1. A registrant under the Selective Training and Service Act of
1940 becomes "actually inducted" within the meaning of § 11 of
the Act when, in obedience to the order of his draft board and
after the Army has found him acceptable for service, he undergoes
whatever ceremony or requirements of admission the War Department
has prescribed. P.
321 U. S.
559.
2. Until "actually inducted" within the meaning of § 11 of
the Selective Training and Service Act, a registrant under that Act
is subject solely to civil, and not to military, jurisdiction. P.
321 U. S.
557.
3. A registrant under the Selective Training and Service Act of
1940, whose claim that he was a conscientious objector had been
rejected, was ordered by his board to report for induction. At the
induction center, he was examined and put in Class 1-B. He informed
the officers in charge that he refused to serve in the Army, and
that he wanted to turn himself over to the civil authorities. He
refused to take the oath, but it was read to him and he was told
that he was in the Army. He was then ordered to submit to
fingerprinting, but refused to obey. Military charges were
preferred against him for willful disobedience of that order.
Held: that he was not subject to trial by
court-martial, but was subject solely to civil jurisdiction. Pp.
321 U. S. 544,
321 U. S.
558.
135 F.2d 505 reversed.
Certiorari, 320 U.S. 725, to review the affirmance of an order,
46 F.
Supp. 663, discharging a writ of habeas corpus and remanding
the petitioner to the custody of the respondent.
Page 321 U. S. 543
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Sec. 11 of the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940 (54
Stat. 894, 50 U.S.C.App. § 311) provides that
"No person shall be tried by any military or naval court martial
in any case arising under this Act unless such person has been
actually inducted for the training and service prescribed under
this Act or unless he is subject to trial by court-martial under
laws in force prior to the enactment of this Act. [
Footnote 1]"
Petitioner Billings, who is held by the Army on a charge of a
violation of the Articles of War, claims that this provision of the
Act exempts him from military jurisdiction and makes him
responsible solely to the civil authorities. The answer turns on
whether or not Billings has been "actually inducted" into the Army.
These are the facts.
Page 321 U. S. 544
Billings claims to be a conscientious objector. He registered
under the Act with Local Board No. 1 of Ottawa County, Kansas,
stating on his card at the time that he would never serve in the
Army. He was given a 1-B classification because of defective
eyesight, but was reclassified as 1-A in January, 1942. The local
board rejected his claim that he was a conscientious objector. He
appealed to the board of appeal, which affirmed the ruling of the
local board. Though petitioner resolved never to serve in the Army,
he desired to comply with all of the requirements of Selective
Service short of actual induction, so that he might avoid all civil
penalties possible. Accordingly, he consulted with draft officials
in Texas and faculty members at the University of Texas, where he
taught, and concluded that taking the oath was a prerequisite to
induction into the armed forces. He thought he might be finally
rejected by the Army on account of defective eyesight. But he
resolved that, if he was not rejected at the induction station, he
would not take the oath, but would turn himself over to the civil
authorities. He was ordered by his local board to report on August
12, 1942, and to proceed to the induction center at Fort
Leavenworth. He joined the group selected for induction and was
transported to Fort Leavenworth, where he and the others in his
group spent the night in the barracks. The next morning, after
breakfast in the mess hall, petitioner was given both the physical
and mental examinations, during which he made clear to the
examining officials his purpose not to serve in the Army. He then
reported to the officer who passed on the results of the
examinations, and who told him that he had been put in Class I-B.
He then reported to the induction office and told the officers in
charge that he refused to serve in the Army and that he wanted to
turn himself over to the civil authorities. They said that he was
already under the jurisdiction of the military, and put him under
guard to prevent him from
Page 321 U. S. 545
leaving the reservation. With their consent, however, he used
the telephone and procured the services of an attorney whom he
retained to file a petition for habeas corpus on his behalf.
Thereupon, an Army officer read petitioner the oath of induction,
which petitioner refused to take. He was advised that his refusal
made no difference, that "You are in the army now." He was then
ordered to submit to fingerprinting. He refused to obey. Military
charges were preferred against him for willful disobedience of that
order.
On August 14, 1942, petitioner filed this petition for a writ of
habeas corpus alleging that he was not a member of the armed forces
of the United States, that he was not subject to military
jurisdiction, and that, if he had violated any laws, they were the
civil laws of the United States. The writ issued. Respondent filed
a return, and a hearing was had at which petitioner testified. The
District Court discharged the writ and remanded petitioner to
respondent's custody, holding that petitioner was subject to
military jurisdiction.
