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        <author>Virginia. Supreme Court of Appeals</author>
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          <titlePart type="main">OPINION
<lb/>
OF THE
<lb/>
SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
<lb/>
IN REGARD TO
<lb/>
LIABILITY TO MILITARY SERVICE
<lb/>
OF THE
<lb/>
PRINCIPALS OF SUBSTITUTES.</titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <docImprint>PRINTED BY ORDER OF THE VIRGINIA SENATE
<lb/>
<pubPlace>RICHMOND:</pubPlace>
<publisher>JAMES E. GOODE, SENATE PRINTER.</publisher>
<docDate>1864.</docDate></docImprint>
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        <head>SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA.</head>
        <head>OPINION.</head>
        <argument>
          <p>BURROUGHS <hi rend="italics">vs.</hi> PEYTON,
and 
ABRAHAMS <hi rend="italics">vs.</hi> PEYTON, <hi rend="italics">On habeas corpus.</hi></p>
        </argument>
        <p>The returns having been made without reference to the recent act of
congress suspending the privilege of the writ of <hi rend="italics">habeas corpus</hi>, in certain
cases, and the respondent not asking leave to amend them, and rely
upon that act; but on the contrary, stating that he asserts no right under
it to hold the petitioners in custody, the court does not consider it
necessary to decide any question which might be raised under said act,
and will proceed to consider these cases irrespective of it.</p>
        <p>Although the court has, more than once, acted upon questions arising
under the acts of congress approved on the 16th day of April 1862,
and on the 27th day of September 1862, commonly called the conscription
acts, it has never until now been called on to decide upon their constitutional
validity, that having been heretofore either expressly or tacitly
conceded. But the question, whether congress had the power under
the constitution to pass such acts, is now raised, and as it is of the
highest public importance, it is proper that it should receive the most
careful and deliberate examination. In deciding it, considerations of
expediency and policy cannot be permitted to control our judgment.
We must expound the constitution according to what appears to be its
true meaning; and if it be clear that no power to pass the acts in question
has been conferred by it, we are bound to declare them void and of
no effect, however disastrous may be the consequences of our decision.</p>
        <p>It is said that congress cannot, under the grant of the power to raise
armies, place by force and at their own discretion, the citizens of a state
in the ranks of the army of the Confederate States: that a power to
do so would be despotic in its nature and far greater and more dangerous
<pb id="stark4" n="4"/>
than any possessed by the government, subjecting as it does the
personal freedom of every citizen to arbitrary discretion. And moreover, that it would be inconsistent with the rights of the states: putting
their very existence at the mercy of the confederate government. That
a mere general grant of the power to raise armies, without specifying
the mode in which they are to be raised, cannot be held to confer an authority
so repugnant to the spirit of free institutions, the principles on
which our constitution rests, and the rights secured by it.</p>
        <p>The power of coercing the citizen to render military service for such
time and under such circumstances as the government may think fit, is indeed
a transcendent power; but so far from being inconsistent with liberty,
it is essential to its preservation. A nation cannot foresee the extent of
the dangers to which it may be exposed. It must, therefor, grant to its
government a power equal to every possible emergency: and this can
only be done by giving to it the control of its whole military strength.
The danger that the power may be abused, cannot render it proper to
withhold it, for it is necessary to the national life. The hazard of abuse
should be guarded against by so framing the government as to render it
unlikely that it will use the power oppressively.</p>
        <p>The real question for our consideration then, is not <hi rend="italics">whether</hi> the power
exists, but <hi rend="italics">where</hi> it exists. Has it been conferred on the confederate
government, or is it retained by the states? In its effects upon the individual
personally, the act of compelling him to render the service, is
the same whether it is performed by the state or by the confederate
government. The question, as to which of them should exercise the
authority, relates merely to the proper distribution of political power
between the two governments. And the idea that first suggests itself
is, that it ought to be placed in the hands of the one which is charged
with the duty of providing for the defence of the country: for a government
“from whose agency the attainment of any <hi rend="italics">end</hi> is expected, ought
to possess the <hi rend="italics">means</hi> by which it is to be attained.”</p>
        <p>The clauses of the confederate constitution, relating to the military
power and its exercise, have been adopted without change from the constitution
of the United States—the amendments to the latter being inserted
in the body of the former. Whatever therefore, throws light
upon the meaning of the constitution of the United States on this point,
throws equal light upon the meaning of ours.</p>
        <p>It is well known that the Union of the colonies was formed for the
purpose of combined resistance to the oppressions of the mother country.
