Under § 6(j) of the Selective Service Act of 1948, a person
whose claim for exemption as a conscientious objector has been
rejected by his local draft board may appeal to an appeal board,
which is required to refer the claim to the Department of Justice
for a recommendation, which the appeal board is required to
consider but is not bound to follow. Before making its
recommendation, the Department is required to make an "appropriate
inquiry" and to hold a "hearing." After investigating the
appellant's background and reputation for sincerity, the Department
conducts a hearing at which the appellant is allowed to appear in
person, accompanied by an advisor and witnesses to testify in his
behalf. Upon request, he is entitled to be instructed "as to the
general nature and character" of any "unfavorable" evidence
developed by the investigation; but he is not permitted to see the
investigator's report, nor is he informed of the names of persons
interviewed by the investigator.
Held:
1. This procedure satisfies the requirements of the Act. Pp.
346 U. S. 2-9.
(a) The statutory scheme for review of exemptions claimed by
conscientious objectors does not entitle them to have the
investigators' reports produced for their inspection. Pp.
346 U. S. 5-6.
(b) The Department satisfies its duties under § 6(j) when it
accords the registrant a fair opportunity to present his views
Page 346 U. S. 2
before an impartial hearing officer, permits him to produce all
relevant evidence in his own behalf, and supplies him with a fair
resume of any adverse evidence in the investigator's report. P.
346 U. S. 6.
(c) The requirement of § 6(j) that the Department afford the
registrant a "hearing" does not require it to entertain an all-out
collateral attack on the testimony obtained in the prehearing
investigation. Pp.
346 U. S. 6-9.
2. As thus construed and applied, the Act does not violate the
Fifth Amendment. Pp.
346 U. S.
9-10.
3. In neither of these cases can the registrant complain of any
failure of the Department to supply him with a fair resume of the
investigator's report, because one of them did not request it and
in neither case was the investigator's report transmitted to the
appeal board or represented to it as being unfavorable. P. 6,
note 10
200 F.2d 46 and 200 F.2d 540 reversed.
Respondents were convicted of violating § 12 of the Selective
Service Act of 1948, 50 U.S.C. App. (Supp. V) § 462, by willfully
refusing to submit to induction into the armed forces of the United
States. The Court of Appeals reversed. 200 F.2d 46, 540. This Court
granted certiorari. 345 U.S. 915.
Reversed, p.
346 U. S. 10.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE VINSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
Section 6(j) of the Selective Service Act [
Footnote 1] provides exemption from military
service -- partial or full, depending upon the circumstances -- for
any person "who, by
Page 346 U. S. 3
reason of religious training and belief, is conscientiously
opposed to participation in war in any form." If the conscientious
objector's claim for relief under this section is denied by his
local draft board, he is entitled to further review by an
"appropriate appeal board." All such appeals are referred to the
Department of Justice for an "appropriate inquiry" and a "hearing."
The Department of Justice then makes a recommendation to the appeal
board, which may or may not follow it in reviewing the local
board's classification.
Page 346 U. S. 4
These two cases are concerned with the procedure, established by
regulation and practice, [
Footnote
2] which is followed when a conscientious objector's appeal is
referred to the Department of Justice. The Department has regularly
used the FBI to investigate each appealing registrant's background
and reputation for sincerity. A hearing is then held before a
designated "hearing officer." The registrant is allowed to appear
in person, and, if he chooses, he may bring with him an advisor and
witnesses to testify in his behalf. [
Footnote 3] Upon request, he is entitled to be instructed
"as to the general nature and character" of any "unfavorable"
evidence developed by the Department's
Page 346 U. S. 5
investigation. [
Footnote 4]
But he is not permitted to see the FBI report, nor is he informed
of the names of persons interviewed by the investigators.
It is the Department's refusal to disclose the entire FBI
reports which precipitates the issues now before us. The Court of
Appeals for the Second Circuit has held that this procedure
violates a registrant's rights under the Selective Service Act.
[
Footnote 5] We granted
certiorari, 345 U.S. 915, because that determination seemed in
conflict with the decisions of other Courts of Appeals [
Footnote 6] and because it dealt with
an important problem in the administration of the Selective Service
Act.
