245 F. 798 | W.D.N.Y. | 1907
Section 2 of the Selective Draft Act, so called, in so far as material to a determination of the question herein involved, reads as follows:
“Such draft as herein provided shall be based upon liability to military service of all male citizens or male persons not alien enemies who have declared their intention to become citizens, between the ages of twenty-one and thirty years, both inclusive, and shall take place and be maintained under such regulations as the President may prescribe not inconsistent with the terms of this act.”
Section 4 provides for the exclusion or discharge from the selective draft of certain specified classes of persons from among those liable to the draft, and for the creation and establishment by the President
“ali questions ot exemption under this Act, and all questions of or claims for including or discharging individuals or classes of individuals from the selectivo draft, which shall be made under rules and regulations prescribed by the President.”
Section 5 providing for registration declares that all persons registered—
“shall be and remain subject to draft into the forces hereby authorized, unless exempted or excused therefrom as in the act provided.
The relator claims, inter alia, that the writ should be allowed on the ground that through ignorance his claim to exemption was not filed; that he has had no hearing; that he was misled by a member of the board, though unintentionally, as to the method of filing his claim for exemption; that he was unfamiliar with the provisions of the act, was unable to read or write English, and was uninformed as to the rules and regulations printed on the notice requiring claims for exemption to be filed or submitted on or before the seventh day following its mailing; that he did not know of the provision requiring affidavits in support of a claim for exemption to be furnished within 10 days after filing the claim; and that on learning that he had been accepted he applied to the local board for a form upon which to file his claim for exemption, and was given by mistake an appeal blank, upon which he specified that he was a nondeclarant alien, but which the district board disregarded.
The contention that the relator is deprived of his treaty rights under the most favored nation clause in the treaty existing between the United States and Austria-Hungary is untenable. Assuming, but not deciding, that such clause applies to subjects of Austria, our treaty with Switzerland (1850), providing substantially that citizens of either country domiciled in the other shall be free from personal military service (11 Stat. 589), is believed not inconsistent with the Selective Draft Act; for, as heretofore pointed out, section 2 by implication excepts aliens who are merely denizens of the United States, only requiring them to file a claim to exemption in' accordance with the rules and regulations prescribed by the President. Moreover, exemption because of treaty rights is not mentioned in the act under discussion, section 14 of which suspends all laws in conflict therewith.
It is questioned whether this court should interfere in behalf of the relator in view of his induction into the military service; but as it has come to my attention that Provost Marshal General Crowder has recently promulgated a rule (see Official Bulletin, October 16, 1917, p. 12) for reopening cases where registrants, through their nonculpable ignorance, have been reported for military duty and sent to mobilization camps, for the purpose of determining whether they should be exempted or excused from military service, it will probably be sufficient for the court to suggest such procedure herein. Hence, without making the writ absolute at this time, but retaining jurisdiction, I will allow 10 days for application to the Adjutant General for permission to reopen the case before the local board under the above rule, and for the relator to file his-claim for exemption and affidavits in support thereof.
So ordered.
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