37 F. 668 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Michigan | 1889
By Rev. St. § 1117, “no person under the age of twenty-one years shall he enlisted or mustered into tlio military service of the United Slates without the written consent of his parents or guardians, provided that such minor has such parents or guardians entitled to his custody and control.” The power of the federal courts to discharge soldiers who have been enlisted in violation of this section is now so well settled that a citation of authorities is unnecessary.
The only complication in this case arises from the fact that the soldier has been tried upon a charge of desertion, and is now in custody, awaiting the disposition of his case by the reviewing authority. By the forty-seventh article of war “any officer or soldier who, having received pay, or having been duly enlisted in the service of the United States, deserts the same, shall * * * suffer, * * * in time of peace, any punishment, excepting death, which a court-martial may direct.” Petitioner claims that if it be once conceded that his son’s enlistment was in violation of law, he was never duly enlisted, and a court-martial had no jurisdiction to try him for desertion. In our opinion, however, section 1117 refers only to such recruits as have gone through’the form of an enlistment, anti have thereby become subject to the rules and articles of war. The prohibitory language used in section 1117 is repeated in section 1118, which declares that “no minor under the age of sixteen years, no insane or intoxicated person, no deserter from the military service of the United States, and no person who has been convicted of a felony, shall be enlisted or mustered into the military service.” The enlistment of a recruit in violation of either section is equally illegal, and the proposition of the petitioner amounts to this: that any soldier who conceives he has been illegally enlisted, either by reason of his minority, or by reason of his insanity or intoxication at the time of enlistment, or
As to the liability of a minor to be tried by a court-martial for any military offense committed after his enlistment, the cases, with perhaps one or two éxceptions, are uniform. In the case of Grace v. Wilber, 10 Johns. 453, it was held by the supreme court of the state of New York that if an infant, not liable to be enrolled in the militia, afterwards deserted the service, he could not be compelled to return, and an action of trespass would lie against a person who apprehended and detained
The only case opposed to this view, to which our attention has been called, is that of In re Baker, 23 Fed. Rep. 30, in which it was held that a court-martial could not retain jurisdiction of an enlisted minor undercharges of desertion. We have read this case with great care, but are unable to concur in the opinion of the learned judge, that the effect of the statute is to make the enlistment so absolutely void that the recruit could not commit the crime of desertion, and that a court-martial could not retain jurisdiction under the charge.
Our conclusion is that the court-martial had jurisdiction of the offense committed by the recruit, and that he must be remanded to await the result of his trial.