United States v. Joseph Ellwood Steiner, Jr.

469 F.2d 760, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6653
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 17, 1972
Docket72-1450
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 469 F.2d 760 (United States v. Joseph Ellwood Steiner, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Joseph Ellwood Steiner, Jr., 469 F.2d 760, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6653 (5th Cir. 1972).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge:

When Joseph Ellwood Steiner, Jr. became 18 years old he registered for the draft with Local Board 59 in Houston, Texas, pursuant to law. 1 Approximately four and a half years later, after high school and collegiate student deferments and numerous delays from claims and appeals within the Selective Service System, Steiner was notified to report for induction and did so. After being found acceptable, he refused to submit to induction. Subsequent to an unsuccessful attempt to interdict further proceedings by way of injunction and habeas corpus relief, 2 he was prosecuted for violation of the Act. 3 After a jury trial conviction, Steiner was sentenced to imprisonment for 30 months. This present appeal attacks the manner in which his classification was made, the composition of Local Board 59, and trial court procedures. The more significant of the Selective Service System attacks relate to the Board’s refusals to reopen Steiner’s I-A classification to permit consideration of a pre-notice claim to a Class III-A hardship deferment and a post-notice Class I-O, conscientious objector claim. Asserted district court errors relate to the quantum of proof offered to show that Steiner’s violation was knowingly committed and to the court’s jury instructions on the standards to be used for measuring Steiner’s conscientious objector beliefs. We affirm.

In the initial classification questionnaire which he completed on February *763 22, 1964, Steiner showed he lived at home with his mother and father in Pasadena, Texas. When asked to list all persons wholly or partially dependent upon him for support, he answered “Not Applicable”. That same form required information with regard to any agricultural occupation, including farm ownership and farming experience. Again, his answer was “Not Applicable”. His grandmother, Mrs. H. Y. Childress, Columbia, Louisiana, was named as a person other than a member of his household who would always know his address. On June 16, 1966, while still deferred as a college student, Steiner completed a current information questionnaire in which he stated he had no dependents, listed his occupation during this and the previous summertimes as a general laborer for a steel company, and showed that in his college education he was pursuing a major in English in preparation for teaching. He changed the name of the person other than a member of his household who would always know his address, from his grandmother to a minister in Pasadena, Texas. The current information questionnaire which Steiner completed March 27, 1967, contained no significant changes; however he did relist his grandmother as a person other than a member of his household who would always know his address.

On May 30, 1968, the college he had been attending notified the Board that Steiner had completed his college education by graduation. On June 9, 1968, Steiner filled out a current information questionnaire on which he indicated Mr. Erby Meredith of Columbia, Louisiana was the person other than a member of his household who would always know his address. On this form Steiner checked a box which indicated he claimed to have a dependent. He listed his present occupation as “Temporary Machine Operator [for a coffee packing company in Houston, Texas]/Farm Manager”. This form was accompanied by a letter stating that Steiner requested an occupational deferment as a farmer. Eight days later Steiner completed and returned the Local Board’s form request for agricultural information, in which he disclosed that although record title to the farm appeared in his deceased grandfather’s name, he claimed to have been the owner-operator of the farm since becoming “of age”. His twenty-first birthday occurred January 22, 1967. He also stated that while his college education had been acquired as his father’s dependent, this status had changed upon graduation. He listed the farm’s annual crop income at 2400 dollars, and a special income item of 2000 dollars from the sale of all but two head of the farm’s livestock. He also stated that his coffee company job in Houston would be terminated in mid-July and that at that time he expected to return to the farm to assist with the harvest. The Board routinely requested confirmation of this agricultural information from the Agricultural Stabilization Conservation Committee of the Louisiana Parish in which the farm was located. This committee replied that to their personal knowledge Steiner was not engaged in the production of any agricultural commodities. In fact they did not connect Steiner with this farm • other than that they considered his mother to be one heir to the property. They stated that the farm had been rented on a share basis for several years to a tenant who had three employees and who worked several small farms in the area. Steiner requested and was granted the right of personal appearance in connection with his request for a II-C Agricultural Occupation deferment. 4

In connection with his personal appearance before the Board, Steiner related that his grandmother, aunt, mother and Steiner himself, were the legal heirs *764 to the farm under Louisiana law; but that it had always been assumed that the farm would become entirely his property as the oldest living male heir. He advised the Board that he had worked all summers and holidays on the farm prior to commencing his college attendance and that after his four year absence while attending college and working at jobs elsewhere, the farm had seriously deteriorated. He also disputed the adequacy of the help which could be expected from the tenant in future years. Prior to this personal appearance before the Board, Steiner continuously listed his address as that of his parents in Pasadena, Texas. The Board declined to reclassify Steiner as a farmer, and he appealed this action to the State Appeal Board. On oral argument before this court, Steiner conceded that he did not demonstrate sufficient productivity to entitle him to a II-C classification.

Ten days after taking the appeal from the refusal of a farmer deferment, Steiner filed a letter from his grandmother’s doctor. The letter said that Mrs. Child-ress had a heart disease and a glandular dysfunction, had been attended by her grandson during summers and other times when he was out of school, and that “she has requested that if at all possible he be deferred at this time or at least 'stationed within a reasonable distance to her since her health is precarious.”

On October 17, 1968, Steiner filed a dependency questionnaire which had been furnished to him by his Local Board. In this document he claimed that his grandmother and his aunt were dependent upon him and that he contributed an estimated 1800 dollars annually to each of them. The form asserted that these two ladies lived with him on the farm; that neither his mother nor his father could contribute to the support of these claimed dependents; and that his total income during the past 12 months (nine of which had been spent attending college as the dependent of his father) was 4677.69 dollars. 1289.18 dollars of this amount came from salary or wages and 3388.51 dollars came from unspecified “other income”. His current job was listed as “Farm Manager (owner)”.

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Bluebook (online)
469 F.2d 760, 1972 U.S. App. LEXIS 6653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-joseph-ellwood-steiner-jr-ca5-1972.