For opinions of the Court see
393
U.S. 802 and 42, 21 L. Ed. 2d 86.
Mr. Justice DOUGLAS, dissenting.
On April 10, 1968, the President deligated to the Secretary of
Defense power to activate units of the Ready Reserve. 1 On the
following day, after receiving
Page 393 U.S.
802 , 803
a similar delegation of authority to activate such units from
the Secretary of Defense,2 the Secretary of the Army called several
units of the Ready Reserves and their members to active duty.
[
Footnote 3] Applicants, who
are members of those units, are challenging that call to active
duty on the ground that it exceeds the authority of the Secretary
of the Army, and is a violation of their enlistment contracts.
After unsuccessfully seeking release from active duty by writ of
habeas corpus, and before being able to petition this Court for
certiorari, applicants were prepared for immediate shipment to
Vietnam. To preserve their avenues of review they sought and I
granted interim stays pending submission of the stay applications
to the full Court. [
Footnote 4]
The question now before the Court, therefore, is whether these
stays should continue pending our consideration of their petitions
for certiorari.
Questions underlying the merits, which have already produced
some judicial disagreement,5 are twofold:6 first, an alleged
usurpation by the Secretary of the
Page 393 U.S.
802 , 804
Army of the limited authority delegated him; second, a purported
conflict between the conditions of enlistment under which
applicants entered the reserves and the subsequent Act of Congress
calling them to active duty.
I.
First, Applicants argue that the Secretary of the Army
improperly called them to active duty for a full period of 24
months, without giving them credit for time already served on
active duty. They claim that, in doing so, he exceeded the power
granted him. To substantiate their claim, applicants rely on the
specific language of delegation, on the treatment of other
reservists similarly situated, and on the original intent of
Congress.
The language of delegation is in 101(e) of Pub.L. 89-687, Title
I, October 15, 1966, 80 Stat. 981, under which applicants were
called. Congress authorized the President to activate 'any unit of
the Ready Reserve of an armed force for a period not to exceed
twenty-four months.' The President in turn, delegated his authority
under subsection (e) to the Secretary of Defense to activate 'any
unit in the Ready Reserve ... for a period not to exceed
twenty-four months.'7 The Secretary of Defense then delegated his
authority by that same language to the Secretary of the Army. 8 The
Secretary of the Army, however, called 'the above units and
individual members thereof ... to active duty for twenty-four
consecutive months ....'9 Thus, instead of calling the above units
to active duty and granting their individual members credit for
time already served on active duty, he ordered the individuals
themselves to active duty for 24 consecutive months, irrespective
of any time
Page 393 U.S.
802 , 805
they may have already served on active duty. In doing so, he
seems to have gone beyond the above language of delegation which
referred exclusively to units. Moreover, he seems to have violated
the organic language of Pub.L. 89-687, Title I, 101(c), October 15,
1966, 80 Stat. 981, which provides that:
'A member ordered to active duty
under this section may be required to serve on active duty until
his total service on active duty or active duty for training equals
twenty-four months.'
To uphold the Secretary's order would seem to discriminate
against these applicants called to active duty as part of units
under 101(e) in favor of those reservists called to active duty as
individuals under 101( a) and (b), by withholding from the former
credit which is concededly accorded the latter. [
Footnote 10]
Congress authorized the President to recall the Ready Reserve
for two stated purposes: First, to free the President to mobilize
those men without forcing him to declare a national emergency;11
second, and more relevant to
Page 393 U.S.
802 , 806
this inquiry, to make the active duty obligation of those who
enlist in the reserves commensurate with that of those who are
drafted. It was felt that young men were enlisting in the reserves
'to escape active military service in South Vietnam';12 that
Congress had allowed 'the 6-month [ reserve] training program to
become 'an umbrella' for avoiding active service at a time when we
are daily inducting large numbers of men into the active forces to
fight in Vietnam';13 and, therefore, that 'it was only fair that
these reservists be put on the same basis for service in Vietnam as
new enlistees and draftees.'14 Thus, it seems that Congress
intended to subject reservists to the same obligation for two-year
active duty as is borne by draftees. To do so, it allowed the
President to call them for the balance between the time they had
already served on active duty and the outer time limit of 24
months.