Delegates from the several colonies constituted a congress, which
<pb id="stark5" n="5"/>
assumed the conduct of the war in the name and on behalf of all the
colonies, which soon became the United States of America. But the
congress could exercise the power of compelling citizens to serve in the
army only through the intervention of the states, by means of requisitions
upon them for their respective quotas of men; and being unable
to enforce compliance with these requisitions, it was found impossible to
raise an army sufficient for the vigorous prosecution of the war.</p>
        <p>This difficulty, which had been so painfully felt throughout the contest,
and which indeed put to serious hazard the success of the cause,
was one of the chief reasons urged in favor of the change of the form
of government, effected by the adoption of the constitution of the
United States. It was insisted that the government, having the power
of determining on peace and war and charged with the duty of providing
for the common defence, should be invested with power commensurate
with that end, and that this could only be done by abandoning the
system of requisitions upon the states and authorizing the federal government
to act directly upon individuals. These views prevailed, the
constitution being framed in accordance with them.</p>
        <p>It will be observed that a broad distinction is made in the constitution
between the “<hi rend="italics">militia</hi>” and the “<hi rend="italics">armies</hi>” referred to in it: the powers
conferred on congress and denied to the states, in reference to the one,
being widely different from the powers conferred and denied in reference
to the other. And indeed, the two words could not have been used to
convey the same idea. <hi rend="italics">An army</hi> is a body of men whose business is
war: <hi rend="italics">the militia</hi> a body of men composed of citizens occupied ordinarily
in the pursuits of civil life, but organized for discipline and drill,
and called into the field for temporary military service when the exigencies
of the country require it.</p>
        <p>The experience acquired during the revolutionary war had demonstrated
what indeed all previous experience had taught, that however
valuable a militia may be, it is unable to contend permanently and successfully
with veteran troops; and that it would be, to the last degree,
unsafe to trust to it exclusively for the defence of the country. It was
well known that a regular army would be absolutely indispensable in a
protracted contest with a powerful nation. Accordingly, in spite of the
jealousy, inherited from their English ancestors, against standing armies,
the framers of the constitution gave to congress the power “to raise
and support armies.” There is certainly nothing in the terms of the
grant to restrict congress to voluntary enlistments as a means of raising
armies. Nor does any sufficient reason appear why such restriction
<pb id="stark6" n="6"/>
should have been imposed. The experience of the revolution had shown
that it was necessary to resort to compulsion to fill the ranks of the
army. This compulsion had not, it is true, been applied by the federal
government; but that was because it had no power to resort to it, being
confined to requisitions upon the states. The states had the power, and
in compliance with the requisitions made upon them by congress, continually
exercised it, not for the purpose of bringing out the militia
merely, but for the purpose, also, of filling the ranks of the regular army, when voluntary enlistments fell short of the number to be furnished for
it. See <hi rend="italics">Marshall's Life of Washington</hi>, vol. 4, p. 241.</p>
        <p>Instances of such legislation are to be found on the statute book of
this state. In May 1777, an act was passed “for the more speedily
completing the quota of troops to be raised in this commonwealth for
the continental army and for other purposes,” in which it was provided
that if, before the 10th day of August 1777, a sufficient number of men
should not have been enlisted to make up the quota required, the deficiency
should be made up by drafts from the militia; and that each
man so drafted should be, “to all intents and purposes, considered as a
regular soldier,” and should serve as such for three years, if the war
should so long continue. See 9 Henning's Statutes at large, p. 275. See,
also, the same volume of Henning, p. 337, and vol. 10, id., ps. 82, 214,
259, 333, and volume 11 id., p. 14, for instances of similar legislation.</p>
        <p>Other instances might doubtless be pointed out; but these are amply
sufficient to put it beyond doubt that compulsory drafting was an ordinary
means used for filling the ranks of the regular continental army.
This, of course, was well known to the framers of the constitution of
the United States. If it had been their design to restrict congress to
voluntary enlistments as the means of raising armies, is it at all probable
that they would have failed so to declare in express terms? In granting
the power “to raise armies,” without any words of limitation or restriction
as to the mode to be employed, they must be understood as intending
that the power should be exercised in any and all of the modes
which had been previously employed by the states. Full power to make
war was vested in the federal government. Of course it could not have
been intended, if an offensive war, necessary for the assertion of the
rights or vindication of the honor of the nation, should be undertaken,
to withhold from the government the means of prosecuting it with success,
by denying to it the use of any troops, except such as might be
obtained by voluntary enlistment. Yet this was done, if the power to
use compulsion to fill the ranks of the army was not conferred on congress;
<pb id="stark7" n="7"/>
for the militia can be called out only for the purpose of executing
the laws, suppressing insurrections or repelling invasions.</p>
        <p>But it is said that it does not appear that any objection was made, at
the time of the adoption of the constitution of the United States, to the
clause granting the power to raise armies, on the ground that it gave to
congress the power of conscription, and that it is incredible that a
power so vast and dangerous would have passed without objection, if it
had been then supposed to be possible that it would ever be claimed by
any one that such power was conferred. It will hereafter be shown
that the failure to make the objection may be accounted for on other
grounds than the one suggested; but, however this may be, it is entitled
to not the slightest weight in determining the construction of the constitution
of the Confederate States. When that constitution was adopted,
it was well known that the power in question had been asserted to exist
under the constitution of the United States by many statesmen whose
opinions had always been received with the utmost respect, especially
in the southern states of the late Union.</p>
        <p>In October 1814, Mr. Monroe, who was then secretary of war under
the administration of Mr. Madison, addressed a letter to Mr. Troup of
Georgia, as chairman of the military committee of the house of representatives,
in which he proposed four different plans for organizing
the forces of the United States. The first of these plans, and the
one for which he expressed his preference, proposed that the army should
be raised by draught from the free male population of the United States,
between 18 and 45 years of age, and he entered into a full examination
of the question as to the constitutional right of congress to compel citizens
to serve in the army, coming to the conclusion that there was no
doubt of the existence of such right. Mr. Troup, as chairman of the
committee of military affairs, reported a bill in conformity with the first
plan recommended by Mr. Monroe; but it was never acted upon— a bill
upon a different plan having been passed by the senate and sent to the
house, where it was amended in certain particulars, in reference to which
no agreement was had between the house and senate, when the treaty
of peace with Great Britain rendered the passage of any bill unnecessary,
and the whole subject was dropped. But the proposition of Mr.
