Section 201 of the Soldiers' and Sailors; Civil Relief Act of
1940, providing for stays in court proceedings involving persons in
military service, addresses to the discretion of the court the
question whether "the ability of . . . the defendant to conduct his
defense is not materially affected by reason of his military
service." In the circumstances of this case, denial of a stay at
the instance of a defendant in military service was not an abuse of
that discretion. Pp.
319 U. S. 565,
319 U. S.
572.
222 N.C. 205, 22 S.E. 426, affirmed.
Certiorari, 318 U.S. 750, to review the affirmance of a judgment
against a defendant who, during the time of the proceeding, was in
the military service.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The federal question in this case is whether a stay of
proceedings against a defendant in military service has been
refused under circumstances which denied rights given by the
Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940. The controversy in
which he was engaged is for state courts to settle, and we deal
with the facts only as they relate to this federal question.
The petitioner Boone was summoned into a state court in North
Carolina in an action to require him to account as trustee of a
fund for his minor daughter, to remove him as trustee, to surcharge
his accounts for losses caused by
Page 319 U. S. 562
illegal management, and to obtain personal judgment for
deficiency in the fund.
Boone's mother-in-law, by will of which he was executor and
trustee, created a trust fund for the education of her
grandchildren, including one child of Boone's. Shortly after her
death, and in September, 1938, another child was born to him. Since
this child was unprovided for in the will, the father-in-law made
arrangements which, upon his death, put into Boone's hands a fund
of about $15,000. It is conceded that the fund was a trust for the
benefit of the daughter. There was controversy whether it was
governed, as Boone claimed, by a letter signed by the father-in-law
which placed no restriction on his discretion, or, as Mrs. Boone,
who has been sustained by the courts of North Carolina, claimed, by
the same conditions as the testamentary trust set up by her mother.
For our purposes, it is enough that it was admittedly a trust, and
that grounds were alleged sufficient to move the state court to
require an accounting.
The summons and complaint were served on Boone personally in
North Carolina on June 23, 1941. He was then in military service of
the United States as a Captain stationed in the office of the Under
Secretary of War in Washington.
Boone filed a verified answer denying the jurisdiction of the
court, claiming that, on June 23, 1941, the same day the summons
was served, he changed his "domicile and legal residence" to
Washington, and his daughter's as well. He admitted receipt of the
fund in trust, asserted the trust was governed by the letter
referred to, and pleaded that he "is not bound to report to any
Court." He denied all charges of misconduct of the fund, denied
that there were grounds for apprehension that the funds were
unsafe, and asserted that "he has exercised at all times good faith
in caring for this fund." He also stated
Page 319 U. S. 563
that "he has not dissipated one penny of the fund, nor has he
made any withdrawal from the fund since the day the money was
turned over to him." He pleaded at length facts to support his
claim that he was no longer domiciled in North Carolina and to
support his allegation that the trust was "a voluntary trust not
subject to the jurisdiction of any court or restricted in any way
by the terms of any will."
On February 2, 1942, the cause came on for hearing. Boone moved
for a continuance to the 25th of May, 1942, his counsel, Roy L.
Deal, stating that he expected soon to be called into service, and
would be unable to try the case, and asking the continuance in
order to give defendant ample time to employ other counsel. The
request was granted, and that date peremptorily set for the trial.
The court forbade transfer of securities constituting the trust and
required that, on the trial date, they and any funds of the trust
be turned over to the Clerk of the Court to abide further orders.
Its order admonished that the court would, at the earliest
practical date, ascertain the status of the trust fund, and that
the presence of Boone himself at the trial "is highly desirable,"
but left to the discretion of Boone and his counsel whether it was
necessary. In order, however, to advise defendant Boone and his
superior officers of the importance of the litigation, the court
directed that a certified copy of the order be sent to the Adjutant
General of the United States Army at Washington.