Ex parte Billings, 46 F. Supp.
663. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that
"[i]nduction was completed when the oath was read to petitioner and
he was told that he was inducted into the Army." 135 F.2d 505, 507.
The case is here on a petition for a writ of certiorari which we
granted because of the importance of the problem in the
administration of the Act.
I
It is conceded that petitioner was not "actually inducted" in
the Army within the meaning of § 11 of the Act when he was
ordered to report to the induction station. But it is contended
that, from that time, on he was subject to at least a limited
military jurisdiction by reason of the Articles of War.
Among those whom Article 2 of the Articles of War, 41 Stat. 787,
10 U.S.C. § 1473, subjects to military law are
Page 321 U. S. 546
all persons
"lawfully called, drafted, or ordered into, or to duty or for
training in, the said service, from the dates they are required by
the terms of the call, draft or order to obey the same."
This provision, standing alone, would have made petitioner
subject to military law from August 12, 1942, the date when he was
required by the local board to present himself for induction. That
was indeed the consequence under the Selective Draft Act of 1917
(40 Stat. 76).
Franke v. Murray, 248 F. 865;
United
States v. Bullard, 290 F. 704; Digest Op. J.A.G. 1912-1930,
Sec. 2238; 2 Op. J.A.G. (1918) 327.3; Second Report, Provost
Marshal General (1918), p. 221. The Articles of War then in force
(39 Stat. 651) had substantially the same provision as the present
Article 2. Sec. 2 of the 1917 Act provided, moreover, that
"All persons drafted into the service of the United States . . .
shall, from the date of said draft or acceptance, be subject to the
laws and regulations governing the Regular Army. . . ."
40 Stat. 78. And the regulations under the 1917 Act stated that,
when a registrant was ordered to report to a local board or a state
adjutant general for duty, he was "in the military service" from
and after the day and hour thus specified. §§ 133, 159D,
159E, 159F, 159G, 161.
And see United States v. McIntyre,
4 F.2d 823. But the present Act and the regulations promulgated
under it are differently designed.
Sec. 3 of the Act provides that
"no man shall be inducted for training and service under this
Act unless and until he is acceptable to the land or naval forces
for such training and service and his physical and mental fitness
for such training and service has been satisfactorily
determined."
Moreover, as we have noted, Congress, by § 11, withheld
from military courts martial jurisdiction over cases arising under
the Act unless the person involved had been "actually inducted" or
"unless he is subject to trial by court-martial under laws in force
prior to the enactment of this Act." The "actually inducted"
Page 321 U. S. 547
clause of § 11 was offered as an amendment on the floor of
the Senate by Senator Bone. 86 Cong.Rec. 10895. It was designed, as
stated by the Senate conferees, to give civil courts jurisdiction
over violations of the Act prior to induction for training in
substitution for the House provisions that civil and military
courts should have concurrent jurisdiction in such cases. 86
Cong.Rec. 11710, 12039, 12084. In view of this legislative history,
the Congress can hardly be presumed to have restored by the second
"unless" clause in § 11 what it took away by the first
"unless" clause. That is to say, § 11 of the Act, read
together with § 3, indicates to us a purpose to vest in the
civil courts exclusive jurisdiction over all violations of the Act
prior to actual induction. It is suggested, however, that, prior to
that time, a selectee may be subject to military jurisdiction by
reason of Art. 2 of the Articles of War, and be prosecuted before
courts martial for all offenses proscribed by the Articles,
provided those acts are not made criminal by the Act. Under that
view, a selectee who failed to report for induction (
Bowles v.
United States, 319 U. S. 33) or
who, having reported, refused to be examined (
United States v.
Collura, 139 F.2d 345) could be prosecuted for such offenses
only in civil courts. § 11. But, since, by Art. 2, he became a
soldier when ordered to report, he could be prosecuted by the
military for those offenses which were proscribed by the Articles
of War, but not by the Act.
We think that is too narrow a reading of § 11 of the Act.
As we pointed out in
Falbo v. United States, 320 U.
S. 549,
320 U. S. 552,
the mobilization program established by the Selective Service
System is designed to operate "as one continuous process for the
selection of men for national service" -- a process in which the
civil and military agencies perform integrated functions. The
examination of men at induction centers and their acceptance or
rejection are parts of that process. Induction marks its
Page 321 U. S. 548
end. But, prior to that time, a selectee is still subject to the
Act, and not yet a soldier. A case involving his rights or duties
as a selectee prior to that event is a case arising under the Act.
