Antrim's Case

1 F. Cas. 1062, 1 E.D. Pa. 617, 20 Leg. Int. 300, 5 Phila. 278, 1863 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 9, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 F. Cas. 1062 (Antrim's Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Antrim's Case, 1 F. Cas. 1062, 1 E.D. Pa. 617, 20 Leg. Int. 300, 5 Phila. 278, 1863 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55 (E.D. Pa. 1863).

Opinion

GADWALADER, District Judge.

The provost marshal of the proper district returns to the habeas corpus that the petitioner was duly drafted and notified; appeared before the board of enrolment asking exemption as the only son of a widow dependent on his labor for support, [see 2 Stat. 731, § 2;] was duly heard upon his allegation and evidence, and that his claim of exemption was finally disallowed; that he subsequently appeared and reported himself for duty; received his uniform; asked and obtained leave of absence for a time not quite expired when the return was made; and. though not in the respondent’s actual custody, was still under his control.

No question as to the effect of the occurrences posterior to the disallowance of the claim of exemption is properly raised by tbis return. These occurrences are not so stated in it that a traverse of them is necessary. Whether proof of them will ultimately be receivable against the petitioner, if proofs on his part of his alleged right shall have been admitted in the first instance, may be a question to arise hereafter. In the meantime, the- question of the sufficiency of such a statement of these occurrences in a return is different. As acts of mere submission to military authority, where obedience would have been compellable, they can add nothing to the effect otherwise attributable to the decision of the hoard. His temporary acquiescence in it was no waiver of right. But, if the occurrences are mentioned for the purpose of showing that, notwithstanding his previous claim of exemption, he after-wards waived any right of exemption that he may have had, so as voluntarily to become a soldier under the draft, the voluntary waiver should have been directly averred. In a return, a statement of occurrences merely tending, more or less, to [1063]*1063prove such a fact, is not of equivalent effect. Sometimes, indeed, a fact consists of a series of connected, or mutually dependent, occurrences. They may then be stated in detail. $ut such a specification of the details of a fact is different from a mere specification of evidence, tending to prove it The proposition or fact relied on, -whether stated in detail or in that general form which is ordinarily more proper, should be set forth substantively so that the statement, if true, shall absolutely suffice in law. The occurrences mentioned in this latter part of the return, under the most favorable view of it, may or may not, independently of those previously stated, suffice to establish a waiver of right. This part of the return, therefore, does not require a traverse. The objections to it might not apply to returns properly framed in order to meet cases of drafted men who, after proper notice, have omitted to appear before the board and claim exemption, or of those appearing and claiming it, but omitting to comply with proper regulations of the board, of which sufficient information has been given. To cases of drafted men who, after the board’s disallowance of their claims of exemption, have had fair time and opportunity to obtain elsewhere the judicial investigation of their alleged rights of exemption, and have not availed themselves of such opportunity, returns might perhaps be so adapted as to prevent unnecessary judicial interference with consummated military organizations embracing such parties.

The question upon the return is whether the military board’s disallowance of the claim of exemption must be traversed; in other words, whether this board’s decision that there was no right of exemption precludes inquiry here as to the existence of the right. This question depends upon the effect of the fourteenth section of the act of-3d March, 1863, c. 75, which enacts “that all persons drafted and claiming exemption from military duty on account of disability or any other cause, shall present their claims to be exempted to the board, whose decision shaü be final.’’ [Section 14, 12 Stat 733.] Cognizance of the application fpr exemption, if taken, must be judicial, however special the jurisdiction or summary the proceeding. The point in question is whether the decision is or is not conclusive elsewhere as to the right of exemption. This depends on the effect of the word final. It certainly imports that the decision of the board shall not undergo executive or other revision. The decision is, relatively to military jurisdiction, conclusive as well as final. Therefore a decision of the board in favor of the claim of exemption, is necessarily conclusive as to the right of exemption. The question will be whether the effect of the words should be extended so as to make a decision against the claim equally conclusive against the right The consideration of this question will involve the inquiry whether an enactment that the decision of such a tribunal shall be thus conclusive, would be constitutional.

The act of 3d March, 1863, has provided for the organization of an exclusively national military force by enrolment, draft, and, where necessary, impressment; that is to say, compulsion to serve. The words of this act, which might otherwise be of doubtful import, must be interpreted so that usurpation of power, beyond the legislative authority conferred by the constitution, may not be unnecessarily imputed to congress. The case has been commendably argued on this point, upon the words of the constitution and of the statute, without any such references to congressional debates, or to debates of those who drafted the constitution, or of those who proposed or discussed its early amendment, as, of late, have, perhaps, been too frequent. Such references to extrinsic matter, it is true, are not always improper. They are sometimes of legal assistance in explaining the meaning of words which are to be interpreted. This meaning may depend upon some relation of ■ the words to occurrences of which historical memorials ■ are preserved in the reports of cotemporaneous discussions. Where, moreover, the meaning of a word is doubtful, or has undergone change since the date of its use, the language of such discussions may sometimes serve, in some degree, the purpose of a glossary. Such cases are, however, not exceptions from, but, on the contrary, exemplify the rule that the intention is ascertainable from the words only. Under this rule, the proper inquiry is, not what may, from extrinsic sources, appear to have been intended by the men whose words are in question, but what was the legal meaning and application of the words when used. The rule applies where a single person has been the lawgiver, and with greater force of reason where a numerous assembly has made a law; and is applicable especially to the constitution of the United States and the amendments. This constitution was, when finished by its framers, as Ch. J. Marshall said, “a mere proposal without obligation or pretension to it.” [M’Culloch v. State of Maryland,] 4 Wheat. [17 U. S.] 404. We read in the subsequent proposal by the first congress, of amendments that the conventions of a number of the states had, in adopting the constitution, expressed a desire for “declaratory and restrictive” additions, (1 Stat. 07); and Oh. J. Marshall has reminded us that almost every convention had recommended such amendments. [Barron v. Mayor, etc., of Baltimore,] 7 Pet. [32 U. S.] 250. The omission to specify which amendments were declaratory and which restrictive enabled persons who differed most widely in opinion as to the effect of the original constitution to concur in adopting ten of the series of [1064]*1064amendments proposed. Otherwise they would not have been adopted. The hope of reconciling the differences of opinion was in future judicial decision upon the constitution and amendments without any consideration of extrinsic matters.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 F. Cas. 1062, 1 E.D. Pa. 617, 20 Leg. Int. 300, 5 Phila. 278, 1863 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 55, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/antrims-case-paed-1863.