Reynolds v. Confederate States

38 Ala. 429
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 15, 1863
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 38 Ala. 429 (Reynolds v. Confederate States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reynolds v. Confederate States, 38 Ala. 429 (Ala. 1863).

Opinion

A. J. WALKER, C. J.

Three persons, who were taken and detained in custody under the conscript law by the enrolling officer, severally petitioned the probate judge for writs of habeas corpus, predicating their prayers for a discharge upon the ground of exemption from conscription on account of physical disability; and the writs were awarded by that officer. The enrolling officer, contending that the judicial tribunals of the State have no jurisdiction over the matter of his detention of those persons as conscripts, now applies to this court for writs of prohibition. Thus the duty devolves upon this court, of deciding whether a State tribunal has authority to discharge one who has been taken and is detained by the enrolling officer as a conscript, upon the ground of his exemption for the reasons above stated.

The first section of the act of congress, approved April 16, 1862, authorizes the president to, call out and place in the service of the Confederate States men between the ages of [431]*431eighteen and thirty-five years, who were not legally exempted from military service. The amendatory act of the 27th September, 1862, in language similar to that employed in the original law, extends the authority to men between the ages of thirty-five and forty-five; and requires the president, if he should not call out all the persons between the specified ages, to discriminate, by limiting his call to persons of some particular age under forty-five. By an act approved 21st April, 1862, certain descriptions of persons were exempted from enrollment for service in the armies of the Confederate States. That act was repealed by one adopted on the 11th October, 1862, which exempts “ from military service in the armies of the Confederate States” various classes of persons therein described.

The two acts of 16th April and 27th September impose upon the authority to conscribe a restriction to persons not legally exempted. The persons exempt are not described by name, but by classes, defined by reference to bodily or mental incapacity, to the incumbency of certain offices, the practice of certain useful arts, the profession of some specified religious creeds, and other distinguishing peculiarities. As the authority to conscribe does not extend to the individuals who compose those classes, it can only be exercised by ascertaining the persons to whom the peculiarities distinguishing the different classes pertain. The ascertainment of the legal subjects of Conscription is an unavoidable step in the proceeding. Inquiry and decision, upon this point, are necessarily invoiced in the exercise of the president’s power to conscribe all within the prescribed ages, “who are not legally exempted from military service.”

The selection from the community at large of the subjects of conscription, involving inquiry and decision as to the status of every man, was obviously susceptible of accomplishment by the executive department of the government, only through the agency of officers clothed with the requisite authority. Congress therefore has authorized the appointment of such officers. By the third section of the act of 16th April, 1862, the president is empowered to ap[432]*432point officers, charged with the duty of enrolling conscripts, “in accordance with rules and regulations to be prescribed by him,” A later act, approved 8th October, 1862, directs, that enrollments shall be made under instructions from the war department, and reported by the enrolling officer; Furthermore, an act, approved October 11th, 1862, authorizes the assignment of one or more surgeons to the .duty of examining those enrolled; and declares, that the decision of such surgeon or surgeons, “under regulations to be established by the secretary of war,” as to physical and mental capacity, shall be final.

The employment of appropriate officers to execute the conscript law, is thus clearly authorized. Every act of conscription by such officers must be done pursuant to a decision based upon an inquiry, in which the hearing and weighing of evidence must often, if not always, be necessary. Without an inquiry and judgment as to the liability to conscription, no enrollment could be made, because it could not otherwise be determined who were subject to conscription. This authority to inquire and decide is not, however, left to implication from the nature of the act. There is an express authority to decide upon the question of exemption on account of mental or physical incapacity, and the decision of the tribunal designated is made final. The existence of such authority is clearly indicated in the phraseology of the law, declaring that “all persons who shall be held unfit for military service in the field, by reason of bodily or mental incapacity, under the rules to be prescribed by the secretary of war,” shall be exempt. The holding or deciding persons to be unfit for military service, under rules prescribed by the secretary of war, must be by the officers appointed to execute the law. The authority to hear evidence and decide, is a plain inference from the provision in the act of 11th October, 1862, that the claim of certain classes of artisans is to be supported by affidavit, which shall only be primarfacie evidence of the facts stated. Furthermore, the general idea, -that the power of investigation and decision is a part of [433]*433the authority to be exercised by the respective officers, is very clearly brought to view, in the clause of the same act, which requires the secretary of war, upon evidence, to judge whether the exempted artisans have, by their conduct, forfeited the privilege. It must be noted, too, that the duties of the officers are to be discharged under rules and regulations to be prescribed by the secretary of war. Surely, these rules and regulations are not contemplated to be merely the guides of the subordinate officers, in performing the acts of writing down the names of the conscripts, and taking charge of them. They were destined to control and direct them in the higher, more important, and more difficult office of inquiring and judging as to the liability to conscription. The execution of the law is utterly impracticable, if there be no authority to ascertain and judge who are the legal subjects of conscription. With the utmost confidence, I assert the proposition, that the officers employed in the execution of the law are clothed with authority to judge what persons fall within its operation. The exercise of this authority is an official duty, to be performed under the guidance of rules prescribed by the secretary of war.

A State judge, in discharging one taken as a conscript, upon the ground that he was not legally liable'to conscription, would supervise and control an officer of the Confederate States, in the performance of an official duty, and in the exercise of a legal authority. He would, furthermore, annul the decision which such officer was authorized to make, and abrogate the enrollment based upon that decision. The decision of the question of amenability to conscription is within the scope of the authority exercised. An incorrect decision would be an erroneous exercise of a subsisting authority — not a mere usurpation. The officer is perfectly within the limit of his authority, when he investigates and decides; and, though he may err, he is not an usurper. Neither the absolute invalidity of the conscription, nor a liability in trespass, would result from an incorrect decision. — Duckworth v. Johnson, 7 Ala. 578; [434]*434Savacool v. Boughton, 5 Wend. 170; Easton v.

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Bluebook (online)
38 Ala. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-v-confederate-states-ala-1863.