Closson v. United States ex rel. Armes

7 App. D.C. 460, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 3086
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJanuary 6, 1896
DocketNo. 522
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 App. D.C. 460 (Closson v. United States ex rel. Armes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Closson v. United States ex rel. Armes, 7 App. D.C. 460, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 3086 (D.C. Cir. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Morris

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This case is not that of a civilian ruthlessly imprisoned by arbitrary military authority. The appellee is an officer of the army of the United States, entitled to wear its uniform and to draw pay as such, and by express provision of the statute law of the United States for the government of the army, made subject to the rules and articles of war, and to trial by court-martial for any infraction of those ar[471]*471tides. Rev. Stats. U. S., sec. 1256. Nor is the force of the statute broken by the fact that the duties of a retired officer, such as the appellee is, are of an exceedingly limited character, being restricted substantially to drawing his pay, reporting his place of residence to the War Department monthly, and being assignable to duty at the Soldiers’ Home, and, at his own request, to duty as professor in any college; and that, subject to these restrictions, a retired officer of the army may enter into any private business into which he chooses to embark, not inconsistent with his duties to the United States. In the nature of things, some of the articles of war cannot apply to retired officers, for the reason that either in express terms or by necessary implication, they concern the duties of those in active service. But so far as the articles of war can be applicable to the retired officers of the army, the statute unquestionably makes these latter subject to them and to all the processes of the military law for all offences committed by them in violation of those articles.

Now it cannot reasonably be doubted that the charges against the appellee in this case are of offences against the military law, of which retired officers, as well as officers in the active service, may be equally guilty. These are: 1. Conduct to the prejudice of good order and military discipline ; and, 2. Conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman ; and the specification under each charge is the statement of the exceedingly intemperate and improper letter written by the appellee to the general commanding the army, which is set forth in full in the appellant’s return to the writ served upon him. If there were occasion to conjecture what the purpose of Congress was in holding retired officers of the army to trial by court-martial for infractions of military law, and what the offences were which it was contemplated they might commit, no better illustration could be afforded of the subject than the offences here charged against the appellee. It would be difficult to conceive a case tp which the statute would be more appropriate.

[472]*472The appellee, therefore, being an officer of the army, although on the retired list, and subject as such to trial by court-martial for violation of the articles of war, and the charges against him being for offences against those articles, such as have been stated, his arrest'to answer those charges was right and proper. Actual arrest, or some equivalent of it, is an essential prerequisite under our system of criminal jurisprudence to the exercise of jurisdiction by any court having cognizance of criminal causes. It is an elementary principle in our law that.no man is to be tried for crime in his absence. The arraignment of an accused person in court to hear the charge against him and to respond to it is essential to give validity to any proceeding thereon against him ; and the only mode known to our law to secure the presence of such accused person for the purpose is by arrest. It is very true that an accused person may come in and voluntarily surrender himself; and that thereupon a court may proceed without the usual preliminary arrest. But upon his surrender, he is in fact, and in contemplation of law, under arrest, and subject to detention. This is the law with reference to offences cognizable by the ordinary tribunals of the common law; and we see no reason why it should not be held to be the law with regard to offences cognizable by courts-martial. But we are not left to mere inference in this matter. For Article 65 of the articles of war specifically provides that “ officers charged with crime shall be arrested.”’ It is vain to argue that the term crime here is to be taken in the technical sense of a felony; for no such distinction is justified by the articles of war or by the dictates of reason.

It is very plain to. us, therefore, that the appellee, as a retired officer of the army of the United States, was subject to arrest and detention by the military authorities to answer before a court-martial on the charges preferred against him. Nor is this conclusion invalidated in the slightest degree by the proposition laid down by some of the writers on military law to this effect:

“ Arrest is not an essential preliminary to a military trial; [473]*473to give the court jurisdiction it is not necessary that the accused should have been arrested ; it is sufficient if he voluntarily, or in obedience to an order directing him to do so, appears and submits himself to trial.”

For this means no more than that an officer may, voluntarily, place himself under arrest, just as any person accused of offence under the common law, may come in and submit himself to authority without formal arrest .in the regular way. It would be absurd to conclude that arrest is improper, because the accused might come in voluntarily, or upon mere notice, and submit to trial without arrest.

But it is argued that the arrest of the appellee in this case was illegal, because he was taken by the military authorities from his own house and confined in military barracks belonging to the United States, which constituted the nearest military post. In this argument it seems to be forgotten that the appellee is not a civilian, but an officer of the army of the United States, subject to trial by court-martial, and to such arrest and detention as will secure his presence before such court-martial. It might well be questioned whether it would be proper for the military authorities to convert the appellee’s residence into a temporary prison for his detention and to station a guard before it. Such an exercise of the right of arrest might subject the military authorities to grave criticism and censure. If the military authorities had the right under the law and the articles of war to arrest the appellee, as we hold they had, and to detain him for trial before a court-martial, it is not apparent to us how the place of his detention can become a material question so as to affect the validity of the arrest.

Article 65 of the articles of war, already cited, provides as follows:

“ Officers charged with crime shall be arrested and confined to their barracks, quarters or tents, and deprived of their swords by the commanding officer. And any officer who leaves his confinement before he is set at liberty by [474]*474his commanding officer shall be dismissed from the service.”

There is likewise an army regulation made in pursuance of law which provides that—

“An arrest may be imposed by the order of the commanding officer, given by him in person or conveyed through his staff officer, either orally or in writing. The officer upon whom it is imposed will repair at once to his tent or quarters, and confine himself to the same until more extended limits have been'granted.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 App. D.C. 460, 1896 U.S. App. LEXIS 3086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/closson-v-united-states-ex-rel-armes-cadc-1896.