United States v. Rodriguez

2 C.M.A. 101, 2 USCMA 101, 1952 WL 2284
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedDecember 31, 1952
DocketNo. 365
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 C.M.A. 101 (United States v. Rodriguez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Military Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Rodriguez, 2 C.M.A. 101, 2 USCMA 101, 1952 WL 2284 (cma 1952).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Paul W. BROSMAN, Judge:

This case, like United States v. Ornelas (No. 446), 6 CMR 96, decided this day, involves an issue of .jurisdiction based upon petitioner’s claim that he was not at any .time legally inducted into the United States Army. Petitioner was brought to trial by general court-martial on a charge of desertion, based on an alleged unauthorized absence from August 22, 1943, to July 26, 1951. Prior to arraignment, defense counsel challenged the jurisdiction of the court on the theory that the accused, a Mexican citizen, had not been lawfully inducted into the service of the United States. The motion was denied and trial proceeded. The prosecution established its case through morning report extract copies showing the dates of original absence and return. Thereafter the accused took the stand. He testified that he was a citizen of Mexico who, however, had resided in the United States continuously since 1918. In 1943 he registered pursuant to the terms of Selective Service legislation, and was called for induction at Fort MacArthur- on July 23 of that year. He was assigned to Fort MacArthur for basic training and remained there on duty for approximately ten days. He then absented himself without leave and remained so absent until he surrendered at El Paso, Texas, on July 26, 1951.

The general court-martial which tried him found petitioner guilty of desertion and sentenced him to dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, and con-finemént at hard labor for six years. Army reviewing authorities have upheld the findings and sentence. We granted the accused’s petition for review in order that we might consider the question of jurisdiction.

If petitioner was not legally inducted [103]*103into one of the armed services, then this court-martial was without jurisdiction to try him for the offense of desertion. United States v. Ornelas, supra. Petitioner’s objection to the court’s jurisdiction is based on two grounds:

(1) That he was never adequately informed of his rights as a Mexican citizen in relation to Selective Service, and
(2) That he did not participate in an induction ceremony, never having taken the oath of allegiance.

We deal first with the effect of petitioner’s citizenship upon his induction. At the outset we observe

that the motion challenging jurisdiction below was predicated on the notion that petitioner was a citizen of a neutral foreign State, and that by virtue of his status as such, he should have been accorded certain specified rights at the time of or prior to induction. This Court may take judicial notice of the fact that, at the time of petitioner’s induction, Mexico was in point of fact in a state of war with Germany, Italy, and Japan. 6 Dept, of State Bull. 505 (1942) ; Wigmore, Evidence, 3d ed, §§ 2566, 2567, 2572, 2574, and cases cited. Petitioner was, therefore, a citizen of a cobelligerent, not a neutral, nation. Nationals of Mexico who were residents of this country were, under the Selective Service Act, subject to induction. Cervantes v. United States, 163 F2d 294 (CA9th Cir): However, prior to the time petitioner was called'to duty, the United States and the Republic of Mexico had entered into an Executive Agreement relating to the military service of nationals of one of the contracting countries residing in the other. Executive Agreement Series 323, January 22, 1943. This agreement provided in substance that, with certain exceptions not applicable here, nationals of Mexico residing in the United States “may be registered and inducted into the armed forces of the country of their residence oh the same conditions as the nationals thereof unless otherwise provided herein.” The classes excepted were officials and employees of the contracting governments, students, and “border cross-ers” — none of which includes petitioner. The agreement also provided that “Nationals of each country who have been registered for or inducted into the Army of the other country in accordance with the military service laws of the latter and who have not declared their intention to acquire the citizenship of the country in which they reside shall upon being designated by the country of which they are nationals and with their consent be released for military service in its forces provided that this has no prejudicial effect on the common war effort.” It is clear that, under both the Selective Service Act and the terms of the Executive Agreement, petitioner was fully subject to induction into the military service of the United States as a resident of this country. Further, under the terms of the Executive Agreement, it- was not his, but rather his country’s prerogative to obtain his release from American induction processes in order that he might serve with the Mexican armed forces.

The Director, Selective Service System, in Memorandum To All State Directors (I-422), Local Board Release (129), May 2, 1942, provided procedures whereby an alien, who had not declared his intention to become a citizen of the United States, and who was a citizen of a cobelligerent nation with whom a' reciprocal agreement had been made, might be permitted to serve with the armed forces of the cobelligerent nation. If the procedures set up therein were followed, and the applicant was accepted for service by the cobelliger-ent nation, the memorandum provided further that the alien should be sent to an induction station of that nation. It is claimed by appellate defense counsel, with some support in the record, that petitioner was not advised of his rights as' an alien under the memorandum mentioned above, and that the failure to advise him properly of those rights fenders the Fort MacArthur induction proceedings invalid. Reliance is placed upon Machado v. McGrath, 193 F2d 706 (CA, DC Cir) and other Federal cases cited in that opinion.

The Machado case arose out of depor[104]*104tation proceedings involving a citizen of Uruguay who was ordered to report for induction in 1944. As a citizen of a neutral country at the- time of induction, Machado was entitled to, and in fact did, refuse military service. Under the terms of the Selective Service Act this refusal to serve barred him forever from becoming an American citizen. Machado was not informed of this prohibition at the time of induction. -Because of -his ignorance the court held that the refusal to serve did not constitute a-bar to citizenship, citing Moser v. United States, 341 US 41, 95 L ed 729, 71 S Ct 553.

Conceding — which we do not — that Machado and Moser should apply to render invalid an induction proceeding wherein a neutral alien was not informed of his right to avoid service, those cases have no application here. This petitioner was a cobelligerent alien. He did not have the right to avoid service and yet to remain within the United States. His only right was to seek service with the armed forces of Mexico as an alternative — and that country retained the right to grant or to deny entry into such service. Fundamentally, too, the power to effect such a transfer belonged to the Republic of Mexico, not to petitioner. There is no intimation whatever in this record that petitioner desired to serve with Mexican forces rather than with those of the United States. Indeed, his only explanation for absenting himself without leave — the illness of his wife and the need to obtain funds for medical care— would indicate that he had no desire whatever to perform any sort of military duty. It is merely claimed that petitioner was not fully advised of his rights.

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Bluebook (online)
2 C.M.A. 101, 2 USCMA 101, 1952 WL 2284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rodriguez-cma-1952.