Both appellees are native-born citizens of the United States.
Mendoza-Martinez was ordered deported as an alien and Cort was
denied a passport to enable him to return to the United States,
both on the ground that they had lost their citizenship by
remaining outside of the jurisdiction of the United States in time
of war or national emergency for the purpose of evading or avoiding
training and service in the Nation's armed forces. Both sued for
relief in Federal District Courts, which rendered judgments
declaring that the relevant statutes, § 401(j) of the Nationality
Act of 1940, as amended, and § 349(a)(10) of the Immigration and
Nationality Act of 1952, are unconstitutional. Mendoza-Martinez'
case was tried by a single-judge District Court, which granted no
injunction. Cort's case was tried by a three-judge District Court,
which enjoined the Secretary of State from denying him a passport
on the ground that he was not a citizen.
Held: The judgments are affirmed. Pp.
372 U. S.
146-186.
1. Although Mendoza-Martinez amended his complaint so as to add
a prayer for injunctive relief before the third trial of his case
by a single-judge District Court, it is clear from the trial record
that the issues were framed and the case handled so as actually not
to contemplate any injunctive relief. In these circumstances, it
was not necessary for the case to be heard by a three-judge
District Court convened pursuant to 28 U. S. C. § 2282. Pp.
372 U. S.
152-155.
2. The trial and conviction of Mendoza-Martinez for violating
§11 of the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940 by going to
Mexico "on or about November 15, 1942 . . . for the purpose
Page 372 U. S. 145
of evading service" did not involve any determination of his
citizenship status, and therefore did not estop the Government from
denying his citizenship subsequently. Pp.
372 U. S.
155-158.
3. Section 401(j) of the Nationality Act of 1940, as amended,
and § 349(a)(10) of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952,
which purport to deprive an American of his citizenship,
automatically and without any prior judicial or administrative
proceedings, for
"departing from or remaining outside of the jurisdiction of the
United States in time of war or . . . national emergency for the
purpose of evading or avoiding training and service"
in the Nation's armed forces, are unconstitutional, because they
are essentially penal in character and would inflict severe
punishment without due process of law and without the safeguards
which must attend a criminal prosecution under the Fifth and Sixth
Amendments. Pp.
372 U. S.
159-186.
(a) The great powers of Congress to conduct war and to regulate
the Nation's foreign relations are subject to the constitutional
requirements of due process. Pp.
372 U. S.
164-165.
(b) It is conceded that §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10) would
automatically strip an American of his citizenship, without any
administrative or judicial proceedings whatever, whenever he
departs from or remains outside the jurisdiction of this country
for the purpose of evading his military obligations. Pp.
372 U. S.
166-167.
(c) The punitive nature of the sanctions imposed by these
sections is evident under the tests traditionally applied to
determine whether an Act of Congress is penal or regulatory in
character, and it is clear from a consideration of the legislative
and judicial history of these sections and their predecessors that
in them Congress employed the sanction of forfeiture of citizenship
as a punishment for the offense of leaving or remaining outside the
country to evade military service. Pp.
372 U. S.
163-184.
(d) Such punishment may not constitutionally be inflicted
without a prior criminal trial with all the safeguards guaranteed
by the Fifth and Sixth Amendments, including indictment, notice,
confrontation, jury trial, assistance of counsel, and compulsory
process for obtaining witnesses. Pp.
372 U. S. 167,
372 U. S. 184,
372 U. S.
186.
192 F. Supp. 1 and
187 F.
Supp. 683, affirmed.
Page 372 U. S. 146
MR. JUSTICE GOLDBERG delivered the opinion of the Court.
We are called upon in these two cases to decide the grave and
fundamental problem, common to both, of the constitutionality of
Acts of Congress which divest an American of his citizenship for
"[d]eparting from or remaining outside of the jurisdiction of the
United States in time of war or . . . national emergency for the
purpose of evading or avoiding training and service" in the
Nation's armed forces. [
Footnote
1]
Page 372 U. S. 147
I
. THE FACTS.
A. Mendoza-Martinez -- No. 2.
The facts of both cases are not in dispute. Mendoza-Martinez,
the appellee in No. 2, was born in this country in 1922, and
therefore acquired American citizenship by birth. By reason of his
parentage, he also, under Mexican law, gained Mexican citizenship,
thereby possessing dual nationality. In 1942, he departed from this
country and went to Mexico, solely, as he admits, for the purpose
of evading military service in our armed forces. He concedes that
he remained there for that sole purpose until November, 1946, when
he voluntarily returned to this country. In 1947, in the United
States District Court for the Southern District of California, he
pleaded guilty to and was convicted of evasion of his service
obligations in violation of § 11 of the Selective Training and
Service Act of 1940. [
Footnote
2] He served the imposed sentence of a year and a day. For all
that appears in the record, he was, upon his release, allowed to
reside undisturbed in this country until
Page 372 U. S. 148
1953, when, after a lapse of five years, he was served with a
warrant of arrest in deportation proceedings. This was premised on
the assertion that, by remaining outside the United States to avoid
military service after September 27, 1944, when § 401(j) took
effect, he had lost his American citizenship. Following hearing,
the Attorney General's special inquiry officer sustained the
warrant and ordered that Mendoza-Martinez be deported as an alien.
He appealed to the Board of Immigration Appeals of the Department
of Justice, which dismissed his appeal.
Thereafter, Mendoza-Martinez brought a declaratory judgment
action in the Federal District Court for the Southern District of
California, seeking a declaration of his status as a citizen, of
the unconstitutionality of § 401(j), and of the voidness of all
orders of deportation directed against him. A single-judge District
Court, in an unreported decision, entered judgment against
Mendoza-Martinez in 1955, holding that, by virtue of § 401(j),
which the court held to be constitutional, he had lost his
nationality by remaining outside the jurisdiction of the United
States after September 27, 1944. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit affirmed the judgment, 238 F.2d 239. This Court, in 1958,
Mendoza-Martinez v. Mackey, 356 U.
S. 258, granted certiorari, vacated the judgment, and
remanded the cause to the District Court for reconsideration in
light of its decision a week earlier in
Trop v. Dulles,
356 U. S. 86.
On September 24, 1958, the District Court announced its new
decision, also unreported, that, in light of
Trop, §
401(j) is unconstitutional because not based on any "rational nexus
. . . between the content of a specific power in Congress and the
action of Congress in carrying that power into execution." On
direct appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1252, this Court noted probable
jurisdiction,
Mackey v. Mendoza-Martinez, 359 U.S. 933,
and then, of its own motion, remanded the cause, this time with
permission to the parties to amend
Page 372 U. S. 149
the pleadings to put in issue the question of whether the facts
as determined on the draft evasion conviction in 1947 collaterally
estopped the Attorney General from now claiming that
Mendoza-Martinez had lost his American citizenship while in Mexico.
Mackey v. Mendoza-Martinez, 362 U.
S. 384.
The District Court on remand held that the Government was not
collaterally estopped because the 1947 criminal proceedings
entailed no determination of Mendoza-Martinez' citizenship. The
court, however, reaffirmed its previous holding that § 401(j) is
unconstitutional, adding as a further basis of invalidity that §
401(j) is
"essentially penal in character, and deprives the plaintiff of
procedural due process. . . . [T]he requirements of procedural due
process are not satisfied by the administrative hearing of the
Immigration Service nor in this present proceedings. [
Footnote 3]"
The Attorney General's current appeal is from this decision.
Probable jurisdiction was noted on February 20, 1961,
Rogers v.
Mendoza-Martinez, 365 U.S. 809. The case was argued last Term,
and restored to the calendar for reargument this Term, 369 U.S.
832.
B. Cort -- No. 3.
Cort, the appellee in No. 3, is also a native-born American,
born in Boston in 1927. Unlike Mendoza-Martinez, he has no dual
nationality. His wife and two young children are likewise American
citizens by birth. Following receipt of his M.D. degree from the
Yale University School of Medicine in 1951, he went to England for
the purpose of undertaking a position as a Research Fellow at
Cambridge University. He had earlier registered in timely and
proper fashion for the draft, and, shortly before
Page 372 U. S. 150
his departure, supplemented his regular Selective Service
registration by registering under the newly enacted Doctors Draft
Act. [
Footnote 4] In late 1951,
he received a series of letters from the American Embassy in London
instructing him to deliver his passport to it to be made "valid
only for return to the United States." He did not respond to these
demands because, he now says in an affidavit filed in the trial
court in this proceeding,
"I believed that they were unlawful, and I did not wish to
subject myself to this and similar forms of political persecution
then prevalent in the United States. . . . I was engaged in
important research and teaching work in physiology, and I desired
to continue earning a livelihood for my family."
Cort had been a member of the Communist Party while he was a
medical student at Yale from 1946 to 1951, except for the academic
year 1948-1949, when he was in England. In late 1952, while still
in England at Cambridge, he accepted a teaching position for the
following academic year at Harvard University Medical School. When,
however, the school discovered through further correspondence that
he had not yet fulfilled his military obligations, it advised him
that it did not regard his teaching position as essential enough to
support his deferment from military service in order to enter upon
it. Thereafter, his local draft board in Brookline, Massachusetts,
notified him in February, 1953, that his request for deferment was
denied and that he should report within 30 days for a physical
examination either in Brookline or in Frankfurt, Germany. On June 4
and on July 3, the draft board again sent Cort notices to report
for a physical examination, the first notice for examination on
July 1 in Brookline, and the second for examination within 30 days
in Frankfurt. He did not appear at either place, and the board, on
August 13, ordered him to report for induction on September 14,
Page 372 U. S. 151
1953. He did not report, and consequently he was indicted in
December, 1954, for violation of § 12(a) of the Selective Service
Act of 1948 [
Footnote 5] by
reason of his failure to report for induction. This indictment is
still outstanding. His complaint in this action states that he did
not report for induction because he believed
"that the induction order was not issued in good faith to secure
his military services, that his past political associations and
present physical disabilities made him ineligible for such service,
and that he was being ordered to report back to the United States
to be served with a Congressional committee subpoena or indicted
under the Smith Act. . . ."
Meanwhile, the British Home Office had refused to renew his
residence permit, and, in mid-1954, he and his family moved to
Prague, Czechoslovakia, where he took a position as Senior
Scientific Worker at the Cardiovascular Institute. He has lived
there since.
In April, 1959, his previous United States passport having long
since expired, Cort applied at the American Embassy in Prague for a
new one. His complaint in this action states that he wanted the
passport
"in order to return to the United States with his wife and
children so that he might fulfill his obligations under the
Selective Service laws and his wife might secure medical treatment
for multiple sclerosis."
Mrs. Cort received a passport and came to this country
temporarily in late 1959, both for purposes of medical treatment
and to facilitate arrangements for her husband's return. Cort's
application, however, was denied on the ground that he had, by his
failure to report for induction on September 14, 1953, as ordered,
remained outside the country to avoid military service, and thereby
automatically forfeited his American citizenship by virtue of §
349(a)(10) of the Immigration
Page 372 U. S. 152
and Nationality Act of 1952, which had superseded § 401(j). The
State Department's Passport Board of Review affirmed the finding of
expatriation, and the Department's legal adviser affirmed the
decision. Cort, through counsel, thereupon brought this suit in the
District Court for the District of Columbia for a declaratory
judgment that he is a citizen of the United States, for an
injunction against enforcement of § 349(a)(10) because of its
unconstitutionality, and for an order directing revocation of the
certificate of loss of nationality and issuance of a United States
passport to him. Pursuant to Cort's demand, a three-judge court was
convened. The court held that he had remained outside the United
States to evade military service, but that § 349(a)(10) is
unconstitutional because "We perceive no substantial difference
between the constitutional issue in the
Trop case and the
one facing us." It therefore concluded that Cort is a citizen of
this country, and enjoined the Secretary of State from withholding
a passport from Cort on the ground that he is not a citizen and
from otherwise interfering with his rights of citizenship.
Cort
v. Herter, D.C.,
187 F.
Supp. 683.
The Secretary of State appealed directly to this Court, 28
U.S.C. §§ 1252, 1253, which postponed the question of jurisdiction
to the hearing of the case on the merits.
Herter v. Cort,
365 U.S. 808. The preliminary question of jurisdiction was
affirmatively resolved last Term,
Rusk v. Cort,
369 U. S. 367,
leaving the issue of the validity of § 349(a)(10) for decision now,
after reargument. 369 U.S. at 380.
Before we consider the essential question in these cases, the
constitutionality of §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10), two preliminary
issues peculiar to No. 2 must be discussed.
II
. THE THREE-JUDGE COURT ISSUE
At the threshold in Mendoza-Martinez' case is the question
whether the proceeding should have been heard by a three-judge
District Court convened pursuant to 28
Page 372 U. S. 153
U.S.C. § 2282, which requires such a tribunal as a prerequisite
to the granting of any
"interlocutory or permanent injunction restraining the
enforcement, operation or execution of any Act of Congress for
repugnance to the Constitution of the United States. . . ."
If § 2282 governs this litigation, we are once again faced with
the prospect of a remand and a new trial, this time by a
three-judge panel. We are, however, satisfied that the case was
properly heard by a single district judge, as both parties
urge.
In the complaint under which the case was tried the first and
second times, Mendoza-Martinez asked for no injunctive relief, and
none was granted. In the amended complaint which he filed in 1960
to put in issue the question of collateral estoppel, he added a
prayer asking the court to adjudge "that defendants herein are
enjoined and restrained henceforth from enforcing" all deportation
orders against him. However, it is abundantly clear from the
amended trial stipulation which was entered into by the parties and
approved by the judge to "govern the course of the trial," that the
issues were framed so as not to contemplate any injunctive relief.
The first question was articulated only in terms of whether the
Government was
"herein estopped by reason of the indictment and conviction of
plaintiff for (draft evasion) . . . from denying that the plaintiff
is now a national and citizen of the United States."
The second question asked only for a declaration as to whether §
401(j) was "unconstitutional, either on its face or as applied to
the plaintiff herein." The conclusion that no request for
injunctive relief nor even any contemplation of it attended the
case as it went to trial is borne out by the total lack of
reference to injunctive relief in the District Court's memorandum
opinion, findings of fact and conclusions of law, and judgment.
See Mendoza-Martinez v. Rogers, 192 F. Supp. 1. The relief
granted was merely a declaration that the 1944 Amendment "is
Page 372 U. S. 154
unconstitutional, both on its face and as applied to the
plaintiff herein," and "[t]hat the plaintiff is now, and ever since
the date of his birth has been, a national and citizen of the
United States." Thus, despite the amendment to Mendoza-Martinez'
complaint before the third trial, it is clear that neither the
parties nor the judge at any relevant time regarded the action as
one in which injunctive relief was material to the disposition of
the case. Since no injunction restraining the enforcement of §
401(j) was at issue, § 2282 was not, in terms, applicable to
require the convening of a three-judge District Court.
Whether an action solely for declaratory relief would under all
circumstances be inappropriate for consideration by a three-judge
court we need not now decide, for it is clear that, in the present
case, the congressional policy underlying the statute was not
frustrated by trial before a single judge. The legislative history
of § 2282 and of its complement, § 2281, [
Footnote 6] requiring three judges to hear injunctive
suits directed against federal and state legislation, respectively,
indicates that these sections were enacted to prevent a single
federal judge from being able to paralyze totally the operation of
an entire regulatory scheme, either state or federal, by issuance
of a broad injunctive order. Section 2281
"was a means of protection the increasing body of state
legislation regulating economic enterprise from invalidation by a
conventional suit in equity. . . . The crux of the business is
procedural protection against an improvident statewide doom by a
federal court of a state's legislative policy. This was the aim of
Congress. . . ."
Phillips v. United States, 312 U.
S. 246,
Page 372 U. S. 155
312 U. S.
250-251. Repeatedly emphasized during the congressional
debates on § 2282 were the heavy pecuniary costs of the unforeseen
and debilitating interruptions in the administration of federal law
which could be wrought by a single judge's order, and the great
burdens entailed in coping with harassing actions brought one after
another to challenge the operation of an entire statutory scheme,
wherever jurisdiction over government officials could be acquired,
until a judge was ultimately found who would grant the desired
injunction. 81 Cong.Rec. 479-481, 2142-2143 (1937).
The present action, which in form was for declaratory relief and
which in its agreed substance did not contemplate injunctive
relief, involves none of the dangers to which Congress was
addressing itself. The relief sought an the order entered affected
an Act of Congress in a totally noncoercive fashion. There was no
interdiction of the operation at large of the statute. It was
declared unconstitutional, but without even an injunctive sanction
against the application of the statute by the Government to
Mendoza-Martinez. Pending review in the Court of Appeals and in
this Court, the Government has been free to continue to apply the
statute. That being the case, there is here no conflict with the
purpose of Congress to provide for the convocation of a three-judge
court whenever the operation of a statutory scheme may be
immediately disrupted before a final judicial determination of the
validity of the trial court's order can be obtained. Thus, there
was no reason whatever in this case to invoke the special and
extraordinary procedure of a three-judge court.
