Opinion
(June Term, 1863.)
The facts are: Huie is 29 years of age; is now, and has been since the death of his father, in 1857, the overseer of his mother, who is a widow, and lives on and owns a plantation in Cabarrus County, and has during that time owned and kept on her plantation in Cabarrus County, and has during that time owned and kept on her plantation more than twenty negroes. She is upwards of 60 years of age, and no white person lives on the place except herself and a daughter about 19 years of age. Huie owns and lives on the place adjoining; has a wife and two small children; no other white person on the place. The witness did not knows whether Huie receives wages as an overseer, but if he dies not, he knows that he earns wages, for ever since the death of his father he has managed his own negroes (some thirteen or fourteen) and has acted as the overseer of his mother, and attended to her business generally; has been diligent; managed the negroes well; kept them in good order, and made good crops. The affidavits required by the act are filed. Huie has for several years been afflicted with bronchitis and was not enrolled and ordered into service when the other conscripts left the county, but on 11 October, 1862, reported at the camp of instruction near Raleigh, when Dr. Baker certified as follows:
HEADQUARTERS, CAMP OF INSTRUCTION, CAMP HOLMES, 11 October, 1862.
I certify, on honor, that I have carefully examined Henry C. Huie (Colonel Barnhardt, 84 N.C. Militia) and find him incompetent to perform the duties of a soldier, because of bronchitis. He is excused until 1 May, 1863. R. B. BAKER, Surgeon, P. C. S. A.
Approved:
J. C. McRAE, Captain A. A. G., P. C. S. A.
Huie's name was put on the roll at that date, and returned home and remained there until his arrest.
The construction of the conscription and exemption act, like other acts of Congress, so far as they concern the rights of a citizen, as distinguished from military regulations and rules which the Secretary of War is authorized to prescribe in order to carry the acts into effect (for instance, the manner of having persons examined in order to determine whether they are fit for military service in the field) is matter for the courts, and any construction put on the acts by the officers (166) of the executive department, as to who is liable as a conscript or who is entitled to exemption, is subject to the decision of the judiciary. This principle of constitutional law is so clear that I suppose it will be conceded by every one.
In re Mills, a shoemaker, Angel, a wagonmaker, and Nicholson, a miller, I decide that the exemption act applies to the conscription act of April as well as to the conscription act of September, and no discrimination is made between mechanics under or over the age of 35. For the same reason I am of opinion that the exemption act of May, which is an amendment of the act of October, applies to both conscription acts.
I do not consider it necessary, for the purposes of this case, to decide the point made by Mr. Boyden, that it is the intention by the act of May to take out of the army and restore to their occupations the overseers of feme soles, infants, and lunatics, provided the persons were employed and acting as overseers previous to 16 April, 1862, and provided there is no white male adult on the farm who is not liable to military duty, and provided affidavit is made that after diligent effort no overseer can be procured for the farm who is not liable to military duty, and provided $500 shall be annually paid into the public treasury by the owner of the farm or plantation. For I am of opinion that supposing the act not to embrace persons who are in service, the petitioner's case fulfills all of the conditions and requirements of the act. He is now, was previous to 15 April, 1862, and has been all the time since 1857 the overseer of a feme sole, etc.
It is insisted on the part of Colonel Mallett that the petitioner was enrolled 11 October, 1862, and has been from that date constructively in the service of the Confederate States, and consequently cannot during that time be considered as having been an overseer.
This position depends on what amounts to an enrollment, and its legal effect. If an enrollment amounts to no more than writing a man's name on a list with others, that was certainly done on 11 October, 1862; but, if it is to have the legal effect of putting a man in the actual or constructive service of the Confederate States, then I am of opinion that what was done on that day was not valid as an (167) enrollment; for the reason that Huie, by force of Dr. Baker's certificate, was excluded from the operation of the conscription act, and was exempted, being ascertained under the rules prescribed by the Secretary of War "to be unfit for military service in the field"; so the commandant of conscripts had no right to have his name put on the roll as a conscript, and instead of doing so, and excusing him until 1 May, 1863, according to the rights of Huie, he should have been sent home, and the proper time for enrolling him would be after he recovered and became fit for military service in the field (if he happened to recover), to be determined under the rules prescribed by the Secretary of War; for the law exempts all persons who shall be held unfit for military service in the field by reason of bodily infirmily, etc., under rules to be prescribed by the Secretary of War, and Dr. Baker, acting under these rules, certified that he is incompetent to perform the duties of a soldier. In other words, he is "unfit for military service in the field." So that he was ipso facto exempted for the time being. In reply to this, it is said the Secretary of War, by the Adjutant General, had prescribed a rule that persons unfit for military service in the field shall be enrolled and may be put to service in the hospital, quartermaster, or on medical staff. So the question is, Had the Secretary of War authority to have men unfit for military service in the field enrolled as conscripts, on the ground that they might be of some service in hospitals, or on the quartermaster's or medical staff? The act exempts all persons held to be unfit for "military service in the field," and clearly no rule prescribed by the Secretary of War could defeat this express provision; for instance, no rule of his could make a man with one arm, who is certified by the surgeon to be unfit for military service in the field, liable as a conscript, although he might answer some purpose about a hospital or be of some service to the quartermaster; because, whether a man is entitled to exemption or not depends on the construction of the act, which it is the privilege of the courts to make, and the authority of the Secretary of War is simply to prescribe rules and make regulations in order to have the fact (168) determined whether a man is or is not fit for military service in the field; for which purpose alone the representatives of the people in Congress assembled, to whose wisdom is confided the trust of making laws, had declared it necessary to take citizens from their homes against their consent. Thus for conscription is carried by our lawmakers, and no further. I was informed by Adjutant Pierce, who returned the body for Colonel Mallet, that this rule had been revoked; but he insists that acts done under it before it was revoked are valid. I do not concur in this position, for the reason stated above, and consider what is called an enrollment on 11 October, 1862, as void and of no legal effect. So the petitioner, according to my view of the case, was employed and acting as the overseer of a feme sole owning, etc., etc., at the time of his arrest, at the passage of the act, on 11 October, 1862, on 16 April, 1862, and for several years previous thereto, and is entitled to exemption. R. M. PEARSON, C. J., S.C.
20 May, 1863.