MEMORANDUM OPINION GRANTING MOTION FOR JUDGMENT OF ACQUITTAL
I. FACTUAL SETTING.
Defendant, Pedro Lucas Machado, is charged with refusal to submit to induction. He raises in his defense the fact that the draft board which classified him I-A and issued his induction order did not comply with 32 C.F.R. 1604.52(c), which states in its pertinent part the following: “The members of local boards * * * shall also, if at all practicable, be residents of the area in which their local board has jurisdiction.”
The board involved herein is Local Board No. 65, the same board that was held to be improperly constituted four months ago in United States v. Beltran, No. 42330, (N.D.Calif. July 11, 1969),
II. MANDATORY NATURE OF 32 C.F.R. 1604.52(c).
Nussbaum
raises two arguments: (1) that Reg. 1604.52(c) is discretionary, not mandatory; (2) that even if the regula
*997
tion is mandatory it cannot be raised as a collateral attack in the criminal trial. A refinement of the second point is that a challenge to the draft board’s composition must be brought in a quo warranto “direct” attack. When discussing the mandatory-discretionary issue
Nussbmim
and the government in the present case point out that the regulation states an area-wide residency requirement, while the statute states a county-wide residency requirement. They argue that compliance with the statute is sufficient. This theory flies in the face of numerous selective service cases in which the courts held that a board’s failure to comply with the
regulations
was a violation of due process. See Oshatz v. United States,
The second point argued is that the regulation’s phrase “if at all practicable” shows the flexibility of the requirement and “suggests that * * * the additional requirement to be, not mandatory, but directory only.” Nussbaum, at 68. However, the phrase in question only modifies the statement “members * * * who shall [also], if at all practicable, be residents of the area * * If in fact members of that area can serve as a practical matter, then the phrase sheds no light whatsoever on whether this requirement is mandatory or discretionary. Furthermore, it is inconceivable that in the area served by Local Board No. 65, which covers one-half of Monterey County including Carmel, Pacific Grove, Seaside, King City and Monterey, it is not practicable to find five qualified persons who live in that area.
Looking to the regulation itself one sees that it uses the word “shall”, not “may.” “Shall” has been traditionally interpreted as a mandatory direction.
“The word ‘shall’ is ordinarily imperative, of similar effect and import with the word ‘must’, and inconsistent with the idea of discretion. 82 C.J.S. Statutes § 380, at pp. 877-882.” Pittman Construction Co. v. Housing Authority of Opelousas,
A mandatory interpretation of Sec. 1604.52(e) is also consistent with the policy of the Selective Service System. Four basic assumptions of this system underline that policy. First, there is the doctrine that local board members are neighbors of the registrant. See Ayers v. United States,
The second assumption is that the local board members are responsive to the community and would act under the “continuous observation of all other members of the community.” 4
The third assumption is that the due process constitutional guarantees and *998 those provided for by the Administrative Procedure Act are not necessary to the local board proceedings because of the individualized treatment the registrant receives and the informality of the board. 5
These policy reasons have also been used by the courts to refuse the right to counsel at the personal appearance. 6 In light of the courts’ acceptance of the Selective Service’s self-proclaimed model of “little groups of neighbors,” as well as the use of the word “shall” instead of “may”, it would seem that a mandatory interpretation of Sec. 1604.52(e) is compelled.
Since the regulation is mandatory, failure to follow it is a violation of due process. See Vitarelli v. Seaton,
There is no evidence that the defendant’s classification was in any manner based upon prejudice * * *. In this situation * * * the absence of evidence of prejudice does not outweigh the obvious intent of the regulation and the seriousness with which it was undoubtedly drafted. * * * ” (Emphasis supplied).
Also as the court succinctly said in Oshatz v. United States,
III. QUO WARRANTO DOES NOT LIE.
Even though the regulation is mandatory
Nussbaum,
holds that an attack on the failure of the board to comply with Reg. 1604.52(c) can only be raised by a “direct” quo warranto proceeding. Historically quo warranto was “the prerogative writ by which the government (could) call upon any person to show by what warrant he holds a public office or exercises a public franchise.” Newman v. United States ex rel. Frizzell,
Since there are no selective service cases prior to Nussbaum discussing quo warranto it is necessary to look at the traditional cases in this area. These *999 cases break down into two major divisions; those where there has been an alleged usurpation of a public office and those where a private party alleges that he has title to a position held by another.
The use of quo warranto to challenge the usurpation of public office is typified by corporate and habeas corpus cases. The first general situation deals with corporations and corporate office. Quo warranto is often used to challenge right to hold office in a corporation. For example, in Bill v. Carr, D.C.,
The habeas corpus cases rely on Ex Parte Ward,
The cases in which one person challenges the title of another are typified by Blackburn v. O’Brien,
Every one of the above situations entails a civil suit. At no time has the doctrine of quo warranto been used to deny a person, in his criminal trial, the right to challenge an element of the prosecution’s case. Given this history one should be uneasy about applying quo warranto to a selective service criminal case. In the case before the court the United States has initiated the suit; it is not a civil suit brought in the name of the registrant. Defendant Machado does not seek to be installed as a member of Board No. 65. Defendant Machado does not even seek to oust the present members of Board No. 65. His concern is defending against a criminal charge by forcing the government to prove all the elements of its case. An essential element of that case is a proper induction order. Regulatory compliance is a necessary element to prove a proper induction notice. Defendant Machado is not interested in trying title to office or putting himself into office, he is only demanding the proper criminal procedure, that is, the proof of each and every element of the charge. Quo warranto is inapplicable to such a proceeding.
IV. DIRECT VERSUS COLLATERAL ATTACK.
Intertwined with the notion of quo warranto is the concept of direct versus collateral attack. Although no draft cases have discussed quo warranto, a few of them have said one cannot make a collateral attack on the board’s actions in one’s criminal defense. Accepting the semantical distinction between “direct” and “collateral” leads one quickly into a quagmire.
