24 S.E. 417 | N.C. | 1896
The motion was heard upon the complaint and demurrer thereto.
The action was brought to enjoin the publication by the defendant, as lieutenant commander, of an order from the (488) Governor as commander in chief of the militia revoking a commission held by the plaintiff as commander of the naval battalion of the State Guard, the plaintiff denying the power of the Governor to issue such order without trial before a court-martial.
Defendant demurred to the complaint, for that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action: (1) because the Governor had, in law, as commander in chief, the power to revoke plaintiff's commission; (2) because the action is not a proper one for injunction, for if the order was void the plaintiff is still in office, but if ousted he could try his title by an action in the nature of a quo warranto.
The demurrer was sustained, the motion for a restraining order denied, and plaintiff appealed. The Constitution of the United States provides (Art. II, sec. 2) that "the President shall be commander in chief of the army and navy of the United States and of the militia of the several States when called into actual service of the United States." The Constitution of North Carolina (Art. III, sec. 8, and Art. XII, sec. 3) constitutes the Governor of the State commander in chief of the militia, except when they are called into the service of the Federal Government, and confers upon him the power to call them out "to execute the law, suppress riots or insurrection and to repel invasion." While the two provisions supplement each other so as to prevent collision when the Chief Executive of the United States calls (489) the militia of the State into actual service, the authority conferred as incident to the office of commander in chief, leaving other constitutional provisions out of view, is substantially the same when either is actually controlling land or naval forces within his own province.
The President, as the constituted head of the military establishment, has the implied power to regulate the disposition of armies and to direct the movements of the navy. So long as Congress refrains from the exercise of its authority to make rules for the government of the land and the naval forces, it has been conceded that the control of the President is supreme, within the sphere of his office, and limited only by the well-defined boundary fixed for the protection of *300 individual liberty and security. Neither the President nor Congress nor the judiciary can disturb any of the safeguards of civil liberty. Ordronaux Con. Leg., p. 108. "But Congress may, under the Constitution, not only provide for raising, equipping and maintaining armies and navies, but may make rules for the government of the land and naval forces. When Congress asserts its authority to the extent that it acts within the purview of its powers the President is deprived of the supreme power of military head of the Government, and in lieu of his right to exercise it incurs the obligation as Chief Executive to see that the laws made by the legislative branch of the government are faithfully executed." Black's Const. Law, p. 96.
So, the Constitution of North Carolina (Art. XII, sec. 2) having authorized the Legislature "to provide for the organization, arming, equipping and discipline of the militia," where it passes an act in pursuance of this section, imposes pro tanto a limit upon the (490) incidental authority of the Governor, as commander in chief and charges him, as the constituted head of the executive department (Article III, section 1), with the duty of seeing that the statute is carried into effect.
It appears, therefore, that by the terms of both the Federal and the State Constitutions the executive heads of the two governments are constituted commanders of the military forces by using substantially the same words, and that the grant of authority to the legislative departments is expressed in the two instruments in language almost identical. It follows that in time of peace the right of the President to remove officers of the regular army, in the absence of all statutory regulation by Congress, must be precisely the same as that of a Governor to dismiss officers of the militia when his powers and duties are not defined by any legislative act. It seems to have been settled by numerous authorities that the President may, in the absence of express prohibitory legislation by Congress, dismiss an officer from the service in order to promote the efficiency of the army or navy. Blake v. U.S.,
The statute (The Code, sec. 3268) was in affirmance of the Constitution in so far as it purported to clothe the Governor, as commander in chief, with the authority already vested in him to revoke any commission * * * whenever in his judgment it shall be necessary or expedient for the public good or for the good of the service. The power to dismiss being conferred by the constitutional provision and affirmed by statute, it is clear that the Governor may still lawfully exercise it, unless the Legislature, by virtue of its authority to *301 organize and discipline the militia, has either expressly or by implication repealed the statute.
It is provided by section 24, chapter 374, Laws 1893, that "a commissioned officer may be honorably discharged upon (491) tender of resignation, upon disbandment of the organization to which he belongs, upon the report of the board of examination, or for failure to appear before such board when ordered." It was further provided in the same section that "he may be dismissed upon the sentence of a court-martial or conviction in a court of justice of an infamous offense." Another section of the same act (section 18) authorizes "the commander in chief to disband a company and grant honorable discharges to its officers and men where for ninety days it is found to contain less than the minimum number of enlisted men, or where upon inspection it is found to have fallen below a proper standard of efficiency."
