Jeffers v. Fair

33 Ga. 347
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 Ga. 347 (Jeffers v. Fair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffers v. Fair, 33 Ga. 347 (Ga. 1862).

Opinion

By the Court.

Jenkins, J., delivering the opinion.

The sole question presented by this record for the consideration of the Court, is the Constitutionality of two Acts passed by the Congress of the Confederate States; the one approved April 16th, 1862, entitled “An Act to further provide for the public defensethe other approved September 27th, 1862, entitled “An Act to amend an Act entitled an Act to further provide for the public defense.” From those Acts alone the defendant in error derives his authority to hold the plaintiff in custody, whilst the latter, admitting that he is within the purview, insists that they are unconstitutional, and the authority claimed under them void.

It is enough to say of those Acts, in this connection, that they authorize the President of the Confederate States to call out and to place in the military service of the Confederate States for three years, unless the war shall have sooner ended, all white men who are residents of the Confederate States, between certain ages, who are not legally exempt from military service.

The Court is impressed with the importance of the question, and the responsibility involved in its decision, have not failed to give it careful and anxious consideration.

The inquiry and course of argument pursued, bring under review the following clauses of the Constitution of the Confederate States. They are contained in the 8th section of the 1st article, and numbered as herein noted: The Congress shall have power: 12. To raise and support armies; but no appropriation of money to that use shall be for a longer term than two years; 15. To provide for the calling forth the militia to execute the laws of the Confederate States, to suppress insurrections and repel invasions; 16. To provide for organizing, arming and disciplining the militia, and for governing such part of them as may be employed in the service of the Confederate States, reserving to the States, respectively, the appointment of the officers and the authority of training the militia according to the discipline prescribed by Congress; 18. To make all laws which shall [349]*349be necessary and proper for carrying into execution the foregoing powers, and all other powers vested by this Constitution in the Government of the Confederate States, or in any department thereof.

Before considering tlfe extent and proper construction of the grant of “power to raise armies ” contained in the 12th clause above recited, we must distinguish between it and the grant of “power to call forth the militia,” etc., contained in the 15th clause.

In the argument presented against the constitutionality of the Acts in question, we are called upon to construe these two clauses together as parts of the same grant. "We regard them as wholly distinct. Armies raised under the 12th clause are instrumentalities whereby Congress executes the power to carry on war, whether offensive or defensive, whether on our own or foreign territory.

The individuals composing armies are separated from the mass of our population, and withdrawn from the ordinary civil pursuits during the time of their enlistment, whether in peace or in war. Armies are at all times and in all places, subject to the Government of the Confederate States; they are at no time and under no circumstances, subject to any State authority. The militia may be defined a body of citizens enrolled for military discipline. They are enrolled by State authority with reference to State boundaries; they are organized, officered and disciplined by State authority, the Confederate Congress having authority, (for the sake of uniformity) only to prescribe the mode of organization and discipline. They are not separated from the mass of their fellow-citizens, nor withdrawn from their ordinary pursuits, save occasionally for drill or for special and usually short service in the field. For such special service they may be called forth either by the authority of the State wherein they are enrolled, or by that of the Confederate States; but the power of the latter to call forth is limited to three special emergencies, viz: to execute the laws of the Confederate States, to suppress insurrections, to repel invasion's. It is apparent, then, that they cannot be used in offensive war on foreign soil.

[350]*350Armies raised under the 12th clause constitute the physical force, in conjunction with the navy, mainly relied upon for national defense, and exclusively for offensive, extra-territorial war in the assertion of national rights. The militia, when called forth, are citizen soldiery; designed to be used in the special emergencies, at points where there may be no portion, or an inadequate portion of the regular army.

They are not intended at any time to be merged in any army of the Confederate States, nor to be substituted for it; but as a separate organization to come in aid of it. Doubtless the constitutional provisions relative to the militia, were adopted in furtherance of the American policy of maintaining small standing armies in times of peace.

But the grants of power “to raise armies” and “to call forth the militia” are' entirely separate • and distinct — are to be construed together for the purpose of restricting or enlarging either. Any such attempt must lead to the most embarrassing confusion, the necessity of avoiding which became apparent in the course of the argument submitted, and seemed to call imperatively for this preliminary distinction.

2nd. It is insisted “that the Confederate Congress has no power to raise armies by compulsion, but is wholly dependent for military forces upon the voluntary enlistment of men; and if it need more force than its armies thus raised and its navy, its only resource is to “call forth the militia of the States.” It is clear under the view we have taken, that Congress can raise armies under the twelfth clause, only by voluntary enlistment or by compulsory enrollment, and we are now asked so to construe the grant as to limit them to the former mode. The limitation now considered is, as to means only; whether or not there be any other constitutional limitation of the power, we will hereafter consider. The acts of Congress under review, authorizes compulsory enrollment of citizens. The clause of the Constitution, in virtue- of which the power thus exercised is claimed, is very general in its terms— neither specifying nor prohibiting any means.

Let the phraseology be fixed in the mind of the inquirer. The Oortgress shall have power to raise armies, etc. Language [351]*351could not express a broader, more general grant of a specific power. "We look in vain for the limitation to voluntary enlistment as a means. Is there any difference between a grant of “power to raise armies?” We think not. Yet had the latter form of expression been used, who would have affirmed the existence of the limitation now insisted on ? We understand the rule of construction in such cases to be, that an unqualified grant of power gives the means necessary to carry it into effect.” But the proposed limitation reduces the grant to “a bare authority to raise armies by accepting” volwnteers. Now this idea and the idea of a power to raise armies, are widely different; and not less so are the terms appropriate to the expression of the one, and the other. Presuming that the framer of the Constitution used the words employed in their ordinary unambiguous significance, we hold that the clause^ ex vi termini, express a grant of power

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Bluebook (online)
33 Ga. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffers-v-fair-ga-1862.