1. A Navy court-martial has no jurisdiction to try an enlisted
man for a violation of Art. 8 of the Articles for the Government of
the Navy, 34 U.S.C. § 1200, Art. 8, committed during a prior
enlistment terminated by an honorable discharge, even though he
reenlisted on the day following his discharge. Pp.
336 U. S.
211-219.
2. This conclusion is supported by the language and legislative
history of 34 U.S.C. § 1200, Art. 14 (Eleventh), specifically
authorizing trial after discharge of offenders against Art. 14. Pp.
336 U. S.
214-216.
3. It is also supported by longstanding administrative
interpretation, including 31 Op.Atty.Gen. 521. Pp.
336 U. S.
216-217.
4. 34 U.S.C. § 591, authorizing the Secretary of the Navy,
with the approval of the President, to adopt and alter regulations
and orders for the control of the Navy, does not authorize the Navy
to extend its court-martial jurisdiction beyond the limits Congress
had fixed. Pp.
336 U. S.
217-218.
5. Nor can a Navy regulation claimed to grant jurisdiction in
cases such as this be sustained as a revision of the longstanding
administrative interpretation of Art. 8. Pp.
336 U. S.
218-219.
168 F.2d 503 reversed.
Petitioner was convicted by a Naval court-martial for an offense
committed during a prior enlistment. In a habeas corpus proceeding,
a federal district court held the judgment void and ordered his
release from custody. 73 F. Supp. 990. The Court of Appeals
reversed. 168 F.2d 503. This Court granted certiorari. 335 U.S.
842. Cooke was substituted as the party respondent. 335 U.S. 882.
Reversed, p.
336 U.S.
219.
Page 336 U. S. 211
MR. JUSTICE BLACK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case raises important questions concerning the statutory
jurisdiction of general courts-martial of the Navy.
In 1942, the petitioner was serving a second enlistment in the
Navy. Upon the surrender of the United States forces on Corregidor,
petitioner became a war prisoner of Japan. After liberation in
September, 1945, petitioner was brought back to the United States
and hospitalized. He was restored to duty in January, 1946. March
26, 1946, he was granted an honorable discharge because of
expiration of his prior enlistment. The next day, he reenlisted,
obligating himself to serve four years
"subject to such laws, regulations and articles for the
government of the Navy as are or shall be established by the
Congress . . . or other competent authority. . . ."
About a year later, petitioner was served with charges directing
his trial by a general court-martial of the Navy. The
specifications included charges that, during his prior enlistment,
the petitioner had maltreated two other naval enlisted men who were
also Japanese prisoners of war and who were members of groups of
prisoners working under petitioner's charge. Petitioner filed a
plea in bar of the trial, one ground being that the court-martial
was without jurisdiction to try him for alleged offenses committed
during a prior enlistment at the end of which he had received an
honorable discharge. His plea was overruled. He was acquitted on
some specifications, but was convicted on others that charged
maltreatment. His sentence was ten months' confinement, reduction
from
Page 336 U. S. 212
chief signalman to apprentice seaman, and dishonorable discharge
from the Navy.
Petitioner then brought this habeas corpus proceeding in a
federal district court charging that the court-martial judgment was
void because of want of statutory power to convict him for an
offense committed if at all during his prior enlistment. [
Footnote 1] That court sustained
petitioner's contention and ordered his release from custody. 73 F.
Supp. 990. The Court of Appeals reversed, one judge dissenting. 168
F.2d 503. The importance of the statutory construction, which
appeared to affect the court-martial powers of the Army as well as
the Navy, caused us to grant certiorari.
Aside from naval regulations to which reference will later be
made, court-martial authority to try and to punish petitioner for
his prior enlistment conduct primarily depends on the language in
Article 8 (Second) of the Articles for the Government of the Navy
(34 U.S.C. § 1200, art. 8), subd. 2, which particularly
provides that
"such punishment as a court-martial may adjudge may be inflicted
on any person in the Navy . . . who is guilty of . . . maltreatment
of, any person subject to his orders. . . ."
