S. 510;
Stromberg v. California, 283 U.
S. 359,
283 U. S.
368-369;
Near v. Minnesota, 283 U.
S. 697,
283 U. S. 707.
The fact that they are able to pay their way in this University but
not in any other institution in California is without significance
upon any constitutional or other question here involved. California
has not drafted or called them to attend the University. They are
seeking education offered by the state and at the same time
insisting that they be excluded from the prescribed course solely
upon grounds of their religious beliefs and conscientious
objections to war, preparation for war, and military education.
Taken on the basis of the facts alleged in the petition,
appellants' contentions amount to no more than an assertion that
the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, as a safeguard
of "liberty," confers the right to be students in the state
University free from obligation to take military training as one of
the conditions of attendance.
Viewed in the light of our decisions, that proposition must at
once be put aside as untenable.
Government, federal and state, each in its own sphere, owes a
duty to the people within its jurisdiction to preserve itself in
adequate strength to maintain peace and order and to assure the
just enforcement of law. And every citizen owes the reciprocal
duty, according to his capacity, to support and defend government
against all
Page 293 U. S. 263
enemies.
Selective Draft Law Cases, supra, p.
245 U. S. 378;
Minor v.
Happersett, 21 Wall. 162,
88 U. S.
166.
United States v. Schwimmer, 279 U.
S. 644, involved a petition for naturalization by one
opposed to bearing arms in defense of country. Holding the
applicant not entitled to citizenship, we said (p.
279 U. S.
650):
"That it is the duty of citizens by force of arms to defend our
government against all enemies whenever necessity arises is a
fundamental principle of the Constitution. . . . Whatever tends to
lessen the willingness of citizens to discharge their duty to bear
arms in the country's defense detracts from the strength and safety
of the government."
In
United States v. Macintosh, 283 U.
S. 605, a later naturalization case, the applicant was
unwilling, because of conscientious objections, to take
unqualifiedly the statutory oath of allegiance which contains this
statement:
"That he will support and defend the Constitution and laws of
the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic, and
bear true faith and allegiance to the same."
8 U.S.C. § 381. His petition stated that he was willing, if
necessary, to take up arms in defense of this country, "but I
should want to be free to judge of the necessity." In
amplification, he said:
"I do not undertake to support 'my country, right or wrong' in
any dispute which may arise, and I am not willing to promise
beforehand, and without knowing the cause for which my country may
go to war, either that I will or that I will not 'take up arms in
defense of this country,' however 'necessary' the war may seem to
be to the government of the day."
The opinion of this Court quotes from petitioner's brief a
statement to the effect that it is a
"fixed principle of our Constitution, zealously guarded by our
laws, that a citizen cannot be forced and need not bear arms in a
war if he has conscientious religious scruples against doing
so."
And, referring to that part of the
Page 293 U. S. 264
argument in behalf of the applicant, this Court said (p.
283 U. S.
623):
"This, if it means what it seems to say, is an astonishing
statement. Of course, there is no such principle of the
Constitution, fixed or otherwise. The conscientious objector is
relieved from the obligation to bear arms in obedience to no
constitutional provision, express or implied, but because, and only
because, it has accorded with the policy of Congress thus to
relieve him. . . . The privilege of the native-born conscientious
objector to avoid bearing arms comes not from the Constitution, but
from the acts of Congress. That body may grant or withhold the
exemption as in its wisdom it sees fit; and, if it be withheld, the
native-born conscientious objector cannot successfully assert the
privilege. No other conclusion is compatible with the well nigh
limitless extent of the war powers as above illustrated, which
include, by necessary implication, the power, in the last
extremity, to compel the armed service of any citizen in the land,
without regard to his objections or his views in respect of the
justice or morality of the particular war or of war in general. In
Jacobson v. Massachusetts, 197 U. S.
11,
197 U. S. 29, this Court
(upholding a state compulsory vaccination law), speaking of the
liberties guaranteed to the individual by the Fourteenth Amendment,
said:"
". . . And yet he may be compelled, by force if need be, against
his will and without regard to his personal wishes or his pecuniary
interests, or even his religious or political convictions, to take
his place in the ranks of the army of his country, and risk the
chance of being shot down in its defense."
And see
Pearson v. Coale, 165 Md. 224, 167 A. 54, a
case, similar to that now before us, decided against the contention
of a student in the University of Maryland who, on conscientious
grounds, objected to military training there required. His appeal
to this Court was dismissed for the want of a substantial federal
question.
Coale v. Pearson, 290 U.S. 597.
Page 293 U. S. 265
Plainly there is no ground for the contention that the regents'
order, requiring able-bodied male students under the age of
twenty-four as a condition of their enrollment to take the
prescribed instruction in military science and tactics,
transgresses any constitutional right asserted by these
appellants.
