Petitioners were enlisted men in the United States Army who were
captured during the hostilities in Korea in 1950 and 1951. In the
prison camps to which they were taken, they consorted, fraternized,
and cooperated with their captors and behaved with utter disloyalty
to their comrades and to their country. After the Korean Armistice
in the summer of 1953, they refused repatriation and went to
Communist China. They were dishonorably discharged from the Army in
1954. In 1955, they returned to the United States and filed claims
for accrued pay and allowances, which were denied administratively.
They then sued in the Court of Claims for pay and allowances from
the time of their capture to the date of their discharge from the
Army.
Held: under 37 U.S.C. § 242 and the Missing Persons
Act, petitioners were entitled to the pay and allowances that
accrued during their detention as prisoners of war; but no opinion
is expressed as to their rights to pay for the period between the
Korean Armistice and their administrative discharge, since that
question was not separately raised or argued in this Court. Pp.
366 U. S.
394-416.
(a) Refusal to pay petitioners cannot be justified under § 9A of
the Act of 1939, which made it unlawful to pay from appropriated
funds compensation to any employee of the Federal Government who
was a member of any organization which advocates the overthrow of
the Government, since that statute was repealed more than a year
before the Army relied upon it in refusing to pay petitioners. Pp.
366 U. S.
398-400.
(b) Refusal to pay petitioners cannot be sustained on the
principle of contract law that one who willfully commits a material
breach of a contract can recover nothing under it, since common law
rules governing private contracts have no place in the area of
military pay, which is governed entirely by statute. Pp.
366 U. S.
401-404.
(c) Under the plain language of 37 U.S.C. § 242 and the Missing
Persons Act, a serviceman captured by the enemy and thus unable to
perform his normal duties is nonetheless entitled to his pay. Pp.
366 U. S.
397-398,
366 U. S.
404-405,
366 U. S.
409-410.
Page 366 U. S. 394
(d) Refusal to pay petitioners cannot be justified under the
Missing Persons Act, either on the ground that they were no longer
"in the active service" or on the ground that they had been
"officially determined absent from [their posts] of duty without
authority," since there has never been any official administrative
determination that petitioners were no longer in the active service
or that they were absent from their posts of duty without authority
during the period here in question. Pp.
366 U. S.
404-414.
(c) No opinion is expressed as to petitioners' pay rights for
the period between the Korean Armistice and their discharges from
the Army, since that question was not separately raised or argued
administratively, in the court below, or in this Court. Pp.
366 U. S.
414-415.
___ Ct. Cl.___, 181 F. Supp. 668, reversed and remanded.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petitioners were enlisted men in the United States Army who
were captured during the hostilities in Korea in 1950 and 1951. In
the prison camps to which they were taken, they behaved with utter
disloyalty to their comrades and to their country. After the Korean
Armistice in the summer of 1953, they refused repatriation and went
to Communist China. They were formally discharged from the Army in
1954. In 1955, they returned to the United States. Later that year,
they filed claims with the Department of the Army for accrued pay
and allowances. When these claims were denied, they brought the
present action in the Court of Claims for pay and allowances from
the time of their capture to the date of
Page 366 U. S. 395
their discharge from the Army. [
Footnote 1] The Court of Claims decided against them,
stating that
"[n]either the light of reason nor the logic of analysis of the
undisputed facts of record can possibly justify the granting of a
judgment favorable to these plaintiffs."
181 F. Supp. 668, 674. Judge Madden dissented. [
Footnote 2] We granted certiorari to consider
a seemingly important statutory question with respect to military
pay. 363 U.S. 837.
The Court of Claims made detailed findings of fact with respect
to the petitioners' conduct as prisoners of war, based upon a
stipulation filed by the parties. [
Footnote 3] These circumstances
Page 366 U. S. 396
need not be set out in minute detail. They are adequately
summarized in the opinion of the Court of Claims, as follows:
"[D]uring the period of their confinement, each of the three
plaintiffs became monitors for the 'forced study groups,' the
sessions of which the prisoners were compelled to attend. Armed
guards attended these sessions. The programs included lectures
picturing what were declared to be the bad aspects of life in the
United States as contrasted with idyllic life under communism. As
monitors, they procured and distributed propaganda literature, and
threatened to turn in names of any prisoners who refused to read
and discuss favorably these propaganda handouts."
"Each of the plaintiffs made tape recordings which were used as
broadcasts and over the camp public address system. Each of them
wore Chinese uniforms and were permitted to attend meetings outside
the camp. The details of the plaintiffs' consorting, fraternizing,
and cooperating with their captors and the devious ways in which
they sought favors for themselves, thus causing hardship and
suffering to the other prisoners, are set out in our findings. . .
."
"Two of Bell's recordings were broadcast over the Peiping radio,
stating, among other things, that, on the orders of his platoon
leader, his men had killed North Korean prisoners of war, and that
President Truman was a warmonger. In written articles for the camp
newspaper, he alleged that American troops had committed atrocities
and he personally had been ordered to kill women and children and
not to take
Page 366 U. S. 397
prisoners of war, and that, if given the opportunity, he would
run a tank over the President's body."
"Bell was paid money to write these articles. He also delivered
lectures before his company and to the camp on American aggression.
He appeared voluntarily in a motion picture and appeared in
bi-monthly plays. He stated that, if given a weapon, he would fight
against the United States. He sold food intended for the sick to
other prisoners of war. By making reports to the Chinese, he caused
one man to be bayonetted and others to be placed in solitary
confinement."
"Cowart did many similar things, wrote propaganda articles
accusing American soldiers of atrocities and of using germ warfare.