Compare
Schneider v. Rusk, 372 U. S. 224,
decided this day.
III
. THE COLLATERAL ESTOPPEL ISSUE.
Mendoza-Martinez' second amended complaint, filed in 1960
pursuant to the suggestion of this Court earlier that year, charged
that
"the government of the United States
Page 372 U. S. 156
has admitted the fact of his United States citizenship by virtue
of the indictment and judgment of conviction (in 1947 for draft
evasion) . . . , and is therefore collaterally estopped now to deny
such citizenship. . . ."
The District Court rejected this assertion. Mendoza-Martinez
renews it here as an alternative ground for upholding the judgment
entered below "That the plaintiff is now, and ever since the date
of his birth has been, a national and citizen of the United
States." 192 F. Supp. at 3.
We too reject Mendoza-Martinez' contention on this point. His
argument, stated more fully, is as follows: the Selective Training
and Service Act of 1940 applies only to citizens and resident
aliens. Both the indictment and the judgment spoke in terms of his
having remained the Mexico for the entire period from November 15,
1942, until November 1, 1946, when he returned to this country.
[
Footnote 7]
Page 372 U. S. 157
For the period from September 27, 1944, when § 401(j) became
effective, until November 1, 1946, he could not have been in
violation of our draft laws unless he remained a citizen of the
United States, since the draft laws do not apply to nonresident
aliens. Therefore, he concludes, the Government must be taken to
have admitted that he did not lose his citizenship by remaining
outside the country after September 27, 1944, because it charged
him with draft evasion for that period, as well as for the period
preceding that date.
It is true that, "as to those matters in issue or points
controverted, upon the determination of which the finding or
verdict was rendered,"
Cromwell v. County of Sac,
94 U. S. 351,
94 U. S. 353,
the findings in a prior criminal proceeding may estop a party in a
subsequent civil action,
Emich Motors Corp. v. General Motors
Corp., 340 U. S. 558,
340 U. S.
568-569, and that the United States may be estopped to
deny even an erroneous prior determination of status,
United
States v. Moser, 266 U. S. 236.
However, Mendoza-Martinez' citizenship status was not at issue in
his trial for draft evasion. Putting aside the fact that he pleaded
guilty, which in itself may support the conclusion that his
citizenship status was not litigated and thereby without more
preclude his assertion of estoppel, [
Footnote 8] the basic flaw in his argument is in the
assertion that he was charged with a continuing violation of the
draft laws while he remained in Mexico, particularly after
September 27, 1944, the date on which § 401(j) became effective. He
was, in fact, charged with a violation "on or about November 15,
1942," because he
"did knowingly evade service . . . in that he did knowingly
depart from
Page 372 U. S. 158
the United States and go to a foreign county, namely, Mexico,
for the purpose of evading service. . . ."
This constituted the alleged violation. The additional language
that he "did there remain until on or about November 1, 1946," was
merely surplusage in relation to the substantive offense, although
it might, for example, serve a purpose in relation to problems
connected with the tolling of the statute of limitations. No
language appears charging the elements of violation -- knowledge
and purpose to evade -- in connection with it. The only crime
charged is what happened "on or about November 15, 1942," and
conviction thereon, even if it had entailed a finding as to
Mendoza-Martinez' citizenship on that date, [
Footnote 9] in nowise estopped the Government with
reference to his status after September 27, 1944.
The trial court's judgment was worded no differently.
Mendoza-Martinez was convicted of:
"Having, on or about November 15th 1942, knowingly departed from
the United States to Mexico, for the purpose of evading service in
the land or naval forces of the United States and having remained
there until on or about November 1st, 1946."
"Again, the language relating to the time during which
Mendoza-Martinez remained in Mexico was not tied to the words
stating knowledge and purpose to evade service. Thus, the
conviction entailed no actual or necessary finding about
Mendoza-Martinez' citizenship status between September 27, 1944,
and November 1, 1946, and the Government was not estopped from
denying his citizenship in the present proceedings. "
Page 372 U. S. 159
IV
. THE CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES
A. Basic Principles
Since the validity of an Act of Congress is involved, we begin
our analysis mindful that the function we are now discharging is
"the gravest and most delicate duty that this Court is called upon
to perform."
Blodgett v. Holden, 275 U.
S. 142,
275 U. S. 148
(separate opinion of Holmes, J.). This responsibility we here
fulfill with all respect for the powers of Congress, but with
recognition of the transcendent status of our Constitution.
We deal with the contending constitutional arguments in the
context of certain basic and sometimes conflicting principles.
Citizenship is a most precious right. It is expressly guaranteed by
the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, which speaks in the
most positive terms. [
Footnote
10] The Constitution is silent about the permissibility of
involuntary forfeiture of citizenship rights. [
Footnote 11] While it confirms citizenship
rights, plainly there are imperative obligations of citizenship
performance of which Congress in the exercise of its powers may
constitutionally exact. One of the most important of these is to
serve the country in time of war and national emergency. The powers
of Congress to require military service for the common defense are
broad and far-reaching, [
Footnote 12]
Page 372 U. S. 160
for, while the Constitution protects against invasions of
individual rights, it is not a suicide pact. Similarly, Congress
has broad power under the Necessary and Proper Clause to enact
legislation for the regulation of foreign affairs. Latitude in this
area is necessary to ensure effectuation of this indispensable
function of government. [
Footnote 13]
These principles, stemming, on the one hand, from the precious
nature of the constitutionally guaranteed rights of citizenship,
and, on the other, from the powers of Congress and the related
obligations of individual citizens, are urged upon us by the
parties here. The Government argues that §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10)
are valid as an exercise of Congress' power over foreign affairs,
of its war power, and of the inherent sovereignty of the
Government. Appellees urge the provisions' invalidity as not within
any of the powers asserted, and as imposing a cruel and unusual
punishment.
We recognize at the outset that we are confronted here with an
issue of the utmost import. Deprivation of citizenship --
particularly American citizenship, which is "one of the most
valuable rights in the world today," Report of the President's
Commission on Immigration and Naturalization (1953), 235 -- has
grave practical consequences. An expatriate who, like Cort, had no
other nationality becomes a stateless person -- a person who not
only has no rights as an American citizen, but no membership in any
national entity whatsoever.
"Such individuals as do not possess any nationality enjoy, in
general, no protection whatever, and if they are aggrieved by a
State, they have no means of redress, since there is no State which
is competent to take up their case. As far as the Law of
Nations
Page 372 U. S. 161
is concerned, there is, apart from restraints of morality or
obligations expressly laid down by treaty . . . , no restriction
whatever to cause a State to abstain from maltreating to any extent
such stateless individuals."
1 Oppenheim, International Law (8th ed., Lauterpacht, 1955), §
291, at 640. [
Footnote 14]
The calamity is "[n]ot the loss of specific rights, then, but the
loss of a community willing and able to guarantee any rights
whatsoever. . . ." Arendt, The Origins of Totalitarianism (1951),
294. The stateless person may end up shunted from nation to nation,
there being no one obligated or willing to receive him, [
Footnote 15] or, as in Cort's case,
may receive the dubious sanctuary of a Communist regime lacking the
essential liberties precious to American citizenship. [
Footnote 16]
Page 372 U. S. 162
B. The Perez and Trop Cases
The basic principles here involved, the gravity of the issue,
and the arguments bearing upon Congress' power to forfeit
citizenship were considered by the Court in relation to different
provisions of the Nationality Act of 1940 in two cases decided on
the same day less than five years ago:
Perez v. Brownell,
356 U. S. 44, and
Trop v. Dulles, 356 U. S. 86.
In
Perez, § 401(e), which imposes loss of nationality
for "[v]oting in a political election in a foreign state or
participating in an election or plebiscite to determine the
sovereignty over foreign territory," was upheld by a closely
divided Court as a constitutional exercise of Congress' power to
regulate foreign affairs. The Court reasoned that, since withdrawal
of citizenship of Americans who vote in foreign elections is
reasonably calculated to effect the avoidance of embarrassment in
the conduct of foreign relations, such withdrawal is within the
power of Congress, acting under the Necessary and Proper Clause.
Since the Court sustained the application of § 401(e) to
denationalize Perez, it did not have to deal with § 401(j), upon
which the Government had also relied, and it expressly declined to
rule on the constitutionality of that section, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 62.
There were three opinions written in dissent. The principal one,
that of THE CHIEF JUSTICE, recognized
"that citizenship may not only be voluntarily renounced through
exercise of the right of expatriation, but also by other actions in
derogation of undivided allegiance to this country,"
id. at
356 U. S. 68,
but concluded that "[t]he mere act of voting in a foreign election,
however, without regard to the circumstances attending
Page 372 U. S. 163
the participation, is not sufficient to show a voluntary
abandonment of citizenship,"
id. at
356 U. S.
78.
In
Trop, § 401(g), forfeiting the citizenship of any
American who is guilty of
"[d]eserting the military or naval forces of the United States
in time of war, provided he is convicted thereof by court martial
and as the result of such conviction is dismissed or dishonorably
discharged . . . ,"
was declared unconstitutional. There was no opinion of the
Court. THE CHIEF JUSTICE wrote an opinion for four members of the
Court, concluding that § 401(g) was invalid for the same reason
that he had urged as to § 401(e) in his dissent in
Perez,
and that it was also invalid as a cruel and unusual punishment
imposed in violation of the Eighth Amendment. JUSTICE BRENNAN
conceded that it is
"paradoxical to justify as constitutional the expatriation of
the citizen who has committed no crime by voting in a Mexican
political election, yet find unconstitutional a statute which
provides for the expatriation of a soldier guilty of the very
serious crime of desertion in time of war,"
356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 105.
Notwithstanding, he concurred because "the requisite rational
relation between this statute and the war power does not appear . .
. ,"
id. at
356 U. S. 114.
Justice Frankfurter, joined by three other Justices, dissented on
the ground that § 401(g) did not impose punishment at all, let
alone cruel and unusual punishment, and was within the war powers
of Congress.
C. Sections 401(j) and 349(a)(10) as
Punishment
The present cases present for decision the constitutionality of
a section not passed upon in either
Perez or
Trop
-- § 401(j), added in 1944, and its successor and present
counterpart, § 349(a)(10) of the Immigration and Nationality Act of
1952. We have come to the conclusion that there is a basic question
in the present cases,
Page 372 U. S. 164
the answer to which obviates a choice here between the powers of
Congress and the constitutional guarantee of citizenship. That
issue is whether the statutes here, which automatically -- without
prior court or administrative proceedings -- impose forfeiture of
citizenship, are essentially penal in character, and consequently
have deprived the appellees of their citizenship without due
process of law and without according them the rights guaranteed by
the Fifth and Sixth Amendments, including notice, confrontation,
compulsory process for obtaining witnesses, trial by jury, and
assistance of counsel. This issue was not relevant in
Trop, because, in contrast to §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10), §
401(g) required conviction by court-martial for desertion before
forfeiture of citizenship could be inflicted. In
Perez,
the contention that § 401(e) was penal in character was impliedly
rejected by the Court's holding, based on legislative history
totally different from that underlying §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10),
that voting in a political election in a foreign state "is
regulable by Congress under its power to deal with foreign
affairs." 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 59.
Compare Dent v. West Virginia, 129 U.
S. 114;
Hawker v. New York, 170 U.
S. 189;
Flemming v. Nestor, 363 U.
S. 603. Indeed, in
Trop, THE CHIEF JUSTICE
observed that
"Section 401(j) decrees loss of citizenship without providing
any semblance of procedural due process whereby the guilt of the
draft evader may be determined before the sanction is imposed . . .
,"
356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 94,
and Justice Frankfurter, in dissent, alluded to the due process
overtones of the requirement in § 401(g) of prior conviction for
desertion by court-martial,
id. at
356 U. S.
116-117.
It is fundamental that the great powers of Congress to conduct
war and to regulate the Nation's foreign relations are subject to
the constitutional requirements of due
Page 372 U. S. 165
process. [
Footnote 17]
The imperative necessity for safeguarding these rights to
procedural due process under the gravest of emergencies has existed
throughout our constitutional history, for it is then, under the
pressing exigencies of crisis, that there is the greatest
temptation to dispense with fundamental constitutional guarantees
which, it is feared, will inhibit governmental action.
"The Constitution of the United States is a law for rulers and
people, equally in war and in peace, and covers with the shield of
its protection all classes of men, at all times, and under all
circumstances."
Ex parte
Milligan, 4 Wall. 2,
71 U. S. 120-121.
[
Footnote 18] The rights
guaranteed by the Fifth and Sixth Amendments are "preserved to
every one accused of crime who is not attached to the army, or
navy, or militia in actual service."
Id. at
71 U. S. 123.
[
Footnote 19]
"[I]f society is disturbed by civil commotion -- if the passions
of men are aroused and the restraints of law weakened, if not
disregarded -- these safeguards need, and should receive, the
watchful care of those intrusted with the guardianship of the
Constitution and laws. In no other way can we transmit to posterity
unimpaired the blessings of liberty, consecrated by the sacrifices
of the Revolution."
Id. at
71 U. S. 124.
We hold §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10) invalid because, in them,
Congress has plainly employed the sanction of deprivation of
nationality as a punishment -- for the offense of leaving or
remaining outside the country to evade military
Page 372 U. S. 166
service -- without affording the procedural safeguards
guaranteed by the Fifth and Sixth Amendments. [
Footnote 20] Our forefathers
"intended to safeguard the people of this country from
punishment without trial by duly constituted courts. . . . And even
the courts to which this important function was entrusted, were
commanded to stay their hands until and unless certain tested
safeguards were observed. An accused in court must be tried by an
impartial jury, has a right to be represented by counsel, (and)
must be clearly informed of the charge against him. . . ."
United States v. Lovett, 328 U.
S. 303,
328 U. S. 317.
See also Chambers v. Florida, 309 U.
S. 227,
309 U. S.
235-238.
As the Government concedes, §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10)
automatically strip an American of his citizenship, with
concomitant deprivation "of all that makes life worth living,"
Ng Fung Ho v. White, 259 U. S. 276,
259 U. S.
284-285, whenever a citizen departs from or remains
outside the jurisdiction of this country for the purpose of evading
his military obligations. Conviction for draft evasion, as
Page 372 U. S. 167
Cort's case illustrates, is not prerequisite to the operation of
this sanction. [
Footnote 21]
Independently of prosecution, forfeiture of citizenship attaches
when the statutory set of facts develops. It is argued that the
availability after the fact of administrative and judicial
proceedings, including the machinery the Court approved last Term
in
Rusk v. Cort, 369 U. S. 367, to
contest the validity of the sanction meets the measure of due
process. But the legislative history and judicial expression with
respect to every congressional enactment relating to the provisions
in question dating back to 1865 establish that forfeiture of
citizenship is a penalty for the act of leaving or staying outside
the country to avoid the draft. This being so, the Fifth and Sixth
Amendments mandate that this punishment cannot be imposed without a
prior criminal trial and all its incidents, including indictment,
notice, confrontation, jury trial, assistance of counsel, and
compulsory process for obtaining witnesses. If the sanction these
sections impose is punishment, and it plainly is, the procedural
safeguards required as incidents of a criminal prosecution are
lacking. We need go no further.
Page 372 U. S. 168
The punitive nature of the sanction here is evident under the
tests traditionally applied to determine whether an Act of Congress
is penal or regulatory in character, even though in other cases
this problem has been extremely difficult and elusive of solution.
Whether the sanction involves an affirmative disability or
restraint, [
Footnote 22]
whether it has historically been regarded as a punishment,
[
Footnote 23] whether it
comes into play only on a finding of
scienter, [
Footnote 24] whether its operation
will promote the traditional aims of punishment -- retribution and
deterrence, [
Footnote 25]
whether the behavior to which it applies is already a crime,
[
Footnote 26] whether an
alternative purpose to which it may
Page 372 U. S. 169
rationally be connected is assignable for it, [
Footnote 27] and whether it appears
excessive in relation to the alternative purpose assigned [
Footnote 28] are all relevant to the
inquiry, and may often point in differing directions. Absent
conclusive evidence of congressional intent as to the penal nature
of a statute, these factors must be considered in relation to the
statute on its face. Here, although we are convinced that
application of these criteria to the face of the statutes supports
the conclusion that they are punitive, a detailed examination along
such lines is unnecessary, because the objective manifestations of
congressional purpose indicate conclusively that the provisions in
question can only be interpreted as punitive. [
Footnote 29] A study of the history of the
predecessor of § 401(j), which "is worth a volume of logic,"
New York Trust Co. v. Eisner, 256 U.
