Itzcovitz v. SELECTIVE SERVICE LOCAL BOARD NUMBER 6, NY

301 F. Supp. 168, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9400
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedMay 7, 1969
Docket68 Civ. 4312
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 301 F. Supp. 168 (Itzcovitz v. SELECTIVE SERVICE LOCAL BOARD NUMBER 6, NY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Itzcovitz v. SELECTIVE SERVICE LOCAL BOARD NUMBER 6, NY, 301 F. Supp. 168, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9400 (S.D.N.Y. 1969).

Opinion

OPINION

HERLANDS, District Judge:

By this motion, plaintiff seeks to enjoin pendente lite two federal agencies: the Selective Service System and the Immigration and Naturalization Service of the Department of Justice.

With respect to the Selective Service System, plaintiff asks this Court to declare his outstanding induction order invalid and to direct that he be reclassified as an alien exempt from compulsory military service pursuant to a treaty between the United States and Argentina. The branch of the motion is granted in part.

With respect to the Immigration and Naturalization Service, plaintiff requests the Court to restrain that agency from impeding plaintiff’s return to the United States and to order it to permit him to resume his permanent residence in this country. This branch of the motion is denied.

The facts relevant to the issues posed by this motion are recited in this opinion. Except as otherwise expressly indicated, the facts are essentially undisputed.

Plaintiff is an Argentine citizen, born in 1943. He served one' year in the Argentine armed forces and received an honorable discharge.

On March 27, 1966, with his parents and sister, he was admitted to the United States on a permanent resident immigration visa.

As required, plaintiff registered with Local Board No. 6 of the Selective Service System, located in Manhattan, on September 27, 1966. He was classified 1-A by Local Board No. 6, on October 20, 1966; he received such notice on October 24, 1966; and he took no appeal from such classification. Plaintiff reported for a physical examination, was found acceptable for military service on December 6, 1966, and completed, on January 24, 1967, a questionnaire which did not reflect any disability or any ground for exemption or disability other than the one which is involved in this suit.

On March 29, 1967, plaintiff received an order to report for induction into the United States armed forces on April 12, 1967. This order had been issued and mailed by Local Board No. 6 on March 27, 1967.

On the day plaintiff received his induction notice, he communicated with the Argentine Consul General in New York, Señor Carlos de Posada, and requested information about his military obligation to the United States. Señor de Posada informed plaintiff that an existing treaty between Argentina and the United States exempted plaintiff, as an Argentine citizen, from any military service in the United States armed forces. 1 Señor de Posado stated he would obtain, prior to the date set for plaintiff’s induction, exemption papers for plaintiff to complete.

In April, 1967, uncertainty surrounded the legal right of a treaty alien to an *172 exemption from military service. As a factual matter, however, at that period, Selective Service did follow a procedure whereby a resident treaty alien could elect not to serve in the United States armed forces. 2 Thus, in accordance with *173 recognized procedure, the Argentine Consul General communicated with the Argentine Embassy in Washington, D. C. about Itzcovitz’s desire to be exempted. The Embassy, on or before April 7, 1967, made a request of the Department of State for the exemption forms.

Mr. H. Rowan Gaither, an attorney in the Office of the Legal Advisor to the State Department, called the office of the Deputy Director of the Selective Service System, on April 7, 1967 and requested that office to forward the necessary forms to Local Board No. 6 for plaintiff to complete.

In his affidavit sworn to December 20, 1968, Gaither states that, after his call of April 7, 1967, he was uncertain whether Selective Service would forward the forms they administratively required of aliens seeking to avoid military service, in view of their internal administrative policy of not transmitting these forms unless they could reach the local hoard, through state headquarters, by regular mail. Nor, Gaither states, was he certain, if Selective Service did transmit the forms, whether they would arrive at the local board prior to the date set for plaintiff’s induction.

As a result of this uncertainty, Gaither called the Argentine Embassy on April 10, 1967, and told someone of the possible difficulty in securing an exemption for plaintiff. He suggested that the Embassy contact Itzcovitz and advise him to. check with Local Board No. 6 on April 11, to see whether the forms had arrived. Gaither states that he also suggested that Itzcovitz be told that, if the forms did not arrive, he was required to report for induction, and, in that event, Gaither would make arrangements to have plaintiff separated from the military.

Gaither alleges that the Argentine Embassy was fully aware that Selective Service required that exemption from military service be claimed prior to the induction date, and that, if the treaty alien did not “communicate” his desire for exemption prior to the induction date, the individual was obliged to report for induction and that the Department of State would, at that time, intercede and obtain his separation directly from the Department of Defense.

On April 11, 1967, in response to inquiries made by counsel plaintiff had retained for this purpose, the State Department stated that they would communicate with plaintiff’s counsel and inform him whether plaintiff would have to report for induction.

On the morning of April 12th, exemption papers had not as yet been received by Local Board No. 6 for plaintiff to complete. Nor did Itzcovitz report to the induction center, as ordered. Mr. Fred Smith, a State Department officer, spoke to plaintiff’s counsel and informed him that plaintiff’s local board was being advised that they should not report plain *174 tiff as a delinquent, and that the State Department was giving due consideration to plaintiff’s claim of exemption. On the same day, Mr. Gomez of the Argentine Embassy informed the local board that plaintiff had not reported for induction, but that plaintiff was requesting, through the Argentine Embassy, to be exempted from service.

Gaither was also informed that plaintiff did not report for induction. He too telephoned Local Board No. 6 on April 12th, asked it not to classify plaintiff as a delinquent, stating that he believed the difficulties relating to plaintiff’s status were a result of a problem not of plaintiff’s making and that, with plaintiff’s cooperation, these difficulties would be resolved. 3

Apparently before he called the local board, Gaither also spoke to plaintiff that day. He states that, at that time, he explained to Itzeovitz that he planned to arrange for plaintiff to consent to induction, and that discharge would follow shortly.

Thereafter, Gaither arranged with Local Board No. 6 to have plaintiff report for induction on May 12,1967. Apparently, before making final the discharge arrangements through the Defense Department, Gaither contacted the Argentine Embassy and informed it of the new induction date and of his plans for facilitating separation.

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Bluebook (online)
301 F. Supp. 168, 1969 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9400, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/itzcovitz-v-selective-service-local-board-number-6-ny-nysd-1969.