Each of the respondents claims to be a conscientious objector
entitled to total exemption from military service. Each has been
convicted of willfully refusing to submit to induction in the armed
forces of the United States. [
Footnote 7] At their trials, respondents challenged the
validity of their selective service classifications, claiming that
they were fixed without basis in fact [
Footnote 8] and without adherence to the procedures
prescribed by § 6(j) of the Act; [
Footnote 9] each claimed that the Department of Justice's
failure to show him the FBI reports rendered his classification
illegal. The Court of Appeals, reversing each respondent's
conviction, sustained the claims.
We think that the Court of Appeals erred. We think that the
statutory scheme for review, within the selective service system,
of exemptions claimed by conscientious
Page 346 U. S. 6
objectors entitles them to no guarantee that the FBI reports
must be produced for their inspection. We think the Department of
Justice satisfies its duties under § 6(j) when it accords a fair
opportunity to the registrant to speak his piece before an
impartial hearing officer; when it permits him to produce all
relevant evidence in his own behalf, and at the same time supplies
him with a fair resume of any adverse evidence in the
investigator's report. [
Footnote
10]
Respondents urge that this is not enough. The argument rides
hard upon the word "hearing" in § 6(j). It
Page 346 U. S. 7
is suggested that the "hearing" prescribed by Congress was
purposely designed to allow the registrant to refute -- item by
item, if necessary -- the matters discussed in the investigator's
report. [
Footnote 11] In
sum, respondents assimilate the "hearing" in § 6(j) to a trial, and
insist that it imports a right to confront every informant who may
have rendered adverse comment to the FBI.
The statute does entitle the registrant to a "hearing," and of
course no sham substitute will meet this requirement; but we do not
think that the word "hearing" -- when put in the context of the
whole scheme for review set forth in § 6(j) -- comprehends the
formal and litigious procedures which respondents' interpretation
would attribute to it. Instead, the word takes its meaning in this
instance from an analysis of the precise function
Page 346 U. S. 8
which Congress has imposed upon the Department of Justice in §
6(j). [
Footnote 12]
The duty to classify -- to grant or deny exemptions to
conscientious objectors -- rests upon the draft boards, local and
appellate, and not upon the Department of Justice. The registrant
must first look to his local board for the relief he claims; he
must convince this body -- composed of representatives of his own
community -- of the depth and sincerity of his convictions. He must
fill out forms calculated to put him to the test; [
Footnote 13] he must supply any additional
detailed information which may be necessary for a searching
investigation of his claim; and, if he or his local board demands
it, he may appear in person to explain his position to the persons
charged with determining its validity. [
Footnote 14]
If the local board denies the claim, the responsibility for
review, if sought, falls upon the appeal board. The Department of
Justice takes no action which is decisive. Its duty is to advise,
to render an auxiliary service to the appeal board in this
difficult class of cases. Congress was under no compulsion to
supply this auxiliary service -- to provide for a more exhaustive
processing of the conscientious objector's appeal. Registrants who
claim exemption for some reason other than conscientious objection,
and whose claims are denied, are entitled to no "hearing" before
the Department. Yet, in this special class of cases, involving as
it does difficult analyses of facts and individualized
Page 346 U. S. 9
judgments, Congress directed that the assistance of the
Department be made available whenever a registrant insists that his
conscientious objection claim has been misjudged by his local
board. Observers sympathetic to the problems of the conscientious
objector have recognized that this provision in the statute
improves the system of review by helping the appeal boards to reach
a more informed judgment on the appealing registrant's claims.
[
Footnote 15] But it has
long been recognized that neither the Department's "appropriate
investigation" nor its "hearing" is the determinative investigation
and the determinative hearing in each case. It has regularly been
assumed that it is not the function of this auxiliary procedure to
provide a full-cale trial for each appealing registrant.
Accordingly, the standards of procedure to which the Department
must adhere are simply standards which will enable it to discharge
its duty to forward sound advice, as expeditiously as possible, to
the appeal board. Certainly, this is an important and delicate
responsibility, but we do not think the statute requires the
Department to entertain an all-ut collateral attack at the hearing
on the testimony obtained in its prehearing investigation.
Respondents urge that they have a right to such a procedure
under the Fifth Amendment. We cannot agree.
The Selective Service Act is a comprehensive statute designed to
provide an marshal the available manpower of the country, to impose
a common obligation of military service on all physically fit young
men. It is a valid exercise of the war power. It is calculated to
function -- it functions today -- in times of peril. Even so,
Congress took care to provide special treatment for those who could
not
Page 346 U. S. 10
reconcile participation in the defense effort with their
religious beliefs -- if those beliefs were a matter of sincere
conviction. Profiting from the experiences of the First World War,
Congress adopted a new and special procedure to secure the rights
of conscience, which had been given express statutory
recognition.
