Stanley Lawrence Gruca v. Secretary of the Army

436 F.2d 239
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedMarch 22, 1971
Docket23840
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 436 F.2d 239 (Stanley Lawrence Gruca v. Secretary of the Army) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanley Lawrence Gruca v. Secretary of the Army, 436 F.2d 239 (D.C. Cir. 1971).

Opinion

TAMM, Circuit Judge:

On this appeal ours is the difficult but limited task of reviewing a draft board’s finding that the appellant Gruca was not entitled to be classified as a conscientious objector. The difficulty we face is inherent in a process which attempts to distinguish between a sincere belief and one that is not truly held and which for its success must rely in large part on deductions drawn from a registrant’s words and demeanor. At the same time the range of our intervention in this process is narrowly limited to determining whether there was any basis in fact for the draft board’s finding. Having examined the record before us with great care and having determined that there was a basis for the board’s decision, we must affirm the denial of Gruca’s application. Our conclusion has been reached with some hesitation, however, based on the reasons which follow.

Although the background of this case is somewhat detailed, we think it necessary to set it forth in order to put the controversy in the proper context. Stanley Lawrence Gruca was born on March 16, 1949; in April of 1967, shortly after his eighteenth birthday, he registered with his local draft board (hereafter “the Board”) in Ravenna, Ohio. He listed his occupation as “student” but noted that he expected to graduate in June of that year. The Board classified him as a student. (App. 24.) Shortly after graduating from high school, Gruca was notified that he had been reclassified 1-A (available for military induction), and several months thereafter he was tested and found acceptable for induction. (App. 33.) One month later Gruca wrote *241 his Board requesting “Selective Service Form 150 for Conscientious Objector” which he filled out and returned to the Board. In response to the Board’s request for a personal interview before evaluating his application, Gruca went before the Board and explained his reasons for requesting the classification. The next day he was notified that his request had been denied and he appealed to the State Appeal Board; that body upheld the Board without comment. (App. 48.)

Several months later Gruca was inducted into the Armed Forces. Thus he did not follow the more customary route in this type of a case by refusing induction and then defending against a prosecution for that refusal on the ground that he was a conscientious objector. Instead, Gruca completed basic training and only thereafter did he resume his claim by applying for a discharge from the Army on conscientious objector grounds. 1 The Army then accorded Gruca a full panoply of procedural safeguards but decided not to grant him a discharge.

Gruca then went to court. He filed a habeas corpus action in the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma seeking his release from the Army. Because at that time he was under the interim jurisdiction of Army Headquarters in Washington, D. C., Gru-ca’s Oklahoma suit was dismissed; he thereafter brought the same suit here in the District of Columbia. The trial court summarized the gravamen of his petition in the following sentences:

[H]e alleged that the Selective Service Board had no basis in fact for denying his application for exemption from military service by reason of conscientious objection. Alternatively, [Gruca] alleged that the decision of the Army in denying his application for discharge pursuant to Army Regulation 635-20 had no basis in fact and was arbitrary and capricious.

(App. 86.)

The parties submitted the records of the Selective Service and of the Army and, after hearing argument, the court ruled that Gruca had waived his right to challenge the Board’s classification “by submitting to induction, serving in the Army, and filing an application for discharge pursuant to Army Regulation 635-20.” (App. 86.) The court cited one section of this Regulation (which outlines the procedure for “personal separation” due to conscientious objection) as authority for its finding of waiver. That section reads as follows:

Federal courts have held that a claim to exemption from military service under Selective Service laws must be interposed prior to notice of induction, and failure to make timely claim for exemption constitutes waiver of the right to claim.

(AR 635-20 § 3(b) (1969).) Alternatively the court found that there was a basis in fact for the Board’s denial; it also concluded that appellant was not entitled to relief from the Army’s refusal to grant him a discharge. (App. 86-87.) The trial judge therefore dismissed Gru-ca’s petition and this appeal was brought.

At the outset we are met with an argument based on the trial court’s finding of waiver. There are several aspects to this contention all of which tend to become intermingled, making it difficult to understand the Government’s precise position. We have attempted to segregate each aspect to facilitate our discussion on the merits of the Government’s argument. It would seem, as a prelim *242 inary matter, that the trial court misunderstood the applicability of AR 635-20 § 3(b) because that Regulation deals with applicants who have failed to make a claim for an exemption prior to receiving a notice of induction. As we have noted Gruca had claimed an exemption well before he received his notice of induction, and therefore he does not come within the apparent intendment of AR 635-20 § 3(b).

The concept of waiver is subject to alternate meanings, however, and the Government in its brief shifts its focus to several of these. The Government’s basic theory seems to be that Gruca could have petitioned for the writ immediately after induction, but that his delay of seven months constituted a waiver of that privilege. Thus the argument is primarily one of laches, rather than of waiver in the technical sense, and its validity depends on the need for finality in Selective Service classifications and on the danger of disrupting the system by allowing untimely petitions. Cf. United States v. Gearey, 368 F.2d 144 (2d Cir. 1966), cert. denied, 389 U.S. 959, 88 S.Ct. 335, 19 L.Ed.2d 368 (1967).

Another aspect of the waiver argument was not directly confronted in the briefs but was raised in oral argument. It proceeds from the notion that a sincere conscientious objector could never allow himself to submit to induction into the Army. It then follows that Gruca, by submitting to induction, demonstrated a lack of sincerity and therefore waived his right to judicial consideration of his claim for exemption. This thesis has gained prominence due to a reference in a recent Supreme Court decision involving the Selective Service laws. Mulloy v. United States, 398 U.S. 410, 90 S.Ct. 1766, 26 L.Ed.2d 362 (1970). There the Court said:

The scope of judicial review is, as a practical matter, particularly narrow where the registrant is claiming conscientious objector status. “A sincere claimant for conscientious objector status cannot turn to the habeas corpus remedy (to challenge the legality of his classification) because his religious belief prevents him from accepting induction under any circumstances. As a result he is limited to seeking review in a criminal trial for refusal to submit.” United States v.

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Bluebook (online)
436 F.2d 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-lawrence-gruca-v-secretary-of-the-army-cadc-1971.