S. 345,
256 U. S. 349,
coupled with a reading of Congress' reasons for enacting § 401(j),
compels a conclusion that the statute's primary function is to
serve as an additional penalty for
Page 372 U. S. 170
a special category of draft evader. [
Footnote 30]
Compare Trop v. Dulles, supra,
356 U.S. at
356 U. S.
107-110 (Brennan, J., concurring).
1. The Predecessor Statute and Judicial
Construction
The subsections here in question have their origin in part of a
Civil War "Act to amend the several Acts heretofore passed to
provide for the Enrolling and Calling out the National Forces, and
for other Purposes." Act of March 3, 1865, 13 Stat. 487. Section 21
of that Act, dealing with deserters and draft evaders, was in terms
punitive, providing that, "in addition to the other lawful
penalties of the crime of desertion," persons guilty thereof
"shall be deemed and taken to have voluntarily relinquished and
forfeited their rights of citizenship and their rights to become
citizens . . . and all persons who, being duly enrolled, shall
depart the jurisdiction of the district in which he is enrolled, or
go beyond the limits of the United States, with intent to avoid any
draft into the
Page 372 U. S. 171
military or naval service, duly ordered, shall be liable to the
penalties of this section. [
Footnote 31]"
The debates in Congress in 1865 confirm that the use of punitive
language in § 21 was not accidental. The section as originally
proposed inflicted loss of rights of citizenship only on deserters.
Senator Morrill of Maine proposed amending the section to cover
persons who leave the country to avoid the draft, stating, "I do
not see why the same principle should not extend to those who leave
the country to avoid the draft." Cong.Globe, 38th Cong., 2d Sess.
642 (1865). This "same principle" was punitive, because Senator
Morrill was also worried that, insofar as the section as originally
proposed "provides for a penalty" to be imposed on persons who had
theretofore deserted, there was question "whether it is not an
ex post facto law, whether it is not fixing a penalty for
an act already done."
Ibid. Senator Johnson of Maryland
attempted to allay Senator Morrill's concern by explaining that
"the penalties are not imposed upon those who have deserted, if
nothing else occurs, but only on those who have deserted and who
shall not return within sixty days. The crime for which the
punishment is inflicted is made up of the fact of an antecedent
desertion, and a failure to return within sixty days. It is clearly
within the power of Congress."
Ibid. This explanation satisfied the Senate
sufficiently so that they accepted the section, with Senator
Morrill's amendment, although Senator Hendricks of Indiana made one
last speech in an effort to convince his colleagues of the bill's
ex post facto nature and, even apart from that, of the
excessiveness of the punishment, particularly as applied to draft
evaders:
"It seems to me to be very clear that this section proposes to
punish desertions which have already
Page 372 U. S. 172
taken place, with a penalty which the law does not already
prescribe. In other words, it is an
ex post facto criminal
law which I think we cannot pass. . . . One of the penalties known
very well to the criminal laws of the country is the denial of the
right of suffrage and the right to hold offices of trust or
profit."
"It seems to me this objection to the section is very clear, but
I desire to suggest further that this section punishes desertions
that may hereafter take place in the same manner, and it is known
to Senators that one desertion recently created is not reporting
when notified of the draft. . . . I submit to Senators that it is a
horrible thing to deprive a man of his citizenship, of that which
is his pride and honor, from the mere fact that he has been unable
to report upon the day specified after being notified that he has
been drafted. Certainly the punishment for desertion is severe
enough. It extends now from the denial of pay up to death; that
entire compass is given for the punishment of this offense. Why add
this other? It cannot do any good."
Id. at 643.
In the House, the motion of New York's Representative Townsend
to strike the section as a "despotic measure" which would "have the
effect to deprive fifty thousand, and I do not know but one hundred
thousand, people of their rights and privileges," was met by the
argument of Representative Schenck of Ohio, the Chairman of the
Military Committee, that "[h]ere is a penalty that is lawful, wise,
proper, and that should be added to the other lawful penalties that
now exist against deserters."
Id. at 1155. After
Representative Wilson of Iowa proposed an amendment, later accepted
and placed in the enacted version of the bill, extending the draft
evasion portion to apply to persons leaving "the district in which
they are enrolled" in addition to those leaving the country,
Representative J. C. Allen of Illinois raised the
ex post
facto
Page 372 U. S. 173
objection to the section as a whole.
Id. at 1155-1156.
Representative Schenck answered him much as Senator Johnson had
replied in the Senate:
"The gentleman from Illinois [Mr. J. C. Allen] misapprehends
this section from not having looked carefully, as I think, into its
language. He thinks it retroactive. It is not so. It does not
provide for punishing those who have deserted in their character of
deserters acquired by having gone before the passage of the law,
but of those only, who, being deserters, shall not return and
report themselves for duty within sixty days. If the gentleman
looks at the language of the section, he will find that we have
carefully avoided making it retroactive. We give those who have
deserted their country and their flag sixty days for repentance and
return."
"Mr. J. C. ALLEN. Will not the infliction of this penalty on
those who have failed to return to the Army be an additional
penalty that did not exist at the time they deserted?"
"Mr. SCHENCK. Yes, sir."
"Mr. J. C. ALLEN. Does not that make the law retroactive?"
"Mr. SCHENCK. They are deserters now. We take them up in their
present status and character as deserters, and punish them for
continuing in that character. The gentleman refers to lawyers here.
I believe he is a good lawyer himself. Does he not know that if a
man steals a horse and runs away with it to the next county, it is
a continual act of larceny until he delivers up the horse?"
Id. at 1156.
The significance of these debates is, as these excerpts plainly
show that, while there was a difference in both Houses as to
whether the statute would be an
ex post facto law, there
was agreement among all the speakers on both
Page 372 U. S. 174
sides of that issue, as well as on both sides of the merits of
the bill generally, that deprivation of rights of citizenship for
leaving the country to evade the draft was a "penalty" and
"punishment" for a "crime" and an "offense" and a violation of a
"criminal law."
A number of state court judicial decisions rendered shortly
after the Civil War lend impressive support to the conclusion that
the predecessor of §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10), § 21 of the 1865
statute, was a criminal statute imposing an additional punishment
for desertion and draft evasion. The first and most important of
these was
Huber v. Reily, 53 Pa. 112 (1866), in which, as
in most of the cases which followed, [
Footnote 32] the plaintiff had brought an action against
the election judge of his home township, alleging that the
defendant had refused to receive his ballot on the ground that
plaintiff was a deserter and thereby disenfranchised under § 21,
and that such refusal was wrongful because § 21 was
unconstitutional. The asserted grounds of invalidity were that § 21
was an
ex post facto law, that it was an attempt by
Congress to regulate suffrage in the States, and therefore outside
Congress' sphere of power, and that it proposed to inflict pains
and penalties without a trial and conviction, and was therefore
prohibited by the Bill of Rights. In an opinion by Justice Strong,
later a member of this Court, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court first
characterized the statute in a way which compelled discussion of
the asserted grounds of unconstitutionality:
"The Act of Congress is highly penal. It imposes forfeiture of
citizenship and deprivation of the rights of citizenship as
penalties for the commission of a crime. Its avowed purpose is to
add to the penalties which the law had previously affixed to the
offense
Page 372 U. S. 175
of desertion from the military or naval service of the United
States, and it denominates the additional sanctions provided as
penalties."
53 Pa. at 114-115.
It then answered the
ex post facto argument as it had
been answered on the floor of Congress, that the offense could as
well be in the continued refusal to render service as in the
original desertion. The second contention was met with the
statement that
"The enactment operates upon an individual offender, punishes
him for violation of the Federal law by deprivation of his
citizenship of the United States, but it leaves each state to
determine for itself whether such an individual may be a voter. It
does no more than increase the penalties of the law upon the
commission of crime."
Id. at 116. "The third objection," the court continued,
"would be a very grave one if the act does in reality impose pains
and penalties before and without a conviction by due process of
law."
Id. at 116-117. The court then summarized the
protections guaranteed by the Fifth and Sixth Amendments, and
concluded that it was not consistent with these rights to empower
a
"judge of elections or a board of election officers constituted
under state laws . . . to adjudge the guilt or innocence of an
alleged violator of the laws of the United States."
Id. at 117. However, the court decided that, since the
penalty contemplated by § 21 "is added to what the law had
previously enacted to be the penalty of desertion, as imprisonment
is sometimes added to punishment by fine," it must have been
intended
"that it should be incurred in the same way, and imposed by the
same tribunal that was authorized to impose the other penalties for
the offence."
Id. at 119.
"[T]he forfeiture which it prescribes, like all other penalties
for desertion, must be
adjudged to the convicted person,
after trial by a court-martial, and sentence approved. For the
conviction and sentence of such a court there can be no
substitute."
Id.
Page 372 U. S. 176
at 120. (Emphasis in original.) Accordingly, since the plaintiff
had not been so convicted, the court held that he was not
disenfranchised.
Subsequent state court decisions in the post-Civil War period
followed
Huber v. Reily, both in result and reasoning.
State v. Symonds, 57 Me. 148 (1869);
Severance v.
Healey, 50 N.H. 448 (1870);
Gotcheus v. Matheson, 58
Barb. (N.Y.) 152 (1870);
McCafferty v. Guyer, 59 Pa. 109
(1868).
Ultimately and significantly, in
Kurtz v. Moffitt,
115 U. S. 487, a
case dealing with the question whether a city police officer had
the power to arrest a military deserter, this Court recognized both
the nature of the sanction imposed by § 21 and the attendant
necessity of procedural safeguards, approvingly citing the above
decisions:
"The provisions of §§ 1996 and 1998, which reenact the act of
March 3, 1865, ch. 79, § 21, 13 Stat. 490, and subject every person
deserting the military service of the United States to additional
penalties, namely, forfeiture of all rights of citizenship, and
disqualification to hold any office of trust or profit, can only
take effect upon conviction by a court martial, as was clearly
shown by Mr. Justice Strong, when a judge of the Supreme Court of
Pennsylvania, in
Huber v. Reily, 53 Penn.St. 112, and has
been uniformly held by the civil courts as well as by the military
authorities.
State v. Symonds, 57 Maine, 148;
Severance v. Healey, 50 N.H. 448;
Goetcheus v.
Matthewson, 61 N.Y. 420; Winthrop's Digest of Judge Advocate
General's Opinions, 225."
115 U.S. at
115 U. S.
501-502.
Section 21 remained on the books unchanged, except for being
distributed in the Revised Statutes as §§ 1996 and 1998, until
1912, when Congress reenacted it with an amendment making it
inapplicable to peacetime violations
Page 372 U. S. 177
and giving the President power to mitigate or remit punishment
previously imposed on peacetime violators, Act of August 22, 1912,
37 Stat. 356. The legislative history of that amendment is also
instructive for our present inquiry. The discussion in both Houses
had reference only to the penalties as operative on deserters, no
doubt because there was no peacetime draft to evade, but since the
1865 statute dealt without distinction with both desertion and
leaving the jurisdiction to evade, there is no reason to suppose
the discussion quoted below to be any less applicable to the latter
type of misconduct. The House Committee Report, H.R.Rep.No.335, 62d
Cong., 2d Sess. (1912), which was quoted in its entirety in the
Senate Committee Report, S.Rep.No.910, 62d Cong., 2d Sess. 3-6
(1912), stated that,
"In addition to the service penalty imposed by the
court-martial, the law, as it now stands, imposes the further and
most drastic punishment of loss of rights of citizenship. . . .
There are in the United States today thousands of men who are
literally men without a country and their numbers will be
constantly added to until the drastic civil war measure which adds
this heavy penalty to an already severe punishment imposed by
military law, is repealed."
H.R.Rep.No.335,
supra, at 2. In reporting the bill out
of the Committee on Naval Affairs, Representative Roberts of
Massachusetts, its author, stated that
"the bill now under consideration is intended to remove one of
the harshest penalties that can be imposed upon a man for an
offense, to-wit, the loss of rights to citizenship. . . . [S]uch a
drastic penalty was entirely too severe to be imposed upon an
American citizen in time of peace."
He detailed the penalties meted out by court-martial for
desertion, and then referred to the "additional penalty of loss of
citizenship," which, he concluded, is "a barbarous punishment." 48
Cong.Rec. 2903 (1912). Senator Bristow of Kansas, a member of his
chamber's Committee on Military Affairs,
Page 372 U. S. 178
also referred in discussing the bill to the forfeiture of rights
of citizenship as a "penalty," and said that there is no reason why
a peacetime offender should be "punished so severely." 48 Cong.Rec.
9542 (1912).
A somewhat similar amendment had been passed by both Houses of
Congress in 1908, but vetoed by the President. [
Footnote 33] The House Committee Report on
that occasion, H.R.Rep.No.1340, 60th Cong., 1st Sess. (1908),
consisted mainly of a letter from the Secretary of the Navy to the
Congress, and of his annual report. In both documents he referred
to loss of citizenship as a "punishment," and as one of the
"penalties" for desertion. Representative Roberts spoke in 1908, as
he was to do once more in 1912, of the "enormity of the punishment"
and the "horrible punishment," and said, "Conviction itself
under
Page 372 U. S. 179
the existing law forfeits citizenship. That is the monstrosity
of the law." 43 Cong.Rec. 111 (1908). The entire discussion,
id. at 110-114, was based on the premise that loss of
citizenship is a punishment for desertion, the point at issue as in
1912, being whether it was too severe a punishment for peacetime
imposition. At one point, Representative Roberts said, "Loss of
citizenship is a punishment," to which Representative Hull of Iowa
replied, "Certainly."
Id. at 114.
Section 504 of the Nationality Act of 1940, 54 Stat. 1172,
repealed the portion of the 1865 statute which dealt with flight
from the jurisdiction to avoid the draft. However, in connection
with the provision governing loss of citizenship for desertion,
which was enacted as § 401(g) and declared unconstitutional in
Trop v. Dulles, supra, the President's committee of
advisers reported that the provisions of the 1865 Act had been
"distinctly penal in character," and concluded that "They must,
therefore, be construed strictly, and the penalties take effect
only upon conviction by a court martial." [
Footnote 34] Codification of the Nationality
Laws of the United States, 76th Cong., 1st Sess. 68 (Comm.Print
1939). Section 401(g) was therefore worded so that loss of
nationality could only occur upon conviction for desertion by
court-martial. When, however, § 401(j) was enacted in 1944, no such
procedural safeguards were built in.
See Trop v. Dulles,
supra, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 93-94.
Thus, whereas, for JUSTICE BRENNAN, concurring in
Trop,
the conclusion that expatriation under § 401(g) was punishment was
"but the beginning of critical inquiry," 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 110,
a similar conclusion with reference to §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10) is
sufficient to sustain the holding that they are
unconstitutional.
Page 372 U. S. 180
2. The Present Statutes
The immediate legislative history of § 401(j) confirms the
conclusion, based upon study of the earlier legislative and
judicial history, [
Footnote
35] that it is punitive in nature. The language of the section
was, to begin with, quite obviously patterned on that of its
predecessor, an understandable fact, since the draft of the bill
was submitted to the Congress by Attorney General Biddle, along
with a letter to Chairman Russell of the Senate Immigration
Committee in which the Attorney General referred for precedent to
the 1912 reenactment of the 1865 statute. This letter, which was
the impetus for the enactment of the bill, was quoted in full text
in support of it in both the House and Senate Committee Reports,
H.R.Rep. No. 1229, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 2-3 (1944); S.Rep. No.
1075, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 2 (1944), and is set out in the margin.
[
Footnote 36] The
Page 372 U. S. 181
Senate Report stated that it "fully explains the purpose of the
bill." S.Rep. No. 1075,
supra, at 1. The letter was
couched entirely in terms of an argument that citizens who had left
the country in order to escape military service
Page 372 U. S. 182
should be dealt with, and that loss of citizenship was a proper
way to deal with them. There was no reference to the societal good
that would be wrought by the legislation, nor to any improvement in
soldier morale or in the conduct of war generally that would be
gained by the passage of the statute. The House Committee Report
and the sponsors of the bill endorsed it on the same basis. The
report referred for support to the fact that the FBI files showed
"over 800 draft delinquents" in the El Paso area alone who had
crossed to Mexico to evade the draft. H.R.Rep. No. 1229,
supra, at 2. The obvious inference to be drawn from the
report, the example it contained, and the lack of mention of any
broader purpose is that Congress was concerned solely with
inflicting effective retribution upon this class of draft evaders
and, no doubt, on others similarly situated. Thus, on the floor of
the House, Representative Dickstein of New York, the Chairman of
the House Committee on Immigration and Naturalization, explained
the bill solely as a means of dealing with
"draft-dodgers who left this country knowing that there was a
possibility that they might be drafted in this war and that they
might have to serve in the armed forces. . . ."