When the trial day came, Boone invoked the Soldiers' and
Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940 and demanded that the trial be
continued until after the termination of his service in the Army or
until "such time as he can properly conduct his defense." At this
time, there were before the trial court not only the pleadings and
the affidavits submitted by Boone and his counsel, but also certain
depositions
Page 319 U. S. 564
which Boone had made and procured and which had been returned to
the court, and also Boone's own statement of transactions which
accompanied certain securities and funds which he turned over to
the Clerk of the Court. Boone was not present, but counsel appeared
for him to move for a further continuance under the Soldiers' and
Sailors' Civil Relief Act. This motion was denied, counsel who had
presented the motion withdrew from the case, and the trial
proceeded. The verdict of the jury went against Boone, and judgment
was entered that the trust was governed by the terms of the will,
that Boone had been guilty of serious misconduct of the trust fund,
and that he be held personally liable for the consequent loss to
the trust fund of more than $11,000, and removed as trustee.
Boone then appealed to the Supreme Court of North Carolina, on
the merits as well as on denial of the continuance, and that court
affirmed. 222 N.C. 205, 22 S.E.2d 426. As the decision below
presented an important question of construction of the Act, we
granted certiorari.
The section of the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of
1940 principally invoked is § 201, [
Footnote 1] which reads:
"At any stage thereof, any action or proceeding in any court in
which a person in military service is involved, either as plaintiff
or defendant, during the period of such service or within sixty
days thereafter, may, in the discretion of the court in which it is
pending, on its own motion, and shall, on application to it by such
person or some person on his behalf, be stayed as provided in this
Act, unless, in the opinion of the court, the ability of plaintiff
to prosecute
Page 319 U. S. 565
the action or the defendant to conduct his defense is not
materially affected by reason of his military service."
The positions urged by petitioner come to these: first, that
defendant's military service in Washington rendered a continuance
mandatory; second, if not mandatory, that the burden of showing
that he could attend or would not be prejudiced by his absence was
not on him, but on those who would force the proceedings; third,
that the Court did not make the finding required by the Act for
denial of a stay, and last, that, in any view of the law, the trial
judge abused his discretion in this case. The petition raises other
questions, including the constitutional one as to whether he has
been denied due process of law, which we do not discuss because, in
the light of the facts of the case, they are frivolous.
1. The Act cannot be construed to require continuance on mere
showing that the defendant was in Washington in the military
service. Canons of statutory construction admonish us that we
should not needlessly render as meaningless the language which,
after authorizing stays, says
"unless, in the opinion of the court, the ability of plaintiff
to prosecute the action or the defendant to conduct his defense is
not materially affected by reason of his military service."
The Act of 1940 was a substantial reenactment of that of 1918.
The legislative history of its antecedent shows that this clause
was deliberately chosen, and that judicial discretion thereby
conferred on the trial court instead of rigid and undiscriminating
suspension of civil proceedings was the very heart of the policy of
the Act. [
Footnote 2] While
this Court
Page 319 U. S. 569
had no occasion to speak on the subject, the Act was generally
construed consistently with this policy. [
Footnote 3]
Reenacted against this background, without reconsideration of
the question beyond a statement in the Senate Committee Report that
"[t]here are adequate safeguards incorporated in the bill to
prevent any person from taking undue advantage" of its provisions,
[
Footnote 4] we are unable to
ignore or sterilize the clause which plainly vests judicial
discretion in the trial court.
2. The Act makes no express provision as to who must carry the
burden of showing that a party will or will not be prejudiced, in
pursuance no doubt of its policy of making the law flexible to meet
the great variety of situations no legislator and no court is wise
enough to foresee. We, too, refrain from declaring any rigid
doctrine of burden of proof in this matter, believing that courts
called upon to use discretion will usually have enough sound sense
to know from what direction their information should be expected to
come. One case may turn on an issue of fact as to which the party
is an important witness, where it only appears that he is in
service at a remote place or at a place unknown. The next may
involve an accident caused by one of his family using his car with
his permission, which he did not witness, and as to which he is
fully covered by insurance. Such a nominal defendant's absence in
military service in Washington might be urged by the insurance
company, the real defendant, as ground for deferring trial until
after the war. To say that the mere fact of a party's military
service has the same significance on burden of persuasion
Page 319 U. S. 570
in the two contexts would be to put into the Act through a
burden of proof theory the rigidity and lack of discriminating
application which Congress sought to remove by making stays
discretionary. We think the ultimate discretion includes a
discretion as to whom the court may ask to come forward with facts
needful to a fair judgment.
In the present case, whoever might have had the burden
originally, the continuance was finally denied upon a record which
disclosed the facts so far as either party saw fit to do so. The
defendant and his counsel submitted affidavits, and the depositions
and accounts before the court revealed facts relevant to the
issue.