The civil authorities, not the military, are charged with the
duties of enforcement at that stage of the process. That
necessarily means that the measure of a selectee's rights and
duties is to be found in the Act, not in the Articles of War. For
§ 16(a) of the Act suspends all laws or parts thereof which
are in conflict with its provisions.
We are supported in that view by the administrative construction
of the Act. The regulations promulgated under it define a
"delinquent" as one who is "liable for training and service" under
the Act and "who fails or neglects to perform any duty required of
him" by the Act or the regulations made pursuant thereto. §
601.5. And Part 642, which contains detailed provisions concerning
the rights and duties of "delinquents," provides:
"Every registrant who has heretofore or who hereafter fails to
comply with an Order to Report for Induction or an Order to Report
for Work of National Importance shall be reported promptly to the
United States Attorney . . . , provided that, if the local board
believes that, by reasonable effort, it may be able to locate the
registrant and secure his compliance, it may delay the mailing of
such Delinquent Registrant Report for a period not in excess of 30
days."
§ 642.41(a). Moreover, § 642.42(a) provides:
"After a delinquent has been reported to the United States
Attorney, it is the responsibility of the United States Attorney to
determine whether he shall be prosecuted. Before permitting such a
delinquent to be inducted or assigned to work of national
importance, the local board should obtain the views of the United
States Attorney concerning such action."
We will develop shortly the place of such regulations in the
Selective Service System. It is sufficient at this point to
Page 321 U. S. 549
note that the regulations treat the problems of "delinquents" as
matters exclusively for the civil authorities. [
Footnote 2] We cannot believe that the Act would
have been given that construction if, as is now contended, the
selectee became subject to even a limited military jurisdiction
prior to induction.
II
Respondent argues, in the second place, that petitioner became a
soldier when the Army accepted him after his examinations were
completed. That argument is based largely on the War Department
Regulations.
The War Department Regulations [
Footnote 3] in force in August, 1942, (Mobilization
Regulations No. 1-7, October 1, 1940) provided in Sec. II, par. 6,
that
"The function of the induction station is to provide the final
examinations for registrants selected for induction and the
induction of those acceptable to the Army."
Sec. II, par. 13(e) entitled "induction ceremony" provided:
"All men successfully passing the
Page 321 U. S. 550
physical examination will be immediately inducted into the Army.
The induction will be performed by an officer in a short, dignified
ceremony in which the men are administered the oath, AW 109:"
" I, ___ ___, do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will bear
true faith and allegiance to the United States of America; that I
will serve them honestly and faithfully against all their enemies
whomsoever, and that I will obey the orders of the President of the
United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me,
according to the rules and Articles of War."
They will be informed that they are now members of the Army of
the United States, and given an explanation of their obligations
and privileges. In the event of refusal to take an oath (or
affirmation) by any individual, he will not be required to receive
it, but will be informed that this action does not alter in any
respect his obligation to the United States.
The argument is that, since the Army Regulations do not
condition a selectee's entry into the Army on his subscribing to
the oath, [
Footnote 4]
induction must take place at some anterior point of time. It is
said that, while § 3 of the Act provides that a selectee shall
not be inducted "until he is acceptable" to the Army, there is
nothing in the Act which postpones induction beyond that time. The
induction ceremony described in Sec. II, par. 13(e) of the
regulations is said to be a formal exercise which solemnifies the
occasion, and during which the soldier is advised concerning his
obligations and responsibilities to the United States.
See
United States v. Smith, 47 F. Supp. 607. The statement in Sec.
II, par. 13(e), that those who pass the examination "will be
immediately inducted into the Army" is read to mean that
selectees
Page 321 U. S. 551
shall thereupon be accepted as soldiers. A statement by an
officer in authority that they are accepted, followed by the
reading of the oath and such other explanation as may be required,
completes the ceremony.
That view finds support in informal rulings of the Judge
Advocate General's office. [
Footnote 5] And War Department Regulations have the force
of law, as we recently had occasion to reaffirm in
Standard Oil
Co. v. Johnson, 316 U. S. 481,
316 U. S.
484.
