Simmons v. Miller

40 Miss. 19
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1864
StatusPublished

This text of 40 Miss. 19 (Simmons v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simmons v. Miller, 40 Miss. 19 (Mich. 1864).

Opinion

HáNdy, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the com-t.

The questions presented in this case are: 1st. "Whether the acts of the legislature of this State authorized and required persons liable to service in the Confederate army, under the act of 17th February, 1864, or other acts of Congress, but who had not actually been placed in such service, to be placed in the State service. — -2. Whether the State has the power to place her citizens in her military service before they are taken for Confederate service, and to the exclusion of the right of the Confederate States to their military service, when required by that government.

1. The question is, whether sections 4 and 5 of the act of 3rd January, 1863, are in conflict with the Jth section of the act of 9th December, 1863, and are repealed in virtue of the general repealing clause of section 30 of that act; and it appears evident that they are not.

The provisions of the two acts pertain to two distinct subjects. The purpose of section 4 was to declare that a certain class of persons then in the State service, but subject to Confederate service, or who should thereafter become so, should be discharged from State service; the purpose of section 1 was to prescribe generally what persons should be liable to State service. The act of January, 1863, was an amendment to the act of 24th January, 1862, the 4th section of which declared generally who [22]*22should be subject to State military duty in nearly the same terms as section 7 of the act of December, 1863. That general designation was not altered by the act of January, 1863 ; but section 4 of that act makes an exception to the general rule of liability prescribed by the previous act, by providing that persons then liable as conscripts for Confederate service, or who should thereafter be liable as such, should not be liable to State service. Section 7 of the act of December, 1863, again declares the general rule, but is silent as to the qualification stated in section 4 of the act of January, 1863.

It is clear by the 4th section of the act of January, 1863, that the legislature intended not to interfere with persons liable to the Confederate service as conscripts, by claiming their services in the militia, but that they should be surrendered to the service of the Confederacy; and that is a distinct subject from that embraced in the 7th section of the act of December, 1863, which simply was intended to prescribe the general rule as to what persons should be subject to State service. But this intention is more clearly manifested in section 5 of the act of January, 1863, which makes it the duty of State officers, civil and military, to arrest all absentees and deserters, and all conscripts absent without leave, and to forward them to camps of instruction.” Thus, the State establishes a policy not to interfere, for her own service, with persons liable to Confederate service, recognizing the right of the Confederacy to the service of her citizens, embraced in the acts of Congress, and affording her aid to that government in enforcing that right. The language of the act of December, 1863, section 7, so far from being inconsistent with this policy, clearly shows that it was intended to be observed ; for it declares that “ all free white males, etc., residing in this State, i/ncluding exempts cmd discha/rged soldiers from the Confederate service, cmd all who may home substitutes in the Confederate army,” etc., shall be liable to military service under the act; which shows that all other persons subject to Confederate service were not intended to be included; for the express inclusion of one class is the exclusion of others.

There is nothing in the act of December, 1863, in conflict [23]*23with this policy of tlie act of January, 1863, or showing that it was intended to be changed; and the policy is so just and reasonable, and so important in its consequences, that it must be presumed, if the legislature had intended to change it, that it would not have been left to an indefinite repealing clause, which is often but matter of form, but would have been done so in positive terms. All these acts are to be taken together, giving to each its appropriate force; and such a construction is to be adopted as will give effect to all their provisions, so that each may stand unless clearly repugnant to each other.

There is, therefore, nothing in our legislation to authorize the State authorities to retain the military services of her citizens who are liable to Confederate service under the conscript laws of Congress, when their services may be required by the Confederacy.

2. The 1st and 5th sections of the act of Congress of 17th February, 1864, entitled an act to organize forces to serve during the war,” render the persons therein designated, between the ages of 11 and 18, and 45 and 50 years, liable to military duty in the Confederate States service, from the date of the aet; and such persons are bound to enroll themselves for such service at such times and places as the President should prescribe. ’ It is clear that under these provisions of law such persons were potentially in the service of the Confederate States from the date of the act, and subject to be called into actual service whenever the President should deem it propea’ to do so. And if this act of Congress be constitutional, as it is conceded to be, it appears to be manifest that a person subject to its operation could not be relieved from it, when he should be demanded for the Confederate service, by having been placed in the military service of the State prior to the call of the President, or to his actual enrollment after the call.

In opposition to this view, it is insisted that the power of Congress to raise armies, etc., is not exclusive of or paramount to that of the several States; that under paragraph 3, section 10, article 1, of the Constitution of the Confederate States, the several States have the power to “ keep troops ” in time of war, and to [24]*24engage in war ” when actually invaded, or in such imminent danger as will not admit of delay; ” that these powers in the States are concurrent with those of Congress over the subject; and in the present case, that the State, having exercised the right to raise troops by bringing the petitioner and others into her military service, before they were actually in the service of the Confederate States, has a right to their services paramount to that of the Confederate States.

It is true that not only by the provisions of the constitution referred to, but by the general reserved powers of the States, they have the right to organize and maintain their militia within their territories. Bxxt the question is, whether a State can exercise this powder after Congress has acted on the subject and called into service the same men who would constitute the State forces, so as to deprive Congress of its power over the subject; in other words, whether a power positively granted to Congress in the constitution may be exercised to the exclusion of a power over the same subject and the same persons reserved in certain cases to the States in the constitution.

The provisions of the Constitution of the United States upon this subject are nearly the same as those of ours; and, under that constitution, there is probably no question better settled than this.

The constitution, and “ the laws made by the Confederate States in pursuance thereof,” are declared by it to be the supreme law of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
40 Miss. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simmons-v-miller-miss-1864.