Whether, if the court knew only the existence of this
complicated controversy and that the defendant was absent in
military service, it could have cast upon the defendant the burden
of showing that the litigation could not go ahead without prejudice
to him is not before us. The court made no such ruling. The
defendant appeared, he pleaded his defense, he took depositions
showing fully what had happened to the fund, and he supplied his
own affidavit showing where he was and what he was doing.
Regardless of whether defendant was under a duty to make a
disclosure of his situation, once he undertook to do so, the
significance alike of what his affidavit said and of what it
omitted was to be judged by ordinary tests. One of these is
that
"all evidence . . . is to be weighed according to the proof
which it was in the power of one side to have produced, and in the
power of the other side to have contradicted."
Cooper v. Dasher, 290 U. S. 106,
290 U. S. 109.
The trial court and the Supreme Court of North Carolina did just
this. They did not deny his stay because he failed to meet their
ideas of burden; they weighed the evidence he offered and found its
conclusions discredited by its avoidance of supporting facts within
his knowledge and not within that
Page 319 U. S. 571
of his adversary. That is not a ruling on burden of proof.
Finding that the courts below have proceeded upon no
misapprehension of the law, we turn to their dealing with the facts
of the particular case.
3. Some question is raised as to whether the findings of the
trial court meet the requirements of the Act. In the order denying
the continuance, it found as a fact that
"the defendant in this cause is deliberately and willfully
attempting to evade an ultimate determination of the issues
involved in the litigation entitled as above, and is exercising his
assumed right under the Act referred to above to avoid such
determination."
It also found the defendant "is not, upon the motion for
continuance, acting in good faith." In the final judgment, the
court found as a fact
"that the defendant has had ample time and opportunity to
properly prepare his defense in this case, and that his military
service has not prevented him from doing this."
It found that "defendant had full opportunity to prepare and put
in his defense if he had one," and that
"It is apparent that he has only sought to use the provisions of
the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act as a shield for his
wrongdoing, and this Court who once wore a U.S. uniform with pride,
does not intend for this to be done."
Of course, this is not a finding in the words of the statute
that the ability of the defendant "to conduct his defense is not
materially affected by reason of his military service," but there
is no doubt that it was intended to be in substance the equivalent.
It was so treated by the Supreme Court of North Carolina, and to
send the case back for further findings seems unwarranted. The Act
does not expressly require findings. It is one intended to apply to
courts not of record, as well a those of record, and it requires
only that the court be of opinion that ability to defend is not
materially affected by military service. We
Page 319 U. S. 572
accept the findings as sufficiently evidencing the opinion of
the court to that effect.
4. The final question is whether the evidence sufficiently
supports the opinion, or whether the order constitutes an abuse of
discretion.
We think the opinion of the court that Boone's military service
did not prevent him from being present and doing whatever could
have been done by way of defense finds ample support in the
evidence. Boone had been able to get away from Washington to go to
New York for the taking of depositions on two separate occasions.
He had long notice of the trial date, and the court had placed in
the files of his Department its order showing the desirability of
his presence at that time. Boone, being a lawyer and presumably
knowing the gravity of the accusations against him, might be
expected to make some move to get leave to be present. If it were
denied, he might be expected to expose every circumstance of his
effort to the court in his plea for continuance. Boone's affidavit,
after reciting that he was assigned to the International Division,
Headquarters, Services of Supply, Washington, says
"The work in said Division is very heavy, and full time and some
extra time are required of all officers in said Division, including
the defendant. Prior to the declaration of War on Dec. 8, 1941, the
work in this Division was very heavy, but since the declaration of
War, the volume of work has been greatly increased. No leaves
whatever have been granted except in cases of serious
emergency."
Most lawyers trained in the equity tradition of trustee fidelity
would regard a trial of this kind as a serious emergency. Did he
apply for a leave at all? The affidavit pretty clearly implied that
he had not. We think the court had ample grounds for the opinion
that Boone
Page 319 U. S. 573
made no effort to attend to duties that should weigh heavily
upon the honor of a lawyer-trustee.