Monroe to raise men by <hi rend="italics">conscription</hi> (as it was <hi rend="italics">then</hi> designated) led to
much discussion, in which the right was earnestly asserted by some, and as
earnestly denied by others—those asserting it, belonging generally to the
states' rights party. See Annals of Congress—13 Con., 1814-'15, vol. 3.</p>
        <p>This is not referred to as settling conclusively the true construction
<pb id="stark8" n="8"/>
of the constitution in this particular; but it shows that the framers
of the constitution of the Confederate States did not agree in opinion
with those who think that the power in question is fraught with danger
to the liberties of the citizen or the rights of the states, or they would
have taken care to use language which would leave no doubt that they
did not intend to confer it, instead of retaining that which had been
construed, by many of the wisest statesmen under the government of
the United States, to give it.</p>
        <p>But it is impossible that it could have been supposed, at the time of
the adoption of the constitution of the <hi rend="italics">United States,</hi> that it would
never be claimed by any one that it conferred this power; for such was
the construction of the constitution in the papers of the Federalist, written
with the view of inducing the people of the states to adopt it, and recommending
it to them <hi rend="italics">because</hi> it invested the federal government “with
<hi rend="italics">full power to levy troops;</hi> to build and equip fleets; and to raise the revenues
which will be required for the support of an army and navy, in the
customary and ordinary modes practised by other governments.” Federalist,
No. 23. See, also, <hi rend="italics">idem</hi>, from No. 23 to No. 28, inclusive.</p>
        <p>The failure to make special objection, at the time, because of the grant
to congress of the power of conscription, is not surprising.</p>
        <p>There was no serious reason to apprehend that a government, designing
to overthrow the liberties of the people, would raise an army for
the purpose by a conscription of the very people whose rights were to
be assailed; and it was obvious that if it should have the folly to do so,
the army, when raised, would be the most efficient instrument that could
be devised for the defeat of the object in view.</p>
        <p>The danger really apprehended, from the grant of the power to raise
and support armies, was that the federal government would be enabled
to raise and keep in its pay an army of mercenary troops, with no interests
in common with the people, which might be used for the overthrow
of their liberties and the destruction of the rights of the states.
It was to this danger that the objections pointed. It was guarded
against by adding to the grant of the power to raise and support armies,
a proviso that “no appropriation to that use should be for a longer period
than two years,” thus requiring the consent of every new congress
to the continuance of an appropriation for the support of the army. It
was not deemed safe to go further than this in limiting the power of
congress on the subject. A proposition to limit the number of the
army to be raised, was rejected, because it was impossible to foresee
what number the exigencies of the country might require.</p>
        <pb id="stark9" n="9"/>
        <p>The objection to permitting a standing army to be kept up in time of
peace was disregarded, because when it was conceded that armies were
necessary to protect the country from foreign aggression, it was manifest
that it would be unwise to withhold the power to raise them until
after hostilities had actually commenced. When it was resolved that
the federal government should be entrusted with the common defence,
it followed, as a <sic corr="corollary">corrolary</sic>, that it ought to be “invested with all the
powers requisite to a complete execution of trust.” It was wisely
determined, therefore, “that there should be no limitation of that
authority which is to provide for the defence and protection of the community,
in any matter essential to its efficacy, that is in any manner essential
to the <hi rend="italics">formation, direction or support of the national forces.</hi>” Fed.,
No. 23.</p>
        <p>As has been already stated, experience had shown that the exercise of
compulsion was necessary to raise an army of sufficient size for the necessities
of the country in time of war. It had been habitually applied
by the states in the war from which the country had just emerged.
What then could be more natural or proper than to entrust this power
to the federal government, along with the other powers confided to it?</p>
        <p>Why should it be excepted from the grant? Such exception would
be opposed to the principle on which the grant was founded, and might, at
a time of critical danger to the country, render the grant itself nugatory.</p>
        <p>The power to raise armies by conscription is less dangerous to the
liberties of the people than is the power of raising them by voluntary
enlistment. An improper exercise of the power of conscription could
not fail to excite at once the indignant opposition of the people, while
an army might be improperly increased by voluntary enlistments,
without attracting much popular attention; and one, thus raised, would,
as has been shown, be made more dangerous to the rights of the states
and the liberties of the people than the one raised by conscription.</p>
        <p>It is said, however, that the absence of a provision requiring the
power of conscription to be exercised equally and uniformly, shows that
it was never designed to be conferred upon congress; for, without some
such limitation, congress may act most unjustly and oppressively, distributing 
the burden of raising an army unequally between the different
states; and that any state is liable to have its whole arms-bearing population
withdrawn from it and carried off to any part of the world, in the
ranks of the army.</p>
        <p>To this it may be answered, that this power, like all others, is unquestionably
liable to abuse, though it does not seem probable that the
<pb id="stark10" n="10"/>
attempt would ever be made to abuse it in the manner suggested. The
protection against its abuse in this or any other manner, is to be found
in the responsibility of congress to the people, ensured by their short
tenure of office, and in the reserved right of each state to resume the
powers delegated to the confederate government whenever, in her judgment,
they are perverted to the injury or oppression of her people.</p>
        <p>Again, it is objected that if the authority to raise armies gives to congress
the right of compelling citizens to serve as soldiers, it embraces
the whole war power, so far as relates to the raising of men, and not
only renders the provision in reference to the militia <sic corr="supererogatory">superogatory</sic>, but
enables congress to destroy the militia itself, by absorbing into the army
all the men who compose it. And it is argued that it must therefore be
inferred that the right of conscription does not exist, as it cannot be
supposed that it was intended to confer power upon congress to destroy
the militia of the states.</p>
        <p>It is true that the constitution does recognize the militia, and provide
for using it, as well as regular armies, in the military service of the
country. A well regulated militia was (as is stated in one of the amendments)
regarded as necessary to the security of a free state. It was,
therefore, proper that provision should be made in the constitution for
its organization, and for the authority to be exercised over it by the
state governments and congress respectively. It was not probable that
in the exercise of its power to raise armies congress would, under ordinary
circumstances, materially diminish the number of the militia. But
it cannot be true that, with the view of preserving the militia entire, it
was intended to deny to congress the right to take individuals belonging
to it for the regular army. This construction would prevent congress
from obtaining from its ranks not only conscripts, but volunteers also;
and as the militia embraces the whole arms-bearing population, it would
render it necessary that the army should contain none but foreigners,
hired for the purpose, and having no interest in common with the people
of the country. No one can imagine that such was the intention of the
framers of the constitution.</p>
        <p>The true interpretation of the constitution in reference to this matter
would seem to be, that the power to use the whole military force of the
country was conferred upon congress, and it was left to their discretion
to fix, as the varying necessities of the country might require, the relative
proportion of regular troops and militia to be employed in the service.