He implied that the bill was necessary to frustrate their "idea
of evading military service and of returning after the war is over,
and taking their old places
Page 372 U. S. 183
in our society." 90 Cong.Rec. 3261 (1944). Senator Russell, who
was manager of the bill as well as Chairman of the Senate
Immigration Committee, explained it in similar terms:
"Certainly those who, having enjoyed the advantages of living in
the United States, were unwilling to serve their country or subject
themselves to the Selective Service Act should be penalized in some
measure. . . . Any American citizen who is convicted of violating
the Selective Service Act loses his citizenship. This bill would
merely impose a similar penalty on those who are not subject to the
jurisdiction of our courts, the penalty being the same as would
result in the case of those who are subject to the jurisdiction of
our courts."
90 Cong.Rec. 7629 (1944). [
Footnote 37]
The Senate and House debates, together with Attorney General
Biddle's letter, brought to light no alternative purpose to
differentiate the new statute from its predecessor. Indeed, as
indicated, the Attorney General's letter specifically relied on the
predecessor statute as precedent for this enactment, and both the
letter and the debates, consistent with the character of the
predecessor statute, referred to reasons for the enactment of the
bill which were fundamentally retributive in nature. When all of
these considerations are weighed, as they must be in the context of
the incontestably punitive nature of the predecessor statute, the
conclusion that § 401(j) was itself dominantly punitive becomes
inescapable. The legislative history of § 349(a)(10) of the
Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, which reenacted § 401(j),
adds
Page 372 U. S. 184
nothing to disturb that result. [
Footnote 38] Our conclusion from the legislative and
judicial history is, therefore, that Congress in these sections
decreed an additional punishment for the crime of draft avoidance
in the special category of cases wherein the evader leaves the
country. It cannot do this without providing the safeguards which
must attend a criminal prosecution. [
Footnote 39]
V
. CONCLUSION
It is argued that our holding today will have the unfortunate
result of immunizing the draft evader who has left the United
States from having to suffer any sanction against his conduct,
since he must return to this country before he can be apprehended
and tried for his crime. The compelling answer to this is that the
Bill of Rights which we guard so jealously and the procedures it
guarantees are not to be abrogated merely because a guilty man may
escape prosecution or for any other expedient reason. Moreover, the
truth is that, even without being expatriated, the evader living
abroad is not in a position to assert the vast majority of his
component rights as an American citizen. If he wishes to assert
those rights in any real sense, he must return to this country,
and, by doing that, he will subject himself to prosecution. In
fact,
Page 372 U. S. 185
while he is outside the country evading prosecution, the United
States may, by proper refusal to exercise its largely discretionary
power to afford him diplomatic protection, [
Footnote 40] decline to invoke its sovereign
power on his behalf. Since the substantial benefits of American
citizenship only come into play upon return to face prosecution,
the draft evader who wishes to exercise his citizenship rights will
inevitably come home and pay his debt, which within constitutional
limits Congress has the power to define. This is what
Mendoza-Martinez did, what Cort says he is willing to do, and what
others have done. [
Footnote
41] Thus, our holding today does not frustrate the effective
handling of the problem of draft evaders who leave the United
States. [
Footnote 42]
Page 372 U. S. 186
We conclude, for the reasons stated, that §§ 401(j) and
349(a)(10) are punitive, and, as such, cannot constitutionally
stand, lacking as they do the procedural safeguards which the
Constitution commands. [
Footnote
43] We recognize that draft evasion, particularly in time of
war, is a heinous offense, and should and can be properly punished.
Dating back to Magna Carta, however, it has been an abiding
principle governing the lives of civilized men that "no freeman
shall be taken or imprisoned or disseised or outlawed or exiled . .
. without the judgment of his peers or by the law of the land. . .
." [
Footnote 44] What we
hold is only that, in keeping with this cherished tradition,
punishment cannot be imposed "without due process of law." Any
lesser holding would ignore the constitutional mandate upon which
our essential liberties depend. Therefore, the judgments of the
District Courts in these cases are affirmed.
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR. JUSTICE BLACK, while joining the
opinion of the Court, adhere to the views expressed in the dissent
of MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, in which MR. JUSTICE BLACK joined, in
Perez v. Brownell, 356 U. S. 44,
356 U. S. 79,
that Congress has no power to deprive a person of the citizenship
granted the native-born by § 1, cl. 1, of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
Page 372 U. S. 187
* Together with No. 3,
Rusk, Secretary of State, v.
Cort, on appeal from the United States District Court for the
District of Columbia, argued October 11, 1961, decided in part and
set for reargument April 2, 1962, reargued December 4-5, 1962.
[
Footnote 1]
In question in No. 2,
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, is §
401(j) of the Nationality Act of 1940, added in 1944, 58 Stat. 746,
which reads in full as follows:
"A person who is a national of the United States, whether by
birth or naturalization, shall lose his nationality by . . ."
"
* * * *"
"(j) Departing from or remaining outside of the jurisdiction of
the United States in time of war or during a period declared by the
President to be a period of national emergency for the purpose of
evading or avoiding training and service in the land or naval
forces of the United States."
Its successor and counterpart, § 349(a)(10) of the Immigration
and Nationality Act of 1952, 66 Stat. 163, 267-268, 8 U.S.C. §
1481(a)(10), is challenged in No. 3,
Rusk v. Cort, and
reads as follows:
"From and after the effective date of this Act, a person who is
a national of the United States whether by birth or naturalization,
shall lose his nationality by --"
"
* * * *"
"(10) departing from or remaining outside of the jurisdiction of
the United States in time of war or during a period declared by the
President to be a period of national emergency for the purpose of
evading or avoiding training and service in the military, air, or
naval forces of the United States. For the purposes of this
paragraph, failure to comply with any provision of any compulsory
service laws of the United States shall raise the presumption that
the departure from or absence from the United States was for the
purpose of evading or avoiding training and service in the
military, air, or naval forces of the United States."
[
Footnote 2]
54 Stat. 894, as amended, 50 U.S.C.App. (1946 ed.) § 311.
[
Footnote 3]
The memorandum opinion in which the quoted statement appears is
unreported, but the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and
judgment of the court are reported at
Mendoza-Martinez v.
Rogers, D.C., 192 F. Supp. 1.
[
Footnote 4]
64 Stat. 826, 50 U.S.C.App. § 454
et seq.
[
Footnote 5]
62 Stat. 622, 50 U.S.C.App. § 462(a). The short title of the Act
has since 1951 been the Universal Military Training and Service
Act. 65 Stat. 75, 50 U.S.C.App. § 451(a).
[
Footnote 6]
In more detail, 28 U.S.C. § 2281 requires a three-judge court to
be convened in order to grant
"An interlocutory or permanent injunction restraining the
enforcement, operation or execution of any State statute by
restraining the action of any officer of such State in the
enforcement or execution of such statute or of an order made by an
administrative board or commission acting under State statutes . .
. upon the ground of the unconstitutionality of such statute. . .
."
[
Footnote 7]
The indictment was in three counts, but Mendoza-Martinez was
convicted only on Count I, which reads in full as follows:
"Defendant Frank Martinez Mendoza, a male person within the
class made subject to selective service under the Selective
Training and Service Act of 1940, as amended, registered as
required by said act and the regulations promulgated thereunder and
became a registrant of Local Board No. 137, said board being then
and there duly created and acting, under the Selective Service
System established by said act, in Kern County, California, in the
Northern Division of the Southern District of California; and on or
about November 15, 1942, in violation of the provisions of said act
and the regulations promulgated thereunder, the defendant did
knowingly evade service in the land or naval forces of the United
States of America in that he did knowingly depart from the United
States and go to a foreign country, namely, Mexico, for the purpose
of evading service in the land or naval forces of the United
States, and did there remain until on or about November 1,
1946."
The judgment and commitment similarly stated that
Mendoza-Martinez was convicted of:
"Having, on or about November 15th 1942, knowingly departed from
the United States to Mexico for the purpose of evading service in
the land or naval forces of the United States and having remained
there until on or about November 1st, 1946."
[
Footnote 8]
Compare United States v. International Building Co.,
345 U. S. 502, in
which a prior judicial determination of a tax issue, based on the
parties' stipulation, was refused collateral estoppel effect in a
later action.
See also Restatement, Judgments, § 68,
comments
g, h, i.
[
Footnote 9]
Since the Selective Training and Service Act of 1940 applied
both to citizens and resident aliens, there was no need to
determine in which category Mendoza-Martinez fell "on or about
November 15, 1942." In the present proceeding, it is, of course,
not disputed that Mendoza-Martinez was an American citizen on that
date.
[
Footnote 10]
U.S.Const., Amend. XIV, § 1:
"All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and
subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United
States and of the State wherein they reside. . . ."
This constitutional statement is to be interpreted in light of
preexisting common law principles governing citizenship.
United
States v. Wong Kim Ark, 169 U. S. 649.
[
Footnote 11]
There is, however, no disagreement that citizenship may be
voluntarily relinquished or abandoned either expressly or by
conduct.
See, e.g., Perez v. Brownell, 356 U. S.
44,
356 U. S. 48-49;
id. at
356 U. S. 66-67
(Warren, C.J., dissenting).
[
Footnote 12]
Ex parte Quirin, 317 U. S. 1,
317 U. S. 25-26.
See also Home Bldg. & Loan Ass'n v. Blaisdell,
290 U. S. 398,
290 U. S. 426;
Hirabayashi v. United States, 320 U. S.
81,
320 U. S.
93.
[
Footnote 13]
Mackenzie v. Hare, 239 U. S. 299,
239 U. S.
311-312;
Perez v. Brownell, supra, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S.
57-58.
[
Footnote 14]
See also Garner, Uniformity of Law in Respect to
Nationality, 19 Am.J.Int'l L. 547 (1925).
[
Footnote 15]
See Seckler-Hudson, Statelessness: With Special
Reference to the United States (1934), 244-253; Preuss,
International Law and Deprivation of Nationality, 23 Geo.L.J. 250
(1934); Holborn, The Legal Status of Political Refugees, 1920-1938,
32 Am.J.Int'l L. 680 (1938).
See also Shaughnessy v. United
States ex rel. Mezei, 345 U. S. 206.
[
Footnote 16]
The drastic consequences of statelessness have led to
reaffirmation in the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, Article 15, of the right of every individual to retain a
nationality. U.N.Doc. No. A/810, pp. 71, 74 (1948) (adopted by the
U.N. General Assembly on Dec. 10, 1948), reprinted in UNESCO, Human
Rights, A Symposium, App. III (1949).
See also A Study on
Statelessness, U.N.Doc. No. E/1112 (1949); Second Report on the
Elimination or Reduction of Statelessness, U.N.Doc. No. A/CN. 4/75
(1953); Weis, The United Nations Convention on the Reduction of
Statelessness, 1961, 11 Int'l & Comp.L.Q. 1073 (1962), and
authorities cited therein.
The evils of statelessness were recognized in the Report of the
President's Commission on Immigration and Naturalization (1953),
241, and the treatise writers have unanimously disapproved of
statutes which denationalize individuals without regard to whether
they have dual nationality. Borchard, Diplomatic Protection of
Citizens Abroad (1916), §§ 262, 334; Fenwick, International Law (3d
ed. 1948), 263; 1 Oppenheim,
supra, §§ 313-313a; Gettys,
The Law of Citizenship in the United States (1934), 137-138,
160.
[
Footnote 17]
War powers:
United States v. Cohen Grocery Co.,
255 U. S. 81,
255 U. S. 88;
Ex parte Endo, 323 U. S. 283,
323 U. S.
298-300. Foreign-affairs powers:
Kent v.
Dulles, 357 U. S. 116,
357 U. S.
125-130;
Shachtman v. Dulles, 96 U.S.App.D.C.
287, 225 F.2d 938 (1955).
[
Footnote 18]
See also Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries Co.,
251 U. S. 146,
251 U. S. 156;
United States v. Cohen Grocery Co., supra; Ex parte Endo,
supra.
[
Footnote 19]
Compare Ex parte Mason, 105 U.
S. 696;
Kahn v. Anderson, 255 U. S.
1,
255 U. S. 8-9;
Ex parte Quirin, 317 U. S. 1,
317 U. S. 29,
317 U. S.
38-46.
[
Footnote 20]
"No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise
infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a Grand
Jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in
the Militia, when in actual service in time of War or public
danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be
twice put in jeopardy of life or limb; nor shall be compelled in
any criminal case to be a witness against himself, nor be deprived
of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor
shall private property be taken for public use, without just
compensation."
U.S.Const. Amend. V.
"In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right
to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and
district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which
district shall have been previously ascertained by law, and to be
informed of the nature and cause of the accusation; to be
confronted with the witnesses against him; to have compulsory
process for obtaining Witnesses in his favor, and to have the
Assistance of Counsel for his defence."
U.S.Const. Amend. VI.
[
Footnote 21]
Thus the fact that Mendoza-Martinez was, as it happened,
convicted of draft evasion before deportation proceedings were
brought against him is of no relevance. Even if the incidence of
conviction for draft evasion were potentially relevant to the
validity of §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10), the fact is that the "crime"
created by these sections includes an element not necessary to
conviction for violation of § 11 of the Selective Service and
Training Act of 1940 -- "[d]eparting from or remaining outside" the
country "for the purpose of evading or avoiding [military] training
and service. . . ."
See Comment, Power of Congress to Effect Involuntary
Expatriation, 56 Mich.L.Rev. 1142, 1166 n. 102 (1958).
Mendoza-Martinez was thus never tried for any crime the elements of
which are identical with or totally inclusory of those of § 401(j),
and hence was not even arguably accorded the procedural protections
we here hold essential.
[
Footnote 22]
Ex parte
Garland, 4 Wall. 333,
71 U. S. 377;
United States v. Lovett, 328 U. S. 303,
328 U. S. 316;
Flemming v. Nestor, 363 U. S. 603,
363 U. S.
617.
[
Footnote 23]
Cummings v.
Missouri, 4 Wall. 277,
71 U. S.
320-321;
Ex parte Wilson, 114 U.
S. 417,
114 U. S.
426-429;
Mackin v. United States, 117 U.
S. 348,
117 U. S.
350-352;
Wong Wing v. United States,
163 U. S. 228,
163 U. S.
237-238. Reference to history here is peculiarly
appropriate. Though not determinative, it supports our holding to
note that forfeiture of citizenship and the related devices of
banishment and exile have throughout history been used as
punishment. In ancient Rome,
"There were many ways in which a man might loss his freedom, and
with his freedom he necessarily lost his citizenship also. Thus he
might be sold into slavery as an insolvent debtor, or condemned to
the mines for his crimes as
servus poenae."
Salmond, Citizenship and Allegiance, 17 L.Q.Rev. 270, 276
(1901). Banishment was a weapon in the English legal arsenal for
centuries, 4 Bl.Comm. *377, but it was always "adjudged a harsh
punishment even by men who were accustomed to brutality in the
administration of criminal justice." Maxey, Loss of Nationality:
Individual Choice or Government Flat? 26 Albany L.Rev. 151, 164
(1962).
[
Footnote 24]
Helwig v. United States, 188 U.
S. 605,
188 U. S.
610-612;
Child Labor Tax Case, 259 U. S.
20,
259 U. S.
37-38.
[
Footnote 25]
United States v. Constantine, 296 U.
S. 287,
296 U. S. 295;
Trop v. Dulles, supra, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 96
(opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE);
id. at
356 U. S.
111-112 (BRENNAN, J., concurring).
[
Footnote 26]
Lipke v. Lederer, 259 U. S. 557,
259 U. S. 562;
United States v. La Franca, 282 U.
S. 568,
282 U. S.
572-573;
United States v. Constantine, supra,
296 U.S. at
296 U. S.
295.
[
Footnote 27]
Cummings v. Missouri, supra, 4 Wall. at
71 U. S. 319;
Child Labor Tax Case, supra, 259 U.S. at
259 U. S. 43;
Lipke v. Lederer, supra, 259 U.S. at
259 U. S.
561-562;
United States v. La Franca, supra, 282
U.S. at
282 U. S. 572;
Trop v. Dulles, supra, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 96-97;
Flemming v. Nestor, supra, 363 U.S. at
363 U. S. 615,
353 U. S.
617.
[
Footnote 28]
Cummings v. Missouri, supra, 4 Wall. at
71 U. S. 318;
Helwig v. United States, supra, 188 U.S. at
188 U. S. 613;
United States v. Constantine, supra, 296 U.S. at
296 U. S. 295;
Rex Trailer Co. v. United States, 350 U.
S. 148,
350 U. S. 154.
But cf. Child Labor Tax Case, supra, 259 U.S. at
259 U. S. 41;
Flemming v. Nestor, supra, at
363 U. S. 614,
363 U. S. 616
and n. 9.