There was likewise support for the opinion that the failure to
be represented by counsel did not result from Boone's military
service. On February 2, 1942, the court granted his request for a
continuance and set the case for trial on May 25, 1942. It was
stated to the court that counsel then acting for him was expecting
to be called immediately into military service, and it would be
necessary for defendant to procure additional counsel.
Nevertheless, when the trial date arrived, the fact that this
counsel had gone into service on May 13, 1942, was urged as a
reason for further postponement. No showing whatever was made as to
any effort to obtain other counsel in the long interval allowed by
the court for the purpose. This counsel was also stationed at
Washington, and said he "would not assume to ask for leave at the
present time, so soon after having reported for duty."
On the trial date, defendant was nevertheless represented in
court by local counsel. That counsel, however, was consulted only
three or four days before the trial date, and was employed for the
sole purpose of making the motion for continuance, and, when the
court ruled on it, he withdrew and declined to proceed further. The
defendant's accounts presented to the trial judge showed
disbursements since the beginning of the action and before trial
for the following matters, among others, in connection with this
case: on August 15, 1941, defendant's deposition was taken at
Washington, D.C. This entailed a reporter's fee of $66.00 and a fee
of $248.88 paid a Detroit attorney for appearing at the proceeding.
On November 3 and 5, 1941, depositions were taken in New York City
with the defendant present. These involved a court reporter's fee
of $32.25, and fees in the amount of $375.00
Page 319 U. S. 574
for the Detroit attorney and New York counsel obtained to assist
him. This item carried a notation that it did not "include services
rendered in the taking of depositions in other cases on same date."
From August 4, 1941, to January 26, 1942, Deal, the attorney who
had represented defendant before withdrawing to accept a commission
in Washington, received $218.00 for his services in representing
defendant in the case. Two days after judgment, another lawyer from
the firm of counsel who had withdrawn after making the motion of
May 25 appeared and moved to set the verdict aside and took an
appeal, later filing extensive assignments of error. Counsel who
had withdrawn from the trial argued the appeal in the Supreme Court
of North Carolina.
At all times since the action began, defendant has also been
represented by counsel from Detroit, Michigan. His inability to
appear on the trial date was explained on the ground that he was
"definitely engaged at the present time in the trial of cases at
Detroit which will require his presence in Court there for
approximately thirty days." No affidavit from this counsel was
produced, and no explanation is made as to how it came that other
"cases" were given priority over this in view of the long notice of
the trial date and its importance to the client.
In this Court, Boone is represented by his Detroit counsel and
by Deal, the lawyer who withdrew from the case to accept a
commission in Washington. Besides these, there also appear four
other lawyers, none of whom are included in the five who have
represented him at previous stages in the case.
In addition to the facts presented to the trial court which we
have recited, the trial court apparently considered matters not of
record in this case, but of which he took judicial notice. He
recites that
"the motion to continue is made after the defendant's refusal in
one or more instances arising out of litigation respecting the
Page 319 U. S. 575
subject matter and personnel involved in this action to appear
in the Courts of North Carolina, even on citation for
contempt."
We know nothing of these events, and disregard this ground of
the court's action.
The court was dealing not only with an individual, but with a
trustee, one charged with default in his duty, and with a fund
which was said to be in jeopardy. Defendant, in spite of his
military service in Washington, was continuing to administer the
fund. The defendant was a member of the bar, and the charges struck
at his honor, as well as at his judgment. Instead of seeking the
first competent forum and the earliest possible day to lay his
accounts out for vindication, he sought to escape the forum and
postpone the day. He was both present and represented by counsel
when depositions were taken which establish his speculation with
the trust funds in his personal margin account. We think the record
amply supports the conclusion of the trial judge that the claim
that military service would prejudice the conduct of his defense
was groundless, and that the absence of himself and all of his
numerous and not uncompensated counsel on the day of judgment was
dictated wholly by litigious strategy.
The Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief Act is always to be
liberally construed to protect those who have been obliged to drop
their own affairs to take up the burdens of the nation. The
discretion that is vested in trial courts to that end is not to be
withheld on nice calculations as to whether prejudice may result
from absence, or absence result from the service. Absence when
one's rights or liabilities are being adjudged is usually
prima
facie prejudicial. But, in some few cases, absence may be a
policy, instead of the result of military service, and discretion
is vested in the courts to see that the immunities of the Act are
not put to such unworthy use.