If it should appear at any time to be proper to increase the army,
it might be done by taking men from the militia, either as volunteers or
<pb id="stark11" n="11"/>
as conscripts—the action, in either case, being upon the individual citizen,
and not upon the militia as an organized body. As it was impossible
to foresee how large an army the exigencies of the country might
demand, the number of militiamen to be thus transferred to its ranks
was wisely left to the discretion of congress.</p>
        <p>It may be difficult to say to what extent congress have the right, in
the exercise of this discretion, to affect the militia as an organized body.
It is sufficient for the purposes of this decision to see, as we do, that
neither of the acts of congress, the validity of which has been called in
question, does destroy or impair the organization of the militia— construing
them, as it is proper they should be construed, in connection
with the exemption acts, which are in <foreign lang="lat"><hi rend="italics">pari materia</hi></foreign>. It will be time
enough when a case is brought before us, in which the organization of
the militia is destroyed or impaired by congress, to enquire what limits
are fixed to their action in this respect.</p>
        <p>It is further objected that if congress have the right of compelling
citizens to serve in their armies, the state governments are at their
mercy, and exist at their will. That they may <sic corr="conscript">conscribe</sic> all the officers
of the state—executive, legislative and judicial—and thus put a stop to
the action of its government.</p>
        <p>Congress can have no such power over state officers. The state governments
are an essential part of our political system; for upon the separate
and independent sovereignty of the states, the foundation of our
Confederacy rests. All powers not delegated to the Confederate States
by the constitution, nor prohibited<sic corr="no punctuation">.</sic> by it to the states, are reserved to
the states respectively, or to the people thereof; and the Confederate
States guarantee to each state a republican form of government.</p>
        <p>It is absurd to suppose that the government of the Confederate States
can rightfully destroy the governments of the states which created it;
and all the powers conferred on it must be understood to have been
given with the limitation that in executing them, nothing shall be done
to interfere with the independent exercise of its sovereign powers by
each state. Congress can have no right, therefore, to deprive a state
of the services of any officer necessary to the action of its government.
And the state itself is the sole judge as to the officers that are necessary
for that purpose.</p>
        <p>But it is said that this is not enough to satisfy the rights and duties
of a state as a sovereign. That each state has the right to command
the services of all her citizens, and on the other hand is bound to afford
them protection. That this right and duty are both interfered with by
<pb id="stark12" n="12"/>
the exercise of the power of conscription by congress, for, by it the
citizen may be dragged from his home and forced into the army, for
service, perhaps, in a foreign land against the wish of the state to which
he belongs.</p>
        <p>If, however, the power in question has been conferred upon congress
by the constitution, it is a mistake to say that it can be exercised without
the consent of the states. For each state, by ratifying the constitution,
gave her consent. We are brought again to the inquiry—is the power
granted to congress by the constitution? For the reasons already indicated
we think it clear that it is. And it was wisely granted, for the
rights of the states and the liberties of the citizen can be much more
effectually asserted and defended than they could possibly be if this
power had been withheld from congress.</p>
        <p>The objection that the states have been deprived of the power of appointing
the officers is founded on the mistake of regarding the forces
called out as “the militia.” They are not <hi rend="italics">militia</hi>, but an <hi rend="italics">army</hi>, created
under the power given to “raise armies,”—not, it is true, a standing
army to be kept up in time of peace, but a provisional army, brought
into the field for service during the existing war. No power is reserved
to the states by the constitution to appoint officers of the <hi rend="italics">army</hi>, whether
it be regular or provisional.</p>
        <p>Lastly, it is objected to the acts under consideration, that congress do
not themselves exercise the power of raising an army, but delegate it to
the president.</p>
        <p>We do not think that they are susceptible of any such interpretation.