But that circumstance is complicated here by the division of
jurisdiction between the civil and military authorities which the
Act creates. The President is authorized "to select and induct" men
into the armed forces "in the manner provided in this Act." §
3(a). No man shall be "inducted for training and service under this
Act unless and until he is acceptable" to the armed services.
§ 3(a). And the civil authorities retain jurisdiction over him
until
Page 321 U. S. 552
he is "actually inducted." § 11. Thus, it seems clear, as
we have already said, that the Act, rather than the War Department
Regulations or the Articles of War, determines the rights and
duties of selectees, as distinguished from inducted men. The manner
and method of effecting an induction into the Army are thus left
for the War Department. But the power of the President under the
Act "to select and induct" men includes the power to determine when
the selective process is completed. It is only after that process
is finished that a selectee is eligible for induction.
That view runs throughout the Selective Service Regulations
promulgated under the Act. They are the regulations which have
special relevancy here. The rulemaking power under the Act is
vested in the President. § 10(a)(1). The President, in turn,
is given the power to delegate that authority. [
Footnote 6] § 10(b). And, during the period
here in question, as at the present time, [
Footnote 7] the President had delegated it to the
Director of Selective Service. Exec.Order, No. 8545, Sept. 23,
1940, 5 Fed.Reg. pp. 3779, 3781. The Act and the regulations
promulgated under it give the selective process its integrated
nature.
Falbo v. United States, supra. They determine the
role which the military, as well as the civilian, authorities are
to play in the administrative process of selection.
Id. As
in other instances (
United States v. American Trucking
Assns., 310 U. S. 534,
310 U. S. 549;
Gray v. Powell, 314 U. S. 402),
the interpretations of an Act of Congress by those
Page 321 U. S. 553
charged with its administration are entitled to persuasive
weight.
As we have said, the Selective Service Regulations support our
interpretation of the Act. Thus, it is provided that, while a
selectee is appealing or otherwise contesting his classification,
his induction shall be stayed. §§ 625.3, 626.14, 627.41,
628.7. And, as we have noted, when a "delinquent" has been reported
to a United States Attorney, the local board shall not order him to
report for induction without obtaining the views of the United
States Attorney. These provisions, as well as those governing the
control of the local boards over the orders to report for
induction, which we will come to shortly, are framed on the theory
that the time when a selectee's status may change from civilian to
soldier is subject to the terms and requirements of the Act. Thus,
they confirm our construction of the Act.
The Selective Service Regulations also draw a distinction
between acceptance (or being found acceptable) by the Army and
induction. During the period here in question, an inducted man was
defined as "a man who has become a member of the land or naval
forces through the operation of the Selective Service System." 32
Code Fed.Reg.1941 Supp. § 601.7. Induction station was defined
as any camp, etc. "at which selected men are received by the
military authorities and, if found acceptable, are inducted into
military service." § 601.8. And, though the regulation
governing the reception of selected men at the induction station
referred to their treatment "pending their induction or rejection"
(§ 633.8), "induction" was not otherwise used in the sense of
"acceptance." For it was defined in the very next regulation in the
following manner: "Induction. At the induction station, the
selected men found acceptable will be inducted into the land or
naval forces." § 633.9.
Page 321 U. S. 554
These regulations thus suggest that induction follows
acceptance, and is a separate process. Read in that light, the War
Department Regulations may be reconciled with the regulations under
the Act. For, as we have seen, the War Department provided by
regulation at the time Billings appeared at Fort Leavenworth that
the "induction
will be performed by an officer in a short,
dignified ceremony in which the men are administered the oath,"
etc. (Italics added.)
We are confirmed in this conclusion by recent amendments both to
the Army Regulations and to the Selective Service Regulations. The
Army Regulations, as amended March 30, 1943, now state, respecting
the "induction ceremony," that "The induction will be performed by
an officer who, prior to administering the oath, will give the men
about to be inducted a short patriotic talk" (italics
added). This makes unambiguous the fair inference in the earlier
Army Regulations that selectees were inducted by the ceremony, and
not before it.
Moreover, the Selective Service Regulations have been amended in
recent months so as to provide for pre-induction physical
examinations before a registrant "is ordered to report for
induction." § 629.1. As under the former regulations, the
group to be forwarded for examination by the military authorities
is assembled by the local board and given certain instructions and
credentials. § 629.22. Registrants in certain classes "may be
inducted into service at the induction station upon being found
qualified for service," provided they make written request of their
boards and provided there is no appeal pending in their cases and
the appeal period has expired. § 629.23. All other registrants
who are given the pre-induction examination are returned to their
local board when the examination is completed. § 629.22(e).