The President and the Secretary of Defense apparently read the
Act of October 15, 1966, as I do; for each of them activated only
units of the reserve for 24 months. And a unit, of course, can
serve 24 months even though its original members, having already
served some time, are sooner discharged. The Secretary of the Army,
on the other hand, has subjected these reservists to an additional
obligation of 24 months over and above time already served.
II.
Second. The question just discussed covers, so far as we can
tell from the fragmentary pleadings and findings, all of the
appellants. The second question reaches
Page 393 U.S.
802 , 807
some of the appellants, but just how many we do not know. The
record is not very revealing. But on oral argument, various
attorneys stated that the contracts of enlistment very. According
to these informants, some provide for the rendering of active duty
'in the event of a mobilization or emergency.' Others provide for
active duty in 'time of war or of national emergency declared by
Congress' as provided in 10 U.S.C. 672. It should not lightly be
concluded that a contract has been unilaterally changed by one
party,15 or that the United States as a party will breach its
contract. Cf. Smyth v. United States,
302 U.S. 329.
Where the enlistment contract provides for service in the event
of 'a mobilization or emergency,' I would assume that a wide
variety of events might encompass each term. Indeed the very
summoning of reserves to active duty might itself be sufficient to
constitute the condition subsequent. But where he enlistment
contract contains a provision that active duty is only required in
'time of war or of national emergency declared by Congress,' I
would, if possible, read the Act of October 15, 1966, to preserve
that promise solemnly made to the reservists and not to cover those
who were specifically required by contract to serve only 'in time
of war or national emergency declared by Congress.'
I assume that it is within the power of Congress to change
existing law and no type of estoppel interferes with its law-making
power. See Stone, J., concurring, Perry v. United States,
294 U.S.
330, 359, 438. The disappointment realized by those who relied
only on general law but did not have that explicit promise from
their government in contract form is disappointment of the kind
shared by all citizens in a society of shifting law.
Page 393 U.S.
802 , 808
Where a reservist, however, has counted on a declaration of war
or of an emergency before he is called up and has a contract
calling for reserve duty on those precise terms, I would, if
possible, readsubsequent legislation so as to preserve the promise
made in that enlistment contract. Cf. Woods v. Stone,
333 U.S.
472, 481, 628 ( dissenting opinion). 10 U.S.C. 673 subjects
reservists to call '[i]n time of national emergency declared by the
President after January 1, 1953, or when otherwise authorized by
law.' The Congress has not yet declared either war or national
emergency within the meaning of 672; nor has the President declared
a national emergency within the meaning of 673. As stated by
Senator Russell:16
'Mr. President, I cannot see how any
realistic answer can be raised against this amendment [calling up
the reserves]. They say, 'You can call up the units.' In the first
place, it cannot be done, because the President of the United
States has to declare a national emergency, and very naturally he
does not want to declare a national emergency at this time after we
have gone this far without it. ... [ A] declaration of national
emergency would make us look ridiculous in the eyes of the world-to
declare a state of emergency in regard to a third-rate power like
North Vietnam.'
Thus, the only other provision which 672-673 include as a
'condition prescribed by law' for activating the reserves under the
second type of enlistment contract described above lies in the
phrase 'or when otherwise authorized by law.'
The phrase in 673 'when otherwise authorized by law' is not
without meaning. It plainly refers to those additional
conditions-other than war or national emer-
Page 393 U.S.
802 , 809
gency-upon which members of the reserve can be called to active
duty. [
Footnote 17]
One more issue remains. It has been suggested that 10 U.S.C. 263
gives Congress the power to recall the reserves not just in time of
war or national emergency, but 'whenever needed for the national
security.' No one, however, disputes that power. For the issue is
not the plenary power of Congress under the Constitution, but how
legislation shall be read in order, if possible, to avoid creating
a 'credibility gap' between the people and their government.
III.