They delegate no authority to the president to raise an army, but merely
authorize him to call out and place in the field the army raised under
and by the laws. There can be no valid objection to the discretion
given him to call out, from time to time, as the necessities of the
country might demand, those made liable to service by the laws. It
was, on the contrary, eminently proper, that as commander-in-chief he
should be invested with such discretion.</p>
        <p>For the foregoing reasons we are of opinion that the act “to further
provide for the public defence,” approved on the 16th day of April 1862,
and the act amendatory thereof, approved on the 27th day of September
1862, are clearly authorized by the constitution of the Confederate States.</p>
        <p>The next question for our consideration is, whether congress possessed
the constitutional power to pass the act, approved on the 5th day of
January 1864, entitled “an act to put an end to the exemption of
those who have heretofore furnished substitutes.”</p>
        <pb id="stark13" n="13"/>
        <p>It is insisted that the government, in permitting substitutions, entered
into contract with individual, in whose stead a substitute was accepted,
that he should not (except in certain contingencies specified in
the regulations made by the secretary of war) be required to render
military service during the period of time for which the substitute was
put in, and that the law in question is unconstitutional and void because
it violates this contract.</p>
        <p>The constitution of the Confederate Sates provides that no state shall
pass any law impairing the obligation of contracts, but does not impose
any restriction upon the power of congress in this respect.</p>
        <p>It is insisted, however, that the omission to prohibit expressly the
passage of such laws by congress, resulted simply from the belief that
such prohibition was unnecessary, and does not authorize the inference
that congress have the power to pass them; that if any legislature can
violate its contracts it is because of its unlimited powers and its being
beyond the pale of being questioned in any of its tribunals; that the
confederate government exists only by virtue of powers conferred on it;
and as no power has been granted it to break any engagement it may
enter into, it has no right to break a contract which it has a constitutional
right to make.</p>
        <p>On the other hand, it is said that though it be true that the confederate
government has no right to exercise any power which has not been
granted, yet that if in the exercise of a granted power, a law should
be passed impairing the obligations of a contract, such law will be valid
and cannot be set aside by the courts.</p>
        <p>In support of this position they compare the clause of the constitution,
declaring that no state shall “pass any bill of attainder, <hi rend="italics">ex post
facto</hi> law or law impairing the obligation of contracts,” with the clause
which declares that “no bill of attainder, <hi rend="italics">ex post facto</hi> law, or law denying
or impairing the right of property in negro slaves shall be passed”
by congress. And they insist that it cannot be supposed that the words
“or law impairing the obligation of contracts,” would have been
omitted from the latter clause if it had been intended that the power of
congress over contracts should be as restricted as that of the states.</p>
        <p>In the view we take of the matter before us, it is unnecessary to
decide the question as to the extent of the power of congress in this
respect, and we express no opinion upon it.</p>
        <p>Substitution was permitted as an act of grace and favor on the part
of the government and not as a matter of contract. The government
<pb id="stark14" n="14"/>
received nothing except the service of one man, in the place of another,
to whose service it was entitled. The consideration paid by the principal
for the service of the substitute was a matter of private arrangement
between them with which the government had nothing to do.</p>
        <p>It is true that, under a regulation made by the secretary of war, the
substitute was not received for less than three years or the war, although
the party putting him in may not have had so long to serve. And it is
said that in this way the government received more than a mere equivalent
for the service of the principal. The advantage gained by the government
is rather seeming than substantial, for the government has the
undoubted right, on the expiration of the time for which the principal is
liable, to make a new call upon him and compel him to serve so long as
the necessities of the country may require. The only advantage then
it can be said to have gained is that it has relieved itself from the inconvenience of having to make a new call, as soon as it might otherwise
have been required to make it, and this advantage cannot be regarded
as material. Indeed, it was found that substitution, on these
terms, was so disadvantageous to the service that before the passage of
the act now under consideration, one was passed prohibiting entirely all
future substitution. It was originally permitted as a privilege to individuals,
and not from any benefit the government expected to derive
from it, and it did not cease to be a privilege because of the terms imposed
as the condition of granting it. It is said, however, that where
the substitute is in service at the time that the principal is again called
in, the government gets the service of two men when, but for the substitution,
it would have had the service of one of them only. This is
an incident of the substitution which may result favorably to the government
in the case supposed; but it is not perceived that either the
principal or the substitute has a right to complain. The substitute is
required to serve no longer than he has, for a consideration satisfactory
to himself, agreed to serve; and the principal has, as will be shown, received
all he has a right to claim under the exemption granted him.</p>
        <p>Even if the privilege of substitution had been granted upon a valuable
consideration paid directly to the government, congress would have
right to put an end to the exemption, granted by reason of it, whenever
in their judgment the situation of the country became such as to
render it proper that the party should be again required to serve in the
army.</p>
        <p>However binding the arrangement of substitution, when made, may be
<pb id="stark15" n="15"/>
upon the government, it cannot extend further than to discharge the
person putting in the substitute from the liability to which he is then
subject under the existing law.</p>
        <p>No contract entered into by congress can be enforced or sustained,
unless it appear that the power to make such contract has been conferred
by the constitution. No power has been granted them to agree that
any person liable to render military duty shall be exempted, for any
fixed time, from such liability, under any and every call for troops,
which the necessities of the country may require to be made.</p>
        <p>The obligation of the citizen to render military service is a paramount
social and political duty. It is a matter in which the whole body politic
is interested. “The citizens have a right collectively and individually
to the service of each other to avert any danger which may be menaced.
