In Re Yamashita

327 U.S. 1, 66 S. Ct. 340, 90 L. Ed. 499, 1946 U.S. LEXIS 3090
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 4, 1946
Docket61 Misc. and 672
StatusPublished
Cited by196 cases

This text of 327 U.S. 1 (In Re Yamashita) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Yamashita, 327 U.S. 1, 66 S. Ct. 340, 90 L. Ed. 499, 1946 U.S. LEXIS 3090 (1946).

Opinions

Me. Chief Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the Court.

No. 61 Miscellaneous is an application for leave to file a petition for writs of habeas corpus and prohibition in this Court. No. 672 is a petition for certiorari to review an order of the Supreme Court of the Commonwealth of the Philippines (28 U. S. C. § 349), denying petitioner’s application to that court for writs of habeas corpus and prohibition. As both applications raise substantially like questions, and because of the importance and novelty of some of those presented, we set the two applications down for oral argument as one dase.

[5]*5From the petitions and supporting papers it appears that prior to September 3,1945, petitioner was the Commanding General of the Fourteenth Army Group of the Imperial Japanese Army in the Philippine Islands. On that date he surrendered to and became a prisoner of war of the United States Army Forces in Baguio, Philippine Islands. On September 25th, by order of respondent, Lieutenant General Wilhelm D. Styer, Commanding General of the United States Army Forces, Western Pacific, which command embraces the Philippine Islands, petitioner was served with a charge prepared by the Judge Advocate General’s Department of the Army, purporting to charge petitioner with a violation of the law of war. On October 8,1945, petitioner, after pleading not guilty to the charge, was held for trial before a military commission of five Army officers appointed by order of General Styer. The order appointed six Army officers, all lawyers, as defense counsel. Throughout the proceedings which followed, including those before this Court, defense counsel have demonstrated their professional skill and resourcefulness and their proper zeal for the defense with which they were charged.

On the same date a bill of particulars was filed by the prosecution, and the commission heard a motion made in petitioner’s behalf to dismiss the charge on the ground that it failed to state a violation of the law of war. On October 29th the commission was reconvened, a supplemental bill of particulars was filed, and the motion to dismiss was denied. The trial then proceeded until its conclusion on December 7, 1945, the commission hearing two hundred and eighty-six witnesses, who gave over three thousand pages of testimony. • On that date petitioner was found guilty of the offense as charged and sentenced to death by hanging.

The petitions for habeas gorpus set up that the detention of petitioner for the purpose of the trial was unlawful for [6]*6reasons which are now urged as showing that the military commission was without lawful authority or jurisdiction to place petitioner on trial, as follows:

(a) That the military commission which tried and convicted petitioner was not lawfully created, and that no military commission to try petitioner for violations of the law of war .could lawfully be convened after the cessation of hostilities between the armed forces of the United States and Japan;

(b) That the charge preferred against petitioner fails to charge him with a violation of the law of war;

(c) That the commission was without authority and jurisdiction to try and convict petitioner because the order governing the procedure of the commission permitted the admission in evidence of depositions, affidavits and hearsay and opinion evidence, and because the commission’s rulings admitting such evidence were in violation of the 25th and 38th Articles of War (10 U. S. C. §§ 1496, 1509). and the Geneva Convention (47 Stat. 2021), and deprived petitioner of a fair trial.in violation of the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment;

(d) That the commission was without authority and jurisdiction in the premises because of'the failure to give advance notice of petitioner’s trial to the neutral powei representing the interests of Japan as a belligerent as required by Article 60' of the Geneva Convention, 47 Stat. 2021,2051.

On the same grounds the petitions for writs of prohibition set up that the commission is without authority to proceed with the trial.

The Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands, after hearing argument, denied the petition for habeas corpus presehted to it, on the ground, among others, that its jurisdiction-was limitéd to an inquiry as to the jurisdiction of the commission, to place petitioner on trial for the offense charged, and that the commission, being validly consti[7]*7tuted by the order of General Styer, had jurisdiction oyer the person of petitioner and over the trial for the offense charged.

In Ex parte Quirin, 317 U. S. 1, we had occasion to consider at length the sources and nature of the authority to create military commissions for the trial of enemy combatants for offenses against the law of war. We there pointed out that Congress, in the exercise of the power conferred upon it by Article I, § 8, Cl. 10 of the Constitution to “define and punish . . . Offences against the Law of Nations . . .,” of which the law of war is a part, had by the Articles of War (10 TJ. S. C. §§ 1471-1593) recognized the “military commission” appointed by military command, as it had previously existed in United States Army practice, as an appropriate tribunal for the trial and punishment of offenses against the law of war. Article 15 declares that the “provisions of these articles conferring jurisdiction upon courts martial shall not be construed as depriving military commissions ... or other military tribunals of concurrent jurisdiction in respect of offenders or offenses that by statute or by the law of war may be triable by such military commissions . . . or other military tribunals.” See a similar provision of the Espionage Act of 1917,50 U. S. C. § 38. Article 2 includes among those persons subject to the Articles of War the personnel of our own military establishment. But this, as Article 12 indicates, does not exclude from the class of persons subject to trial by military commissions “any other person who by the law of war is subject to trial by military tribunals,” and who, under Article 12, may be tried by court-martial, or under Article 15 by military commission.

We further pointed out that Congress, by sanctioning trial of enemy combatants for violations of the law of war by military commission, had not attempted to codify the law of war or to mark its precise boundaries. Instead, by Article 15 it had incorporated, by reference, as within the [8]*8preexisting jurisdiction of military commissions created by appropriate military command, all offenses which are defined as such by the law of war, and which may constitutionally be included within that jurisdiction. It thus adopted the system of military common law applied by military tribunals so far as it should be recognized and deemed applicable by the courts, and as further defined and supplemented by the Hague Convention, to which the United States and the Axis powers were parties.

We also emphasized in Ex parte Quirin; as we do here, that on application for habeas corpus we are not concerned with the guilt or innocence of the petitioners. We consider here only the lawful power of the commission to try the petitioner for the offense charged.

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Bluebook (online)
327 U.S. 1, 66 S. Ct. 340, 90 L. Ed. 499, 1946 U.S. LEXIS 3090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-yamashita-scotus-1946.