[
Footnote 29]
Compare 71 U. S.
Missouri, 4 Wall. 277,
71 U. S. 320,
71 U. S. 322;
United States v. Lovett, 328 U. S. 303,
328 U. S.
308-312; Wormuth, Legislative Disqualifications as Bills
of Attainder, 4 Vand.L.Rev. 603, 608 (1951); Note, Punishment: Its
Meaning in Relation to Separation of Power and Substantive
Constitutional Restrictions and Its Use in the
Lovett, Trop,
Perez, and
Speiser Cases, 34 Ind.L.J. 231, 279-253
(1959); Comment, The Communist Control Act of 1954, 64 Yale L.J.
712, 723 (1955).
[
Footnote 30]
Mackenzie v. Hare, 239 U. S. 299, and
Savorgnan v. United States, 338 U.
S. 491, whatever the proposition for which they stand in
connection with the power of Congress to impose loss of
citizenship,
compare Perez v. Brownell, supra, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 51-52,
356 U. S. 61-62
(opinion of the Court),
with id. at
356 U. S. 68-73
(dissenting opinion of THE CHIEF JUSTICE) and
id. at
356 U. S. 80
(dissenting opinion of Justice Douglas), are both plainly
distinguishable, as is
Perez. The statutes in question in
each of those cases provided loss of citizenship for noncriminal
behavior instead of as an additional sanction attaching to behavior
already a crime, and congressional expression attending their
passage lacked the overwhelming indications of punitive purpose
which characterized the enactments here. Thus, basing decision as
we do on the unmistakable penal intent underlying the statutes
presently at issue, nothing in our holding is inconsistent with
these other cases, and there is no occasion for us to pass upon any
question of the power of Congress to act as it did in the statutes
involved in those cases.
See note 43 infra.
[
Footnote 31]
The acts of Mendoza-Martinez and Cort would have been covered by
this statute as well as by §§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10).
[
Footnote 32]
See p.
372 U. S. 31,
infra.
[
Footnote 33]
The President's veto message to the Senate, S.Doc.No.708, 60th
Cong., 2d Sess. (1909), indicates that his refusal to approve the
measure was premised partly on the fact that it placed the
discretion to remit loss of citizenship rights in the Secretary of
the Navy and partly on the President's feeling that it "would
actually encourage hardened offenders to commit a heinous crime
against the flag and the nation."
Id. at 2. The former was
a fault of the particular form of the measure: the President was
worried that power to pardon could not constitutionally be vested
in anyone other than himself, and he was further disturbed that
placing the power in the Secretary of the Navy would result in
discrimination against army people. The President's second reason,
however, indicates that, to him, retention of the law as it stood
would serve a purpose always sought to be furthered by the
imposition of punishment for crime -- deterrence. This is borne out
by the statements of the President's advisers in recommending that
he veto it. The Secretary of War said, "Loss of citizenship is a
substantial part of the punishment, and doubtless has a very
considerable effect in deterring desertions."
Id. at 3.
The Secretary of the Navy stated that "It is believed that the
present law regarding the loss of citizenship as a penalty for
deserters from the navy acts as a deterrent to many."
Ibid. The Attorney General indicated his agreement with
the Secretary of the Navy.
Id. at 5.
[
Footnote 34]
The advisers' citation of
Huber v. Reily, supra, and
Kurtz v. Moffitt, supra, in support of the quoted
statement suggests their awareness that an underlying conviction is
constitutionally mandated.
[
Footnote 35]
The relevance of such history in analyzing the character of a
present enactment is illustrated by the Court's approach in
Helwig v. United States, 188 U. S. 605,
188 U. S.
613-619, wherein, at considerable length, it reviewed
and relied upon the character of previous relevant legislation in
determining whether the statute before it, which imposed an
exaction upon importers who undervalued imported goods for duty
purposes, was a penalty.
[
Footnote 36]
"MY DEAR SENATOR: I invite your attention to the desirability of
enacting legislation which would provide (1) for the expatriation
of citizens of the United States who in time of war or during a
national emergency leave the United States or remain outside
thereof for the purpose of evading service in the armed forces of
the United States, and (2) for the exclusion from the United States
of aliens who leave this country for the above mentioned
purpose."
"Under existing law, a national of the United States, whether by
birth or by naturalization, becomes expatriated by operation of law
if he (1) obtains naturalization in a foreign state; (2) takes an
oath of allegiance to a foreign country; (3) serves in the armed
forces of a foreign state if he thereby acquires the nationality of
such foreign state; (4) accepts employment under a foreign state
for which only nationals of such state are eligible; (5) votes in a
political election in a foreign state or participates in an
election or plebiscite to determine the sovereignty over foreign
territory; (6) makes a formal renunciation of nationality before a
diplomatic or consular officer of the United States in a foreign
state; (7) deserts from the armed forces of the United States in
time of war and is convicted thereof by a court martial; or (8) is
convicted of treason (U.S.C., title 8, sec. 801). Machinery is
provided whereby a person who is denied any right or privilege of
citizenship on the ground that he has become expatriated may secure
a judicial determination of his status; and if he is outside of the
United States he is entitled to a certificate of identity which
permits him to enter and remain in the United States until his
status has been determined by the courts (Nationality Act of 1940,
sec. 503; U.S.C., title 8, sec. 903)."
"The files of this Department disclose that at the present time
there are many citizens of the United States who have left this
country for the purpose of escaping service in the armed forces.
While such persons are liable to prosecution for violation of the
Selective Service and Training Act of 1940, if and when they return
to this country, it would seem proper that in addition they should
lose their United States citizenship. Persons who are unwilling to
perform their duty to their country and abandon it during its time
of need are much less worthy of citizenship than are persons who
become expatriated on any of the existing grounds."
"Accordingly, I recommend the enactment of legislation which
would provide (1) for the expatriation of citizens of the United
States who in time of war or during a national emergency leave the
United States or remain outside thereof for the purpose of evading
service in the armed forces of the United States, and (2) for the
exclusion from the United States of aliens who leave this country
for that purpose. Any person who may be deemed to have become
expatriated by operation of the foregoing provision would be
entitled to have his status determined by the courts pursuant to
the above-mentioned section of the Nationality Act of 1940."
"Adequate precedent exists for the suggested legislation in
that, during the First World War, a statute was in force which
provided for the expatriation of any person who went beyond the
limits of the United States with intent to avoid any draft into the
military or naval service (37 Stat. 356). This provision was
repealed by section 504 of the Nationality Code of 1940 (54 Stat.
1172; U.S.C., title 8, sec. 904)."
"A draft of a proposed bill to effectuate the foregoing purpose
is enclosed herewith."
"I have been informed by the Director of the Bureau of the
Budget that the proposed legislation is in accord with the program
of the President."
"Sincerely yours,"
"Attorney General"
[
Footnote 37]
The Senator's statement that "Any American citizen who is
convicted of violating the Selective Service Act loses his
citizenship" was apparently a reference to § 401(g), and should
accordingly be read in that limited fashion.
[
Footnote 38]
Section 349(a)(10) did amend § 401(j) by adding a presumption
that failure to comply with any provision of the compulsory service
laws of the United States means that the departure from or absence
from the United States is for the purpose of avoiding military
service.
See note 1
supra. Our holding today obviates any necessity for
passing upon this provision.
[
Footnote 39]
Lipke v. Lederer, 259 U. S. 557;
United States v. La Franca, 282 U.
S. 568.
See Ex parte Wilson, 114 U.
S. 417;
Mackin v. United States, 117 U.
S. 348;
Wong Wing v. United States,
163 U. S. 228.
Compare Wieman v. Updegraff, 344 U.
S. 183;
Slochower v. Board of Higher Education,
350 U. S. 551,
350 U. S. 554,
350 U. S. 556;
Speiser v. Randall, 357 U. S. 513.
[
Footnote 40]
Borchard, Diplomatic Protection of Citizens Abroad (1916), §§
143, 341;
see authorities cited in Klubock, Expatriation
-- Its Origin and Meaning, 38 Notre Dame Law. 1, 11, n. 68 (1962).
See also Blackmer v. United States, 284 U.
S. 421.
[
Footnote 41]
The astonishing story of Grover Cleveland Bergdoll is one
example.
See, e.g., N.Y. Times, Sept. 23, 1927, p. 8, col.
3; May 3, 1935, p. 3, col. 4; Aug. 16, 1935, p. 9, col. 3; Apr. 11,
1939, p. 6, col. 4; May 26, 1939, p. 1, col. 7; May 30, 1939, p.
36, col. 4; Oct. 6, 1939, p. 1, col. 3; Dec. 5, 1939, p. 3, col. 6;
39 Op.Atty.Gen. 303 (1939). Another example is the recent voluntary
return of Edward M. Gilbert to face trial on charges for which he
could not be extradited. N.Y. Times, Oct. 27, 1962, p. 1, col. 1;
Oct. 30, 1962, p. 1, col. 2.
[
Footnote 42]
Moreover, the problem is, relatively, extremely small. Over
16,000,000 men served in our armed forces during World War II, and
nearly 6,000,000 more served during the Korean crisis. The World
Almanac (1963), 735. Yet between the time of the enactment of §
401(j) and June 30, 1961, only about 1,750 persons were
denationalized for leaving the country to avoid the draft.
Compare figures cited in Klubock,
supra, at 49,
taken from Immigration and Naturalization Service Annual Reports,
with figures cited in Comment, The Expatriation Act of
1954, 64 Yale L.J. 1164, 1165, n. 9 (1955), derived partially from
correspondence with the General Counsel to the Immigration and
Naturalization Service.
[
Footnote 43]
The conclusion that the denationalization sanction, as used in
§§ 401(j) and 349(a)(10), is a punishment obviates any need to
determine whether these sections are otherwise within the powers of
Congress. That question would have had to be faced only if the
foregoing inquiry had disclosed reasons other than punitive for the
infliction of loss of nationality in the present context,
necessitating decision whether the sections in question were within
the powers of Congress as a regulatory scheme, or if the punitive
forfeiture of citizenship had been surrounded with appropriate
safeguards, obliging decision whether the sections were within the
powers of Congress to apply as a criminal sanction.
[
Footnote 44]
14 Encyclopaedia Britannica (1957 ed.) 630.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN, concurring.
I join the Court's opinion because I fully agree with the
Court's conclusion that Congress has here attempted to employ
expatriation as a penal sanction in respect of behavior deemed
inimical to an objective whose pursuit is within its assigned
powers, and with the reasoning by which that conclusion is reached.
So too, I agree that Congress is constitutionally debarred from so
employing the drastic, the truly terrifying remedy of expatriation,
certainly where no attempt has been made to apply the full panoply
of protective safeguards which the Constitution requires as a
condition of imposing penal sanctions. However, I deem it
appropriate to elaborate somewhat the considerations which impel me
to agree with the Court.
This Court has never granted the existence in Congress of the
power to expatriate except where its exercise was intrinsically and
peculiarly appropriate to the solution of serious problems
inevitably implicating nationality. We have recognized the
entanglements which may stem from dual allegiance, and have twice
sustained statutes which provided for loss of American citizenship
upon the deliberate assumption of a foreign attachment.
Mackenzie v. Hare, 239 U. S. 299;
Savorgnan v. United States, 338 U.
S. 491. We have recognized that participation by
American nationals in the internal politics of foreign states could
dangerously prejudice our diplomacy, and have allowed the use of
expatriation as a uniquely potent corrective which precludes
recriminations by disowning, at the moment of his provocative act,
him who might otherwise be taken as our spokesman or our operative.
Perez v. Brownell, 356 U. S. 44. The
instant cases do not require me to resolve some felt doubts of the
correctness of
Perez, which I joined. For the Court has
never held that expatriation was to be found in Congress'
Page 372 U. S. 188
arsenal of common sanctions, available for no higher purpose
than to curb undesirable conduct, to exact retribution for it, and
to stigmatize it.
I
In
Trop v. Dulles, 356 U. S. 86, we
had before us § 401(g) of the Nationality Act of 1940, which
imposed loss of American nationality following conviction of
deserting the armed forces in time of war. We held that statute
unconstitutional. Three of my Brethren joined in the opinion of THE
CHIEF JUSTICE, who analyzed the case in terms equally applicable to
the cases at bar. That plurality opinion in
Trop noted
that the congressional power to which expatriation under § 401(g)
was said to be relevant was the "war power." It concluded that
expatriation under § 401(g) could have no value in furtherance of
the war power except as a sanction, to deter or punish desertion;
that expatriation so employed was "punishment" within the meaning
of the Eighth Amendment; and that such punishment was
unconstitutional because cruel and unusual. [
Footnote 2/1]
My concurring views in
Trop, separately expressed, were
akin to those of the plurality. I shared the view that expatriation
could have been employed in § 401(g) only as a sanction, and I
considered this an insufficient predicate for its use -- which I
believed allowable only where some affirmative and unique
relationship to policy was apparent. My premise was the simple and
fundamental one that legislation so profoundly destructive of
individual rights must keep within the limits
Page 372 U. S. 189
of palpable reason and rest upon some modicum of discoverable
necessity. I was unable to conclude that § 401(g) met that
elementary test. It was evident that recognizable achievement of
legitimate congressional purposes through the expatriation device
was at best remote; and that far more promising alternative methods
existed and had, in fact, been employed.
My Brother STEWART attempts to distinguish
Trop along
two fronts: he argues that expatriation is not here employed as
"punishment" in the constitutional sense so that the reasoning of
the
Trop plurality has no application; and he argues that,
the question of punishment aside, expatriation as here employed is
a uniquely necessary device not falling within the rationale of my
views separately expressed in
Trop.
My Brother STEWART discerns in § 401(j) [
Footnote 2/2] an affirmative instrument of policy and
not simply a sanction which must be classed as "punishment." The
policy objective is thought to be the maintenance of troop morale;
a threat to that objective is thought to be the spectacle of
persons escaping a military service obligation by flight; and
expatriation of such persons is sustained as a demonstrative
counter to that threat. To my mind, that would be "punishment" in
the purest sense; it would be naked vengeance. Such an exaction of
retribution would not lose that quality because it was undertaken
to maintain morale. Indeed, it is only the significance of
expatriation as retribution which could render it effective to
boost morale -- the purpose which, to the dissent, removes
expatriation as here used from the realm of the punitive. I do not
perceive how expatriation so employed would differ analytically
from the stocks or the rack. Because
Page 372 U. S. 190
such devices may be calculated to shore up the convictions of
the law-abiding by demonstrating that the wicked will not go
unscathed, they would not, by the dissent's view, be punitive or,
presumably, reachable by the Eighth Amendment. [
Footnote 2/3] I cannot agree to any such
proposition, and I see no escape from the conclusion that § 401(j),
before us today, is identical in purpose to § 401(g) and is quite
as "punitive" as was that statute, which we condemned in
Trop.
The dissent finds other distinctions between this case and
Trop, quite apart from its untenable position that §
401(j) is not punitive. It is said that flight from the country to
escape the draft, in contrast with desertion, could never be a mere
technical offense equivocal in its implications for the loyalty of
the offender. But the unshakable fear of physical stress or harm,
the intellectual or moral aversion to combat, and the mental
aberration which may result in flight are no more inconsistent with
underlying loyalty than was Trop's unauthorized abandonment of his
post. [
Footnote 2/4] Again, it is
suggested that the
Page 372 U. S. 191
element of cumulation of punishments which helped expose the
futility of expatriation in
Trop is missing here, because
§ 401(j), unlike § 401(g), becomes operative without a prior
conviction, and applies only in the case of flight beyond our
borders. But the Mendoza-Martinez case, in its collateral estoppel
issue, prominently displays what would in any case be obvious --
that expatriation under § 401(j) is cumulative with criminal
sanctions for draft evasion, for those sanctions apply to fugitives
equally as much as to sedentary violators. [
Footnote 2/5]
Nor can
Trop rationally be distinguished on the ground
that the application of § 401(j) only the fugitives proves that it
was designed to fill a void necessarily left by the ordinary
criminal draft evasion sanctions. The point, as I understand it, is
that the ordinary sanctions cannot be brought to bear against a
fugitive who declines to come home; but he can be expatriated while
he remains abroad, without having to be brought before a tribunal
and formally proceeded against. The special virtue of expatriation,
it appears, is that it may be accomplished
in
absentia.
Page 372 U. S. 192
Aside from the denial of procedural due process, which the Court
rightly finds in the scheme, the surface appeal of the argument
vanishes upon closer scrutiny.