The manner in which the service is to be apportioned among them, and
rendered by them, is a matter for legislation.” The government, as
the agent and trustee of the people, is charged with the whole military
strength of the nation, in order that it may be employed so as to ensure
the safety of all. The power which it has to enforce the performance
of the obligation to render military service, is given that it may be used,
not abdicated. No right has been conferred on the government to divest
itself, by contract or otherwise, of the power of employing, whenever
and as the exigencies of the country may demand, the whole military
strength that has been placed at its disposal. As the nature and extent
of those exigencies cannot be foreseen, and it is impossible to say in advance
that the services of every citizen capable of bearing arms may
not become indispensable for the defence of the country, the government
has no right to enter into any contract precluding it from requiring
those services if they should be needed. If there be such right, the
spectacle might be presented of a nation subjugated and destroyed at a
time when it had within its limits citizens amply sufficient to defend it
successfully against all the assaults of its enemies, but whose services
could not be commanded because, forsooth, the government had contracted
with them that they should not be required to serve in the army.</p>
        <p>It may possibly be said that our protection against this danger is to
be found in the reserved concurrent power of the states to employ their
military strength for the defence of the country. This may perhaps
lessen our danger, but it does not meet the argument. The proposition
is that the government of no nation can abdicate, or bind itself not to
exercise any part of the power entrusted to it for the defence of the
community. And it cannot be supposed that it was intended, under our
<pb id="stark16" n="16"/>
system of government, to confer the right upon congress to strip themselves
of their power, and trust to the irregular, uncertain and tardy
action of the several states to bring out the military force of the country.</p>
        <p>It may be said, also, that the case supposed is an extreme one, and
that it is not at all probable that any government would ever enter into
contracts depriving itself, to any extent, of the right to exercise the
powers with which it was invested. This is true. The case supposed is
an extreme one, not likely to arise, even if the right in question were
possessed by governments. But it tests the principle. In determining
the powers of governments we ought not only to look to what will probably
be done, but we should look also to what may possibly be done under
them.</p>
        <p>No government can have the right to endanger the life of the nation
it represents, by contracting that it will not exercise the powers confided
to it.</p>
        <p>For a proposition so obviously true, it can hardly be necessary to cite
authority; but the authorities are ample to show that, in less important
matters than that of military defence, “a legislative body cannot part
with its powers, by any proceeding, so as not to be able to continue the
exercise of them,” and if any attempt be made to do so, the act is null
and void. “It can and should exercise them, again and again, as often
as the public interests require.” “It cannot abridge its own legislative
power by making permanent and irrepealable contracts in reference to
matters of public interest.” <hi rend="italics">East Hartford</hi> vs. <hi rend="italics">Hartford Bridge company</hi>,
10 How. Sup. C. R. 511. <hi rend="italics">Gooszler</hi> vs. <hi rend="italics">The corporation of Georgetown</hi>,
6 Wheat, 593. In the case of Ohio life insurance and trust company
vs. Debolt, 16 How. S. C., 426, in which the question was as to
the validity of the state law, Chief Justice Taney says:</p>
        <p>“The powers of sovereignty confided to the legislative body of a
state are undoubtedly a trust committed to them, to be executed to the
best of their judgment for the public good, and no one legislature can,
by their own act, disarm their successors of any of the powers or rights
of sovereignty confided by the people to the legislative body, unless
they are authorized to do so by the constitution under which they are
elected.”</p>
        <p>We think, therefore, that if it appeared that congress had attempted
to make a binding and irrepealable contract to exempt from liability to
all subsequent calls for military service, those who put in substitutes,
during the time for which they were put in, such contract would be void,
because of the want of power in congress to make it. But there has
<pb id="stark17" n="17"/>
been no attempt to make any such contract. Exemption from future
liability on the part of the citizen to render military service at the call
of the country, is not a subject matter of <hi rend="italics">contract</hi> within the meaning
of the clause of the constitution prohibiting the passage of any law impairing
the obligation of contracts. By the term “contracts” in that
clause it is not meant to include rights and interests growing out of
measures of public policy. Acts in reference to such measures are to
be regarded as rather in the nature of legislation than of compact, and
although rights or interests may have been acquired under them, these
rights and interests cannot be considered as violated by subsequent
legislative changes which may destroy them. Whatever in the nature
of a contract could be considered to exist, there must be implied in it a
condition that the power is reserved to the legislature to change the law
thereafter as the public interests may, from time to time, appear to
require.</p>
        <p>In delivering the opinion of the whole court in the case of <hi rend="italics">Butler</hi> vs.