Affirmed.
Page 319 U. S. 576
[
Footnote 1]
54 Stat. 1178, 1181, 50 U.S.C. App. § 521.
We express no opinion on the question whether Boone could have
the judgment opened upon proper application under § 200(4), 50
U.S.C. App. § 520(4).
[
Footnote 2]
As originally proposed, the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil Relief
Bill, S. 2859, 65th Cong., 1st Sess., provided in § 6
that:
"At any stage thereof, any action or proceeding commenced in any
court against a person in military service may, in the discretion
of the court in which it is pending, on its own motion, and shall,
on application to it by such person or some person on his behalf,
be stayed as provided in this act, unless, in the opinion of the
court, the defendant is not embarrassed by reason of his military
service."
Accompanying "Notes as to the Provisions of the Bill" stated
that a "sweeping exemption" such as that provided by most States in
Civil War days was
"too broad, for there are many cases where the financial ability
of soldiers and sailors to meet obligations in some way is not
materially impaired by their entrance into service."
Hearings and Memoranda before Senate Judiciary Committee on S.
2859 and H.R. 6361, 65th Cong., 1st and 2d Sess., p. 27.
Major John H. Wigmore, one of the drafters of the bill, stated
at the Senate hearings, that
"a universal stay against soldiers is wasteful, because hundreds
of them are men of affairs and men of assets, and they have agents
back here looking after their affairs. There is no earthly reason
why the court proceedings should stay against them. It is the small
man, or perhaps I should say the humble man, who has just himself
and no agent and no outside assets, that we do not want to forget.
He is the man we are thinking of. These other people can take care
of themselves, and the court would say to them, 'No; your affair is
a going concern; go ahead with the lawsuit, you have a lawyer, you
have an agent, you have a corporation manager, and other
things.'"
Id. at p. 97.
As reported by the House Judiciary Committee, H.R. 6361, 65th
Cong., 1st Sess., provided in § 201:
"That, at any stage thereof, any action or proceeding commenced
in any court against a person in military service during the period
of such service or within 60 days thereafter may, in the discretion
of the court in which it is pending, on its own motion, and shall,
on application to it by such person or some person on his behalf,
be stayed as provided in this act unless, in the opinion of the
court, the ability of the defendant to comply with the judgment or
order sought is not materially affected by reason of his military
service."
The House Report on this bill, No. 181, 65th Cong., 1st Sess.,
stated:
"Instead of a rigid suspension of all actions against a soldier,
a restriction upon suits is placed only where a court is satisfied
that the absence of the defendant in military service has
materially impaired his ability to meet that particular obligation.
Most of the actions sought to be brought against soldiers will be
for small amounts, and will thus be in a local court where the
judge, if he does not already know, will be in a favorable position
to learn whether or not the defendant who seeks the benefit of the
statute has really been prejudiced by his military service. Though
not in military service, he may have property from which the income
continues to come in irrespective of his presence; perhaps he may
be some ne'er-do-well who only seeks to hide under the brown of his
khaki. . . ."
(P. 2.)
"The lesson of the stay laws of the Civil War teaches that an
arbitrary and rigid protection against suits is as much a mistaken
kindness to the soldier as it is unnecessary. A total suspension
for the period of the war of all rights against a soldier defeats
its own purpose. In time of war, credit is of even more importance
than in time of peace, and if there were a total prohibition upon
enforcing obligations against one in military service, the credit
of a soldier and his family would be utterly cut off. No one could
be found who would extend them credit."
"But, in any case, a rigid stay of all actions against the
soldier is too broad. There are many men now in the Army who can
and should pay their obligations in full."
"On the other hand, there are already tens of thousands of men
in military service who will be utterly ruined and their families
made destitute if creditors are allowed unrestrictedly to push
their claims, and yet these same soldiers, if given time and
opportunity, can, in most cases, meet their obligations dollar for
dollar. The country is asking 2,000,000 of its young men to risk
their lives, and, if need be, to give up their lives for their
country. Before long, even more will be asked to make the same
sacrifice. Is it more than naked justice to give to the savings of
these same men such just measure of protection as is possible?"
(Pp. 2-3.)