Those found acceptable by the Army or Navy are later ordered to
report for induction. §§ 632.1
et seq. Local
boards, in filling
Page 321 U. S. 555
calls received, are authorized to allow twenty-one days before
induction to those who "have been found to be acceptable to the
Army." § 632.4. This takes the place of the earlier system
whereby selectees were first inducted and then given, if they
desired, furloughs to attend to their personal affairs. Army Reg.
No. 615-500, September 1, 1942, Sec. II, par. 16.
We mention these recent regulations because they perpetuate the
distinction between acceptance, or being found acceptable, and
induction which appeared in the regulations when Billings reported
at the induction station. That these amendments do not effect any
change in the concept of "induction" is apparent from the fact that
its definition has remained practically the same from the time when
Billings reported at the induction station to the present time.
[
Footnote 8] It could hardly be
maintained that a selectee who has passed his pre-induction
physical examination, but who has not been ordered to report for
induction, is subject to military jurisdiction. And it would not
seem permissible to hold that he who failed to report for induction
at the end of the so-called twenty-one day furlough period could be
prosecuted by a court-martial because he had been "actually
inducted" within the meaning of § 11. But, if that is true, it
is difficult to see why there would be a difference in result if
the interval between the time when he is found acceptable or is
accepted and the ceremony of induction were only a few minutes, as
in the present case, rather than a few weeks.
Page 321 U. S. 556
III
It is finally contended, as the Circuit Court of Appeals held,
that petitioner was inducted when the oath was read to him and he
was told that he was in the Army. At that time, he had been placed
under guard, and was retained against his will. But the argument is
that the military has authority to exercise force for the purpose
of inducting selectees into the service.
We have no doubt of the power of Congress to enlist the manpower
of the nation for prosecution of the war, and to subject to
military jurisdiction those who are unwilling, as well as those who
are eager, to come to the defense of their nation in its hour of
peril.
Arver v. United States, 245 U.
S. 366. But Congress did not choose that course in the
present emergency. It imposed a separate penalty on those who
defied the law -- prosecution by the civil authorities and a
maximum penalty of five years' imprisonment or a $10,000 fine, or
both. § 11. We say that that penalty was aimed at those who
defied the law, though, in the words of § 11, it includes, of
course, only those who have not been "actually inducted." But we
give "inducted" the meaning it has in the Act and in the
regulations. As we have pointed out, an inducted man is defined by
the Selective Service Regulations as one "who has become a member
of the land or naval forces through the operation of the Selective
Service System." § 601.7. That suggests that he becomes
"actually inducted" within the meaning of the Act by submitting to
the Selective Service System. The fact that he is not a volunteer
is, of course, irrelevant, as the Act was designed as a "fair and
just system of selective compulsory military training and service."
§ 1(b). But induction under the Act and the present
regulations is the end product of submission to the selective
process and compliance with the orders of the local board.
Page 321 U. S. 557
It must be remembered that § 11 imposes on a selectee a
criminal penalty for any failure "to perform any duty required of
him under or in the execution" of the Act or "rules or regulations
made pursuant thereto." He who reports to the induction station but
refuses to be inducted violates § 11 of the Act as clearly as
one who refuses to report at all.
United States v. Collura,
supra. The order of the local board to report for induction
includes a command to submit to induction. Though that command was
formerly implied, [
Footnote 9]
it is now express. The Selective Service Regulations state that it
is the "duty" of a registrant who receives from his local board an
order to report for induction "to appear at the place where his
induction will be accomplished," "to obey the orders of the
representatives of the armed forces while at the place where his
induction will be accomplished," and "to submit to induction."
§ 633.21(b). Thus, it is clear that a refusal to submit to
induction is a violation of the Act, rather than a military order.
The offense is complete before induction and while the selectee
retains his civilian status. That circumstance throws light on the
meaning of the words "actually inducted" as used in § 11 of
the Act. Congress, by accepting the Bone amendment to § 11,
specified the maximum penalty to be imposed on those who violated
the Act or disobeyed an order of their board prior to their
induction. [
Footnote 10] It
also withheld from military courts
Page 321 U. S. 558
jurisdiction over those offenders. At the same time, Congress
did not authorize the Army to search out delinquents, wherever they
might be, and induct them without more. We must therefore assume
that Congress, as a matter of policy, decided that those who
disobeyed the order of their board and refused to be inducted were
to be punished by the civil authorities, and by them alone.