It is always difficult to devise procedures which will be
adequate to do justice in cases where the sincerity of another's
religious convictions is the ultimate factual issue. It is
especially difficult when these procedures must be geared to meet
the imperative needs of mobilization and national vigilance -- when
there is no time for "litigious interruptions."
Falbo v. United
States, 320 U. S. 549
(1949). Under the circumstances presented, we cannot hold that the
statute, as we construe it, violates the Constitution. [
Footnote 16]
The judgments are
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
* Together with No. 573,
United States v. Packer, on
certiorari to the same court.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 6(j) appeared in the 1940 Selective Service Act as §
5(g), 54 Stat. 885, 889. It was reenacted as § 6(j) of the
Selective Service Act of 1948. 62 Stat. 604, 613, 50 U.S.C. §
456(j). The Act was amended in 1951, 65 Stat. 75, 86, 50 U.S.C.App.
(Supp. V) § 456(j), and the present language of § 6(j) differs in
immaterial respects from the language in the earlier statutes.
The full text of § 6(j) of the Selective Service Act of 1948
reads:
"Nothing contained in this title shall be construed to require
any person to be subject to combatant training and service in the
armed forces of the United States who, by reason of religious
training and belief, is conscientiously opposed to participation in
war in any form. Religious training and belief in this connection
means an individual's belief in a relation to a Supreme Being
involving duties superior to those arising from any human relation,
but does not include essentially political, sociological, or
philosophical views, or a merely personal moral code. Any person
claiming exemption from combatant training and service because of
such conscientious objections whose claim is sustained by the local
board shall, if he is inducted into the armed forces under this
title, be assigned to noncombatant service as defined by the
President, or shall, if he is found to be conscientiously opposed
to participation in such noncombatant service, be deferred. Any
person claiming exemption from combatant training and service
because of such conscientious objections shall, if such claim is
not sustained by the local board, be entitled to an appeal to the
appropriate appeal board. Upon the filing of such appeal, the
appeal board shall refer any such claim to the Department of
Justice for inquiry and hearing. The Department of Justice, after
appropriate inquiry, shall hold a hearing with respect to the
character and good faith of the objections of the person concerned,
and such person shall be notified of the time and place of such
hearing. The Department of Justice shall, after such hearing, if
the objections are found to be sustained, recommend to the appeal
board that (1) if the objector is inducted into the armed forces
under this title, he shall be assigned to noncombatant service as
defined by the President, or (2) if the objector is found to be
conscientiously opposed to participation in such noncombatant
service, he shall be deferred. If, after such hearing, the
Department of Justice finds that his objections are not sustained,
it shall recommend to the appeal board that such objections be not
sustained. The appeal board shall, in making its decision, give
consideration to, but shall not be bound to follow, the
recommendation of the Department of Justice, together with the
record on appeal from the local board. Each person whose claim for
exemption from combatant training and service because of
conscientious objections is sustained shall be listed by the local
board on a register of conscientious objectors."
There is a dearth of legislative history reflecting much
discussion in Congress about this phase of the Selective Service
Act. The problem was discussed rather briefly during the Committee
hearings on the 1940 Act.
See Hearings Before the
Committee on Military Affairs United States Senate on S. 4164, 76th
Cong., 3d Sess., and Hearings Before the Committee on Military
Affairs House of Representatives on H.R. 10132, 76th Cong., 3d
Sess.
Compare H.R.Rep.No. 2903, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., p.
5.
[
Footnote 2]
See 32 CFR Part 1626.25 (1949 ed.);
see also
17 Fed.Reg. 5449, June 18, 1952.
[
Footnote 3]
See Instructions to Registrants Whose Claims for
Exemption as Conscientious Objectors Have Been Appealed (a letter
sent to the appealing registrant from the office of the Attorney
General) reproduced in part in the record in the Nugent case, at
54.
[
Footnote 4]
Ibid.
[
Footnote 5]
United States v. Nugent, 200 F.2d 46, and
United
States v. Packer, 200 F.2d 540.
[
Footnote 6]
See e.g., Imboden v. United States, 194 F.2d 508
(1952);
Elder v. United States, 202 F.2d 465 (1953).
[
Footnote 7]
50 U.S.C.App. (Supp. V) § 462.
[
Footnote 8]
Cox v. United States, 332 U. S. 442
(1947).