The contention that the regents' order is repugnant to the
Briand-Kellogg Peace Pact requires little consideration. In that
instrument, the United States and the other high contracting
parties declare that they condemn recourse to war for the solution
of international controversies and renounce it as an instrument of
national policy in their relations with one another and agree that
the settlement or solution of all disputes or conflicts which may
arise among them shall never be sought except by pacific means.
Clearly there is no conflict between the regents' order and the
provisions of this treaty.
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
The quoted language, § 4, has been twice reenacted.
See Act of March 3, 1883, 22 Stat. 484 and Act of April
13, 1926, 44 Stat. 247.
Morrill Act land grant colleges have been given federal aid
under the following Acts: March 2, 1887, 24 Stat. 440; August 30,
1890, 26 Stat. 417; March 16, 1906, 34 Stat. 63; March 4, 1907, 34
Stat. 1256, 1281; May 8, 1914, 38 Stat. 372; February 24, 1925, 43
Stat. 970; May 22, 1928, 45 Stat. 711.
And see Acts of
February 23, 1917, 39 Stat. 929; June 7, 1924, 43 Stat. 653;
February 9, 1927, 44 Stat. 1065.
[
Footnote 2]
Micas v. Williams, 104 U. S. 556;
Wabash R. Co. v. Flannigan, 192 U. S.
29,
192 U. S. 38;
Deming v. Carlisle Packing Co., 226 U.
S. 102,
226 U. S. 105,
226 U. S. 107;
Erie R. Co. v. Solomon, 237 U. S. 427;
Chicago, R.I. & P. Ry. Co. v. Devine, 239 U. S.
52,
239 U. S. 54;
Sugarman v. United States, 249 U.
S. 182;
Quong Ham Wah Co. v. Industrial Comm'n,
255 U. S. 445,
255 U. S.
448-449;
Zucht v. King, 260 U.
S. 174,
260 U. S. 176;
Roe v. Kansas, 278 U. S. 191;
Seaboard Air Line Ry. v. Watson, 287 U. S.
86,
287 U. S. 92.
[
Footnote 3]
Each state has a land grant college; Massachusetts has two. In
1923, Wisconsin made the course elective. Wis.Laws 1923, c. 226. On
the argument of this case, appellants' counsel stated that
Minnesota has recently made the course elective. Circular 126,
Preliminary Report, Land-Grant Colleges and Universities, 1933,
Department of Interior, Office of Education.
[
Footnote 4]
§§ 40-47 of National Defense Act of June 3, 1916, 39
Stat. 166, 191-192, as amended by §§ 33 and 34 of Act of
June 4, 1920, 41 Stat. 759, 776, 777, Act of June 5, 1920, 41 Stat.
948, 967, and Act of May 12, 1928, 45 Stat. 501. 10 U.S.C.
§§ 381-390; Army Regulations No. 145-10, § II, pars.
10 and 11.
Cf. Acts of July 28, 1866, § 26, 14 Stat. 332,
336, and of May 4, 1870, 16 Stat. 373; R.S. § 1225, as amended
July 5, 1884, 23 Stat. 107, 108, September 26, 1888, 25 Stat. 491,
and January 13, 1891, 26 Stat. 716; November 3, 1893, 28 Stat. 7;
February 26, 1901, 31 Stat. 810; April 21, 1904, 33 Stat. 225; June
3, 1916, 39 Stat. 166, 197, § 56 amended by June 4, 1920, 41
Stat. 759, 780.
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO, concurring.
Concurring in the opinion, I wish to say an extra word.
I assume for present purposes that the religious liberty
protected by the First Amendment against invasion by the nation is
protected by the Fourteenth Amendment against invasion by the
states.
Accepting that premise, I cannot find in the respondents'
ordinance an obstruction by the state to "the free exercise" of
religion as the phrase was understood by the founders of the
nation, and by the generations that have followed.
Davis v.
Beason, 133 U. S. 333,
133 U. S.
342.
There is no occasion at this time to mark the limits of
governmental power in the exaction of military service when the
nation is at peace.