He drew posters and cartoons for the enemy, acted in plays, walked
and talked with the Chinese officers, guards and interpreters,
lived part of the time at Chinese regimental headquarters, stated
he hated America, desired to study in China, and to return to the
United States in five years to help in the overthrow of the
government."
"Griggs did many similar things, attended enemy parties, visited
Chinese headquarters frequently, referred to the Chinese as
comrades, was accorded special privileges, made broadcasts, signed
leaflets, wrote articles accusing the American soldiers of
atrocities, and declared the United States had used germ
warfare."
As stated in their brief, the petitioners
"do not admit to the alleged acts of dishonor contained in the
Stipulation and the Findings of Fact, but rather demur to them on
the grounds that such facts are irrelevant and immaterial in a
civil action for military pay provided by statute."
The statute upon which the petitioners rely
Page 366 U. S. 398
is an ancient one. It was first enacted in 1814, and has been
reenacted many times. It provides:
"Every noncommissioned officer and private of the Regular Army,
and every officer, noncommissioned officer, and private of any
militia or volunteer corps in the service of the United States who
is captured by the enemy, shall be entitled to receive during his
captivity, notwithstanding the expiration of his term of service,
the same pay, subsistence, and allowance to which he may be
entitled while in the actual service of the United States; but this
provision shall not be construed to entitle any prisoner of war of
such militia corps to any pay or compensation after the date of his
parole, except the traveling expenses allowed by law."
37 U.S.C. § 242. [
Footnote
4]
Although the plain language of this law appears to entitle the
petitioners to their Army pay and allowances during their
imprisonment in Korea, the Government has urged various grounds
upon which we should hold that the provisions of the statute are
inapplicable. We have concluded that none of the theories advanced
by the Government can serve as a valid basis to circumvent the
unambiguous financial obligation which the law imposes.
The Army's refusal to pay the petitioners was based upon an
administrative determination that all prisoners of war who had
declined repatriation after the Korean Armistice
"advocate, or are members of an organization
Page 366 U. S. 399
which advocates, the overthrow of the United States Government
by force or violence. [
Footnote
5]"
In refusing to honor the petitioners' claims upon this ground,
the Army was apparently relying upon a statute enacted in 1939
which made it unlawful to pay from funds appropriated by any Act of
Congress the compensation of "any person employed in any capacity
by any agency of the Federal Government" who was a member of "any
political party or organization which advocates the overthrow of
our constitutional
Page 366 U. S. 400
form of government in the United States." [
Footnote 6] That this statute was the basis of the
Army's decision is evident not only in the language employed in
rejecting the petitioners' demands, but also in the pleadings filed
in the Court of Claims. [
Footnote
7] We need not, however, now decide the applicability of this
statute to members of the Armed Forces, for the reason that the
statute was repealed more than a year before the Army relied upon
it in refusing to pay the petitioners. [
Footnote 8]
Page 366 U. S. 401
Although this was the only ground ever advanced for the
administrative denial of the petitioners' claims, the Government's
brief in this Court, for understandable reasons, does not even
mention this repealed statute. Instead, the Government now relies
upon other grounds to avoid the provisions of 37 U.S.C. § 242. It
says that the petitioners violated their obligation of faithful
service, [
Footnote 9] and
points to the principle of contract law that
"one who willfully commits a material breach of a contract can
recover nothing under it. 4 Williston, Contracts (1936 ed.) § 1022,
pp. 2823-4; 5 Williston, Contracts (1936 ed.) § 1477; 5 Corbin,
Contracts (1951 ed.) § 1127, pp. 564-5,
see also
Restatement Contracts, § 357(1)(a)."
In accord with this principle, the Government argues that, in
the Missing Persons Act, [
Footnote 10] a statute first enacted in 1942, [
Footnote 11] Congress provided a
statutory basis for denying the petitioners' claims. We do not so
construe that statute.
Preliminarily, it is to be observed that common law rules
governing private contracts have no place in the area of military
pay. A soldier's entitlement to pay is dependent upon statutory
right. In the Armed Forces, as everywhere else, there are good men
and rascals, courageous men and cowards, honest men and cheats. If
a soldier's conduct falls below a specified level, he is subject to
discipline, and his punishment may include the forfeiture of
future, but not of accrued, pay. [
Footnote 12] But a soldier
Page 366 U. S. 402
who has not received such a punishment from a duly constituted
court-martial is entitled to the statutory pay and allowances of
his grade and status, however ignoble a soldier he may be.
[
Footnote 13]
This basic principle has always been recognized. It has been
reflected throughout our history in numerous court decisions and in
the opinions of Attorneys General and Judge Advocates General.
"Enlistment is a contract; but it is one of those contracts
which changes the status; and, where that is changed, no breach of
the contract destroys the new status or relieves from the
obligations which its existence imposes. . . . By enlistment, the
citizen becomes a soldier. His relations to the State and the
public are changed. He acquires a new status, with correlative
rights and duties; and although he may violate his contract
obligations, his status as a soldier is unchanged."
In re Grimley, 137 U. S. 147,
137 U. S.
151-152.
Almost a hundred years ago, Attorney General Hoar rendered an
opinion to the Secretary of War regarding the right to pay of a
Major Herod, who had been "charged with murder, arrested, tried by
a court-martial, and sentenced to be hung." The Attorney General
stated:
"It was not expressly a part of the sentence that Herod should
forfeit his pay from the date of his arrest, and I know of no
statute imposing a forfeiture of pay from the date of arrest in a
case like
Page 366 U. S. 403
this of Herod's. The sentence that he be hung necessarily
implied a dismissal from the service, but not, as it seems to me,
the forfeiture of back pay. I can find no authority for the opinion
of the Comptroller that, as Herod was withdrawn from actual
military service by his arrest made on account of a crime committed
by him, on the general principle that pay follows services, he
should not be paid for the time he was under arrest. The monthly
pay of officers of the Army is prescribed by statute, and, so long
as a person is an officer of the Army, he is entitled to receive
the pay belonging to the office, unless he has forfeited it in
accordance with the provisions of law, whether he has actually
performed military service or not."