It simply is not true that expatriation provides an
instrumentality specially necessary for imposing the congressional
will upon fugitive draft evaders. Our statutes now provide severe
criminal sanctions for the behavior in question. The fugitive can
return only at the cost of suffering these punishments; the only
way to avoid them is to remain away. As to any draft delinquent for
whom the prospect of this dilemma would not itself pose a
recognizable, formidable deterrent, I fail to see how the addition
of expatriation could enhance the effect at all. [
Footnote 2/6] Nor can expatriation affect the
fugitive who will not return to be punished -- for whom it is
thought to be specially designed. For that individual has,
ex
hypothesi, determined on his own to stay away and so cannot be
affected by the withdrawal of his right to return. The sting of the
measure is felt only by those like Mendoza-Martinez, who have
already returned and been punished, and those like Cort, who desire
to return and be punished -- those, in other words, as to whom
expatriation is patently cumulative with other sanctions. As to the
unregenerate fugitive whom it is particularly thought to reach,
expatriation is but a display of congressional displeasure. I
cannot agree that it is within the power of Congress so to express
its displeasure with those who will
Page 372 U. S. 193
not return as to destroy the rights and the status of those who
have demonstrated their underlying attachment to this country by
coming home.
It is apparent, then, that today's cases are governed by
Trop no matter which of the two controlling opinions is
consulted. Expatriation is here employed as "punishment," cruel and
unusual here if it was there. Nor has expatriation as employed in
these cases any more rational or necessary a connection with the
war power than it had in
Trop.
II
MR. JUSTICE STEWART's dissent would sustain § 401(j) as a
permissible exercise of the "war power." The appellants in these
cases, on the other hand, place their main reliance on the "foreign
affairs power." The dissent summarizes the appellants' arguments
under this heading but does not purport to pass on them. Because of
my conviction that § 401(j) is unconstitutional no matter what
congressional power is invoked in its support, I find it necessary
to deal with the foreign affairs arguments advanced by the
appellants.
Initially, I note that the legislative history as expounded by
the dissent fails to reveal that Congress was mindful of any
foreign affairs problem to be corrected by the statute. The primary
purpose seems to me to have been retributive, the secondary purpose
deterrent; and even the morale-boosting purpose discerned by the
dissent has nothing to do with foreign affairs. While the obvious
fact that Congress was not consciously pursuing any foreign affairs
objective may not necessarily preclude reliance on that power as a
ground of constitutionality, it does render such reliance initially
questionable.
Proceeding to the appellants' arguments, one encounters first
the suggestion that a fugitive draft evade "can easily cause
international complications" while he remains
Page 372 U. S. 194
an American citizen, because the United States cannot exercise
control over him while he is on foreign soil.
Such a "problem," obviously, exists equally with respect to any
fugitive from American justice, and cannot be thought confined to
draft evaders. Yet it is only fugitive draft evaders who are
expatriated. It is, therefore, impossible to agree that Congress
was acting on any such inherently unlikely premise as that
expatriation was necessary so as to avoid responsibility for those
described by § 401(j).
But, contend the appellants, § 401(j) is designed to prevent
embroilments as well as embarrassments. During wartime, it is
argued, our Government would very likely feel impelled to demand of
foreign havens the return of our fugitive draft evaders; and such a
demand might seriously offend a "host" country, leading to
embroilment. The transparent weakness of this argument -- its
manifest inconsistency -- must be immediately apparent. Surely the
United States need not disable itself from making injudicious
demands in order to restrain itself from doing so. The argument
rests on the possibility that there may be an urgent need to secure
a fugitive's return. If that is so, a demand must be made with its
attendant risk of embroilment. If expatriating the fugitive makes a
demand impossible, it able forever defeats the objective -- his
return -- which would have impelled the demand in the first place.
If recapturing fugitives may ever be urgently necessary, it is
obvious that automatic expatriation could only be directly opposed
to our interest -- which requires that the Government be free to
choose whether or not to make the demand, in light of all the
attendant circumstances.
The appellants have still another argument. It is that, whereas
the Government is under an obligation to seek the return of the
fugitive as long as he remains a citizen, by terminating
citizenship,
"Congress has eliminated at
Page 372 U. S. 195
the outset any further claim that this country would have to the
services of these individuals, and has removed all basis for
further demands upon them. . . ."
This simply is not so. Expatriation may have no effect on a
continuing military service obligation. [
Footnote 2/7] And it is incontrovertible that the power
to punish the initial draft evasion offense continues although
citizenship has meanwhile become forfeit. The Government has so
argued in addressing itself to the collateral estoppel issue in
Mendoza-Martinez. I cannot understand how any obligation
to apprehend can be other than coextensive with the power to
punish. The Government cannot have it both ways in the same
case.
III
The appellants urge that, wholly apart from any explicit
congressional power, § 401(j) may be sustained as an exercise of a
power inherent in United States sovereignty. My Brethren who would
uphold the statute have not adverted to this possibility except, as
I shall point out, as they have adopted in passing certain related
arguments.
Preliminarily, it is difficult to see what is resolved by the
assertion that sovereignty implies a power to expatriate. That
proposition may be admitted and yet have no bearing on the problem
facing the Court.
For, under our Constitution, only a delimited portion of
sovereignty has been assigned to the Government of
Page 372 U. S. 196
which Congress is the legislative arm. To say that there inheres
in United States sovereignty the power to sever the tie of
citizenship does not answer the inquiry into whether that power has
been granted to Congress. Any argument that it has been so
delegated which eschews reference to the constitutional text must,
it appears, make its appeal to some sense of the inevitable fitness
of things. The contentions here fall far short of any such
standard.
It is too simple to suggest that it is fitting that Congress be
empowered to extinguish the citizenship of one who refuses to
perform the "ultimate duty" of rising to the Government's defense
in time of crisis. I pause to note that for this Court to lend any
credence whatever to such a criterion -- as the dissent would,
see pp.
372 U. S.
214-215, is fraught with the most far-reaching
consequences. For if Congress now should declare that a refusal to
pay taxes, to do jury duty, to testify, to vote, is no less an
abnegation of ultimate duty -- or an implied renunciation of
allegiance -- than a refusal to perform military service, I am
unable to perceive how this Court, on the dissent's view, could
presume to gainsay such a judgment. But the argument is not saved
even by a willingness to accept these consequences. There really is
no way to distinguish between the several failures of a citizen's
duty I have just enumerated, or to explain why evasion of military
service should be visited with this specially harsh consequence,
except to recognize that the latter defection is palpably more
provocative than the others. But, as I have argued in another
context, when conduct is singled out of a class for specially
adverse treatment simply because it is specially provocative, there
is no escaping the conclusion that punishment is being
administered.
See Flemming v. Nestor, 363 U.
S. 603,
363 U. S.
635-640 (dissenting opinion). Pursuit of the "ultimate
duty" concept, then, simply reaffirms my conviction that this case
is indistinguishable from
Trop.
Page 372 U. S. 197
The appellants, however, argue that it is fitting that Congress
be empowered to extinguish the citizenship of one who not only
refuses to perform his duty, but who also "repudiates his wider
obligation as a citizen to submit to this country's jurisdiction
and authority" by fleeing the country in order to escape that duty.
It is, once again, difficult to see how this flight-repudiation
theory can be confined to draft evasion. Every fugitive from United
States justice repudiates American authority over him in equal
measure. If the difference lies in the quality of the act of draft
evasion, then we are back once again to punishment.
The appellants assert that
"(a) government which cannot exert force to compel a citizen to
perform his
lawful [Government's emphasis] duty is, to
that extent, not sovereign as to him."
The apparent corollary is that congressionally imposed
expatriation is, under such circumstances, in effect declaratory of
a change in status which has already occurred. But the Government
is far from conceding its lack of authority over a fugitive draft
evader. It informs us that "the federal government has the power to
order our citizens abroad to return, for any lawful purpose,"
citing
Blackmer v. United States, 284 U.
S. 421. And, in any event, the argument proves far too
much, for it would justify expatriation of any American abroad for
any reason who would, equally with persons covered by § 401(j), be
outside our Government's power to compel the performance of
duty.
[
Footnote 2/1]
The plurality opinion in
Trop rested alternatively on
the proposition that divestiture of citizenship can result only
from a clear renunciation or transfer of allegiance on the part of
the citizen. However, since this view had been rejected by a
majority of the Court in
Perez v. Brownell, supra, the
Trop plurality relied principally on the reasoning
outlined in the text.
[
Footnote 2/2]
My discussion of § 401(j) is equally applicable to its
reenactment as § 349(a)(10) of the Immigration and Nationality Act
of 1952, involved in the
Cort case.
[
Footnote 2/3]
The examples I have given must, of course, have some deterrent
effect upon the conduct for which they are administered. But this
could not, in the dissent's view, render them punitive. For
expatriation as employed in § 401(j) must also, in the dissent's
view, have some deterrent effect upon draft-evading flight, since
if expatriation were not thought by the dissent to be an
undesirable consequence, it could not serve the morale-boosting
purpose which is attributed to it. (
But see p.
372 U. S.
192-193, and
372
U.S. 144fn2/6|>n. 6.) And, as the dissent recognizes, the
legislative purpose was at least in part a deterrent one.
[
Footnote 2/4]
The "purpose of evading or avoiding training and service"
specified in § 401(j) seems no graver a reflection upon loyalty
than the "intent to remain away . . . permanently" or the "intent
to avoid hazardous duty or to shirk important service" specified in
the definition of desertion codified in the Uniform Code of
Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. § 885. The mere fact that the conduct
described in § 401(j) requires the crossing of a frontier does not
guarantee that it will be any less equivocal or more serious than
was Trop's desertion. A resident of Texas might, during time of
war, cross the border into Mexico intending to evade the draft,
then change his mind and return the next day. Such conduct clearly
results in expatriation under § 401(j).
[
Footnote 2/5]
It is obvious that § 401(j) does not reach any conduct not
otherwise made criminal by the selective service laws. 62 Stat.
622, 50 U.S.C.App. § 462(a), in relevant part identical with
Selective Training and Service Act of 1940, § 11, under which
Mendoza-Martinez was prosecuted, provides:
"[A]ny person who . . . evades or refuses registration or
service in the armed forces or any of the requirements of this
title . . . , or who in any manner shall knowingly fail or neglect
or refuse to perform any duty required of him under or in the
execution of this title, or rules, regulations, or directions made
pursuant to this title . . . , shall, upon conviction in any
district court of the United States of competent jurisdiction, be
punished by imprisonment for not more than five years or a fine of
not more than $10,000, or by both such fine and imprisonment. . .
."
[
Footnote 2/6]
The prospective fugitive draft evader must consider that if he
flees, either (1) he must eventually face criminal fine and
imprisonment; or (2) he will not be able to return. To say that
prospect (1) will not deter is simply to reject our entire criminal
justice as fruitless so far as deterrence is an object. To say that
prospect (2) will not deter is simply to concede that expatriation
will not deter, either -- except on the strained assumption that
withdrawal of diplomatic protection can work the difference.
[
Footnote 2/7]
As the Government forcefully argues on the collateral estoppel
point in
Mendoza-Martinez, the selective service
requirements apply to resident aliens as well as to citizens.
Section 401(j), as discussed in Congress and by the appellants and
in MR. JUSTICE STEWART's dissent in these cases, seems to reflect a
special concern with those who flee "for the duration," intending
to return after peace is restored. The Government could well argue
that such a fugitive, although expatriated, is a resident alien
subject to compulsory military service.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, whom MR. JUSTICE CLARK joins,
dissenting.
I agree with and join in Parts I, II, III, and IV of my Brother
STEWART's opinion, leading to the conclusion that § 401(j) of the
Nationality Act of 1940, applicable in No. 2 (
Mendoza), is
constitutional. I also agree with his conclusion that, for the same
reasons, the substantive
Page 372 U. S. 198
provisions of § 349(a) (10) of the 1952 Act, applicable in No. 3
(
Cort), are constitutional. I disagree, however, with his
view that the evidentiary presumption contained in § 349(a)(10) is
unconstitutional. I am content to state my reasons in summary
form.
1. As I read the opinion below in the
Cort case, I do
not think the District Court relied on the § 349(a)(10)
presumption. [
Footnote 3/1] This
view is fortified by several considerations: (i) the
constitutionality of the presumption was attacked in Cort's
complaint and was briefed by both sides in the District Court; (ii)
the text of the presumption itself was set forth in the opinion of
the District Court (187 F.Supp. at 684) at only a page or two
before the extract quoted in the margin (note 1); and (iii) in
these
Page 372 U. S. 199
circumstances it is difficult to believe that the lower court,
composed of three experienced judges, either inadvertently ignored
the presumption or upheld its validity
sub silentio. The
more likely conclusion is that, finding the evidence sufficient
without the aid of the presumption, the lower court saw no need for
reaching a second constitutional issue.
So viewing that District Court's opinion, I think the evidence
was quite sufficient under the "clear, unequivocal, and convincing"
standard of
Schneiderman v. United States, 320 U.
S. 118,
320 U. S. 135,
to support the finding below that Cort had remained abroad for the
purpose of evading military service. [
Footnote 3/2]
Page 372 U. S. 200
2. In addition, I see nothing constitutionally wrong with this
presumption, either on its face or as related to this case. Similar
presumptions have been consistently sustained in criminal statutes,
where the standard of proof is certainly no less stringent than in
denationalization cases.
See, e.g., Yee Hem v. United
States, 268 U. S. 178;
Casey v. United States, 276 U. S. 413;
Hawes v. Georgia, 258 U. S. 1;
cf.
Fong Yue Ting v. United States, 149 U.
S. 698. As regards the requirement that there must be a
"rational connection between the fact proved and the ultimate fact
presumed,"
Tot v. United States, 319 U.
S. 463,
319 U. S. 467,
this presumption is surely a far cry
Page 372 U. S. 201
from that held constitutionally invalid in the
Tot
case. [
Footnote 3/3] And since we
are concerned here only with the presumption as applied in this
instance (if indeed it was in fact applied below or must now be
resorted to in this Court), it is no answer to suggest that in
other instances application of the presumption might be
unconstitutional.
Thus whether or not the § 349(a)(10) presumption is involved in
the Cort case, I believe that the order of denationalization there,
as well as in the Mendoza case, should be upheld. [
Footnote 3/4]
[
Footnote 3/1]
The District Court said:
"When, as here, a citizenship claimant establishes his birth in
the United States the burden is upon the Government to prove by
clear, convincing and unequivocal evidence the act it relies upon
to show expatriation.
Nishikawa v. Dulles, 356 U. S.
129,
356 U. S. 133. We think the
Government has met this burden. In 1951, when the plaintiff went
abroad, it was for a limited period. On December 29, 1952, he
accepted a position at the Harvard Medical School to begin the
latter part of 1953, and indicated that he had made arrangements
for prior transportation to the United States. His intention to
return to this country was steadfast until he learned, shortly
after January 31, 1953, that the school authorities felt that they
could not declare him 'essential' for teaching, and that he
probably would be drafted. He wrote them on February 10, 1953,
that, until he heard 'something definite' from the draft board, he
was 'reluctant to take a decision that may prove to be foolish or
premature.' On February 9, June 4, and July 3 in 1953 the draft
board sent him notices to report for physical examination, and
thereafter ordered him to report for induction on September 14,
1953. The plaintiff made no response or compliance, but remained
abroad. We are convinced that his purpose was to avoid service in
the armed forces."
"The only question left in this case is the constitutionality of
the law under which the Government maintains that the plaintiff was
divested of his citizenship."
187 F. Supp. at 686.
[
Footnote 3/2]
Cort was not charged with going abroad in order to avoid
military service, but solely with remaining abroad to avoid
induction. The evidence shows convincingly that Cort's purpose in
remaining abroad, first in England and then in Czechoslovakia, was
to avoid the draft.
On May 29, 1951, Cort left the United States to accept a
research fellowship at the University of Cambridge, England. A few
days before his departure, he registered as a "special registrant"
under the Doctors Draft Act. On September 11, 1952, he was
classified I-A (medical), available for military service.
Meanwhile, in late 1951, the Government had requested Cort to
surrender his passport for invalidation except for return to the
United States. He did not do this.
On December 29, 1952, Cort accepted, by a letter sent from
England, a teaching position at the Harvard Medical School,
indicating his intention to return to the United States in late
June, 1953, in order to start work on August 1, 1953. On the same
day, he also wrote to the Massachusetts Medical Advisory Committee,
stating that he would begin teaching at Harvard in July, 1953, and
requesting a draft deferment on the ground that this "civilian
function . . . shall be far more essential to my country than
military service."
On January 29, 1953, Harvard authorities advised the Medical
Advisory Committee that they did not regard Cort's teaching
position as essential to medical teaching, and, on February 4,
1953, the Committee recommended to the local draft board that Cort
be considered "available for active military service." Between
January 31, 1953, and May 29, 1953, the Dean of the Harvard Medical
School and Cort exchanged several letters -- the Dean suggesting
that Cort apply for a commission, Cort expressing surprise that the
teaching position was not considered essential, and that, until he
had heard from his draft board, he was "reluctant to take a
decision that may prove to be foolish or premature."