The Government contends that this language, given its literal
meaning, authorized the court-martial to try and
Page 336 U. S. 213
to punish petitioner for conduct during a prior enlistment. It
is pointed out that petitioner was "in the Navy" when the offense
was committed and when he was tried; this language, it is argued,
brings his case under the Article. In aid of this interpretation,
the Government emphasizes that, during the whole period of time
involved, petitioner was continuously "in the Navy" except for an
interval of a few hours between his honorable discharge and his
reenlistment. This latter circumstance, we think, cannot justify
the statutory interpretation urged. For if that interpretation is
correct, court-martial jurisdiction would be satisfied if a sailor
was merely "in the Navy" when the offense was committed and when
brought before the court-martial, regardless of the duration of any
interim period out of the naval service, provided the prosecution
was not barred by the two-year limitation period provided by 34
U.S.C. § 1200, art. 61.
The concessions made by the Government in urging such a literal
construction of this Article expose the whimsical and uncertain
nature of the distinctions that would mark the boundaries of
court-martial powers. It is conceded that, had petitioner not
reenlisted in the Navy after his 1946 discharge, no Navy
court-martial could have tried him for offenses committed during
his prior naval service. Thus, under the construction here urged,
naval court-martial jurisdiction for a prior enlistment offense is
made wholly to depend on whether the naval offender either
voluntarily reenters the Navy or is drafted into its service. And
punishment of the gravest nature might be imposed on a naval
volunteer or draftee which no court-martial could have imposed but
for such a voluntary or forced entry into the Navy. For, under this
interpretation, had the same naval offender reentered his country's
service by way of the Army, rather than the Navy, either by choice
or by accident of draft
Page 336 U. S. 214
assignment, no court-martial, either Navy or Army, could have
punished him. Jurisdiction to punish rarely, if ever, rests upon
such illogical and fortuitous contingencies. We therefore must look
beyond the literal language of the Article, ambiguous at best, in
order to determine whether this court-martial acted within its
power.
See Runkle v. United States, 122 U.
S. 543,
122 U. S.
555-556;
Ex parte Reed, 100 U. S.
13,
100 U. S.
23.
While not itself determinative of the question here, 34 U.S.C.
§ 1200, art. 14 (Eleventh) has greatly influenced the Army and
Navy in determining their court-martial jurisdiction to try service
personnel for offenses committed in prior enlistments. That Article
provides that, where any person previously discharged or dismissed
from the Navy has, "while in the naval service," been guilty of
certain types of fraud against the Government, such person
"shall continue to be liable to be arrested and held for trial
and sentence by a court-martial, in the same manner and to the same
extent as if he had not received such discharge nor been
dismissed."
Article 14 (Eleventh) stems from an Act of Congress passed in
1863, particularly designed to punish frauds against the military
branches of the Government in connection with the procurement of
supplies for war activities. 12 Stat. 696. That the attention of
the 1863 Congress was directly focused upon the powers that could
and should be vested in courts-martial is made clear by the debates
and by the fact that Congress deleted from the bill as proposed
specific provisions which would have made civilian government
contractors subject to trial before military and naval
courts-martial. Cong.Globe, 37th Cong., 3d Sess. 952-958 (1863),
and Part II, Appendix to Cong.Globe, 3d Sess.199 (1863).
See Ex
parte Henderson, 11 Fed.Cas. 1067, No. 6,349 (1878).
And
see 317 U. S. Marcus
v. Hess,
Page 336 U. S. 215
317 U. S. 537,
317 U. S.
539-545. But, after elimination of certain provisions
which would further have expanded court-martial jurisdiction,
Congress left in the bill § 3, now Naval Article 14
(Eleventh), which makes naval personnel guilty of service frauds,
subject to court-martial after discharge or dismissal. The same
1863 provision has also been made applicable to Army personnel by
Article of War 94, 10 U.S.C. § 1566.