13 Op.Atty.Gen. 103, 104.
A similar opinion was rendered by Attorney General Alphonso Taft
a few years later. He rejected the theory of the Second Comptroller
of the Treasury that,
"[i]f the man, by his misconduct and necessary withdrawal from
service, does not perform his part of the contract, the Government
cannot be held to the fulfillment of its part thereof."
The Attorney General said:
"The Comptroller has, I think, misconceived the true basis of
the right to [military] pay. . . . In the naval, as in the
military, service, the right to compensation does not depend upon,
nor is it controlled by, 'general principles of law'; it rests
upon, and is governed by, certain statutory provisions or
regulations made in pursuance thereof, which specially apply to
such service. These fix the pay to which officers and men belonging
to the Navy are entitled, and the rule to be deduced therefrom is
that both officers and men become entitled to the pay thus fixed so
long as they remain in the Navy, whether they actually perform
service or not, unless their right
Page 366 U. S. 404
thereto is forfeited or lost in some one of the modes prescribed
in the provisions or regulations adverted to."
15 Op.Atty.Gen. 175, 176.
This principle has received consistent recognition in the Court
of Claims.
"It would, we think, be an anomalous proceeding to permit resort
to the courts to ascertain whether, under all the various
provisions with respect to pay and allowances of officers and men
of the Army, Navy, and Marine Corps, investigations should obtain
to determine as a matter of fact whether the soldier involved had
by conscientious service earned what the statutes allow him."
White v. United States, 72 Ct.Cl. 459, 468.
"[T]he mere fact that an officer or soldier is under charges
does not deprive him of his pay and allowances; . . . such
forfeiture can only be imposed by the sentence of a lawful
court-martial."
Walsh v. United States, 43 Ct.Cl. 225, 231. [
Footnote 14]
The statute upon which the petitioners rely applies this same
principle to a specialized situation. A serviceman captured by the
enemy and thus unable to perform his normal duties is nonetheless
entitled to his pay. The rule has commanded unquestioned adherence
throughout our history, as two cases will suffice to
illustrate.
In 1807, a sailor named John Straughan was a member of the crew
of the American frigate
Chesapeake. After that vessel's
ill-starred engagement with the British man-of-war
Leopard
off Hampton Roads, Straughan was taken
Page 366 U. S. 405
aboard the
Leopard and impressed into service in the
British Navy. There, he served for five years and nine days before
he finally was repatriated. Years later, his widow sued for his pay
and rations as a member of the United States Navy during the period
he had been held by the British. The Court of Claims ruled that,
even though we had not been at war in 1807, the
Chesapeake
had nevertheless been "taken by an enemy," and that Straughan's
widow was entitled to the United States Navy pay and allowances
that had accrued while he was serving with the British.
Straughan v. United States, 1 Ct.Cl. 324. [
Footnote 15]
In October, 1863, a lieutenant in the Union Army named Henry
Jones was taken prisoner by Confederate guerrillas near Elk Run,
Virginia. Jones was confined in Libby Prison until March 1, 1865,
when he was exchanged and returned to the Union lines. Upon his
return, he found that he had been administratively dismissed from
the service in November, 1863, because he had been in disobedience
of orders at the time of his capture. When the Army for that reason
refused his demand for pay and allowances, he filed suit in the
Court of Claims. The court entered judgment in his favor, stating
that "[t]he contrary would be to hold that an executive department
could annul and defy an act of Congress at its pleasure."
Jones
v. United States, 4 Ct.Cl. 197, 203.
It is against this background that we turn to the Government's
contention that the Missing Persons Act authorized the Army to
refuse to pay the petitioners their statutory pay and allowances in
this case. The provisions of the Act which the Government deems
pertinent
Page 366 U. S. 406
are set out in the margin. [
Footnote 16] Originally enacted in 1942 as temporary
legislation, [
Footnote 17]
the Act was amended and reenacted several times, [
Footnote 18] and finally was made permanent
in 1957. [
Footnote 19] So
far as relevant here, this legislation provides that any person in
active service in the Army "who is officially determined to be
absent in a status of . . . captured by a hostile force" is
entitled to pay and allowances; that
"[t]here shall be no entitlement to pay
Page 366 U. S. 407
and allowances for any period during which such person may be
officially determined absent from his post of duty without
authority;"
that the Secretary of the Army or his designated subordinate
shall have authority to make all determinations necessary in the
administration of the Act, and for purposes of the Act
determinations so made as to any status dealt with by the Act shall
be conclusive.
We are asked first to hold that,
"[s]ince the Missing Persons Act is later in time, is
comprehensive in scope, and includes within its provisions the
whole subject matter
Page 366 U. S. 408
of R.S. 1288 [the statute upon which the petitioners rely], any
inconsistency consistency or repugnancy between the two statutes
should be resolved in favor of the Missing Persons Act."
This step having been taken, we are asked to decide that the
petitioners, because of their behavior after their capture, were no
longer in the "active service in the Army . . . of the United
States," and that they were therefore not covered by the Act. It is
also suggested, alternatively, that the Secretary of the Army might
have determined that each of the petitioners after capture was
"absent from his post of duty without authority," and therefore,
not entitled to pay and allowances under the Act. We can find no
support for these contentions in the language of the statute, in
its legislative history, or in the Secretary's administrative
determination.
