28 App. D.C. 157 | D.C. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This appeal is taken from an order of the supreme court of the District of Columbia granting appellees’ motion to supersede a writ of certiorari granted ex parte, requiring appellees to produce in court certain special orders of the War Department, known as numbers 111, 115, and 186, and all reports of proceedings had thereunder upon the examination of the appellant on the 23d and 24th days of May, 1905, and on the 21st and 23d days of August, 1905, by the board of examination convened by the said orders to determine his fitness for promotion in the Regular Army under the provisions of the act of Congress approved October 1st, 1890.
This writ ran to the appellee, Frederick C. Ainsworth, the military secretary. A motion to quash the writ was filed, and the case came on for hearing upon the petition. The writ of certiorari issued thereon, and the motion to quash said writ was-
The appellant, Winslow Hart Eeaves, three days later, obtained leave from the court to amend his petition and the writ of certiorari by incorporating in and adding to the title thereof the words, “and William H. Taft as Secretary .of War.” The petition being amended, and the amended writ of certiorari having been granted, appellees moved to supersede the writ, upon the grounds that the writ was granted improvidently and upon ex 'parte application; that the allowance of the writ would be unjust and contrary to public policy; that the amended petition did not' set up facts showing any right of property, title, or interest in petitioner to any alleged office to which he was entitled ; that Congress had intrusted to the board of examination, whose proceedings were sought to be reviewed, the decision of matters properly arising before it, and that, said board not being a judicial or inferior tribunal, the court had no jurisdiction to interpose its functions, nor to issue the writ of certiorari to examine its proceedings; that the allowance of the writ and the requirement of a return thereto would embarrass the operations of the military service of the United States and the proper administration of the duties of the War Department, and hinder the enforcement of its discipline and regulations and the discharge of the legally ordained functions of that branch of the government; and that the record sought to be reviewed showed that the petitioner was not entitled to the issuance of the writ, as appeared by a true extract from said record filed therewith. Accompanying the motion to supersede, there was filed the affidavit of the appellee Ainsworth, setting forth that an extract from the record, appended thereto and filed therewith, was a true copy of such part of the record as shows the concluding report of the board of officers convened by special order 111 in its.proceedings of May 23d, 1905.
The court, proceeding to the consideration of the original and amended petitions for the writ of certiorari and the motion to
The petition upon which the writ was granted set forth that until September 14th, 1905, the petitioner, Reaves, was second lieutenant of the Artillery Corps, United States Army, and was ordered to appear before a board of examination for promotion, convened by special orders numbers 111, 115, and 186; that he was commissioned in the Regular Army February 20th, 1902.
In view of the conclusion to which we have arrived, it is unnecessary to here set forth the voluminous allegations of the petition filed by the appellant, for we are met at the threshold by the question of jurisdiction, — the power of the supreme court of the District of Columbia to issue a writ of certiorari to review the proceedings of the board of examination whose action is here complained of. This board is one created under the authority vested in the President by the act of October 1, 1890 (26 Stat. at L. 562, chap. 1241, U. S. Comp. Stat. 1901, p. 849). Section 8 of the act says: “That the President be, and he is hereby, authorized to prescribe a system of examination of all officers of the Army below the rank of major to determine their fitness for promotion, such an examination to be conducted at such times anterior to the accruing of the right to promotion as may be best for the interests of the service: * * * That, if any officer fails to pass a satisfactory examination, and is reported unfit for promotion, the officer next below him in rank * * shall receive the promotion: and provided that, should the officer fail in his physical examination, and be found incapacitated for service by reason of physical disability contracted in line of duty, he shall be retired with the rank to which his seniority entitled him to be promoted; but if he should fail for any other reason, he shall be suspended from promotion for one year, when he shall be re-examined, and, in case of failure on such re-examination, he shall be honorably discharged with one year’s pay from the Army.”
The alleged lack of jurisdiction is founded on the theory that
That Congress acted within its constitutional powders when it enacted the statute in question is undoubted. “By article 1, section 8, of the Constitution Congress has power to raise and support armies to malee rules for the government of the land and naval forces.’ * * * Congress is thus expressly vested with the power to make rules for the government of the whole Regular Army and Navy at all times.” Johnson v. Sayre, 158 U. S. 109, 39 L. ed. 914, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep. 773. It is equally true that “all persons in the military or naval service of the United States are subject to the military law.” Ibid.