[
Footnote 11] If forcible
seizure or detention of such offenders by the Army were sanctioned,
the Congressional policy of providing the maximum punishment for
their delinquency would be undermined.
Moreover, it should be remembered that he who reports at the
induction station is following the procedure outlined in the
Falbo case for the exhaustion of his administrative
remedies. Unless he follows that procedure, he may not challenge
the legality of his classification in the courts. But we can hardly
say that he must report to the military in order to exhaust his
administrative remedies and then say that, if he does so report, he
may be forcibly inducted against his will. That would indeed make a
trap of the
Falbo case by subjecting those who
reported
Page 321 U. S. 559
for completion of the Selective Service process to more severe
penalties than those who stayed away in defiance of the board's
order to report.
These considerations together indicate to us that a selectee
becomes "actually inducted" within the meaning of § 11 of the
Act when, in obedience to the order of his board and after the Army
has found him acceptable for service, he undergoes whatever
ceremony or requirements of admission the War Department has
prescribed.
We are not concerned with the wisdom of either the "actually
inducted" clause in § 11 or the procedure for selection and
induction which has been prescribed under the Act. Nor is it for us
to decide whether the maximum penalty provided by Congress is
adequate for those who flout the Act while the nation fights for
its very existence. But, where Congress has drawn the line between
civil and military jurisdiction, it is our duty to respect it.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE ROBERTS is of the view that the judgment should be
affirmed for the reasons stated in the opinion of the Circuit Court
of Appeals, 135 F.2d 505.
[
Footnote 1]
Sec. 11, so far as material here, provides:
"Any person . . . who in any manner shall knowingly fail or
neglect to perform any duty required of him under or in the
execution of this Act, or rules or regulations made pursuant to
this Act . . . shall, upon conviction in the district court of the
United States having jurisdiction thereof, be punished by
imprisonment for not more than five years or a fine of not more
than $10,000, or by both such fine and imprisonment, or if subject
to military or naval law may be tried by court-martial, and, on
conviction, shall suffer such punishment as a court-martial may
direct. No person shall be tried by any military or naval court
martial in any case arising under this Act unless such person has
been actually inducted for the training and service prescribed
under this Act or unless he is subject to trial by court-martial
under laws in force prior to the enactment of this Act."
[
Footnote 2]
While the regulations governing "delinquents" cited in the text
are those presently in force, the ones in effect at the time of
Billings' refusal to be inducted were of the same tenor, and were
then included in § 601.5, § 642.4, § 642.5.
It should also be noted that these regulations contain detailed
provision for the parole of persons convicted of violations of the
Act. §§ 643.1
et seq. Those required to register
under the Act may be paroled by the Attorney General on the
recommendation of the Director of Selective Service for induction
or for other assignments. § 643.2. The Attorney General has
the power to impose "such terms and conditions as he may deem
proper" upon the parolee and shall supervise him, and may suspend
or revoke the parole, except when the parolee is "in the active
land or naval forces of the United States." §§ 643.8,
643.9. And Army Regulations No. 615-500, Sec. II, par. 7(b)(5),
provide that registrants convicted of violation of the Act "will be
accepted for induction at any time," provided the Attorney General
of the United States has granted parole "for the purpose of
induction."
[
Footnote 3]
These were superseded September 1, 1942, by Army Regulations No.
615-500.
[
Footnote 4]
The case of a selectee is distinguished from that of an
enlistee, who is required by Art. 109 of the Articles of War to
take the oath. Identical requirements in the predecessor Articles
of War applicable to enlistees were construed as inapplicable to
draftees under the Selective Draft Act of 1917.
See 1 Op.
J.A.G. 169 (1917);
Franke v. Murray, supra, pp.
868-869.
[
Footnote 5]
The following propositions were submitted to the Chief, Military
Affairs Section, of the Judge Advocate General's office:
"1. That the only purpose of the administration of the oath as
set out in MR 1-7, Paragraph 13e, is for the purpose of informing
the individual of his obligations and responsibilities to the
United States of America, and his acquiescence in, or
acknowledgement of this obligation, by some overt act indicating
acceptance thereof is immaterial. 2. That induction is complete
immediately upon full acceptance of the individual by the
government. The oath or any act or requirement thereafter is
ministerial only, and is not necessary to the completion of
induction. 3. For induction, no acquiescence or acceptance on the
part of the individual is required."