The Missing Persons Act was a response to unprecedented
personnel problems experienced by the Armed Forces in the early
months after our entry into the Second World War. Originally
proposed by the Navy Department, the legislation was amended on the
floor of the House to cover the other services. As the Committee
Reports make clear, the primary purpose of the legislation was to
alleviate financial hardship suffered by the dependents of
servicemen reported as missing. [
Footnote 20]
Page 366 U. S. 409
To hold that the Missing Persons Act operated to repeal the
statute upon which the petitioners rely would be a long step to
take, for at least two reasons. In the first place, the record of
the hearings of the Senate Committee on Naval Affairs clearly
discloses that, at the time the Missing Persons Act was being
considered, the Committee was made fully aware of the 1814 statute,
and manifested no inclination to disturb it. [
Footnote 21] Secondly, it is not entirely
accurate to say, as does the Government, that the
Page 366 U. S. 410
Missing Persons Act is "later in time." After the original
passage of that Act in 1942, the statute upon which the petitioners
rely was recodified in 1952 and again in 1958. [
Footnote 22]
But the question whether there was a repeal by implication is
one that we need not determine here, for it is clear that, under
either statute, the petitioners are entitled to the pay and
allowances that accrued during their detention as prisoners of war.
The Missing Persons Act unambiguously provides that any person
"in the active service . . . officially determined to be absent
in a status of . . . captured by a hostile force . . . [is]
entitled to receive or to have credited to his account the same . .
. pay [and allowances] to which he was entitled at the beginning of
such period of absence. . . ."
It affirmatively appears on this record that the petitioners
were in the active service of the Army, that they were in fact
captured by the enemy, and that they were later officially
determined to be "absent in a status of . . . captured by a hostile
force." The terms of the Missing Persons Act are therefore
expressly applicable.
The argument that it was open to the Secretary of the Army to
determine that the petitioners in the prison camps to which they
were taken were thereafter not "in the active service" cannot
survive even cursory analysis. In the Armed Forces, the term
"active service" has a precise meaning, a meaning not dependent
upon individual conduct. 10 U.S.C. § 101. [
Footnote 23] Moreover, the verbal
Page 366 U. S. 411
structure of the Act, reenforced by common sense, clearly leads
to the conclusion that "active service" refers to a person's status
at the time he became missing. Nothing in the legislative history
of the original statute or of its many reenactments offers support
for any other construction. That history simply reflects a
continuing purpose to widen the classes of persons to whom the
benefactions of the law were to be extended, from the time those
persons became missing. [
Footnote 24]
Page 366 U. S. 412
The Government's alternative argument seems, as a matter of
statutory construction, equally invalid. The legislative history
discloses that the provision denying pay to a person officially
determined to have been "absent from his post of duty without
authority" was enacted to cover the case of a person found to have
been "missing" in the first place only by reason of such
unauthorized authorized absence. [
Footnote 25] Moreover, desertion and absence without
leave are technically defined offenses. 10 U.S.C. § 885, 10 U.S.C.
§ 886;
see Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, p.
315 (1951). It is open to serious question whether the conduct of
the petitioners after their capture could conceivably have been
determined to be tantamount either to desertion or absence without
leave.
See Avins, Law of AWOL, p. 167 (1957); Snedeker,
Military Justice under the Uniform Code, p. 562 (1953).
These are questions which we need not, however, pursue. We need
not decide in this case that the Secretary of the Army was wholly
without power under the statute to determine administratively that
the petitioners after their capture were no longer in active
service, or that they were absent from their posts of duty. Nor
need we finally decide whether either such determination by the
Secretary would have been valid as a matter of law. The simple fact
is that no such administrative determination has ever been made.
The only reason the Army ever advanced for refusing to pay the
petitioners was its determination that they had "advocated, or were
members of an organization which advocated . . . the overthrow of
the United States Government by force or violence." [
Footnote 26] That determination has now
been totally abandoned. The Army has never even purported to
determine that the
Page 366 U. S. 413
petitioners were not in active service or that they were absent
from their posts of duty. [
Footnote 27] The Army cannot rely upon something that
never happened, upon an administrative determination that was never
made, even if it be assumed that such a determination would have
been permissible under the statute and supported by the facts.
[
Footnote 28]
Page 366 U. S. 414
See Service v. Dulles, 354 U.
S. 363;
Vitarelli v. Seaton, 359 U.
S. 535. For these reasons, we hold that the petitioners
were entitled under the applicable statutes to the pay and
allowances that accrued during their detention as prisoners of
war.
Throughout these proceedings, no distinction has been made
between the petitioners' pay rights while they were prisoners and
their rights after the Korean Armistice when they voluntarily
declined repatriation and went to Communist China. Since both the
Army and the Court of Claims denied the petitioners' claims
entirely, no separate
Page 366 U. S. 415
consideration was given to the petitioners' status after their
release as prisoners of war until the date of their administrative
discharges. Nor did the petitioners in this Court address
themselves to the question of the petitioners' rights to pay during
that interval. Yet it is evident that the petitioners' status
during that period might be governed by considerations different
from those which have been discussed. Other statutory provisions
and regulations would come into play. Accordingly, we express no
view as to the petitioners' pay rights for the period between the
Korean Armistice and their administrative discharges, leaving that
question to be fully canvassed in the Court of Claims, to which, in
any event, this case must be remanded for computation of the
judgments.
