Boitano v. District Board, Northern Dist. No. 3

250 F. 812 | N.D. Cal. | 1918

DOOLING, District Judge.

The proceedings sought to be reviewed here are proceedings taken under the Selective Service Law. The local board of Amador county, upon the return of petitioner’s questionnaire, which showed that he was a married man, with a dependent wife and an unborn child, placed him in class IVa. Upon appeal by the government, the district board placed him in class I, and in due time he was directed to report for military service. Pie then applied to this court for a writ of certiorari, which was issued, and a hearing was had upon his petition and the return made thereto by the two boards. The record shows that petitioner was married on June 27, 1917, after the passage of the act, and after the petitioner had registered thereunder pursuant to the proclamation of the President.

[1] It may be briefly noted, in passing, that the act gives to the President the power to exclude and discharge from the selective draft, among others, “those in a status with respect to persons dependent upon them for support which renders their exclusion or discharge advisable.” Section 4. The act also provides for the creation of local and district boards, and declares that the decision of such district boards shall be final, except that the President may modify or reverse the same. The President is also authorized by the act to make rules and regulations governing the organization and procedure of the local and district boards.

*813Pursuant to this authorization, a very elaborate course of procedure has been devised, and a large number of rules promulgated. Of these the ones bearing directly upon this proceeding are the following:

Section 76, rule IX: “In class IV shall be placed: (a) Any married registrant whose wife or children are mainly dependent on his labor for support.”
Section 72, rule V: “On May 18, 1917, every person subject to registration had notice oí' his obligation to render military service to his country. The purpose of the Selective Service Law was not to suspend the institution of marriage among registrants, but boards should scrutinize marriages since May 18, 1917, and especially those hastily effected since that time, to determine whether the marriage relation was entered into with a primary view of evading military service, and unless such is found not to be the case boards are hereby authorized to disregard the relationship so established as a condition of dependency requiring deferred classification under these regulations.”

The questionnaire showed nothing further than that the marriage was contracted June 27, 1917, that he was then 23 years and his wife 31 years of age, and-the district board, so far from finding that it was not contracted with a primary view of evading military service, found that it was what the hoard designated a “war marriage,” and reversed the action of the local board, which gave to petitioner the deferred classification.

The history of the case, as disclosed by the record, shows that the local board, which, in the small community, was more or less in touch with all the registrants, had itself twice before this, and on practically the same evidence, refused deferred classification and placed petitioner in class I. There was no evidence before the board at any time tending to show affirmatively that the marriage was not entered into with a primary view of evading military duty, and rule V, above quoted, seems to place upon the registrant, who has entered into the marriage relation since May 18, 1917, the burden of making such showing as will authorize the board to find that such marriage was not entered into with that view.

[2] The language of the rule is:

“And unless such is found not to be the case boards are authorized to disregard the relationship.”

This does not mean that all marriages after May 18, 1917, shall he looked upon with suspicion, but, if any circumstances in the previous history of the case, as disclosed by the record, induce the belief in the minds of the board that a marriage under consideration was in fact what this board denominates a “war marriage,” the registrant must show affirmatively that such was not the case.

The decision of the district board is made final by the act itself, and the courts can interfere with their action, if at all, only when the registrant has been denied a fair hearing, when he has not been given an opportunity to be heard at all, or when the action of the board is so manifestly unfair and unjust as to make it apparent that the rights of the registrant have been disregarded, and that he has been clearly wronged. And it may be said that, even if the court would have reached a different conclusion from the evidence if the case were presented to it in the *814first instance, that fact cannot be held sufficient to warrant the court in holding that the hearing accorded the registrant by the district board was unfair.

Nothing appears in this record that would authorize the court to disturb the action of the district board, the finality of which is proclaimed and determined by the law itself. It was not intended that every dissatisfied registrant should find relief in the courts. Indeed, the Selective Service Law would be shorn of all its vigor and efficacy, were the courts to undertake to review the action of the local and district boards in any case where it does not clearly appear that such boards have abused the great powers conferred upon them.

The writ of certiorari is therefore discharged, and the order restraining the local and district boards from proceeding further with petitioner’s induction into the service is set aside.