[
Footnote 9]
Estep v. United States, 327 U.
S. 114 (1946).
[
Footnote 10]
As to what constitutes a "fair resume "
see Imboden v.
United States, supra. Compare United States v. Oller,
107 F. Supp. 54 ,(1952) and
United States v.
Bouziden, 108 F.
Supp. 395 (1952).
We need not reach that question in these cases, because, in our
view, respondents cannot complain of any failure on the part of the
Department of Justice to supply them with a summary of the
evidence.
Respondent Nugent first indicated to his local board that he
would only serve as a noncombatant. Thereafter, when required to
submit additional information, he stated that he was opposed to any
military service whatsoever. The local board, after a hearing,
classified him as 1-A-O which rendered him eligible only for
noncombatant military service. He appealed, claiming total
exemption. Pursuant to § 6(j) his case was referred to the
Department of Justice.
Instructions mailed to respondent Nugent informed him of his
right to "request" the Hearing Officer to "advise" him of the
"general nature and character of any evidence" which was
"unfavorable" to him claim. Respondent never requested the Hearing
Officer for any summary of the FBI investigation. He claims he was
misled by the Hearing Officer's secretary, who told him that the
"files" were "favorable." But respondent made no effort to verify
this statement; at no time did he say anything or make any request
to the Hearing Officer concerning the FBI report.
Moreover, the Hearing Officer, in his own report on the case,
said nothing which would indicate that the secretary's comment was
erroneous. He did not purport to base his recommendation on
material submitted by the FBI; rather, his recommendation seems
based upon Nugent's own conduct and testimony at the hearing,
coupled with the fact that respondent, in his original
classification questionnaire, had indicated a willingness to serve
as a noncombatant -- the classification to which he had been
assigned.
An additional statement by a Special Assistant to the Attorney
General, forwarding the Hearing Officer's report to the appeal
board, also made no mention that there was adverse matter in the
FBI report.
No part of the FBI report was transmitted to the appeal board.
Thus, the record before the appeal board contained no evidence
secured by the FBI. In view of this, and in view of his failure to
make any request to the Hearing Officer, we think that Nugent was
not denied any right.
Nor was respondent Packer denied his right to be advised of the
general nature of any evidence in the FBI report which might defeat
his claim. In response to his question, the Hearing Officer told
him that there was nothing unfavorable in it. The Hearing officer's
report, which was transmitted to the appeal board, corroborates
this view. Nothing in the FBI report was transmitted to the appeal
board, and thus it was given no indication that the FBI report was
unfavorable.
[
Footnote 11]
See United States v. Geyer, 108 F. Supp. 70 (1952), an
opinion heavily relied upon by the Court of Appeals in its opinion
in the
Nugent case.
[
Footnote 12]
Norwegian Nitrogen Products Co. v. United States,
288 U. S. 294
(1933).
[
Footnote 13]
The Selective Service System requires conscientious objectors to
fill out a special form. This form supplies the registrant with the
opportunity to demonstrate -- by pointing to past examples,
referring to character witnesses, and recounting the background of
his training and beliefs -- the sincerity of his claim.
[
Footnote 14]
32 CFR (1949 ed.) § 1624.
[
Footnote 15]
See Sibley and Jacob, Conscription of Conscience
(1952), 71-76.
[
Footnote 16]
Cf. Norweigan Nitrogen Products Co. v. United States, supra;
Williams v. New York, 337 U. S. 241
(1949).
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK and MR. JUSTICE
DOUGLAS join, dissenting.
That so strong a court and one so strong in literary endowment
-- Swan, Ch. J., Learned Hand and Frank, JJ. -- should rely, as did
the Court of Appeals in this case, 200 F.2d 46, 49-50, on the
opinion of a District Judge, impressively attests the
persuasiveness of that opinion. Chief Judge Hincks has stated also
for me the compelling reasons why the refusal to make available the
FBI report on a registrant claiming exemption as a
conscientious
Page 346 U. S. 11
objector invalidates, on any fair construction of the
requirements of the Selective Service Act, his classification as
1-A.
"It is true that, on the precise point of law involved, the
[Selective Service] Act is not explicit: when it directs the board
to refer the registrant's claim of conscientious objection 'for
inquiry and hearing' by the Department [of Justice], it does not
specify that the product both of the inquiry and of the hearing
shall be made available to the board. But neither does the Act
suggest any reason why the product of the hearing should go forward
to the board, as it did here as a matter of course, and the product
of the inquiry should be withheld."
