William Edward Franks v. United States

216 F.2d 266, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2967
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 4, 1954
Docket14114
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 216 F.2d 266 (William Edward Franks v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Edward Franks v. United States, 216 F.2d 266, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2967 (9th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

POPE, Circuit Judge.

This appellant was indicted for a violation of the Universal Military Training and Service Act, 50 U.S.C.A.Appendix, § 451 et seq., in that he knowingly refused to submit himself to induction into the armed forces of the United States. Upon this appeal he asserts that the board which classified him for military service acted arbitrarily; that there was no basis in fact for his I-A classification, and that in general he owed no duty to submit to induction in that his draft classification was void.

The appellant registered with his local board on April 27, 1950, the day following his 18th birthday. By executing the blank form provided for conscientious objectors he asked to be classified in what was formerly known as Class IV-E and subsequently as Class I-O, — Person conscientiously opposed to both combatant and noncombatant training and service in the armed forces. His local board first classified him in Class I-A (available for military service), whereupon he requested and was granted a personal appearance before the board. He was again classified I-A and appealed to the appeal board. In due course his file was forwarded to the Department of Justice for an investigation and he was granted a hearing before a hearing officer.

The report of the hearing officer discloses that at the time of the appellant’s hearing the officer had received an FBI report concerning the registrant; the hearing officer refers to that report, and to information contained therein, all of which was favorable to the registrant. The report refers to the appellant’s personal appearance at the hearing accompanied by four witnesses; it summarizes his statement as to his occupation, and then states:

“His accompanying witnesses were very positive that the registrant is a genuine conscientious objector, both as to combatant and non-combatant military service. On the whole, the Hearing Officer was impressed with the sincerity of the registrant; however, the depth and *268 maturity of his sincerity is questionable, because, in response to questions propounded by the Hearing Officer, the registrant stated that if there were no other work available, he would be willing to accept employment in a Naval Shipyard.
“In the circumstances it is felt that the registrant is not completely motivated by deep religious conviction in his professed opposition to participation in war.”

Thereafter a special assistant to the Attorney General for the Department of Justice forwarded to the appeal board the hearing officer’s report with the statement that the Department concurred in the recommendation there made. Thereupon the appeal board gave the appellant the recommended classification of I-A, and the refusal to submit to induction followed.

The portions of the hearing officer’s report quoted above would seem to indicate that the registrant’s sincerity was credited by the officer but that the reason for the officer’s disapproval of a conscientious objector classification was the registrant’s statement that he would be willing to accept employment in a naval shipyard. If this was the sole reason for denial of the conscientious objector claim, we would experience some difficulty in perceiving why that would be a reason for denying the registrant not merely the complete conscientious objector classification, the I-O, but the I-A-0 as well. It would appear just as a matter of logic that while a willingness to work in a naval shipyard might tend to show that the registrant was not conscientiously opposed to noncombatant service, yet such attitude with respect to employment would not be inconsistent with an attitude of conscientious objection to combatant service.

There is nothing in the hearing officer’s report or in the Department’s letter to the appeal board, or in the minutes of the appeal board itself, to indicate that any of these parties had given any consideration to the possibility of a classification of this registrant in Class I-A-O.

Whether the records to which we are now about to refer had any influence upon the result just mentioned or not, we think that some importance must be attached to what transpired before the local board at the time of registrant’s personal appearance there.

The minutes of the meeting at which appellant made his appearance are extensive and contain in question and answer form what purports to be a verbatim report of a discussion between the registrant and the chairman of the board. In the course of that discussion the following interrogation took place:

“Mr. LaRue: Ministers of other faiths feel as strongly as you do regarding killing but they go into battle just the same. A I-A-0 classification is one that is given to those who are willing to serve their country but who are not subject to combatant training and service.
“Franks: According to 2 Corinthians, Chapter 5, 20th verse, I believe I would be a traitor to God if I went to service as a I-A-O.” 1

Following the questions and answers the board’s minutes conclude as follows: “Board considered all the evidence * * Franks did not want consideration as a I-A-O. Board voted unanimously that Franks should be classified I-A as in accordance with Selective Service Regulations they could not consider and did not consider him a true Conscientious Ojector as described in the Regulations. Clerk was instructed to mail a I-A Classification Card (SSS Form 110).”

This final paragraph has caused us considerable difficulty. It might be suggested that the words “Franks did not want consideration as a I-A-O” were used by the board in the sense that “Franks admits he is not a conscientious objector.” But the record before the local board discloses no basis in fact for such a conclusion. There is no sugges *269 tion that the board doubted his sincerity, any more than did the hearing officer on his later appearance there. We think rather that this language of the board discloses that it did not consider classifying Franks I-A-0 because he did not want to be so considered or classified. The paragraph suggests that the board might have so classified him had he not taken that attitude.

Evidently counsel for the Government takes this view of what transpired for their brief twice states that Franks “refused classification as a I-A-O.” In their argument before the trial court they indicated that the local board gave no consideration to the question of classifying Franks I-A-O, saying: “Now, in relation to the I-A-0 classification, it must be remembered that the registrant told the local board that he didn’t want it anyway, he wouldn’t accept it. The local board had before it, ‘shall we give him the IV-E now, the I-O, or shall we place him in I-A ?’ ”

The fact that the chairman of the board broached such a classification in questioning Franks, and the fact that Franks made a strong and substantial showing of conscientious objection at least so far as combatant service is concerned, leaves the record open to the interpretation that the board did not consider giving him a I-A-0 classification for the reason that he waived and refused it.

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Bluebook (online)
216 F.2d 266, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 2967, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-edward-franks-v-united-states-ca9-1954.