The disclosure of grave misconduct by numbers of servicemen
captured in Korea was a sad aftermath of the hostilities there. The
consternation and self-searching which followed upon that
disclosure are still fresh in the memories of many thoughtful
Americans. [
Footnote 29] The
problem is not a new one. [
Footnote 30] Whether the solution to it lies alone
Page 366 U. S. 416
in subsequent prosecution and punishment is not for us to
inquire. [
Footnote 31]
Congress may someday provide that members of the Army who fail to
live up to a specified code of conduct as prisoners of war shall
forfeit their pay and allowances. [
Footnote 32] Today, we hold only that the Army did not
lawfully impose that sanction in this case.
The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further
proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
Each of the petitioners was dishonorably discharged by
administrative order of the Secretary of the Army on January 23,
1954. The validity of these administrative discharges is not in
issue here, since the petitioners have made no claim for pay and
allowances after that date.
Compare memorandum to the
Chief of Staff from the Judge Advocate General of February 3, 1954,
J.A.G.A. 1954/1627, with Opinion Memorandum for the Secretary of
Defense from the General Counsel of the Department of Defense of
January 25, 1954.
See Pasley, Sentence First -- Verdict
Afterwards: Dishonorable Discharges Without Trial by Court-Martial?
41 Cornell L.Q. 545; Note, Misconduct in the Prison Camp: A Survey
of the Law and an Analysis of the Korean Cases, 56 Col.L.Rev. 709,
735.
[
Footnote 2]
Judge Madden stated:
"It is noteworthy that, after Congress abolished the historical
power of courts-martial to forfeit accrued pay, the Army,
apparently for the first time in history, forfeited the pay already
accrued to these plaintiffs not by the process of trial and
sentence, which was forbidden by statute, but by the crude and
primitive method of refusing to give them their money. Finding
nothing in the law books to justify its refusal to pay these men,
it threw the books away and just refused to pay them. It could have
set before these confused young men a better example of government
by law."
181 F. Supp. at 675.
[
Footnote 3]
The petitioners did not stipulate that these facts were true,
but did agree
"that the facts hereinafter set forth shall, for the purposes of
this case, he deemed to have been elicited from defendant's
witnesses testifying under oath,"
and that
"[t]he facts so elicited, and hereinafter set forth, have not
been rebutted by plaintiffs or by plaintiffs' witnesses, and
plaintiffs, and each of them, hereby waive the right to testify or
to call witnesses to testify in rebuttal of these facts."
[
Footnote 4]
The statute was originally enacted on March 30, 184 , as § 14 of
"An Act for the better organizing, paying, and supplying the army
of the United States." C. 37, § 14, 3 Stat. 113, 115. The provision
next appeared as R.S. § 1288. In the 1952 edition of the Code, it
appeared at 10 U.S.C. § 846. Title 10 at that time dealt with the
Army and the Air Force. In the 1958 edition of the Code, the
provision was transferred to Title 37, c. 4, which covers basic pay
and allowances of military personnel.
[
Footnote 5]
This position was set out in a letter from the Army Chief of
Finance to the petitioners' lawyer, rejecting the petitioners'
claims. The letter in its entirety read as follows:
"2 October 1956"
"Dear Mr. Brown:"
"Further reference is made to your inquiries concerning the
claims of Otho G. Bell, Lewie W. Griggs, and William A.
Cowart."
"I have been advised that the following determinations have been
made regarding the status of all United States Army Voluntary
Non-Repatriates who elected not to accept repatriation to United
States control under the terms of the Korean Armistice Agreement
prior to 23 January 1954:"
"a. That all Voluntary Non-Repatriates who refused to elect
repatriation prior to 23 January 1954, under the terms of the
Korean Armistice Agreement have, as demonstrated by their refusal
to elect repatriation to the United States and their records as
prisoners of war, adopted, adhered to or supported the aims of
Communism, one of which is the overthrow of all non-Communist
governments, including the Government of the United States, by
force or violence."
"b. That all Voluntary Non-Repatriates who refused to elect
repatriation prior to 23 January 1954 under the terms of the Korean
Armistice Agreement now advocate, or are members of an organization
which advocates, the overthrow of the United States Government by
force or violence."
"c. That all Voluntary Non-Repatriates who refused to elect
repatriation prior to 23 January 1954 under the terms of the Korean
Armistice Agreement advocated, or were members of an organization
which advocated, during the period from the date of their capture
in Korea through the date of their Dishonorable Discharge from the
Army, the overthrow of the United States Government by force or
violence."
"d. That such persons are not entitled to the payment of salary
or wages for the period beginning with their respective dates of
capture through the date they were given Dishonorable
Discharges."
"The claims of Otho G. Bell, Lewie W. Griggs, and William A.
Cowart may not, therefore, be favorably considered."
"Sincerely yours,"
"[Signed] H. W. Crandall"
"Major General, USA"
"Chief of Finance"
[
Footnote 6]
"(1) It shall be unlawful for any person employed in any
capacity by any agency of the Federal Government, whose
compensation, or any part thereof, is paid from funds authorized or
appropriated by any Act of Congress, to have membership in any
political party or organization which advocates the overthrow of
our constitutional form of government in the United States."
"(2) Any person violating the provisions of this section shall
be immediately removed from the position or office held by him, and
thereafter no part of the funds appropriated by any Act of Congress
for such position or office shall be used to pay the compensation
of such person."
§ 9A of the Act of August 2, 1939, 53 Stat. 1148.
[
Footnote 7]
The "Second Affirmative Defense" read in part as follows:
"During the period for which they seek to recover pay and
allowances herein, plaintiffs advocated the overthrow of the
Government of the United States or were members of a political
party or organization which so advocated. Therefore, plaintiffs are
not entitled to recover under the provisions of Section 9A of the
Act of August 2, 1939 (53 Stat. 1148), as amended. . . ."
[
Footnote 8]
August 9, 1955, c. 690, § 4(2), 69 Stat. 625.