The only remaining question is whether the older statute (The Code, sec. 3268) is by implication repealed by either chapter 374 or chapter 399, Laws 1893. The plaintiff does not contend that there is any express repealing clause in either. The courts have universally given their sanction to the rules of construction: (1) That the law does not favor a repeal of an older statute by a later one by mere implication. S. v. Woodside,
The Legislature, by the act of 1876-'77 (The Code, sec. 3268), reaffirmed the Governor's right as commander in chief to revoke commissions and disband companies, in the exercise of a sound discretion, "for the public good or the good of the service." Are the Acts of 1893 repugnant to the provisions of The Code? If not, is there anything in either (chapter 374 or chapter 399, Laws 1893) that plaintiff manifests the purpose of the Legislature to substitute the new acts for the pre-existing statute? These are the questions upon which the controversy depends.
The section of The Code then in force clothed the Governor with power to disband companies or to revoke commissions where he deemed it best for the service or the public interest, but section 18, chapter 374, Laws 1893, clothed him with authority to act upon the report of an inspection made by the proper officer and order that a company (493) be disbanded and men and officers be honorably discharged, where they did not appear to have come up to a standard of efficiency set up by a staff officer or to have kept the number of enlisted men above the minimum prescribed. Clearly the right to exercise such a general discretion is not inconsistent with the legislative declaration that certain conditions may justify the exercise of the same power in special cases and under given circumstances, without regard to the views of the agent entrusted by the government with the authority. So the provision in section 24 of the same chapter, that a commissioned officer may be honorably discharged on tender of his resignation, upon the report of the board of examination, or for failure to appear before such board, is not irreconcilable with the prior statute, for the reason that the Governor might, before the passage of the later act, have refused to accept the resignation of an officer, or, upon an unfavorable report of the board or upon failure to appear before such board, might have declined to revoke his commission on the ground that he did not believe the public interest or the good of the service called for the exercise of his authority. The two statutes can stand and be construed together as vesting in the Governor the right to revoke commissions on special grounds, without regard to his opinion as to consequences or for any reason outside of the cases enumerated, where he may think it best for the service. Looking at all of the provisions of the two acts, which refer to each other and were intended to be enforced together, we see nothing to indicate a purpose to substitute the two chapters as a whole for the law *303 previously in force. The courts construe any statute in derogation of the common law or of common right strictly, and upon the same principle prefer to interpret successive statutes as in pari materia and give effect to all, in so far as they are reconcilable one with (494) the other. It is manifest that the Legislature intended that the naval force which might be organized under chapter 399, Laws 1893, should constitute a part of the State militia and should be subject to the same regulations previously prescribed for the land forces. Neither the provision for the election of the battalion or company officers nor for the appointment of staff officers is inconsistent with the intent on the part of the Legislature to allow the chief officer of all the forces to exercise the power given him by the act of 1876-'77. On the contrary, the discipline of the naval forces, by the express terms of the last act, was required to "conform as closely to that of the land forces of this State as the difference in the two services will allow." If, therefore, under a proper construction of the act of 12 March (chapter 374), the Governor was not divested of the power to revoke commissions of officers in the land forces, there is no reason why he should not have conformed to the rules applicable to the land forces in dealing with the naval officers. It was not contended that the Governor revoked the commission of the plaintiff for reasons that affected his character as a man or his general efficiency as an officer. It is ordinarily essential to the success of efforts to train and discipline troops that there should be harmony and concerted action on the part of the higher officers entrusted with the duty. If, as we gather from the argument, the commander in chief and the commander of all the naval forces had disagreed as to methods or discipline, and such disagreements had made their relations unpleasant, it was natural that the chief officer should act upon the idea that the naval forces would prove more efficient if the command should be entrusted to one in touch both in thought and purpose, with his superior. For the reasons given the demurrer was properly sustained.
If the Governor could lawfully revoke the commission of the (495) plaintiff, the latter has no cause of action at all. It is therefore unnecessary to follow counsel in the discussion of the question whether, if the plaintiff had suffered an injury for which he would have been entitled to redress, his remedy would have been an action at law, pure and simple, or whether he might have invoked the equitable jurisdiction of the court by demanding an order enjoining the defendant, as lieutenant commander, from exercising the authority of commander. The judgment is
Affirmed. *304
Cited: S. v. Atwater, post, 1215; S. v. Davis,