On February 9, 1953, Cort was informed by his local draft board
that his deferment request had been denied, and he was ordered to
report for a physical examination within 30 days of the receipt of
the letter. On June 4, 1953, and on July 3, 1953, he was again sent
notices directing him to report for a physical examination. On
August 13, 1953, Cort was ordered to report for induction on
September 14, 1953. Cort did not report, notwithstanding that, in
the interval, as he concedes, he had received these notices from
his draft board.
On August 8, 1954, after his residence permit in England was not
renewed by the British Home Office, Cort took up residence in
Prague, Czechoslovakia, where not until
April 7, 1959, did
he make any application for a United States passport.
Against this background, the District Court was certainly
entitled to discredit Cort's belated efforts, long after his
indictment for draft evasion, to come to terms with the military
authorities, as well as his self-serving statements that he
remained abroad to avoid investigation as to his alleged Communist
affiliations or possible prosecution under the Smith Act.
[
Footnote 3/3]
A presumption that one is remaining abroad with a purpose of
avoiding military service, arising from continued sojourn abroad in
the face of an uncontroverted call to military duty, certainly
bears no resemblance whatever to the presumption found wanting in
Tot. That presumption was that firearms or ammunition
possessed by one previously convicted of a crime of violence, or
who was a fugitive from justice, were received not only in
interstate commerce, but also subsequent to the enactment of the
relevant statute, the presumption arising solely from a showing
that such person had already once been convicted of a crime of
violence and was presently in possession of firearms or
ammunition.
[
Footnote 3/4]
Even on the premises of my Brother STEWART, the proper course
would be to remand the
Cort case to the District Court for
a new trial, not, as he proposes, to set aside the basic
denationalization proceeding. This is not a case of the District
Court being called on simply to review for error an administrative
record, but one in which it was required to try the
denationalization issue
de novo. In these circumstances,
there would be no need to have the administrative proceeding start
all over again.
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, with whom MR. JUSTICE WHITE joins,
dissenting.
The Court's opinion is lengthy, but its thesis is simple: (1)
The withdrawal of citizenship which these statutes provide is
"punishment." (2) Punishment cannot constitutionally be imposed
except after a criminal trial and conviction. (3) The statutes are
therefore unconstitutional.
Page 372 U. S. 202
As with all syllogisms, the conclusion is inescapable if the
premises are correct. But I cannot agree with the Court's major
premise -- that the divestiture of citizenship which these statutes
prescribe is punishment in the constitutional sense of that term.
[
Footnote 4/1]
I
Despite the broad sweep of some of the language of its opinion,
the Court, as I understand it, does not hold that involuntary
deprivation of citizenship is inherently and always a penal
sanction -- requiring the safeguards of a criminal trial. Such a
determination would overrule at least three decisive precedents in
this Court.
Nearly 50 years ago, the Court held that Congress had
constitutional power to denationalize a native-born citizen who
married a foreigner but continued to reside here.
Mackenzie v.
Hare, 239 U. S. 299. The
Court there explicitly rejected the argument
"that the citizenship of plaintiff was an incident to her birth
in the United States, and, under the Constitution and laws of the
United States, it became a right, privilege, and immunity which
could not be taken away from her except as a punishment for crime
or by her voluntary expatriation."
239 U.S. at
239 U. S. 308.
The power of Congress to denationalize a native-born citizen,
without a criminal trial, was reaffirmed in
Savorgnan v. United
States, 338 U. S. 491. And
less than five years ago, in
Perez v. Brownell,
356 U. S. 44, the
Court again upheld this congressional power in an opinion which
unambiguously rejected the notion, advanced in
Page 372 U. S. 203
that case by the dissenters, [
Footnote 4/2] that the
Mackenzie and
Savorgnan decisions stand only for the proposition that
citizenship may be voluntarily relinquished or abandoned either
expressly or by conduct. In short, it has been established for
almost 50 years that Congress, under some circumstances, may,
without providing for a criminal trial, make expatriation the
consequence of the voluntary conduct of a United States citizen,
irrespective of the citizen's subjective intention to renounce his
nationality, and irrespective too of his awareness that
denationalization will be the result of his conduct. [
Footnote 4/3]
II
The position taken by the Court today is simply that, unlike the
statutes involved in
Mackenzie, Savorgnan and
Perez, the statutes at issue in the present case employ
deprivation of citizenship as a penal sanction. In support of this
position, the Court devotes many pages of its opinion to a
discussion of a quite different law, enacted in 1865, amended in
1912, and repealed in 1940. That law [
Footnote 4/4] provided for forfeiture of the "rights of
citizenship" as an additional penalty for deserters from the armed
forces and for enrolled draftees who departed from their district
or from the United States "to avoid any draft into the military or
naval service, duly ordered. . . ." That statute, as the Court
correctly says, "was, in terms,
Page 372 U. S. 204
punitive," and I agree with the Court that the statute's
legislative history, as well as subsequent judicial decisions
construing it, makes it clear that the law was punitive -- imposing
additional punishment upon those convicted of either of the
offenses mentioned. [
Footnote
4/5]
In these cases, however, we have before us statutes which were
enacted in 1944 and 1952, respectively. In construing these
statutes, I think nothing is to be gained from the legislative
history of a quite different law enacted by a quite different
Congress in 1865, nor from the reports of still another Congress
which amended that law in 1912. Unlike the 1865 law, the
legislation at issue in the cases before us is not, "in terms,
punitive." And there is nothing in the history of
this
legislation which persuades me that these statutes, though not, in
terms, penal, nonetheless embody a purpose of the Congresses which
enacted them to impose criminal punishment without the safeguards
of a criminal trial.
Unlike the two sections of the Nationality Act of 1940 which
were in issue in
Perez v. Brownell [
Footnote 4/6] and Trop v. Dulles, [
Footnote 4/7] § 401(j) did not have its genesis in the
Cabinet Committee's draft code which President Roosevelt submitted
to Congress in 1938. [
Footnote 4/8]
Indeed, § 401(j) was the product of a totally different environment
-- the experience of a nation engaged in a global war.
On February 16, 1944, Attorney General Biddle addressed a letter
to the Chairman of the Senate Immigration
Page 372 U. S. 205
Committee, calling attention to circumstances which had arisen
after the institution of the draft in World War II, and suggesting
the legislation which subsequently became § 401(j). The Attorney
General's letter stated in part:
"I invite your attention to the desirability of enacting
legislation which would provide (1) for the expatriation of
citizens of the United States who in time of war or during a
national emergency leave the United States or remain outside
thereof for the purpose of evading service in the armed forces of
the United States and (2) for the exclusion from the United States
of aliens who leave this country for the above-mentioned
purpose."
"Under existing law, a national of the United States, whether by
birth or by naturalization, becomes expatriated by operation of law
if he (1) obtains naturalization in a foreign state; (2) takes an
oath of allegiance to a foreign country; (3) serves in the armed
forces of a foreign state if he thereby acquires the nationality of
such foreign state; (4) accepts employment under a foreign state
for which only nationals of such state are eligible; (5) votes in a
political election in a foreign state or participates in an
election or plebiscite to determine the sovereignty over foreign
territory; (6) makes a formal renunciation of nationality before a
diplomatic or consular officer of the United States in a foreign
state; (7) deserts from the armed forces of the United States in
time of war and is convicted thereof by a court martial; or (8) is
convicted of treason (U.S.C., title 8, sec. 801). Machinery is
provided whereby a person who is denied any right or privilege of
citizenship on the ground that he has become expatriated may secure
a judicial determination of his status; and if he is outside of the
United States he is entitled to a
Page 372 U. S. 206
certificate of identity which permits him to enter and remain in
the United States until his status has been determined by the
courts (Nationality Act of 1940, sec. 503; U.S.C., title 8, sec.
903)."
"The files of this Department disclose that, at the present
time, there are many citizens of the United States who have left
this country for the purpose of escaping service in the armed
forces. While such persons are liable to prosecution for violation
of the Selective Service and Training Act of 1940, if and when they
return to this country, it would seem proper that in addition they
should lose their United States citizenship. Persons who are
unwilling to perform their duty to their country and abandon it
during its time of need are much less worthy of citizenship than
are persons who become expatriated on any of the existing
grounds."
"Accordingly, I recommend the enactment of legislation which
would provide (1) for the expatriation of citizens of the United
States who in time of war or during a national emergency leave the
United States or remain outside thereof for the purpose of evading
service in the armed forces of the United States and (2) for the
exclusion from the United States of aliens who leave this country
for that purpose. Any person who may be deemed to have become
expatriated by operation of the foregoing provision would be
entitled to have his status determined by the courts pursuant to
the above-mentioned section of the Nationality Act of 1940.
[
Footnote 4/9]"
The bill was passed unanimously by both the House and the
Senate, and became Public Law No. 431 of the Seventy-eighth
Congress. Neither the committee reports nor the limited debate on
the measure in Congress
Page 372 U. S. 207
adds any substantial gloss to the legislative action. [
Footnote 4/10] And the legislative
history of § 349(a) (10) of the Immigration and Nationality Act of
1952, the statute directly involved in the second of the two cases
now before us,
Page 372 U. S. 208
gives no additional illumination as to the purpose of the
Eighty-second Congress, since the substantive provisions of that
statute were but a recodification of § 401(j) of the 1940 Act.
[
Footnote 4/11]
The question of whether or not a statute is punitive ultimately
depends upon whether the disability it imposes is for the purpose
of vengeance or deterrence, or whether the disability is but an
incident to some broader regulatory objective.
See Cummings
v. Missouri, 4 Wall. 277, 320,
71 U. S. 322;
United States v. Lovett, 328 U. S. 303,
328 U. S.
308-312;
Page 372 U. S. 209
Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S.
107-109.
See generally Flemming v. Nestor,
363 U. S. 603,
363 U. S.
613-617;
cf. De Veau v. Braisted, 363 U.
S. 144,
363 U. S. 160;
Communist Party v. Subversive Activities Control Board,
367 U. S. 1,
367 U. S. 83-88.
In commenting on the nature of this kind of inquiry, the Court said
in
Flemming v. Nestor,
"We observe initially that only the clearest proof could suffice
to establish the unconstitutionality of a statute on such a ground.
Judicial inquiries into Congressional motives are, at best a
hazardous matter, and when that inquiry seeks to go behind
objective manifestations, it becomes a dubious affair indeed.
Moreover, the presumption of constitutionality with which this
enactment, like any other, comes to us forbids us lightly to choose
that reading of the statute's setting which will invalidate it over
that which will save it."
363 U.S. at
363 U. S.
617.
In the light of the standard enunciated in
Nestor, I
can find no clear proof that the prime purpose of this legislation
was punitive. To be sure, there is evidence that the deterrent
effect of the legislation was considered. Moreover, the attitude of
some members of Congress toward those whom the legislation was
intended to reach was obviously far from neutral. But the fact that
the word "penalty" was used by an individual Senator in the
congressional debates is hardly controlling. As THE CHIEF JUSTICE
has so wisely remarked,
"How simple would be the tasks of constitutional adjudication
and of law generally if specific problems could be solved by
inspection of the labels pasted on them! [
Footnote 4/12]"
It seems clear to me that these putative indicia of punitive
intent are far overbalanced by the fact that this legislation dealt
with a basic problem of wartime morale reaching far beyond concern
for any individual affected. The legislation applies only to those
who have left this
Page 372 U. S. 210
country or remained outside of it for the purpose of avoiding
the draft. Congress can reasonably be understood to have been
saying that those who flee the country for such express purposes do
more than simply disobey the law and avoid the imposition of
criminal sanctions. They disassociate themselves entirely from
their nation, seeking refuge from their wartime obligations under
the aegis of another sovereign. Congress could reasonably have
concluded that the existence of such a group, who voluntarily and
demonstrably put aside their United States citizenship "for the
duration," could have an extremely adverse effect upon the morale,
and thus the war effort, not only of the armed forces, but of the
millions enlisted in the defense of their nation on the civilian
front. During the consideration of § 401(j) in Congress, there were
repeated references to the expectation that fugitive draft evaders
then living abroad would return to this country after the war to
resume citizenship and to enjoy the fruits of victory. The effect
upon wartime morale of the known existence of such a group, while
perhaps not precisely measurable in terms of impaired military
efficiency, could obviously have been considered substantial.
Denationalization of this class of voluntary expatriates was a
rational way of dealing with this problem by removing its visible
cause. In light of this broader purpose, I cannot find, as the
Court does, that § 401(j) was motivated primarily by the desire to
wreak vengeance upon these individuals who fled the country to
avoid military service. Rather, the statute seems to me precisely
the same kind of regulatory measure, rational and efficacious,
which this Court upheld against similar objections in
Perez v.
Brownell, supra. [
Footnote
4/13]
Page 372 U. S. 211
III
For the reasons stated, I cannot find in the terms of these
statutes or in their legislative history anything close to the
"clearest proof" that the basic congressional purpose was to impose
punishment. But that alone does not answer the constitutional
inquiry in these cases. As with any other exercise of congressional
power, a law which imposes deprivation of citizenship, to be
constitutionally valid, must bear a rational relationship to an
affirmative power possessed by Congress under the Constitution. The
appellants submit that, in enacting this legislation, Congress
could rationally have been drawing on any one of three sources of
recognized constitutional power: the implied power to enact
legislation for the effective conduct of foreign affairs; the
express power to wage war, to raise armies, and to provide for the
common defense; and the inherent attributes of sovereignty.
The appellants argue that this legislation, like the statutory
provision sustained in
Perez v. Brownell, supra, has a
direct relationship to foreign affairs. They point out that
international complications could arise if this country attempted
to effect the return of citizen draft evaders by requests to a
foreign sovereign which that nation might be unwilling to grant.
The appellants insist that the possibility of international
embroilments resulting from problems caused by fugitive draft
evaders is not fanciful, pointing to the background of
international incidents preceding the War of 1812, and the long
history, later in the nineteenth century, of this country's
involvement with other nations over the asserted liability of our
naturalized citizens to military obligations imposed by their
native countries. [
Footnote 4/14]
Expatriation of those who leave or remain
Page 372 U. S. 212
away from the United States with draft evasion as their purpose,
the appellants say, might reasonably be attributed to a
congressional belief that this was the only practical way to nip
these potential international problems in the bud.
Compare
Perez v. Brownell, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 60;
Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 106
(concurring opinion).
In the view I take of this case, it is unnecessary to pursue
further an inquiry as to whether the power to regulate foreign
affairs could justify denationalization for the conduct in
question. For I think it apparent that Congress, in enacting the
statute, was drawing upon another power, broad and
far-reaching.
A basic purpose of the Constitution was to "provide for the
common defence." To that end, the Framers expressly conferred upon
Congress a compendium of powers which have come to be called the
"war power." [
Footnote 4/15]
Responsive to the scope and magnitude of ultimate national need,
the war power is "the power to wage war successfully."
See
Charles Evans Hughes, War Powers under the Constitution, 42
A.B.A.Rep. 232, 238.
It seems to me evident that Congress was drawing upon this power
when it enacted the legislation before us. To be sure, the
underlying purpose of this legislation can
Page 372 U. S. 213
hardly be refined to the point of isolating one single, precise
objective. The desire to end a potential drain upon this country's
military manpower was clearly present in the minds of the
legislators, and would itself have constituted a purpose having
sufficient rational nexus to the exercise of the war power. Indeed,
there is no more fundamental aspect of this broad power than the
building and maintaining of armed forces sufficient for the common
defense.
Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U.
S. 366;
see Falbo v. United States,
320 U. S. 549.
But, in any event, the war power clearly supports the objective of
removing a corrosive influence upon the morale of a nation at war.
As the Court said in
Hirabayashi v. United States,
320 U. S. 81,
320 U. S. 93,
the war power
"extends to every matter and activity so related to war as
substantially to affect its conduct and progress. The power is not
restricted to the winning of victories in the field and the repulse
of enemy forces. It embraces every phase of the national defense,
including the protection of war materials and the members of the
armed forces from injury and from the dangers which attend the
rise, prosecution and progress of war."
See Lichter v. United States, 334 U.
S. 742.
This legislation is thus quite different from the statute held
invalid in
Trop v. Dulles, supra. In that case, there were
not five members of the Court who were able to find the "requisite
rational relation" between the war power of Congress and § 401(g)
of the 1940 Act imposing denationalization upon wartime deserters
from the armed forces. As the concurring opinion pointed out, the
statute was "not limited in its effects to those who desert in a
foreign country or who flee to another land." 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 107.