"Section 201 illustrates how the committee has avoided an
arbitrary, a rigid, bill. The clause 'unless, in the opinion of the
court, the ability of the defendant to comply with the judgment or
order sought, is not materially affected by reason of his military
service,' is the key to the whole scheme of the bill. This mere
fact of being in military service is not enough; military service
must be the reason for the defendant not meeting his
obligations."
(P. 5.)
Congressman Webb, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee,
stated on the floor of the House, with reference to this bill,
that:
"Heretofore, during wars, the various States have undertaken to
pass the private stay laws for the benefit of the soldiers who are
in the service of their country. If you will read the various laws
of this kind which the committee has set out in its report, you
will see what contrariety of such laws have been passed during
recent years and during the various wars. The next material
difference between this law and the various State laws is this, and
in this I think you will find the chief excellence of the bill
which we propose: instead of the bill we are now considering being
arbitrary, inelastic, inflexible, the discretion as to dealing out
evenhanded justice between the creditor and the soldier, taking
into consideration the fact that the soldier has been called to his
country's cause, rests largely, and in some cases entirely, in the
breast of the judge who tries the case."
"Manifestly, if this Congress should undertake to pass an
arbitrary stay law providing that no creditor should ever sue or
bring proceedings against any soldier while in the military service
of his country, that would upset business very largely in many
parts of the country. In the next place, it would be unfair to the
creditor, as well as to the soldier. It would disturb the soldier's
credit probably in many cases, and would deny the right of the
creditor to his just debts from a person who was amply able to pay
and whose military service did not in the least impair his ability
to meet the obligation."
55 Cong.Rec. 7787.
On the floor of the Senate, § 201 was amended to substitute
for "the ability of the defendant to comply with the judgment or
order," "the ability of the defendant to conduct his defense," and
to extend its protection to plaintiffs as well as to defendants. 56
Cong.Rec. 1696, 1753-1754. The amendments were agreed to in
conference, with the managers stating with respect to the former
amendment that,
"As the bill passed the House, relief was to be given the party
in military service unless his ability to comply with the judgment
or order sought was not materially affected by such service. The
amendment agreed on makes the test depend upon his ability to
conduct the defense."
56 Cong.Rec. 3023. As so amended, the Bill became § 201 of
the 1918 Act, 40 Stat. 442, which was carried into § 201 of
the 1940 Act without amendment of the provision under
consideration. While it is true that the discussion set forth in
the preceding paragraphs related to a stay on a different basis
than the one enacted, insofar as it deals with the question whether
a mandatory or a discretionary stay was intended, it is not made
inapplicable or uninstructive by the amendment.
[
Footnote 3]
Davies & Davies v. Patterson, 137 Ark. 184, 208
S.W. 592;
State ex rel. Clark v. Klene, 201 Mo.App. 408,
212 S.W. 55;
Swiderski v. Moodenbaugh, 44 F. Supp.
687; 45 F. Supp. 790;
Dietz v. Treupel, 184 App.Div.
448, 170 N.Y.S. 108;
Gilluly v. Hawkins, 108 Wash. 79, 182
P. 958.
[
Footnote 4]
Sen.Rept. No. 2109, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., p. 2.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK, dissenting.
The petitioner is a soldier who was on duty in Washington
throughout the course of the litigation in North Carolina of this
action against him. He duly claimed the protection of the Soldiers'
and Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940, and rests upon it here. I
think he should prevail.
The relevant statutory provision before us may be summarized as
follows: actions brought against a person in military service shall
be stayed upon application of that person "unless, in the opinion
of the court, the ability of the . . . defendant to conduct his
defense is not materially affected by reason of his military
service."
The statutory language has no legislative history, and has not
previously been interpreted by this Court. The elaborate
legislative history set forth by the Court is a history of a clause
which was stricken from the 1918 Act, which is not before us now
and which, on its face, has a meaning wholly different from the
clause under construction. [
Footnote
2/1] Hence, the problem is a narrow one of analysis of the
words of the statute itself.
I believe that the clause under consideration requires that an
action against a person in military service must be
Page 319 U. S. 577
stayed unless the trial judge concludes (a) that no personal
judgment will result and that the action will in effect preserve
the interests of all the parties for the duration of the war, or
(b) that the defendant is only a formal party, or (c) that the
defendant need not be present for any purpose, either before,
during, or after the trial, and that he will be adequately
represented and has no need to testify or participate in any way,
or (d) that the defendant's military service does not preclude him
from having ample opportunity to get ready for, and to take his
necessary part in, the litigation.