'The war power of the United States,
like its other powers ... is subject to applicable constitutional
limitations.' Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries Co.,
251 U.S.
146, 156, 108. For that reason, this Court will exercise
jurisdiction to review criminal adjudication by the military of
civilian (Reid v. Covert,
354 U.S. 1, 77 S. Ct. 1222)
and military (Burns v. W lson,
346 U.S. 137) personnel
alike and to review administrative action by the military. Thus, in
Orloff v. Willoughby,
345 U.S. 83, 73 S. Ct.
534, where a military doctor complained that the Secretary of the
Army had wrongfully denied him medical detail, we were unanimous in
agreeing that we had jurisdiction to review the power of the
Secretary; that he had no power to deny petitioner such medical
assignments; and that we were prepared to prevent him from doing
so. Similarly here, where the Secretary purportedly has no power to
recall reservists whom he promised to activate only
Page 393 U.S.
802 , 810
in war or national emergency, we have jurisdiction to prevent
him from doing so, at least where Congress has not precluded such
jurisdiction. See Harmon v. Brucker,
355 U.S. 579, 581-583,
434-435.
I would continue the stays until the merits of this important
controversy can be resolved.
Footnotes
Footnote 1 Exec.Order No.
11,406, 33 Fed.Reg. 5735 (1968).
Footnote 2 Memorandum for
Secretaries of the Military epartments, April 11, 1968, as cited in
Brief for Appellees at 5, Morse et al. v. Boswell et al.,
401 F.2d
544 (4th Cir., August 26, 1968).
Footnote 3 Joint Message
form DA 859314, April 11, 1968, as cited in Brief for Appellees,
id.
Footnote 4 Applicant in the
Winters case, Winters v. United States,
390 U.S. 993 had been
called to duty as an individual rather than as part of a unit; and
unlike applicants in these cases, apparently did not challenge the
authority of the Secretary of the Army to call him for a full 24
months of active duty irrespective of time already served on
active
Footnote 5 Compare Winters
v. United States, 281 F.Supp, 289 (E.D.N.Y.), aff'd per curiam,
390 F.2d
879 (2d Cir. 1968), with Gion v. McNamara, Civ. No. 67-1563
(C.D. Calif., January 9, 1968).
Footnote 6 Applicants have
also raised other questions which I consider too unsubstantial to
discuss.
Footnote 7 Supra, n. 1
(emphasis added).
Footnote 8 Supra, n. 2
(emphasis added).
Footnote 9 Supra, n. 3
(emphasis added).
Footnote 10 In enacting
Pub.L. 89-687, 101, Congress made a distinction between reservists
called as individuals and reservists called as units. That
distinction however related only to its desire to keep reserve
units as much intact as possible; consequently, it only authorized
the call of those individual reservists who were not attached to
such units, who had not been participating atisfactorily in their
present units, or who had had less than 120 days of active duty
experience. The distinction between individuals and units would
seem to have nothing to do with the question whether reservists
called as part of units should be credited for time already served
on active duty. In making permanent the President's temporary
authority to activate for 24 months those individuals not
participating satisfactorily in their reserve units, Congress
reaffirmed its intention to credit them for time already
Footnote 11 112 Cong.Rec.
19718 (1966) (remarks of Senator Richard Russell, Chairman of
Senate Armed Services Committee, and co-sponsor of the
amendment).
Footnote 12 112 Cong.Rec.
19724 (1966) (remarks of Senator Lausche).
Footnote 13 112 Cong.Rec.
19720 (1966) (remarks of Senator Stuart Symington, member of Senate
Armed Services Committee).
Footnote 14 112 Cong.Rec.
19500 (1966) (remarks of Senator Saltonstall, ranking minority
member of the Senate Armed Services Committee and co- sponsor of
the amendment) (emphasis added).
Footnote 15 Cf. Bell v.
United States,
366
U.S. 393; Perry v. United States,
294 U.S. 330; United
Footnote 16 112 Cong.Rec.
19726 (1966) (Chairman of Senate Armed Services
Footnote 17 Under 10
U.S.C. 672(b), a reservist may be called to active duty at any time
for a period of 15 days. Pursuant to 10 U.S.C. 679 a reservist may
sign an active agreement by which he obligates himself to serve at
any time on active duty that he is called; furthermore, that
obligation may be extended beyond the expiration date of the
agreement in times of war or national emergency. 10 U.S.C.
672(d).