Indeed, "The Solicitor General acknowledged that forfeiture of
citizenship would have occurred if the entire incident had
transpired in this country." 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 92. It
was emphasized that conduct far short of disloyalty could
technically constitute the military offense
Page 372 U. S. 214
of desertion, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 112,
356 U. S. 113,
and that the harshness of denationalization for conduct so
potentially equivocal was "an important consideration where the
asserted power to expatriate has only a slight or tenuous relation
to the granted power." 356 U.S. at
356 U. S.
110.
The legislation now before us, on the other hand, is, by its
terms, completely inapplicable to those guilty of draft evasion who
have remained in the United States; it is exclusively aimed at
those, whether or not ever criminally convicted, who have gone to
or remained in another land to escape the duty of military service.
Moreover, the conduct which the legislation reaches could never be
equivocal in nature, but is always and clearly a "refusal to
perform this ultimate duty of American citizenship."
Trop v.
Dulles, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 112
(concurring opinion).
IV
There is one more point to be made as to the substantive
provisions of the legislation before us in these cases. Previous
decisions have suggested that congressional exercise of the power
to expatriate may be subject to a further constitutional
restriction -- a limitation upon the kind of activity which may be
made the basis of denationalization. Withdrawal of citizenship is a
drastic measure. Moreover, the power to expatriate endows
government with authority to define and to limit the society which
it represents and to which it is responsible.
This Court has never held that Congress' power to expatriate may
be used unsparingly in every area in which it has general power to
act. Our previous decisions upholding involuntary denationalization
all involved conduct inconsistent with undiluted allegiance to this
country. But I think the legislation at issue in these cases comes
so clearly within the compass of those decisions as to make
unnecessary in this case an inquiry as to
Page 372 U. S. 215
what the ultimate limitation upon the expatriation power may
be.
The conduct to which this legislation applies, involving not
only the attribute of flight or absence from this country in time
of war or national emergency, but flight or absence for the express
purpose of evading the duty of helping to defend this country,
amounts to an unequivocal and conspicuous manifestation of
nonallegiance, whether considered objectively or subjectively. Ours
is a tradition of the citizen soldier. As this Court has said,
"[T]he very conception of a just government and its duty to the
citizen includes the reciprocal obligation of the citizen to render
military service in case of need and the right to compel it."
Selective Draft Law Cases, 245 U.
S. 366, at
245 U. S. 378.
It is hardly an improvident exercise of constitutional power for
Congress do disown those who have disowned this Nation in time of
ultimate need.
V
For the reasons stated, I believe the substantive provisions of
§ 401(j) of the 1940 Act and of § 349(a)(10) of the 1952 Act are
constitutionally valid. In addition to its substantive provisions,
however, § 349(a)(10) declares:
"For the purposes of this paragraph, failure to comply with any
provision of any compulsory service laws of the United States shall
raise the presumption that the departure from or absence from the
United States was for the purpose of evading or avoiding training
and service in the military, air, or naval forces of the United
States."
I think the evidentiary presumption which the statute creates is
clearly invalid, and that it fatally infected the administrative
determination that Joseph Henry Cort had lost his citizenship.
Page 372 U. S. 216
The District Court did not mention this statutory presumption,
and it is, therefore, impossible to know how much the court relied
upon it, if at all. Indeed, the District Court's attention in this
case was oriented primarily towards the issue of its jurisdiction
and the basic issue of the constitutionality of the substantive
provisions of § 349(a)(10). In view of its holding that §
349(a)(10) is unconstitutional, the court understandably did not
give exhaustive attention to the factual issues presented, devoting
but a single short paragraph to the question of whether Cort's
conduct had brought him within the statute. 187 F. Supp. at
686.
But it is clear that the final reviewing agency in the State
Department relied heavily upon this presumption in determining that
Cort had lost his citizenship. The Board of Review on the Loss of
Nationality, in its memorandum affirming the initial administrative
determination that Cort had lost his citizenship, stated that,
"[b]y failing to comply with the notices sent to him by his
local board, Dr. Cort brought upon himself the presumption
mentioned in Section 349(a)(10), that his continued absence from
the United States was for the purpose of evading or avoiding
training and service in the military, air, or naval forces of the
United States.
Even if the Board should consider that the
presumption could be overcome by showing that a person
remained abroad for a purpose other than to avoid the military
service, the evidence in Dr. Cort's case, taken as a whole, does
not show that he remained abroad for a purpose other than to avoid
being drafted."
(Emphasis added.) One of the Board's specific findings was "that
Dr. Cort has not overcome the presumption raised in the last
sentence of Section 349(a)(10) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act."
As was said in
Speiser v. Randall, 357 U.
S. 513, at
357 U. S.
520-521,
"it is commonplace that the outcome of a lawsuit
Page 372 U. S. 217
-- and hence the vindication of legal rights -- depends more
often on how the factfinder appraises the facts than on a disputed
construction of a statute or interpretation of a line of
precedents. Thus, the procedures by which the facts of the case are
determined assume an importance fully as great as the validity of
the substantive rule of law to be applied. And the more important
the rights at stake, the more important must be the procedural
safeguards surrounding those rights."
The presumption created by § 349(a)(10) is wholly at odds with
the decisions of the Court which hold that in cases such as this a
heavy burden is upon the Government to prove an act of expatriation
by clear, convincing, and unequivocal evidence.
Gonzales v.
Landon, 350 U.S. 920;
Nishikawa v. Dulles,
356 U. S. 129.
This standard commands that "evidentiary ambiguities are not to be
resolved against the citizen."
Nishikawa v. Dulles, 356
U.S. at
356 U. S.
136.
Without pausing to consider whether this evidentiary standard is
a constitutional one, it is clear to me that the statutory
presumption here in question is constitutionally invalid because
there is insufficient "rational connection between the fact proved
and the ultimate fact presumed."
Tot v. United States,
319 U. S. 463,
319 U. S.
467.
"A statute creating a presumption that is arbitrary or that
operates to deny a fair opportunity to repeal it violates the due
process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment."
Manley v. Georgia, 279 U. S. 1,
279 U. S. 6. A
federal statute which creates such a presumption is no less
violative of Fifth Amendment due process. "Mere legislative fiat
may not take the place of fact in the determination of issues
involving life, liberty or property."
Ibid. It is
"essential that there shall be some rational connection between
the fact proved and the ultimate fact presumed, and that the
inference of one fact from proof of another shall not be
Page 372 U. S. 218
so unreasonable as to be a purely arbitrary mandate."
Mobile, J. & K.C.R. Co. v. Turnipseed, 219 U. S.
35.
Cf. Speiser v. Randall, supra.
The failure of a person abroad to comply with notices sent by
his draft board would obviously be relevant evidence in determining
whether that person had gone or remained abroad for the purpose of
avoiding military service. But the statute goes much further. It
creates a presumption of an expatriating act from failure to comply
with "any provision of any compulsory service laws" by a citizen
abroad, regardless of the nature of the violations and regardless
of the innocence of his purpose in originally leaving the United
States. The various compulsory service laws of the United States
contain a multitude of provisions, many of them technical or
relatively insignificant. To draw from the violation of a single
such provision a presumption of expatriation, with its solemn
consequences, is, I think, to engaged in irrationality so gross as
to be constitutionally impermissible. [
Footnote 4/16]
It is clear from the record in this case that Court's sole
purpose in leaving the United States in 1951 was to accept a
position as a Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge,
England. The record also makes clear that, in 1946, Cort was called
up under the Selective Service law, physically examined, and
classified as 4F because of physical disability. The record further
shows that Cort voluntarily registered under the Doctors Draft Act,
making special arrangements with his draft board to do so in
advance of the effective date for registration under the statute, a
few days before he left for Europe. Cort filed an affidavit in
which he swore that it was his belief,
Page 372 U. S. 219
in the light of his physical disability, that the induction
order which he received in England was not issued in good faith to
secure his military service, but that its purpose instead was to
force him to return to the United States to be investigated by the
House Committee on Un-American Activities or prosecuted under the
Smith Act. He has made repeated efforts to arrange with Selective
Service officials for the fulfillment, albeit belatedly, of his
military obligations, if any, and, in 1959, his wife came to the
United States and met with officials of the Selective Service
system for that purpose. The very reason he applied in Prague for a
United States passport was, as he swore, so that he could return to
the United States in order to respond to the indictment for draft
evasion now pending against him in Massachusetts and to fulfill his
Selective Service obligations, if any. When Cort applied in Prague
for a passport, the American Consul there, who interviewed him,
stated his opinion in writing that he had no reason to disbelieve
Cort's sworn statement that he had not remained outside the United
States to avoid military service. [
Footnote 4/17] I mention this evidence as disclosed by
the present record only to indicate why I think a new
administrative hearing freed from the weight of the statutory
presumption is in order, not to imply any prejudgment of what I
think the ultimate administrative decision should be.
In No. 3,
Rusk v. Cort, I would vacate the judgment of
the District Court and remand the case with instructions to declare
null and void the certificate of loss of nationality
Page 372 U. S. 220
issued to Court by the Secretary of State, so that upon Cort's
renewed application for a passport, an administrative hearing could
be had, free of the evidentiary presumption of § 349(a)(10). In the
event that such administrative proceedings should result in a
finding that Cort had lost his United States citizenship, he would
be entitled to a
de novo judicial hearing [
Footnote 4/18] in which the Government
would have the burden of proving an act of expatriation by clear,
convincing and unequivocal evidence.
Gonzales v. Landon,
350 U.S. 920;
Nishikawa v. Dulles, 356 U.
S. 129.
In No. 2,
Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, I would reverse
the judgment of the District Court.
[
Footnote 4/1]
The statute involved in No. 2,
Kennedy v.
Mendoza-Martinez, is § 401(j) of the Nationality Act of 1940,
as amended, 58 Stat. 746. The statute involved in No. 3,
Rusk
v. Cort, is § 349(a)(10) of the Immigration and Nationality
Act of 1952, 8 U.S.C. § 1481(a)(10). The substantive provisions of
these statutes are practically identical. I agree with the Court
that the jurisdictional objection and the claims of collateral
estoppel in No. 2 are without merit, and that the constitutional
validity of both statutes must therefore be determined.
[
Footnote 4/2]
356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 62
(dissenting opinion).
[
Footnote 4/3]
In
Perez v. Brownell, the Court pointed out that the
provision of the Fourteenth Amendment that "All persons born or
naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction
thereof, are citizens of the United States . . . " does not
restrict the power of Congress to enact denaturalization
legislation. It was there stated that
"there is nothing in the terms, the context, the history or the
manifest purpose of the Fourteenth Amendment to warrant drawing
from it a restriction upon the power otherwise possessed by
Congress to withdraw citizenship."
356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 58, n.
3.
[
Footnote 4/4]
Act of March 3, 1865, § 21, 13 Stat. 490.
[
Footnote 4/5]
This law was the direct predecessor of § 401(g) of the
Nationality Act of 1940, providing the additional penalty of loss
of citizenship upon those convicted by court-martial of deserting
the armed forces in time of war (a provision subsequently
invalidated in
Trop v. Dulles, 356 U. S.
86).
[
Footnote 4/6]
356 U. S. 356 U.S.
44 (involving § 401(e)).
[
Footnote 4/7]
356 U. S. 356 U.S.
86 (involving § 401(g)).
[
Footnote 4/8]
See Perez v. Brownell, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 52-57;
Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S. 94-95;
Codification of the Nationality Laws of the United States,
H.R.Comm.Print, pt. 1, 76th Cong., 1st Sess. 68-69.
[
Footnote 4/9]
S.Rep.No.1075, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 2.
[
Footnote 4/10]
The House Committee Report does contain some particularization
of the problem to which the legislation was addressed:
"It is, of course, not known how many citizens or aliens have
left the United States for the purpose of evading military service.
The Department of Justice discovered that in the western district
of Texas, in the vicinity of El Paso alone, there were over 800
draft delinquents recorded in the local Federal Bureau of
Investigation office, born in this country and, therefore citizens,
who had crossed the border into Mexico for the purpose of evading
the draft, but with the expectation of returning to the United
States to resume residence after the war."
H.R.Rep.No.1229, 78th Cong., 2d Sess. 1-2. In explaining the
bill to the House Committee of the Whole, Representative Dickstein,
the Chairman of the House Committee on Immigration, stated:
"I would classify this piece of legislation as a bill to
denaturalize and denationalize all draft dodgers who left this
country knowing that there was a possibility that they might be
drafted in this war and that they might have to serve in the armed
forces, in the naval forces, or the marines, and in an effort to
get out of such service. We are all American citizens, and our
country has a great stake in this war; nevertheless, we have found
hundreds of men who have left this country to go to certain parts
of Mexico and other South American countries with the idea of
evading military service and of returning after the war is over,
and taking their old places in our society."
90 Cong.Rec. 3261.
In explaining the bill to the Senate, Senator Russell, the
Chairman of the Senate Committee on Immigration, stated:
"The . . . bill . . . relates to the class of persons, whether
citizens of the United States or aliens, who departed from the
United States in order to avoid service in the armed forces of the
United States under the Selective Service Act. Information before
the committee indicated that, on one day, several hundred persons
departed from the United States through the city of El Paso, Tex.,
alone, in order to avoid service in either the Army or the Navy of
the United States, and to avoid selection under the selective
service law. This bill provides that any person who is a national
of the United States, or an American citizen, and who in time of
national stress departed from the United States to another country
to avoid serving his country, shall be deprived of his
nationality."
"It further provides that any alien who is subject to military
service under the terms of the Selective Service Act, and who left
this country to avoid military service, shall thereafter be forever
barred from admission to the United States."
"Mr. President, I do not see how anyone could object to such a
bill. An alien who remains in the country and refuses to serve in
the armed forces in time of war is prosecuted under our laws, and,
if found guilty, he is compelled to serve a term in the
penitentiary. Under the terms of the Selective Service Act, an
American citizen who refuses to serve when he is called upon to do
so is likewise subject to a prison term. Certainly those who,
having enjoyed the advantages of living in the United States, were
unwilling to serve their country or subject themselves to the
Selective Service Act should be penalized in some measure. This
bill would deprive such persons as are citizens of the United
States of their citizenship, and, in the case of aliens, would
forever bar them from admission into the United States. Any
American citizen who is convicted of violating the Selective
Service Act loses his citizenship. This bill would merely impose a
similar penalty on those who are not subject to the jurisdiction of
our courts, the penalty being the same as would result in the case
of those who are subject to the jurisdiction of our courts."
90 Cong.Rec. 7628-7629.
[
Footnote 4/11]
Section 349(a)(10) did add a presumption that failure to comply
with any provision of the compulsory service laws of the United
States means that the departure from or absence from the United
States is for the purpose of avoiding military service.
See pp.
372 U. S.
215-219.
[
Footnote 4/12]
Trop v. Dulles, 356 U.S. at
356 U. S.
94.
[
Footnote 4/13]
I cannot suppose that the Court today is saying that Congress
can impose denationalization without the safeguards of a criminal
trial for conduct which is unexceptionable -- like marrying an
alien -- or relatively innocuous -- like voting in a foreign
election -- but that Congress cannot do so for conduct which is
reprehensible.
[
Footnote 4/14]
See III Moore, Digest of International Law (1906), §§
434, 436-438, 440; Tsiang, The Question of Expatriation in America
Prior to 1907 (1942), 44-55, 71-72, 78-84.
[
Footnote 4/15]
"The Congress shall have Power . . ."
"
* * * *"
"To declare War, grant Letters of Marque and Reprisal, and make
Rules concerning Captures on Land and Water;"
"To raise and support Armies, but no Appropriation of Money to
that Use shall be for a longer Term than two Years;"
"To provide and maintain a Navy;"
"To make Rules for the Government and Regulation of the land and
naval Forces;"
"
* * * *"
"To make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for
carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers, and all other Powers
vested by this Constitution in the Government of the United States,
or in any Department or Officer thereof."
Art. I, § 8, cls. 11, 12, 13, 14, 18.
[
Footnote 4/16]
McFarland v. American Sugar Rfg. Co., 241 U. S.
79,
241 U. S. 86;
Western & Atlantic R. Co. v. Henderson, 279 U.
S. 639,
279 U. S. 642;
Morrison v. California, 291 U. S. 82,
291 U. S. 90.
See Bailey v. Alabama, 219 U. S. 219,
219 U. S. 239;
Lindsley v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co., 220 U. S.
61,
220 U. S.
81.
[
Footnote 4/17]
The United States Consul said,
"Without evidence to the contrary, the consular officer has no
reason to doubt Dr. Cort's statements made in the attached
affidavit which purports to answer the charge that he departed from
and remained outside the jurisdiction of the United States for the
purpose of evading or avoiding training and service in the armed
forces of the United States."
[
Footnote 4/18]
Ng Fung Ho v. White, 259 U. S. 276;
Kessler v. Strecker, 307 U. S. 22,
307 U. S. 35;
Frank v. Rogers, 102 U.S.App.D.C. 367, 253 F.2d 889.