* The petitioners
have not been required to bear arms for any hostile purpose,
offensive or defensive, either now or in the future. They have
Page 293 U. S. 266
not even been required in any absolute or peremptory way to join
in courses of instruction that will fit them to bear arms. If they
elect to resort to an institution for higher education maintained
with the state's moneys, then and only then they are commanded to
follow courses of instruction believed by the state to be vital to
its welfare. This may be condemned by some as unwise or illiberal
or unfair when there is violence to conscientious scruples, either
religious or merely ethical. More must be shown to set the
ordinance at naught. In controversies of this order, courts do not
concern themselves with matters of legislative policy, unrelated to
privileges or liberties secured by the organic law. The First
Amendment, if it be read into the Fourteenth, makes invalid any
state law "respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting
the free exercise thereof." Instruction in military science is not
instruction in the practice or tenets of a religion. Neither
directly nor indirectly is government establishing a state religion
when it insists upon such training. Instruction in military
science, unaccompanied here by any pledge of military service, is
not an interference by the state with the free exercise of religion
when the liberties of the Constitution are read in the light of a
century and a half of history during days of peace and war.
The meaning of those liberties has striking illustration in
statutes that were enacted in colonial times and later. They will
be found collected in the opinion of the lower court in
United
States v. Macintosh, 42 F.2d 845, 847-848;
283 U. S. 283 U.S.
605,
283 U. S. 632,
and more fully in the briefs of counsel. From the beginnings of our
history, Quakers and other conscientious objectors have been
exempted as an act of grace from military service, but the
exemption, when granted, has been coupled with a condition, at
least in many instances, that they supply the Army with a
substitute or with the money necessary to hire one. This
Page 293 U. S. 267
was done in Virginia in 1738 and 1782 (5 Hening 16; 11
id. 18;
cf. 1766, 1780, 8
id. 242-243;
10
id. 261-262, 334-335); in Massachusetts (Acts and
Resolves, 1758, vol. 4, p. 159; 1759, 4
id. 193; in North
Carolina (1781, 24 state Records 156), and in New York Colonial
Laws, 1755, vol. 3, pp. 1068-1069). A like practice has been
continued in the Constitutions of many of the states.
See,
e.g., Constitution of Alabama, 1819, 1865, 1867 (F.N. Thorpe,
Federal and state Constitutions, Colonial Charters and Other
Organic Laws, vol. 1, pp. 105, 119, 147); Arkansas, 1868 (Thorpe,
vol. 1, p. 325); Colorado, 1876 (Thorpe, vol. 1, p. 507); Idaho,
1889 (Thorpe, vol. 2, p. 943); Illinois, 1819, 1870 (Thorpe, vol.
2, pp. 980, 1044); Indiana, 1816 (Thorpe, vol. 2, p. 1067); Iowa,
1846, 1857 (Thorpe, vol. 2, pp. 1132, 1148); Kansas, 1855, 1857,
1859 (Thorpe, vol. 2, pp. 1190, 1214, 1253); Kentucky, 1792, 1799,
1850, 1890 (Thorpe, vol. 3, pp. 1271, 1283, 1307, 1350); Louisiana,
1879, 1898 (Thorpe, vol. 3, pp. 1501, 1587); Michigan, 1850
(Thorpe, vol. 4, p. 1966); Mississippi, 1817 (Thorpe, vol. 4, p.
2041); Missouri, 1820, 1875 (Thorpe, vol. 4, pp. 2164, 2268); New
Hampshire, 1792, 1902 (Thorpe, vol. 4, pp. 2472, 2495); New York,
1821, 1846 (Thorpe, vol. 5, pp. 2648, 2671); Pennsylvania, 1790,
1838 (Thorpe, vol. 5, pp. 3099, 3111); Vermont, 1793 (Thorpe, vol.
6, p. 3763). For one opposed to force, the affront to conscience
must be greater in furnishing men and money therewith to wage a
pending contest than in studying military science without the duty
or the pledge of service. Never in our history has the notion been
accepted, or even, it is believed, advanced that acts thus
indirectly related to service in the camp or field are so tied to
the practice of religion as to be exempt, in law or in morals, from
regulation by the state. On the contrary, the very lawmakers who
were willing to give release from warlike acts had no thought that
they were doing anything
Page 293 U. S. 268
inconsistent with the moral claims of an objector, still less
with his constitutional immunities, in coupling the exemption with
these collateral conditions.
Manifestly a different doctrine would carry us to lengths that
have never yet been dreamed of. The conscientious objector, if his
liberties were to be thus extended, might refuse to contribute
taxes in furtherance of a war, whether for attack or for defense or
in furtherance of any other end condemned by his conscience as
irreligious or immoral. The right of private judgment has never yet
been so exalted above the powers and the compulsion of the agencies
of government. One who is a martyr to a principle -- which may turn
out in the end to be a delusion or an error -- does not prove by
his martyrdom that he has kept within the law.
I am authorized to state that MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS and MR.
JUSTICE STONE join in this opinion.
* As to the duty of the able-bodied citizen to aid in
suppressing crime,
see Matter of Babington v. Yellow Taxi
Corp., 250 N.Y. 14, 16, 164 N.E. 726, and the authorities
there assembled.