Nussbaum
and the cases it relies on provide no way out of that quagmire, rather, they sink one deeper into the confusion. Two of the four cases relied upon by
Nussbaum
assume without argument that an attack on racial compo
*1000
sition of a draft board is collateral
8
and therefore they rely on the old habeas corpus cases such as
Ex Parte Ward
and
Lindsley.
The other two cases
9
cited by
Nussbaum
give only cursory treatment to the attack on draft boards for improper residency, relying almost exclusively on the same traditional cases dealing with quo warranto. These draft cases fail to analyze the charge against the defendant, that is, the refusal to submit to induction. A person cannot be judged guilty of such charge unless there is a valid induction order. A prerequisite to a proper induction order is procedural due process. See Miller v. United States,
There are numerous cases which allow as part of the criminal defense, proof of the failure of the board’s regulatory compliance. See Briggs v. United States,
In all of these cases the defendants were raising the same type of claim as the defendant raises herein. For Machado argues a violation of due process in that the Selective Service arbitrarily refused to follow Reg. 1604.52(c) and that this failure invalidated the induction order; therefore the defendant cannot be found guilty of refusal to submit to the induction.
V. ASSUMING QUO WARRANTO LIES, IT IS INADEQUATE.
Even if it were assumed that quo warranto is a proper remedy it must be decided whether it is an adequate remedy. For if it is not adequate then it is not an exclusive remedy. See Lapides v. Doner,
It is also clear that the United States Attorney has discretion to decline to bring a quo warranto lawsuit. See cases cited above. Anno: Quo warranto, private person’s right,
The denial of a federal forum is more than a theoretical possibility. The court takes judicial notice of the fact that in the case of United States v. Johnson, No. 42910 (N.D.Cal. Nov. 18, 1969), defendant’s attorney demanded that the United States Attorney bring a quo warranto proceeding against Local Board No. 53, but no proceeding was instituted. It is also a fact that the United States Attorney’s office has been on notice since the decision in Beltran over four months ago that Local Board No. 65 was improperly constituted and has instituted no quo warranto proceedings.
The conclusion that a quo warranto action is not adequate and therefore not exclusive is buttressed by two further arguments. First, it is doubtful that in the face of 50 U.S.C. App. § 460(b) (3) a pre-induction attack would lie. This section is an emphatic Congressional statement that no one can bring a judicial review of classification and processing prior to induction. A general attack of the kind suggested in
Nussbaum
would disrupt the selective service system. For example, not one draft board in San Francisco is properly constituted.
11
A quo warranto proceeding would bring all classification to a standstill until such time as the boards were properly constituted. Although the courts have not decided this particular issue, there are suggestions that such an attack prior to induction would not be allowed. The court in Anderson v. Hershey,
The other argument pointing out the inadequacy of the quo warranto action revolves around the registrant’s lack of counsel. To initiate a quo warranto proceeding in a selective service case the registrant would have to be familiar with the myriad of complex regulations; capable of statutory and regulatory interpretation ; aware of the possibility of quo warranto; and skilled in research and investigation. An average registrant has none of these skills, and the crucial factor is that the registrant usu *1002 ally comes into contact with an attorney only after his refusal to submit to induction.
In the typical quo warranto case either a person has title himself and is therefore aware someone else improperly has title, or he is part of a corporation or business adversely affected and thereby has an attorney easily available for consultation. In draft cases the regulations themselves forbid a registrant counsel in the proceedings prior to induction and thereby discourage any contact with attorneys prior to the criminal charge. 32 C.F.R. § 1624.1(b). The addressees of members of the board are by regulation confidential. 32 C.F.R. 1606.62(c). Furthermore, the courts have held that the dates of appointment of the members are confidential. See Tuchinsky v. Selective Service System,
The case of defendant Machado is especially instructive. ' Here is a young man, born in Portugal, with only nine years of schooling, who was completely unaware of Reg. 1604.52(c) and a legalistic proceeding called quo warranto. And he, like most registrants, came to an attorney only after he was criminally charged.
When viewing the difficulty in bringing a quo warranto action for the registrant, the policy and command of 50 U.S.C. App. § 460(b) (3), and the dependence of a quo warranto proceeding on the public attorney’s discretion the court must conclude that such a proceeding is an inadequate remedy and therefore not exclusive.
In light of the court’s determination that Reg. 1604.52(c) is mandatory and that the failure of the draft board to comply with such regulation can be raised as a defense in the registrant’s criminal trial; and in light of the court’s conclusion that quo warranto does not lie, and even if it did lie it would not be an adequate remedy, it is hereby ordered that the motion for judgment of acquittal be granted.
Notes
. The court is aware that Nussbaum is presently on appeal and it is hoped that the United States Court of Appeals will soon resolve this issue for further guidance of the court.
. Hearings before the Senate Military Affairs Committee on S. 4164, 76th Cong., 3d Sess. 384 (1940).
. See Report of the National Advisory Commission on Selective Service, at 20 (1967).
. 86 Cong.Rec. 11678 (1940) (remarks of Rep. Mott).
. See United States v. Pitt,
. See United States v. Capson,
. This wide scope of discretion has led to significant variation in classification of persons in like circumstances. See Report of the National Advisory Commission on Selective Service 83-6 (1967).
. Haven v. United States,
. Jessen v. United States,
. In Stiles the board had failed to classify registrant anew based on new information as required by Reg. 625.2(c). The court held that “the induction order was invalid and that Stiles * * * was entitled to set up its invalidity in his defense.”
. See Draft Boards Here Ignore the Courts, San Francisco Examiner and Chronicle, at 1, 10/19/69.
