Defendant was convicted in the court below of failing to report for civilian work in the national .interest in violation of 50 U.S.C. App. §§ 456(j), 462. Defendant concedes that he knowingly failed to obey an order of his local board, and that the order was issued in compliance with statute and regulations. His appeal raises issues concerning the free exercise of religion, the intent requisite for conviction of crime, and the division of function between judge and jury.
The record indicates that both defendant and the Selective Service System have behaved punctiliously. Defendant was originally classified II-S while an undergraduate at Antioch College. Upon graduation, his local board placed him in class I-O, the classification reserved for those conscientiously opposed to any form of military service. In the course of completing SSS Form 152 (Special Report for Class 1-0 Registrants), defendant indicated that his first choice for alternate service was the Chicago branch of the American Friends Service Committee. Defendant’s local board replied that the Friends Service Committee was not an acceptable alternative to military service and advised defendant to apply for work in an approved program.
By that time, however, defendant had already begun work with the Committee as an adviser to draft registrants. Several months of negotiations concerning defendant’s status ensued. Defendant terminated these negotiations by a letter to his local board in which he expressed his intent to refuse to cooperate any further with the Selective Service System. This step was prompted by defendant’s belief that any system of conscription is unjust and that the practice of exempting conscientious objectors was merely a device for blunting the protests of those most vehemently opposed to militarism. Defendant’s local board then ordered defendant to report for ci *112 vilian work at Massachusetts General Hospital. Because of procedural irregularities, two further orders were issued, and twice more defendant refused to report. He was then indicted and convicted after a trial by jury.
On this appeal, defendant raises three objections: first, that the requirement of alternate service for conscientious objectors infringes the free exercise of religion ; second, that the trial court erred in refusing to charge that the jury should consider defendant’s motivation in deciding the issue of criminal intent; and finally, that the jury should have been expressly informed of its power to acquit defendant in spite of his admitted violation of the statute.
Defendant’s First Amendment claim would have us make a substantial inroad on the existing law governing military service exemptions. We rehearse briefly what that law is. It has been repeatedly recognized that exemption for military service is a matter of Congressional grace rather than constitutional compulsion. United States v. Macintosh,
We need not decide whether to adopt this approach, however, for even if we assume that the First Amendment requires some form of exemption for those conscientiously opposed to military service, it does not follow that Congress must grant a total exemption. Congress has broad power to take all steps necessary and appropriate to raising and supporting an army. United States v. O’Brien,
Defendant impliedly rejects this conventional wisdom,. The First Amendment, he argues, protects religiously motivated conduct unless that conduct poses some substantial peril to the public health or safety. This stringent test, he maintains, should be applied even if the individual’s objection is not to the conduct which the government seeks to compel, but to the national policy which that conduct promotes. Counsel for defendant made clear at oral argument that this principle would equally apply to one who refused to pay his income tax because of conscientious objections to the war in Vietnam.
Such a view of the First Amendment is, we think, overly solipsistic. The Constitution does not extend the same degree of protection to every manifestation of religious impulse. The strict standard which defendant invokes may be appropriate when the government seeks *113 to regulate acts of worship, 1 or to compel conduct which violates a cardinal tenet of religious faith. 2 In this case, however, defendant has been ordered to work in a hospital, an employment in which he has already engaged without violence to his principles. 3 Defendant objects not to the specific conduct which the government requires, but to cooperation with a system which he considers wicked. But, in the words of Mr. Justice Cardozo,
“Never in our history has the notion been accepted * * * that acts thus indirectly related to service in the camp or field are so tied to the practice of religion as to be exempt, in law or in morals, from regulation by the state. * * * [A] different doctrine would carry us to lengths that have never yet been dreamed of. The conscientious objector, if his liberties were to be thus extended, might refuse to contribute taxes in furtherance of a war, whether for attack or for defense, or in furtherance of any other end condemned by his conscience as irreligious or immoral. The right of private judgment has never yet been so exalted above the powers and the compulsion of the agencies of government.” Hamilton v. Board of Regents,293 U.S. 245 , 267, 268,55 S.Ct. 197 , 206,79 L.Ed. 343 (1934) (concurring).
Defendant nevertheless argues that even if the First Amendment does not immunize his conduct from regulation, at least the government should have the burden of showing that no less restrictive form of regulation could accomplish its purposes, citing Sherbert v. Verner,
Defendant’s second attack focuses on the trial court’s instructions concerning the mental element of the offense charged. The court told the jury that the term “willfully” as used in the indictment meant that the defendant acted with knowledge that his conduct was prohibited by law and with specific intent to violate the law. The court then distinguished “motive” and “intent”:
“Motive is that which tempts, induces or moves a person to commit a crime. Intent is the purpose or mental state with which the person doe.s the act. Now, members of the jury, motive, no matter how laudable or praiseworthy that motive may be, cannot negative a specificate intent to commit a crime. * * * Where a person has a specific *114 intent to bring about a result which the law seeks to prevent, what induces him to act, his motive, is immaterial.”
In keeping with this instruction, the trial court rebuffed all attempts by defense counsel to demonstrate defendant’s good moral character or to explore the reasonableness of defendant’s beliefs concerning the draft and the war in Vietnam.
Defendant criticizes these rulings on the ground that the term “willfully” as used in the indictment includes not only an intent to violate the statute, but also a venal or ignoble motive. Two arguments support this proposition: first, defendant maintains that criminal liability in general requires the “concurrence of an evil-meaning mind with an evildoing hand”; 4 second, defendant argues that a good faith belief in the unconstitutionality of government action excuses otherwise criminal conduct.