In my opinion, none of these conditions is met here. Although
the action began as a proceeding to preserve the trust estate,
which was quite proper, it terminated with a personal judgment
against the petitioner for $11,000 after a trial by jury of many
disputed facts. The petitioner was obviously not merely a formal
party. One issue in the case was whether he had dissipated trust
funds, and for such an inquiry his presence to hear the evidence
against him was essential to his interests, and his own testimony
was, in the words of the trial court, "highly desirable."
The sole possible ground for the Court's action, therefore, is
that the defendant could have been present, and, willfully taking
advantage of the Act, chose instead to absent himself. In reaching
this result, the Court engages in precisely the speculation which I
think the Act prohibits. The Court does not know, and the state
court did not try to find out, whether Boone applied for a leave or
disclosed its urgency to his superiors; it concludes that he did
neither. The Court does not know whether Boone attempted to find
new counsel; it assumes that he did not. The Court does not know
why Boone chose to participate in certain other law suits against
him conducted simultaneously with this one; it assumes that the
others were less important than this case. The Court cannot
know
Page 319 U. S. 578
whether the petitioner truly owes the amount of the judgment
against him; it must assume that he does because of a proceeding
conducted against him in his absence. [
Footnote 2/2]
The Court emphasizes that Boone is a member of the bar. But, for
the duration of the war, he is primarily a soldier, with a job to
do which Congress intended should overshadow personal interests,
whether his or those of others who seek a personal judgment against
him. It is difficult for me to believe that he could adequately
have prepared for this trial without a leave of many weeks. The
purpose of the Act is to prevent soldiers and sailors from being
harassed by civil litigation "in order to enable such persons to
devote their entire energy to the defense needs of the Nation."
§ 100. He is required to devote himself to serious business,
and should not be asked either to attempt to convince his superior
officers of the importance of his private affairs or to spend his
time hunting for lawyers.
The trial court should, at the very least, have inquired of the
appropriate military authorities whether the petitioner could be
granted ample leave to prepare his defense and be present for
trial. If the Act does not require this, it serves little purpose.
It may be argued that this petitioner, a man of knowledge and
experience, is as competent to ask his superior officer for leave
as is the trial court; but the argument fails because the policy
set here, no matter how many qualifications the Court tries to work
into it, will shoot far beyond the confines of this case. In the
course of the war, numerous actions will be brought against
soldiers who have never heard of this Act, and have no notion that
this Court might want them to apply to
Page 319 U. S. 579
their superior officers for leave and to make and file a formal
record of their superior officers' refusal.
I fear that today's decision seriously limits the benefits
Congress intended to provide in the Soldiers' and Sailors' Civil
Relief Act. It apparently gives the Act a liberal construction for
the benefit of creditors, rather than for the benefit of soldiers.
It places in trial judges an enormous discretion to determine from
a distance whether a person in military service has exercised
proper diligence to secure a leave, or whether it is best for the
national defense that he make no application at all. These are
questions on which the judiciary has no competence, since only the
military authorities can know the answers.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The clause for which the Court gives the legislative history is
as follows: an action against a person in military service shall be
stayed, upon request,
"unless, in the opinion of the court, the ability of the
defendant to comply with the judgment or order sought is not
materially affected by reason of his military service."
This means, in rough substance, what its legislative history
says -- that the action was to be stayed except where the defendant
could readily pay a judgment against himself. But that language was
removed, and the present provision inserted: the action, upon
proper request, shall be stayed unless, in the opinion of the trial
judge, "the ability of . . . the defendant to conduct his defense"
is affected by military service. The difference between ability to
pay a judgment and ability to conduct a defense is so great that
the two clauses have substantially nothing in common. The ability
to pay clause has been left in some sections of the Act, as,
e.g., §§ 203, 206, but it is not before us
here.
[
Footnote 2/2]
Had this been a judgment by default, Boone might have it set
aside upon proper motion made at any time within "ninety days after
the termination" of his military service. § 200(4). Whether
that section will permit Boone to attack this judgment after the
war is a question which the Court expressly reserves.