United States v. David Herman Primous

420 F.2d 33
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 20, 1970
Docket17288
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 420 F.2d 33 (United States v. David Herman Primous) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. David Herman Primous, 420 F.2d 33 (7th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

KILEY, Circuit Judge.

The district court, without a jury, convicted defendant of willfully refusing to submit to induction. He has appealed. We affirm.

Defendant, while an eighteen year old high school student, was erroneously classified I-A. After his graduation he was given the same classification. On three occasions thereafter he was denied hardship deferments, and each time the I-A classification was retained. On the last occasion he appealed and the appeal board approved the classification. He was ordered to report for induction, failed to report, and his indictment, trial and conviction followed.

*34 Defendant contends that when he was first classified I-A he was a high school student entitled to a student deferment under 32 C.F.R. § 1622.15, and his initial I-A classification was, ipso facto, void ab initio, has continued to be void, has vitiated the order to report for induction, and cannot be a basis for his conviction. The government concedes the failure of the board to comply with Section 1622.15 when it originally classified defendant I-A instead of I-S.

However, the government argues that the defendant was, after his graduation from high school, reclassified I-A three additional times by his board when his requests for hardship deferment were denied, with the third determination approved by the appeal board. Furthermore, the government argues defendant has not shown the required prejudice.

This court’s decision in United States v. Manns, 232 F.2d 709 (1956), supports the government’s second argument. The court there said: “We think it is clear that where, as here, no harm or prejudice resulted from a violation of a regulation the proceedings of the board are not invalidated.” Id. at 711. Defendant has not shown any prejudice resulting from the error .in the classification process. Nor is there merit in the argument that in Manns a violation of a regulation was involved while here a violation of a statute (50 U.S.C.A. App. § 456 (i) (1)) is involved. We see no reason to treat a statute differently from a regulation issued by the Director of Selective Service or by the President. We hold that the several I-A classifications which occurred after defendant’s graduation, plus the lack of showing of prejudice, render defendant’s first argument meritless.

The file, in a Report of Oral Information dated November 18, 1965, states that defendant claimed hardship deferment on the basis that his support was needed by his mother and an ill brother Timothy; that his mother who is remarried and “now” named Wynn, 1 owns a two-flat building where they and two other brothers and their wives live; and that defendant bought a Chevrolet Impala September 26, 1965, and was paying $83.81 per month on the purchase price and on auto insurance.

A Dependency Questionnaire in the file, dated December 9, 1965, states defendant contributed “all I can give” to the support of his mother and brother Timothy; that he was employed as a railroad brakeman and switchman at $123.00 per week before taxes; that he had monthly obligations of “no set amount” for lights, gas, oil and food; that — contrary to the statement in the November 18 report — he did not own an automobile; that his father died in February, 1963; and that his mother does not qualify in age for Social Security. The Questionnaire contains defendant’s handwritten answers containing substantially what he had previously stated orally to the board. There are also in the file three affidavits of neighbors, requested by the board, bearing January, 1966 dates, stating that defendant is sole support of his mother.

A Report of Oral Information dated April 19, 1966, in the file states that defendant appeared in person that day, claiming he was sole support of his mother and invalid brother; that “close examination” showed his mother owned the two-flat building; that his older brother Carl, age 28, lives on the first floor and pays rent to his mother; 2 and that defendant presented no evidence in support of his claim “other than [to] ‘ask his mother’ ” who was not present at the hearing. The board’s continued refusal of the request for a hardship *35 deferment, and confirmation of the I-A classification, were approved by the appeal board.

Defendant contends the information in the three affidavits was “some evidence” to support his contentions for a hardship deferment, and that since the summary says “no evidence” was presented at the personal hearing, there is a plain violation of the Selective Service Act. The board sought the affidavits, they are in the file and we must presume they were considered, although not mentioned specifically in the summary of the personal hearing. See Yeomen v. United States, 400 F.2d 793, 797 (10th Cir. 1968). This court believes the information given by defendant at the hearing could be reasonably found to clearly outweigh the affidavits.

The summary report of defendant’s oral statements is not in defendant’s handwriting as required by 32 C.F. R. § 1624.2. We are not informed by the file why this is so. But we cannot infer denial of due process from the violation itself. 3

Defendant claims that the denial of his original request for hardship deferment under 32 C.F.R, § 1622.30(b) 4 was based on a note in his file that his brother was a member of the Black Dragon Society. There is a typed unsigned note in the file referring to defendant’s brother Wilbur:

Brother-11-48-44-189 Wilbur Osborne Primous - Rejected at AFES Mentally disqualified - (belongs to Black Dragon Society) Emp. with the Crane Co.

However, the file entries which we have discussed above' justified the board’s refusal to grant the hardship deferment. We therefore presume the notation was not the reason for the denial of the hardship deferment, and that the file, in its entirety, was properly considered. Yeoman v. United States, supra.

Finally, we see no merit in defendant’s claim that the board was capricious in discriminating against him by denying him advice that there was a list of draft advisers available to help him, which was given to other registrants. The file contains a letter written to defendant granting his request for a personal appearance and telling him that he could not be represented by an attorney or any other person at the hearing, “other than the regularly appointed government appeal agent.” Defendant was a high school graduate. who should have understood what was said in the letter, and if he did not he could have requested help in understanding. There is no showing that he was denied “equal justice.”

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Bluebook (online)
420 F.2d 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-david-herman-primous-ca7-1970.