Congress, in this 1863 Act, plainly recognized that there was a
significant difference between court-martial power to try men in
the service and to try former service men after their discharge.
The Government correctly argues that the attention of the 1863
Congress was not focused on the precise question here -- namely,
the extent of a military court's statutory power to punish a man
presently "in the service" for an offense committed in a prior
enlistment period from which he has been discharged. But the fact
remains that the 1863 Congress did act on the implicit assumption
that, without a grant of congressional authority, military courts
were without power to try discharged or dismissed soldiers for any
offenses committed while in the service. Acting on this assumption,
Congress granted such a power to courts-martial, but only in the
very limited category of offenses there defined -- frauds against
the Government. [
Footnote 2]
Since the 1863 Act, Congress has not passed any measure that
Page 336 U. S. 216
directly expanded court-martial powers over discharged
servicemen, whether they reenlisted or not.
Obviously, Article 8 (Second), which subjects to court-martial
jurisdiction persons "in the Navy," supports an argument that
petitioner was subject to trial by this court-martial. It is
equally obvious that the language of Article 8 (Second),
particularly in view of Article 14 (Eleventh), supports an argument
that this court-martial could not try petitioner for an offense
committed prior to his honorable discharge. Under these
circumstances, the manner in which court-martial jurisdiction has
long been exercised by the Army and Navy is entitled to great
weight in interpreting the Articles.
The question of the jurisdiction of a naval court-martial over
discharged personnel was submitted by the Secretary of the Navy to
the Attorney General in 1919. The precise question of whether
reenlistment could revive jurisdiction of a military court was not
considered, but, as to the power of military courts over discharged
personnel in general, the Attorney General reached the conclusion
that a person discharged from the Navy before proceedings were
instituted against him "for violations of the Articles Governing
the Navy, excepting Article 14," could not "thereafter be brought
to trial . . . for such violations, though committed while he was
in the service." 31 Op.Atty.Gen. 521, 529. This conclusion of the
Attorney General relied on statements of the Judge Advocate
Generals of the Army and Navy that their offices had, "from the
beginning and uniformly, held that a person separated from the
service ceases to be amenable" to military and naval jurisdiction.
Previous to the Attorney General's 1919 opinion, neither the Navy
nor Army had ever claimed court-martial power to try their
personnel for offenses committed prior to an honorable discharge
where proceedings had not been instituted before discharge.
Page 336 U. S. 217
See Winthrop, Military Law and Precedents 93 (2d
ed.1920). The Government concedes that the Army has always so
construed its court-martial jurisdiction whenever the question
arose. And the Government concedes that the Navy also followed this
view of its jurisdiction until 1932. [
Footnote 3] Many holdings and opinions of Army and Navy
authorities are cited to support these concessions. The
Government's brief quotes the following language by the Navy
Department in one of the cases which considered the precise issue
raised here. The case appears in CMO 12-1921, p. 11.
"Except in cases of offenses in violation of Article 14 of the
Articles for the Government of the Navy, there is no authority of
law giving jurisdiction to a court-martial to try an enlisted man
for an offense committed in a prior enlistment from which he has an
honorable discharge, regardless of the fact that he has
subsequently reenlisted in the naval service and was serving under
such reenlistment at the time the jurisdiction of the court was
asserted."
Accepting, as we do, the longstanding Army and Navy
interpretation of the Articles previously referred to, an
interpretation which necessarily would deny jurisdiction to
court-martial here, there remains the contention that the Navy has,
by a recent congressionally authorized regulation, acquired such
jurisdiction for its courts-martial. 34 U.S.C. § 591
authorizes the Secretary of the Navy, with the approval of the
President, to adopt and alter regulations and orders for control of
the Navy.