"There are, however, other provisions in the Act from which I
think one must imply a Congressional intent that the board should
have access to the investigative report. The same section of the
Act proceeds to provide that, after inquiry, a hearing shall be had
of which the registrant shall be notified. The natural import of
this provision is, I think, that the investigative report resulting
from the inquiry shall be made a part of the record for
consideration by all directly concerned with the classification.
Under the contemplated procedure, the registrant has already had an
opportunity before the draft board to put everything desired into
the record. That being so, there would be no point to notify him to
appear in the departmental hearing just to put in more evidence.
Thus, by elimination, the only useful purpose of notice at that
stage was to give the registrant opportunity to meet the contents
of the report. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"Congress was not using empty words when, in Sec. 451 of the
Act, it solemnly declared"
"that, in a
Page 346 U. S. 12
free society, the obligations and privileges of serving in the
armed forces and the reserve components thereof should be shared
generally, in accordance with a system of selection which is fair
and just and which is consistent with the maintenance of an
effective national economy."
"A system in which selections might be made in uninformed
reliance upon the recommendation of an executive officer bottomed,
perhaps, on secret police reports would indeed make a mockery of
that high declaration of policy. Only if the Act be construed to
require that the investigative reports shall become a part of the
record open to the appeal board and all concerned is the 'system of
selection . . . fair and just' within our Anglo-axon concepts of
justice and due process."
United States v. Geyer, 108 F. Supp. 70,
72-72.
There is a note of uneasiness in the Court's recognition of the
difficulty of "devising" procedures "adequate to do justice in
cases where the sincerity of another's religious convictions" is in
issue. Courts are, no doubt, closely circumscribed in "devising"
such procedures where Congress has, with sufficient clarity, bound
the allowable judicial discretion in applying legislation. And, of
course, only within narrow limits may courts reject a procedure,
devised by Congress, on constitutional grounds. The Due Process
Clause cannot be bent to what a judge may privately think is wisdom
in respecting dissident views. But here, the Court ought not to
feel an impotent uneasiness. It is not called upon to devise a just
procedure -- merely to apply one. Considering the traditionally
high respect that dissent, and particularly religious dissent, has
enjoyed in our view of a free society, this Court ought not to
reject a construction of congressional language which assures
justice in cases where the sincerity of another's religious
conviction is at stake, and where prison
Page 346 U. S. 13
may be the alternative to an abandonment of conscience. The
enemy is not yet so near the gate that we should allow respect for
traditions of fairness, which has heretofore prevailed in this
country, to be overborne by military exigencies.
The suggestion that the registrants in these cases have waived
their rights by not asking for "a fair resume " of any adverse
evidence in the investigator's report seems to me an instance of
keeping the word of promise to the ear and breaking it to the hope.
The very purpose of a hearing is to give registrants an opportunity
to meet adverse evidence. It makes a mockery of that purpose to
suggest that such adverse evidence can be effectively met if its
provenance is unknown. Nor is it possible to be confident that a
"resume is fair" when one cannot know what it is a resume of. This
does not suggest purposeful unfairness -- still less, want of zeal.
Language is treacherous, and the meaning of what is written to no
small degree derives from him who reads it. In a country with our
moral and material strength, the maintenance of fair procedures
cannot handicap our security. Every adherence to our moral
professions reinforces our strength and therefore our security.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom MR. JUSTICE BLACK concurs,
dissenting.
I concur in MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER's opinion, and only add a
word. The use of statements by informers who need not confront the
person under investigation or accusation has such an infamous
history that it should be rooted out from our procedure. A hearing
at which these faceless people are allowed to present their
whispered rumors and yet escape the test and torture of
cross-xamination is not a hearing in the Anglo-merican sense. We
should be done with the practice -- whether
Page 346 U. S. 14
the life of a man is at stake, or his reputation, or any matter
touching upon his status or his rights. If FBI reports are
disclosed in administrative or judicial proceedings, it may be that
valuable underground sources will dry up. But that is not the
choice. If the aim is to protect the underground of informers, the
FBI report need not be used. If it is used, then fairness requires
that the names of the accusers be disclosed. Without the identity
of the informer, the person investigated or accused stands
helpless. The prejudices, the credibility, the passions, the
perjury of the informer are never known. If they were exposed, the
whole charge might wither under the cross-xamination.