This is аn appeal by the government from the dismissal of an indictment. The facts are these. Defendant, classified I-A by his local Selective Service Board, was ordered to rеport for induction on June 24, 1969. After receipt of this notification, he requested SSS Form 150, seeking a conscientious objector classification, which he completed and returned to the Board on June 2. The Board thereafter wrote him as follows.
“This letter is- to advise that your case was considered by the Board at a meeting held June 24, 1969. The Boаrd did not reopen your classification.”
Apparently defendant’s induction date was postponed to August 26. On that date he reported, but refused to submit.
To the customary indictment under 50 U.S.C. App. § 462, the defendant filed a motion to dismiss on the ground that “no reasons [were] given” by the Board for the refusal to reopen his classification, citing the court’s previоus decision in United States v. Cassarino, D.N.H., 1970,
The government asserts that this order is appealable by it, under 18 U.S.C. § 3731. That matter not appearing as obvious to us, we requested a brief with particular reference to United States v. Sisson, 1970,
Section 3731, in- relaxing the normal principle that the government has no aрpeal in criminal cases, is of limited scope.
See Sisson,
ante, 399 U.S. at pp. 291-296,
“From a decisiоn or judgment setting aside, or dismissing any indictment or information, or any count thereof except where a direct appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States is prоvided by this section.”
Quite obviously this does not mean every dismissal.
See, e. g.,
United States v. Apex Distributing Co., ante (no appeal from dismissal for “unnecessary delay” due to government’s unwillingness to comply with discovery order); Umbriaco v. United Stаtes, 9 Cir., 1958,
There can be no question, then, that, had he waited and proved these facts at trial defendant would, assuming the court’s view of the law is correct, have been еntitled to an acquittal from which, under Sisson, no appeal would lie.
Admittedly Findley, unlike Sisson, had not formally been put in jeopardy. It is also true that the parties stipulated to the additional facts in question. But the Court’s reasoning in
Sisson
supports our further conclusion that Findley should be treated as he would have been had he raised his defense only at trial. First, see
Sisson,
ante, at 284-286,
Immediately following our tentative conclusion on this matter the Court decided the case of United States v. Weller,
Examination of the Weller briefs reveals no question raised, and no discussion, except as to the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court. Both parties proceeded on the assumption that jurisdiction in the court of appeals depended solely on a resolution of that question. That there may be a further question as to circuit court jurisdiction is not obvious from the face of the statute. We intend no possible disrespect towards a busy court when we conclude that the fact that such a question exists might well have escaped its attention. We believe that it does exist, at least in this case, 2 and that we must decide it. We believe, further, that the answer depends on Sis-son’s exclusion of appeals where the de- *974 cisión was based on the merits. 3 If an appeal will lie in the present case, while it cannot if the defendant waits and subjects himself to jeopardy, informed counsel believing they have a defense on the merits will henceforth protect their clients by avoiding an exрediting procedure otherwise beneficial to all concerned, and only ignorant and ill-advised defendants will subject their defense on the merits to a government apрeal. We will not adopt such a penalizing construction of the statute.
Appeal dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
Notes
. We must, accordingly, take it that in the court’s view it was immaterial whether the form was defective or insufficient on its face. Whatever the ultimate resolution of the present dispute as to the duty of the Board to specify its reasoning in refusing to reopen, if the defendant did not еven have openers we clearly wonder how or why he should get into the play.
See
Mulloy v. United States, 1970,
. Possibly an argument may be made that Weller, involving an interpretation of a regulation, and this not involving the same kind of dependency on facts outside the indictment, presents a different jurisdictional question than the case at bar. We have doubts, but leave that question to the consideration of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
. “[F]indings on evidence presented in the trial of the general issue.”