Page 336 U. S. 218
The Government claims that a regulation adopted pursuant to this
authority has been promulgated, [
Footnote 4] and that it vested the necessary power in this
court-martial to try petitioner. This authorized regulation, it is
contended, had the force of law,
Ex parte Reed,
100 U. S. 13,
100 U. S. 22,
and consequently supplants the prior statutes which, as
interpreted, had denied the jurisdiction here asserted. There has
been considerable argument as to whether the language of the Navy
regulation was sufficiently precise to endow it with the force of
law. Passing over this argument, however, we are not able to agree
that the Navy could in this manner acquire the expanded
court-martial jurisdiction it claimed. For we cannot construe 34
U.S.C. § 591 as permitting the Navy to extend its
court-martial jurisdiction beyond the limits Congress had fixed.
United States v. Symonds, 120 U. S.
46,
120 U. S.
49.
The regulation stands no better if it be considered merely as an
evidence of a revised naval interpretation of the Article. This
revised naval interpretation was given in 1932. Before that time,
both Army and Navy had, for more than half a century, acted on the
implicit assumption that discharged service men, whether reenlisted
or not, were no longer subject to court-martial power. The Attorney
General of the United States had proceeded on the same assumption.
And see 82 U. S. S.
219� States v. Kelly,@ 15 Wall. 34,
82
U. S. 36. Under these circumstances, little weight can
be given to the 1932 separate effort of the Navy to change the long
accepted understanding of its statutory court-martial power. For,
should this belated naval interpretation be accepted as correct,
there would be left outstanding an Army interpretation of its
statutory court-martial powers directly opposed to that of the
Navy. Since the Army and Navy court-martial powers depend on
substantially the same statutory foundations, the opposing
interpretations cannot both be right unless it be assumed that
Congress has left each free to determine its own court-martial
boundaries. We cannot assume that Congress intended a delegation of
such broad power in an area which so vitally affects the rights and
liberties of those who are now, have been, or may be associated
with the Nation's armed forces.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Court-martial jurisdiction to try petitioner depends on a part
of Article 8 (Second), which reaches only conduct of an offender
charged with "maltreatment of, any person subject to his orders."
Before the court-martial and in the District Court, petitioner
contended that the court-martial was without jurisdiction in his
case because the alleged maltreatment was of naval enlisted men who
were not "subject to his orders" by virtue of his United States
Navy obligations, but that whatever authority he then had over the
other Navy men came from duties assigned him by the Japanese as a
prisoner of war. Both the District Court and the Court of Appeals
rejected this suggested interpretation of the Article, and the
contention is not urged here.
[
Footnote 2]
The discussion of the 1863 Act showed that Congress rather
grudgingly conceded this comparatively slight expansion of the
court-martial power, apparently prompted by reports of particularly
abhorrent recent frauds by war contractors, such as the supply of
shells to the Army "filled not with the proper explosive materials
for use, but with sawdust." Cong.Globe, 37th Cong., 3d Sess. 955
(1863). This action of the 1863 Congress does not support an
argument that Congress has been quick in response to appeals for
expansion of court-martial jurisdiction.
See Duncan v.
Kahanamoku, 327 U. S. 304;
Ex parte
Milligan, 4 Wall. 2.
[
Footnote 3]
Since 1932, the Navy has consistently adhered to its revised
interpretation of Art. 8 (Second). In 1934, the Navy Department
incorporated this revised interpretation in an official Navy
publication, Naval Courts and Boards, and this interpretation
became § 344(a) of Naval Courts and Boards (1937 ed.).
[
Footnote 4]
The regulation appearing in the 1937 Naval Courts and Boards
§ 334 contained the following language:
". . . Except for offenses provided for in article 14, A.G.N., a
court-martial may not try an individual who has been formally
separated from the Navy and is no longer in the service unless
proceedings were instituted against him while he was in the
service. . . . Similarly, the Navy Department has passed cases as
legal in which enlisted men have been convicted by court martial of
offenses committed in a previous enlistment, although such offenses
were not provided for in article 14, A.G.N."