[
Footnote 9]
"I, ______., do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will bear true
faith and allegiance to the United States of American; that I will
serve them honestly and faithfully against all their enemies
whomsoever; and that I will obey the orders of the President of the
United States and the orders of the officers appointed over me,
according to regulations and the Uniform Code of Military
Justice."
10 U.S.C. § 501.
[
Footnote 10]
50 U.S.C.Appendix, § 1001
et seq.
[
Footnote 11]
56 Stat. 143.
[
Footnote 12]
See Article 57, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10
U.S.C. § 857.
[
Footnote 13]
Unless he is absent without leave or a deserter,
United
States v. Landers, 92 U. S. 77;
Dodge v. United States, 33 Ct.Cl. 28; Dig.Op. JAG Army 265
(1868); Dig.Op. JAG Army 850 (1912); JAGA 1952/5875, 2 Dig.Op.
SENT. & PUN. § 3 5.7; JAGA 1953/1074, 3 Dig.Op.PAY § 21.15;
Davis, Military Laws of the United States, p. 371, n. 2 (1897);
Winthrop, Military Law and Precedents, pp. 645-646 (2d ed. 1920).
But see Comment, Mil.L.Rev., July 1960 (DA Pam 27-100-9, 1
Jul 60), p. 151.
And see generally U.S. Army Special Text
27-157, Military Affairs (1955), pp. 1605-1612.
[
Footnote 14]
See Conrad v. United States, 32 Ct.Cl. 139;
Carrington v. United States, 46 Ct.Cl. 279.
See
also Dig.Op. JAG Army 265 (1868); Dig.Op. JAG Army 850 (1912).
The rule cuts both ways, as the case of
Ward v. United
States, 158 F.2d 499, illustrates. There, the plaintiff, a
yeoman in the Navy, had actually performed the duties of a land
title attorney. He sued to recover the reasonable value of his
services, less what he had received as a yeoman. The Court of
Appeals approved a dismissal of the complaint, with the comment
that "[h]is rating fixed his status and his pay." 158 F.2d at
502.
[
Footnote 15]
The case was decided under a statute specifically applicable to
naval personnel, originally enacted in 1800, 2 Stat. 45, now 37
U.S.C. § 244.
See note
32 infra.
[
Footnote 16]
"§ 1001. Definitions."
"For the purpose of this Act [sections 1001-1012 and 1013-1016
of this Appendix] --"
"
* * * *"
"(b) the term 'active service' means active service in the Army,
Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard of the United States, including
active Federal service performed by personnel of the retired and
reserve components of these forces, the Coast and Geodetic Survey,
the Public Health Service, and active Federal service performed by
the civilian officers and employees defined in paragraph (a)(3)
above . . . ;"
50 U.S.C.Appendix, § 1001.
"§ 1002 . Missing interned or captive persons. (a) Continuance
of pay and allowances."
"Any person who is in the active service . . . and who is
officially determined to be absent in a status of missing, missing
in action, interned in a foreign country, captured by a hostile
force, beleaguered by a hostile force, or besieged by a hostile
force shall, for the period he is officially carried or determined
to be in any such status, be entitled to receive or to have
credited to his account the same . . . pay [and allowances] . . .
to which he was entitled at the beginning of such period of absence
or may become entitled thereafter . . . and entitlement to pay and
allowances shall terminate upon the date of receipt by the
department concerned of evidence that the person is dead or upon
the date of death prescribed or determined under provisions of
section 5 of this Act [section 1005 of this Appendix]. Such
entitlement to pay and allowances shall not terminate upon the
expiration of a term of service during absence and, in case of
death during absence, shall not terminate earlier than the dates
herein prescribed. There shall be no entitlement to pay and
allowances for any period during which such person may be
officially determined absent from his post of duty without
authority and he shall be indebted to the Government for any
payments from amounts credited to his account for such period. . .
."
50 U.S.C.Appendix, § 1002.
"§ 1009. Determinations by department heads or designees;
conclusiveness relative to status of personnel, payments, or
death."
"(a) The head of the department concerned, or such subordinate
as he may designate, shall have authority to make all
determinations necessary in the administration of this Act
[sections 1001-1012 and 1013-1016 of this Appendix], and for the
purposes of this Act [said sections] determinations so made shall
be conclusive as to death or finding of death, as to any other
status dealt with by this Act [said sections], and as to any
essential date including that upon which evidence or information is
received in such department or by the head thereof. . . .
Determinations are authorized to be made by the head of the
department concerned, or by such subordinate as he may designate,
of entitlement of any person, under provisions of this Act
[sections 1001-1012 and 1013-1016 of this Appendix], to pay and
allowances, including credits and charges in his account, and all
such determinations shall be conclusive: . . . When circumstances
warrant reconsideration of any determination authorized to be made
by this Act [said sections], the head of the department concerned,
or such subordinate as he may designate, may change or modify a
previous determination. . . ."
50 U.S.C.Appendix, § 1009.
[
Footnote 17]
Act of March 7, 1942, 56 Stat. 143.
[
Footnote 18]
Act of December 24, 1942, 56 Stat. 1092; Act of July 1, 1944, 58
Stat. 679; § 4(e) of Selective Service Act of 1948, 62 Stat. 608;
Act of July 3, 1952, 66 Stat. 330, 331; Act of April 4, 1953, 67
Stat. 20-21; Act of January 30, 1954, 68 Stat. 7; Act of June 30,
1955, 69 Stat. 238; Act of July 20, 1956, 70 Stat. 595; Act of
August 7, 1957, 71 Stat. 341.
[
Footnote 19]
Act of August 29, 1957, 71 Stat. 491.