<hi rend="italics">Pennsylvania</hi>, 10 How. Sup. Ct. R. 416, Mr. Justice Daniel says:</p>
        <p>“The contracts designed to be protected by the tenth section of the
first article of the federal constitution are contracts by which perfect
rights, certain, definite, fixed rights of property are vested. These are
clearly distinguishable from measures or engagements, adopted or undertaken
by the body politic or state government, for the benefit of all,
and from the necessity of the case, and according to universal understanding,
to be varied or discontinued as the public good may require.</p>
        <p>Accordingly, it was held in that case that an appointment to a public
office, which by the existing law of the state, was to be held for one
year, with a fixed per diem compensation, does not amount to a contract
by the state thus to employ and pay the officer during the
year. So that a law repealing the former law and directing that the
office should be vacated before the expiration of a year, and in the meantime
that the officer should receive a smaller per diem compensation than
he was entitled to under the first law, was held valid. And the officer
who continued to discharge the duties of the office, from the day fixed
by the latter statute for the reduction of his compensation, until the day
when the office was vacated, was held to be entitled to the reduced compensation
only, and not to that fixed by the statute under which he received
his appointment. See also <hi rend="italics">East Hartford</hi> vs. <hi rend="italics">Hartford Bridge</hi>,
10 How., S. C. 511, and the opinion of Mr. Justice Campbell, in <hi rend="italics">State
bank of Ohio</hi> vs <hi rend="italics">Knoop</hi>, 16 Howard, S. C., 405.</p>
        <p>So, divorces granted by the legislature of a state do not (according
<pb id="stark18" n="18"/>
to the preponderance of authority, and as we think, in accordance with
sound principle,) impair the obligation of contracts; because marriage,
although usually denominated a contract, and certainly one in some
senses, is also a status or civil relation, and therefore subject to legislative
control. Bishop on Marr and Div., §771 to §775.</p>
        <p>Where a proclamation was issued by the King of Great Britain,
declaring that the net proceeds of all prizes taken should belong to the
captors; and parties had at their peril taken a prize from the enemy and had
incurred expenses in securing it, it was held that the crown might, if it
thought proper, for reasons of state and public policy, restore the prize
without the consent of the captors, and without making them compensation,
on the ground that the prize being the property of the crown, and the
only title of the parties to it being derived from its grace and bounty, it
was regarded as a condition annexed to the gift, that it might be recalled
and revoked by the crown if considerations of public policy rendered it,
in its opinion, proper that it should be revoked. And this was decided
not upon any peculiar doctrine of the English law or constitution, but as
a general and necessary principle of public jurisprudence. Case of the
<hi rend="italics">Elsebee Mase</hi>, 5, Rob. (Adm.) 173. This case was decided by Lord Stowell,
and is cited and commented upon with approbation by Lord Chancellor
Brougham, in the case of <hi rend="italics">Alexander</hi> vs. <hi rend="italics">The Duke of Wellington</hi>,
2 Russ. and Myl. 35.</p>
        <p>So, where a seizure was made by a revenue officer, under a promise
contained in a law of the United States that on conviction he should
share the forfeiture, and a condemnation was regularly had, adjudging
the forfeiture to have been incurred, it was held that a discharge of the
forfeiture by the secretary of the treasury, without making compensation
to the revenue officer, who had incurred trouble and expense in
making the seizure and procuring the condemnation, was no violation of
vested rights or impairment of the obligation of a contract within the
meaning of the constitutional inhibition. <hi rend="italics">United States</hi> vs. <hi rend="italics">Morris</hi>, 10
Wheaton, 246.</p>
        <p>See also the cases of State bank of Ohio vs. Knoop, 16 How., S. C.
R., 369, and the Ohio life insurance and trust company vs. Debolt, 16
How., S. C. R., 416, and especially the opinions of Justices Campbell,
Catron and Daniel in those cases.</p>
        <p>For the marked distinction between an engagement to render military
service and a contract, the cases of the United States vs. Cottingham,
1 Rob. Va., R., 615, and United States vs. Blackeny, 3 Gratt., 405,
decided by our own court, may be referred to.
<pb id="stark19" n="19"/>
To borrow the language of Mr. Justice Campbell, in the case of the
State bank of Ohio vs. Knoop, and apply it to the cases before us:</p>
        <p>“A plain distinction exists between statutes which create hopes and
expectations and those which form contracts.” Congress allow exemptions
from military service to those who have furnished substitutes, “on
existing considerations of policy, without annexing restraints on their
will, or abdicating their prerogative, and consequently are free to modify,
alter or repeal them.”</p>
        <p>Whatever, therefore, may have been the expectation, at the time, in
reference to the extent of the exemption obtained by putting in a substitute,
there was clearly no “contract,” the obligation of which has
been impaired, and no vested right which has been violated, by the passage
of the law putting “an end to the exemption from military service
of those who have heretofore furnished substitutes.”</p>
        <p>But if all this were otherwise, and the permission granted by congress
to individuals to put in substitutes, could be held to amount to a contract
by which congress was irrevocably bound, what would be the true
interpretation of that contract?</p>
        <p>The well established rule of construction, is that all grants of privileges
and exemptions from general burthens, are to be construed liberally
in favor of the public, and strictly as against the grantee. Whatever
is not plainly expressed and unequivocally granted, is to be taken to
have been withheld.</p>
        <list type="simple">
          <item>Charles Reives Bridge vs. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. 420.</item>
          <item>The Rich. R. R. Co. vs. The Louisa. R. R. Co., 18 How. S. C. R. 71.</item>
          <item>State Bank of Ohio vs. Knoop, 16 How. S. C. R. 369.</item>
          <item>Ohio Ins. Co. vs. Debolt, 16 How. S. C. R. 416.</item>
        </list>
        <p>It would be especially improper to infer, in the absence of the most
distinct indication of intention, that congress intended in any grant to
go further than the constitution allows them to go.</p>
        <p>But it is not necessary to apply a strict rule of construction. No
fair interpretation of the law can make it a grant of exemption from
liability to service, under laws which might thereafter be passed, as the
necessities of the country might from time to time require.</p>
        <p>The 9th section of the act of 16th April 1862, provides “that persons
not liable for duty may be received as substitutes for those who are,
under such regulations as may be prescribed by the secretary of war.”</p>
        <p>This is the whole provision on the subject. There is not one word to
show that it was intended to extend the exemption from liability, by
reason of having furnished substitutes, to any liability other than that
<pb id="stark20" n="20"/>
created by the act. On the contrary, the language is, “persons <hi rend="italics">not
liable for duty</hi> may be received as substitutes for <hi rend="italics">those who are</hi>. What
duty and liability are referred to? The duty and liability, of course,
imposed by the law, of which this section forms a part, and no other.