Defendant’s first argument attempts to transform occasionally pertinent language into black letter law. Defendant cites a miscellany of cases which use the phrase “bad purpose” in describing the mental element necessary for criminal culpability. In context, this phrase serves as a convenient shorthand expression to distinguish liability based on conscious wrong-doing from liability based on mere carelessness or mistake. But the occasional use of this phrase does not establish that an ignoble motive is a necessary element of crime. The cases on which defendant places primary reliance hold only that, as a matter of history and statutory construction, certain crimes require a specific mental element. Spies v. United States,
The trial court’s charge in this case properly explained the mental element required for conviction under 50 U.S.C. App. § 462. To sustain conviction under this statute, the government must show awareness of legal obligation and a deliberate purpose not to comply. United States v. Rabb,
Defendant also maintains that his conduct, “based upon the bona fide belief in the illegality of the Government’s conduct or based upon constitutional claims * * * cannot be the basis of a criminal conviction.” For this he relies principally on United States v. Murdock,
Murdock was a prosecution under the revenue laws. The defendant had refused to give tax information to the federal government on the grounds that dis-
*115
closure would expose him to state prosecutions in violation of the Fifth Amendment. After lengthy litigation, the Supreme Court rejected defendant’s Fifth Amendment claim,
7
but the Court later held that defendant’s reason for refusal was relevant to the issue of willfulness and should have been considered by the jury. The Court reached this result by a process of statutory construction. Under a complex regulatory scheme such as the revenue laws, honest disagreements about the meaning of the law will often arise. Congress, reasoned the Court, did not intend one to become a criminal “by reason of a bona-fide misunderstanding” as to his duty.
In the case at bar, however, there was no misunderstanding of what the law required, and the power of Congress to impose such requirements has long been settled. Defendant disobeyed a well-settled requirement in order to protest the entire conscription system, and hopefully to make new law, but that does not give him immunity from the sanctions of the old law if he is unsuccessful in his efforts. Had the defendant in Murdock refused to divulge tax information because he conscientiously felt that the capital gains provisions were immoral or that deficit spending was contrary to Scripture, he would have fared no better. Congress may not have intended to punish good-faith misunderstanding, but Congress obviously did not intend to carve out a universal exception for test-cases.
Keegan does not, we think, enlarge the scope of Murdock, but is addressed to a different problem. There the defendants were prosecuted for conspiracy to counsel draft evasion, there being at that time no sanction for counselling refusal to serve. The majority viewed the evidence as limited to counselling refusal to serve. 9 In this context, Mr. Justice Roberts added a cryptic and ambiguous dictum:
“One with innocent motives, who honestly believes a law unconstitutional and, therefore, not obligatory, may well counsel that the law shall not be obeyed ; that its command shall be resisted until a court shall have held it valid, but this is not knowingly counselling, stealthily and by guile, to evade its command. * * *”325 U.S. at 493-494 ,65 S.Ct. at 1209 .
We construe this as describing the conduct of the defendants and contrasting it with evasion, not — as has been the interpretation of some — as proclaiming a novel doctrine that one may with impunity counsel or engage in disobedience of a squarely applicable law in order to provoke a test ease. We are strengthened in this reading not only by the ambiguity and brevity of the quoted passage, but by the concurrence on separate grounds of *116 two Justices and the specific rejection of the test-case-in-good-faith doctrine by four dissenters. 10 Okamoto, it is true, seized on the dictum and gave it broad reach. We would agree with the result, but only for the reasons advanced by the dissent, namely, this was Keegan replayed. Subsequent progeny have been few and conflicting. 11
Defendant’s final objection concerns the trial court’s refusal to instruct the jury that it had the power to acquit defendant even though he was guilty of the offense charged. The court’s refusal was clearly correct. The doctrine that juries are judges of the law as well as the facts in criminal cases has enjoyed a rich and varied history, but this doctrine was decisively rejected during the nineteenth century. Howe, Juries as Judges of Criminal Law, 52 Harv.L.Rev. 582 (1939). Today jurors may have the power to ignore the law, but their duty is to apply the law as interpreted by the court, and they should be so instructed. Sparf & Hansen v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
.
E. g.,
People v. Woody,
. Sherbert v. Verner,
. Defendant’s SSS Form 152 indicates that he has worked at three different hospitals as a scrub nurse, lab technician, and research assistant.
. Morissette v. United States,
. Defendant repeatedly cites
Sisson
to justify admitting evidence concerning the reasonableness of defendant’s belief. The court did consider such evidence in
Sisson,
but only on the issue of the constitutionality of distinguishing between religious and ethical objections to war. The court specifically ruled that such evidence was irrelevant to the issue of intent. United States v. Sisson,
supra,
.
See
United States v. Spock,
.
United States v. Murdock,
. We do not, of course, mean to confine
Murdoch
solely to the Internal Revenue Code. Similar logic may be applied in other eases where Congress penalizes only “willful” violations of complex regulations.
E. g.,
Rainbow Dyeing & Cleaning Co. v. Bowles,
. Defendants, officers of the German-Amer-iean Bund, had ordered Bund members to register for the draft but to refuse service because of an amendment to the selective service law which proscribed filling any draft-created job vacancy with a Bund member.
. We note also that both Keegan and Murdoch were from the pen of Mr. Justice Roberts, but neither he nor the writers of the three other opinions in Keegan made reference to Murdock.
. The 10th Circuit has limited
Okamoto
to cases of counselling disobedience as distinguished from actual violations of the terms of a statute. Warren v. United States,