Congress, having constitutional authority to provide for the government of the Army, did, by section 3 of the act of October 1, 1890, give to the President certain powers relating to the promotion, and indirectly to the retirement, of officers of the Army; and this appellant, being an officer of the Army, was amenable to such statute. If Congress had the power to provide a system of examinations for promotion, and as an incident thereto for the retirement of officers ordered before said boards of examination, we are of the opinion that it had the power to provide that the acts of the President under authority given him should he final, and not directly reviewable by the courts.
“Congress alone has the power to determine whether the judgment of a court of the United States, of competent jurisdiction, shall be reviewed or not. If it fails to provide for such a review, the judgment stands as the judgment of the court of last resort, and settles finally the rights of the parties which are involved.” Ex parte Pennsylvania, 109 U. S. 176, 27 L.
The statute in terms gives no right of review, and, when we take into consideration the nature of the subject it was legislating upon, many reasons present themselves why such review would, on the whole, be impolitic, and have a tendency to embarrass the discipline of the Army. If one officer, dissatisfied with the decision of an examining board, has a right to ask to have the proceedings of the board reviewed by means of a writ of certiorari, then of course all others have. This, it would seem, might soon lead to a demoralization of that branch of the military service.
“When the law has confided to a special tribunal the authority to hear and determine certain matters arising in the course of its duties, the decision of that tribunal within the scope of its authority is conclusive upon all others.” Johnson v. Towsley, 13 Wall. 12, 83, 20 L. ed. 485, 487.
Nor is there anything in the statute, as we read it, which even indirectly suggests that Congress intended to authorize the courts, by writs of certiorari, to review the acts of the President, done under it. The acts of these examining boards not being final, but subject to the approval or disapproval of the President, they are, in effect, the acts of the President. It is not to be presumed that Congress considered that the decisions of the President, when called upon to exercise judgment and discretion in the performance of duties devolved upon him, should be reviewable. That discretion and judgment was confided in the executive branch of the government by -the act of Congress in question, and that it had to be exercised by the board of examination, and by the President in approving of any finding the board might make, is too plain for argument. As was said by Chief Justice Alvey, speaking for the court, in United States ex rel. Edwards v. Root, 22 App. D. C. 419: “To interpose
In the case at bar the board was military in character. It had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the person. To review its decision, approved as it was by the President, and in the form sought, would be to establish a most unwise precedent. In Smith v. Whitney, 116 U. S. 167, 29 L. ed. 601, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 570, which was a case where the supreme court of the District of Columbia at general term had held that it had no jurisdiction to entertain a petition, filed by a naval officer, for a writ of prohibition to the Secretary of the Navy and to a court martial convened to try him, and had therefore dismissed it, the Supreme Court did not consider it necessary to decide as to the power of the court to issue the writ, because no case was shown for the exercise of it. The court, however, did say: “The Secretary of the Navy being an executive officer, and not a member of the court martial sought to be prohibited, it is quite-dear that his acts concerning the petitioner cannot be the subject of a writ of prohibition. * * * And this court, although the question of issuing a writ of prohibition to a court martial has not come before it for direct adjudication, has repeatedly recognized the general rule that the acts of a court martial, within the scope of its jurisdiction and duty, cannot be controlled or reviewed in the civil courts by writ of prohibition or otherwise.” While recognizing that a board of examination is not the same as a court martial, and that a writ of prohibition is quite different from a writ of certiorari, nevertheless we are of the opinion that the decision of the latter should not be reviewed by the United States courts, by writs of cer-tiorari, when it acts within the scope of its authority. That the board of examination acted within the scope of its authority, we think is shown by that part of the record referred to in the
We have examined the case of People ex rel. Smith v. Hoffman, 166 N. Y. 462, 54 L.R.A. 597, 60 N. E. 187, much relied on by appellant’s counsel. In that case it was held that a writ of certiorari, not being prohibited under section 2120 of the New York Code of Civil Procedure, or by the Military Code, was a proper proceeding by which to review a decision of a board of examination having before it a member of the State militia. While the decisions of the court of appeals of the