On June 6, 1941, the following informal ruling was made:
"Generally speaking, the above-quoted conclusions are believed
to be sound, and it therefore follows that a refusal on the part of
a selectee to take the prescribed oath does not legally affect the
validity of his induction."
We are advised by the Judge Advocate General on February 4,
1944, in a supplemental memorandum filed by the Solicitor General,
that, although that opinion was expressed informally by letter, and
not in a formal opinion, it "represented the views of The Judge
Advocate General," and that those views "have not been modified,
and are hereby adhered to."
[
Footnote 6]
Sec. 10(b), as originally enacted, contained no limitation as to
the persons to whom that authority might be delegated. But, by the
Act of December 5, 1943, 57 Stat. 598, § 10(b) was amended to
read:
"The President is authorized to delegate to the Director of
Selective Service only, any authority vested in him under this Act
(except section 9)."
[
Footnote 7]
See Exec.Order No. 9410, December 23, 1943, 8 Fed.Reg.
17319.
[
Footnote 8]
As we have indicated, the Selective Service Regulations in
§ 633.9 defined "induction" at the time Billings reported to
the induction station as follows: "At the induction station, the
selected men found acceptable will be inducted into the land or
naval forces." At the present time, § 633.25 defines
"induction" as follows:
"At the Army Reception Center, the Navy Recruiting Station, or
the induction station, as the case may be, the selected men who
have been forwarded for induction and found acceptable will be
inducted into the land or naval forces."
[
Footnote 9]
See §§ 633.1, 633.2, 633.6 in force in
August, 1942.
[
Footnote 10]
The Conference Report stated:
"The Senate bill provided that persons subject to the bill who
fail to report for duty as ordered should be tried exclusively in
the district courts of the United States, and not by military and
naval courts-martial, unless such persons had actually been
inducted for the training and service prescribed in the bill or
unless they were subject to trial by court-martial under laws in
force prior to the enactment of the bill. The House amendment in
such cases gave the courts-martial and the district courts
concurrent jurisdiction, and made failure of persons to report for
duty subject to the laws and regulations concerning that branch of
the land and naval forces to which they were assigned from the date
they were required by the terms of the order to obey the same, even
though they had not actually been inducted."
"The conference agreement contains the provisions of the Senate
bill in this respect."
86 Cong.Rec. 12039.
[
Footnote 11]
It is true that, for other purposes, Congress has treated
selectees who are ordered to report for induction the same as those
in military service. Thus, the benefits of the Soldiers' and
Sailors' Civil Relief Act of 1940 (50 U.S.C.App. § 501
et
seq., 54 Stat. 1178), which originally obtained only to
"persons in the military service," were extended by an Act of
October 6, 1942, to selectees from the date of receiving an order
to report until the time of actually reporting for induction. 50
U.S.C.App. Supp. II, § 516 56 Stat. 770. But, as we have
pointed out, the Selective Service Act and the regulations under it
have not made the selectee's civilian status change to that of
soldier at either point of time.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER.
Under the Selective Service Act of 1940, unlike that of 1917, a
selectee is not subject to trial by a military court-martial until
he has been "actually inducted" for training and service. But
Congress did not define when he was so "inducted." It thus left to
judicial construction when the civilian status ceased and the
military status began. In a matter of this sort, involving as it
does the process of compulsory recruiting of the nation's Army in
the midst of war, it is of vital importance that the line be drawn
as definitely as the legislation reasonably permits in order that
ambiguity and controversy be reduced to a minimum.
Page 321 U. S. 560
In the
Falbo case, we held the other day that
"The connected series of steps into the national service which
begins with registration with the local board does not end until
the registrant is accepted by the army. . . ."
320 U. S. 320 U.S.
549,
320 U. S. 553.
The line that was thus drawn -- when "the connected series of
steps" has ended -- seems to me to be the line to draw between the
civil and military status of a registrant. In other words, when
acceptance of a registrant is communicated by the Army, the Army
has made its choice. The man is then in the Army. Such was the
ruling, and I believe the correct ruling, of the court below. 135
F.2d 505. According to the Court's opinion, as I understand it, the
Act itself does not draw this line, but Congress has authorized
such a line to be drawn by appropriate regulations. On that
assumption, I do not dissent.