When the liability was extended to other persons by the amendatory
act of 27th September 1862, the privilege of substitution was also extended
to those then made liable, by the provision that nothing therein
contained should be understood as repealing or modifying any part of
the act of 16th April 1862, except so far as was therein expressly
stated. Nor is there anything in the regulations made by the secretary
of war, under the authority conferred on him by these acts, from which
it can be inferred that the exemption could be made to extend to any
liability other than that created by the acts themselves.</p>
        <p>If it had been supposed that those furnishing substitutes were to be
relieved from liability to future calls, during the period of time for
which the substitute was furnished, an exemption paper so stating, in
express terms, would have been given. Instead of such a paper, we find
that nothing more was ever given than a simple discharge from the army.</p>
        <p>Again, whatever may be the power of congress, no one can pretend
that the secretary of war had any right, without express authority of
law, to make a contract for exemption, which would relieve the party
from liability under any call for service that might be made by congress
during the time for which the secretary's exemption lasted. Now, the
law permitting substitution merely gave the sanction of congress to a
practice which had previously prevailed under orders of the secretary.
It made no change in that practice, and there is nothing to show that
it was designed to extend the exemption, by reason of substitution, beyond
the limits within which it was confined under it.</p>
        <p>The nature of the transaction, the terms of the act, and the regulation
and practice under it, all show that, according to the true
intent and meaning of the parties, the persons furnishing a substitute
was to be relieved from the liability then resting on him, under existing
laws, to render military service, and from that only. There is
nothing to show that it was designed to exempt him from any service
which the future wants of the country might make it proper for congress
to require of him. He may, it is true, have entertained the belief that
the necessities of the country would not be such as to require another
call to be made upon him, and so have hoped and expected that by putting
in the substitute, he would in fact be relieved from the performance
of military service during the time for which he was put in. The 
<pb id="stark21" n="21"/>
disappointment of these hopes and expectations can give him no right to
complain.</p>
        <p>If he has sustained loss, it is <foreign lang="lat"><hi rend="italics">damnum abeque injuria</hi></foreign>. The government
has been guilty of no breach of faith; for, if the transaction be
called a contract, he has had the benefit of all that he contracted for,
namely, exemption from service until the situation of the country became
such as to make it necessary that he should again be called upon
to take part in its defence.</p>
        <p>The act putting an end to the exemption from military service of
those who have furnished substitutes, commences with the recital, that
“whereas, in the present circumstances of the country, it requires the
aid of <hi rend="italics">all</hi> who are able to bear arms,” thus showing, on its face, that
but for the pressing necessity of the country, the exemption would not
have been taken away.</p>
        <p>It would be beyond the jurisdiction of the court to enquire whether
congress were right or wrong in supposing such necessity to exist. Of
its existence, congress, to whose discretion it is confided to provide
means adequate to the defence of the country, have the exclusive right
to judge.</p>
        <p>But it is objected that the law is unconstitutional and void, because
it makes no provision for compensating those whose exemption is taken
away. It is said that the privilege of exemption is a valuable right,
and if the public necessity requires that the citizen should be deprived
of it, it can be taken only upon making to him a just compensation.</p>
        <p>We have seen that the transaction is one relating to a matter of public
concern, as to which congress could not, if they would, make any
valid contract which would entitle the party to compensation; and further,
that they have not attempted to make any such contract. It has
also been shown, that even if the transaction could be regarded as a
contract, the government has fully complied with its engagement, and
has deprived the party of no right; for the condition has happened,
upon the happening of which by the contract itself, according to its
true interpretation, the exemption was to cease.</p>
        <p>If there should be any case presenting an equitable ground for relief
or indemnity, it is a matter of which the courts can take no cognizance.</p>
        <p>The only remaining question is, whether the petitioner Burroughs,
who claims to have put in his substitute under the law of the state,
passed on the 10th day of February 1862, stands on a different footing
is to this matter, from those who have put in substitutes under the act
of congress.</p>
        <pb id="stark22" n="22"/>
        <p>It has been very much disputed, in the argument of the case, whether
he did really put in a substitute under the state law, in such a way as
to entitle himself to a discharge from service according to its provisions.
We consider it unnecessary to enter upon an examination of
this question, because, supposing him to have acted in strict conformity
with the requirements of that law, and to have become entitled to a discharge
from the service according to its provisions, we do not think that he
occupies a better position than those do who put in substitutes and obtained
their discharge under the law of congress. The law of the state,
like the law of congress, exempted only from the then existing liability
to render military service, and did not (as it could not properly) undertake
to exempt from future liability, if the necessities of the country
should make a further call necessary.</p>
        <p>The act of congress of 16th April 1862, operated upon all white men
who were residents of the Confederate States, between the specified
ages, and not legally exempted, whether they were in or out of the army.
Those in the army, however they had been put there, whether under requisitions
upon the states, or as volunteers turned over by state authority,
or in any other manner, became liable to service under the act of congress,
which superseded all previous laws and all calls that had been
made for troops.</p>
        <p>Those who had put in substitutes under state authority, had a right to
expect to enjoy the benefit of it, in like manner as if the substitution
had been effected under the orders of the secretary of war, or the act
of congress, and this right has always been recognized and allowed by
the confederate government. But they have no claim to stand on any
higher ground than those who put in substitutes under confederate authority.</p>
        <p>We are of the opinion, therefore, that both of the petitioners are
liable to render military service, and must be remanded to the custody
of the officer.</p>
        <closer>A copy—Teste:
<signed><name>M. T. STARKE,</name>
Clerk of the supreme court of appeals of Virginia, at Richmond.</signed></closer>
      </div1>
    </body>
  </text>
</TEI.2>