[
Footnote 20]
"In general, the purposes of this bill are to provide
authorization for the continued payment or credit in the accounts,
of the pay and allowances of missing persons for 1 year following
the date of commencement of absence from their posts of duty or
until such persons have been officially declared dead [In December,
1942, the statute was amended so as to permit a department head to
continue personnel in a missing status for an indefinite period. 56
Stat. 1092.]; the continued payment for the same period of the
allotments for the support of dependents and for the payment of
insurance premiums, and for regular monthly payments to the
dependents of missing persons, in the same manner in which
allotments are paid, in those instances in which the missing
persons had neglected to provide for their dependents through the
medium of allotments, such payments to be deducted from the pay of
the missing persons in the same manner in which allotments are
paid."
"
* * * *"
"The Navy Department advised the committee that many instances
have occurred during recent months of personnel having been
reported as missing, and, in accordance with requests received from
disbursing officers carrying the pay accounts, the allotments of
such persons were discontinued. Because of stoppage of allotments
and the withholding of pay of missing persons, dependents of
personnel concerned have experienced great hardships in a large
number of cases. The committee are advised that this situation is
aggravated by the fact that, so long as a person is declared to be
missing and has not been officially declared dead, the 6 months'
death gratuity is not payable."
H.R.Rep. No. 1680, 77th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 3, 5.
[
Footnote 21]
The committee was advised by a representative of the Marine
Corps as follows:
"Section 1288, Revised Statutes (sec. 846, title 10, U.S.Code),
provides that noncommissioned officers and privates shall be
entitled to receive during their captivity by an enemy,
notwithstanding the expiration of their terms of service, the same
pay, subsistence, and allowances to which they may be entitled
while in the actual service of the United States. This applies only
to enlisted personnel, and I know of no such law affecting the pay
and allowances of officers and nurses. The proposed legislation
would also authorize the crediting, in the account of the
individual concerned, of the same pay and allowances received at
the time an individual is reported as missing or missing in action
until his status is determined by competent authority."
Hearings before the Senate Committee on Naval Affairs on H.R.
6446, 77th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 13-14.
[
Footnote 22]
See note 4
[
Footnote 23]
A House Committee Report concerning a proposed amendment to the
Act sets forth a letter from the Secretary of the Army clearly
showing his understanding that "active service" was employed in the
statute as a technical phrase embodying a technical status:
"Also, the proposal would amend section 2 of the Missing Persons
Act to provide coverage for persons on training duty under certain
conditions, in addition to persons on active service."
H.R.Rep. No. 2535, 84th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 7. See also H.R.Rep.
No. 204, 85th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 8; H.R.Rep. No. 888, 85th Cong.,
1st Sess., p. 3; H.R.Rep. No. 2354, 84th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 3;
S.Rep. No. 573, 85th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 4; S.Rep. No. 970, 85th
Cong., 1st Sess., p. 7; S.Rep. No. 2552, 84th Cong., 2d Sess., p.
3.
[
Footnote 24]
For example, when the statute was amended in 1957 to extend
coverage to those in "full-time training duty, other full-time
duty, or inactive duty training," an Army spokesman testifying
before the House Subcommittee expressed the clear view that "active
service" referred to the moment the person entered a missing
status.
"The purpose of that . . . is to insure that people who are in a
nonpay status at the time they enter in a missing or
missing-in-action status are covered. . . . Under the present
wording of the bill, it is conceivable that, being in a nonpay
status at the time that he enters into a missing status, his
survivors would not be entitled to any pay or allowances. This
would insure that they would be entitled to the pay and allowances
that he would have had had he been on active duty at the time that
he entered into a missing status."
Hearings before Subcommittee No. 1 of the House Committee on
Armed Services on H.R. 2404, 85th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 563.
In S.Rep. No. 970, 85th Cong., 1st Sess., the Committee on Armed
Services stated:
"Coverage would be extended to members of the Reserve components
while they are performing full-time training duty, other full-time
duty, and inactive duty training with or without pay. Members of
the Reserve components entering a missing status while performing
duty of the types enumerated would have credited to their pay
accounts the same pay and allowances that they would receive if
they were performing full-time active duty. Some reservists
participate in training without pay, such as weekend proficiency
flights in aircraft, and this amendment is intended to treat them
as if they were on active duty when they entered a missing
status."
P. 3. Similar statements may be found in H.R.Rep. No. 2535, 84th
Cong., 2d Sess., p. 3, and H.R.Rep. No. 204, 85th Cong., 1st Sess.,
p. 2. Certainly the thrust of these statements is a primary concern
with status at the time the missing status is first entered.
[
Footnote 25]
See H.R.Rep. No. 1680, 77th Cong., 2d Sess., p. 5;
Hearings before House Committee on Naval Affairs on H.R. 4405, 78th
Cong., 2d Sess., p. 2316.
[
Footnote 26]
See note 5
supra.
[
Footnote 27]
Nor has the Army ever purported to determine that the
petitioners were not in "captivity" or "in the actual service of
the United States" within the meaning of 37 U.S.C. § 242.
[
Footnote 28]
The record of a 1954 hearing before the House Armed Services
Committee on a bill to extend the life of the Missing Persons Act
indicates that some thought was being given at that time to the
possibility of an administrative determination that the petitioners
were absent from their posts of duty:
"Mr. Bates. General, what is the pay status of prisoners who
have refused repatriation?"
"General Powell. Those prisoners, sir, are carried in pay
status. In negotiating the armistice, we agreed that, until this
matter was settled, they would be carried as prisoners of war."
"Mr. Kilday. When does that stop?"
"Mr. Bates. Does that stop next week?"
