Goodwin v. Laird

317 F. Supp. 863, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11272
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. California
DecidedJune 19, 1970
DocketC-70 808
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 317 F. Supp. 863 (Goodwin v. Laird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goodwin v. Laird, 317 F. Supp. 863, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11272 (N.D. Cal. 1970).

Opinion

ORDER GRANTING PETITION FOR WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS

ZIRPOLI, District Judge.

Petitioner was inducted in September, 1969, and filed an application for discharge as a conscientious objector in December, 1969. His company commander recommended disapproval of petitioner’s application. His battalion executive officer recommended disapproval stating that petitioner’s beliefs were not primarily religious, but were based on “introspection and personal experience.” The brigade commander and the commanding general of Fort Ord recommended approval. Aside from the recommendation of the unit commander none of the above persons have any authority under the applicable regulation to determine whether or not petitioner satisfies the requirements for a conscientious objector status. 1

The army regulations give primary authority in determining a serviceman’s claim of conscientious objection to the “chaplain” and to “an officer in the grade of 0-3, or higher, who is knowledgeable in policies and procedures relating to conscientious objector matters.” See AR 635-20, paras, c and d; Miller v. Laird, 318 F.Supp. 1401 (N.D.Cal. 4/28/70).

The chaplain found petitioner sincere in his religious convictions. The hearing officer also recommended approval and specifically found that petitioner’s beliefs had become fixed as a “direct result of basic combat training.” These two recommendations would normally justify a conclusion that petitioner should be discharged pursuant to Army Regulation 635-20. However, here the Conscientious Objector Review Board disapproved the application holding, contrary to the 0-3 hearing officer, that petitioner’s views became fixed prior to his entry into the active military service.

After reviewing the file, the court finds that there was no basis in fact for the Board’s disapproval. The Board based its decision on four factors :

(1) Petitioner’s religious training from the ages of five to twelve;

(2) His essay on Thoreau and civil disobedience written while in college;

(3) The character references which point out petitioner’s “long-standing respect for life”;

(4) A letter from his brother which stated the following:

“For the last several years I have discussed the various ideas involved in *865 Will’s decision to reject service in the Armed Forces: war, killing, universal brotherhood, and harmony with nature. I have always found my brother to honestly believe in the brotherhood of man, and that killing for any reason save immediate self defense, is an intolerable thing in man, a thing to fight in oneself. * * * Just prior to his entry into the Army, my brother and I discussed the idea of applying for a CO status.”

The first three grounds given by the Board are built on fallacious reasoning. The fact that a person had some religious training in his background does not necessarily lead one to the position of a conscientious objector. Just because petitioner, at the age of 12, believed in the Sixth Commandment does not mean that at the age of 21 he would apply for a 1-0 deferment. And the fact that petitioner thought about the principles of civil disobedience and wrote a paper in college regarding Thoreau does not lead to the conclusion that he was at that point in time a conscientious objector. If the above contentions of the Board were true, then no person who had been brought up with a religious or anti-militarist background could apply for a conscientious objector discharge. The very facts needed to qualify a person for discharge would become the basis for a finding that his beliefs were fixed prior to entry in the service. Such a scheme cuts against the very purpose of the regulations; 2 that is to allow the discharge of men with already existing general beliefs “growing out of experiences prior to entering military service, but which did not become fixed until entry into the service. * * * ” AR 635-20 para. 3b (emphasis added).

The fourth reason given by the Board rests on the false psychological premise that the intellect and the emotion are separable and distinct entities which do not inter-relate, and therefore, late crystallization is proof of insincerity. The Board points to the brother’s letter in which he states that petitioner and he had discussed the possibility of a conscientious objector claim prior to induction. However, the Board does not give weight to the rest of the letter which states that prior to induction petitioner did not file a claim because “ [h] is feelings then were that he would not do so. I believe he decided this without the full realization of what war and killing would do to his conscience. I believe also that he never realized that he might actually have to participate in war. In the fifth week of Will’s BCT at Fort Ord I visited him and I believe he had come to the full realization that he was being trained to kill men and to make war. I believe his AIT assignment to the infantry was the final eye opener to this fact.”

The above statements give meaning to the notion of “crystallization”, for they show that a man can intellectually generalize about theories but often must go through actual experiences before feeling the emotional compulsion that causes him through his conscience to act according to his beliefs.

With regard to petitioner it was only after the actual experience of basic training 3 that he was able to state sin *866 cerely that, “[I]f I were to refuse an order for war, I am sure the penalties would be great. However, I cannot refuse the order of God and my conscience, the penalties would be overwhelming. My highest duty is to the law of God and that law requires that I honor life, especially human life, above all things.”

“Crystallization” reflects a very subtle psychological process. For some persons just reading and discussing is enough to cause them to make the mental and emotional commitment to oppose participation in war. Other persons, like petitioner, need to go through the actual experience of combat training, the experience of learning to handle and to use weapons of destruction before their beliefs crystallize into commitment.

Given the imprecise psychological process at work the court should be careful not to interpret such crystallization process in a way which denies relief to sincere conscientious objectors. 4 In the case before the court the petitioner’s application states a prima facie case; he has adequately explained how and why his beliefs became fixed after entry to the service, and such explanation is supported by the chaplain implicitly and the hearing officer explicitly. The reasons given by the Board only point out that petitioner’s claim grew “out of experiences prior to entering military service * * * ” (AR 635-20 para. 3b) which is consistent with requirements for discharge. If the Board’s reasons are interpreted to mean that petitioner’s views did not crystallize in the Army, they are unsupported by the record and are based on a misunderstanding of the regulation's use of the term “fixed.”

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Bluebook (online)
317 F. Supp. 863, 1970 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodwin-v-laird-cand-1970.