"General Powell. The method of stopping the pay and allowances,
allotments and status of military personnel of those 21 prisoners
is a matter to be decided by the Secretary of Defense for all
services involved. He has announced no decision."
"Mr. Bates. Aren't they absent without leave?"
"General Powell. No, sir."
"Mr. Bates. What is it?"
"General Powell. In the armistice agreement, the United States
agreed to carry them as prisoners of war until the matter was
settled."
"Mr. Bates. I thought there was also an understanding that they
would be considered a.w.o.l. as of a certain date?"
"General Powell. That is a matter still to be decided by the
Secretary of Defense."
"Mr. Bates. Or deserters, you know."
"General Powell. The Secretary of Defense is deciding for all
services."
"The Chairman. Call the roll. It is not necessary to call the
roll. There is no objection, is there?"
"(Chorus of 'No.')"
"Mr. Kilday. I would like it understood that they are going to
be cut off as soon as you can."
"General Powell. Sir, the Secretary of Defense must make a
decision, including phychological [
sic] factors,
individual rights, the law involved, and national policy."
"Mr. Vinson. That is right."
"General Powell. He has not as yet announced such a decision to
us."
"Mr. Cunningham. Should the pay and allotments, benefits to the
members of the family, ever be cut off?"
"The Chairman. Sure."
"Mr. Van Zandt. Oh, yes."
"Mr. Cunningham. Why so? They are not to blame for this."
"Mr. Bishop. No, they are not."
"Mr. Vinson. Well, if a man is absent without leave --"
"Mr. Cunningham. A man has children or wife and he is over there
in Korea and decided to stay with the Communists. Why should the
children be punished?"
"The Chairman. Wait, one at a time. The Reporter can't get
it."
"Mr. Cunningham. I think it is a good question. The pay for the
individual: he should never have that, and his citizenship. But
here is a woman from Minnesota, goes over there and pleads with her
son and went as far as Tokyo. Now that mother needs an allotment as
that boy's dependent. Why should she be punished because the boy
stayed over there? I think there are a lot of things to be
considered, not just emotion."
"Mr. Kilday. That is inherent. When a man is court-martialed
--"
"The Chairman. Without objection, the bill is favorably
reported."
Hearings before House Committee on Armed Services on H.R. 7209,
83d Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 3071-3072.
[
Footnote 29]
See Report by the Secretary of Defense's Advisory
Committee on Prisoners of War (1955).
[
Footnote 30]
In 1333, John Culwin was charged with having sworn allegiance to
his Scottish captors. 1 Hale, Historia Placitorum Coronae 167-168
(1736). The earliest reported American case of prisoner of war
misconduct appears to be
Respublica v.
McCarty, 2 Dall. 86 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania,
1781). During the Civil War, thousands of captives on each side
defected to the enemy.
See H.R.Rep. No. 45, 40th Cong., 3d
Sess., pp. 229, 742-777 (1869); Report by the Secretary of
Defense's Advisory Committee on Prisoners of War, p. 51 (1955). Two
treason trials grew out of prisoner of war misconduct during World
War II.
United States v. Provoo, 124 F.
Supp. 185,
reversed, 215 F.2d 531,
second
indictment dismissed, 17 F.R.D. 183,
affirmed, 350
U.S. 857;
United States ex rel. Hirshberg v. Malanaphy, 73
F. Supp. 990,
reversed, 168 F.2d 503,
reversed sub
nom. United States ex rel. Hirshberg v. Cooke, 336 U.
S. 210. More than forty British prisoners of war were
brought to trial for misconduct.
See note, 56 Col.L.Rev.
709-721 (1956).
[
Footnote 31]
Upon their return to the United States in July, 1955, the
petitioners were confined by the United States Army in San
Francisco, California, to await trial by general court-martial for
violation of Article 104 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.
In November of that year, they were released from confinement by
virtue of writs of habeas corpus issued by a Federal District
Court, on the authority of
Toth v. Quarles, 350 U. S.
11. There have been several court-martial prosecutions
growing out of alleged misconduct by Army prisoners of war in
Korea.
See United States v. Dickenson, 17 C.M.R. 438,
affirmed, 6 U.S.C.M.A. 438, 20 C.M.R. 154;
United
States v. Floyd, 18 C.M.R. 362;
United States v.
Batchelor, 19 C.M.R. 452,
affirmed, 7 U.S.C.M.A. 354,
22 C.M.R. 144;
United State v. Olson, 20 C.M.R. 461,
affirmed, 7 U.S.C.M.A. 460, 22 C.M.R. 250;
United
States v. Gallagher, 21 C.M.R. 435;
United States v.
Bayes, 22 C.M.R. 487;
United States v. Alley, 8
U.S.C.M.A. 559, 25 C.M.R. 63;
United States v. Fleming, 19
C.M.R. 438.
See the discussion of these cases in Prugh,
Justice for all RECAP-K'S, Army Combat Forces Journal, November,
1955, p. 15; Note, 56 Col.L.Rev. 709.
[
Footnote 32]
A statute relating to the right to pay of members of the United
States Navy who are taken prisoner does appear to require a
standard of conduct after capture:
"The pay and emoluments of the officers and men of any vessel of
the United States taken by an enemy who shall appear, by the
sentence of a court-martial or otherwise, to have done their utmost
to preserve and defend their vessel, and, after the taking thereof,
to have behaved themselves agreeably to the discipline of the Navy,
shall go on and be paid to them until their exchange, discharge, or
death."
37 U.S.C. § 244. No reported case has been found holding that
this standard of conduct was not met.
Cf. Straughan v. United
States, 1 Ct.Cl. 324, discussed in text,
supra, p.
366 U. S.
404.