Cobb v. Stallings
Cobb v. Stallings
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
delivering the opinion.
The question for consideration in this case, is whether or not Assessors and Collectors of the Confederate tax in the State of Georgia, actually engaged in their respective duties, are subject, under the laws of the State of Georgia, as a portion of the militia thereof, to be called by the Governor into actual service for the purpose of repelling invasion. .
It is very clear that it is the duty of the Confederate Government to protect each and all of the Confederate States against invasion, and that the general conduct and management of the war now in progress, are committed, by the constitution, to that Government. But it is equally clear, that there are emergencies, to meet which, the Goverment of the State pressed by them, may,proprio vigore, call out its militia not previously placed in the Confederate service. It is a subject of profound regret, that controversies should grow out of the cooperation of these two coordinate Governments in so sacred a cause.
In the argument, exemption from the eall of the State Executive has been claimed for the relators on two grounds : 1st, that they had been enrolled as soldiers in the Confederate army, and then detailed for special service, in which they are now engaged, being subject, so soon as that shall have been performed, to be again placed in the ranks as other soldiers. 2d. That they are civil officers of that Government,
My mind has not been seriously impressed by the first position, nor do I believe it influenced materially (if at all) the judgment of the Court. The Contederate Government is invested with both civil and military powers, imposing correlative duties, and although there may be between these, certain relations and dependencies, they are, in their natures, distinct. It is true,' that revenue is necessary to the prosecution of war, but it is equally so to the maintenance of Government in peace; and in the classification of governmental agencies into civil and military, that for the collection of taxes, would seem to appertain to the former class. It is not questioned that an individual may be transferred from the military to. the civil service; but when the transfer shall have been effected, is not the military status terminated, or at least, suspended? A satisfactory test may be found in'the casé before us, the transmutation of a soldier into a collector of taxes. Is he, thus transmuted, accountable to the department of the Treasury, or to that of War ? Is he amenable for official malfeasance to a court martial or to a civil tribunal ? Under existing laws, military service is compulsory; civil service however compensated, only voluntary. Can the Government compel a citizen,, against his will, to fill a civil office by first enroling him in the army, and then detailing him to the duties of that office ? Should not military details have a palpable connection with military operations ? In declining to place the judgment of the Court on this ground it is only intended to intimate as the better and safer opinion, that the appointment of an enrolled soldier to a civil office, operates as a discharge from the army, or at least as a temporary exemption from military service, and consequently, whilst so invested with civil office, courts cannot recognise his military status.
Are the relators entitled to exemption from the call of the Governor, on the second ground, viz: that they are civil
We pause not to inquire, whether the relators be or be not within the general terms of the act or acts of the Legislature of Georgia, under which this call has been made, nor yet, whether or not they be embraced within its exemptions; though we cheerfully bear witness to the manifest intent of
For construction of this clause of the Constitution, see McCullock vs. The State of Maryland, 4th Wheaton. 316. Houston vs. Moore, 5th Wheaton, 1. Osborne and others vs. The U. S. Bank, 9th Wheaton, 738. In the case under consideration, it is not denied that the Congress of the Confederate States are empowered byvthc Constitution to lay and collect taxes; nor, that they have passed laws for that purpose; nor, that the relators have been duly appointed under, those laws, and are actually engaged in the duties of their respective offices ; nor, that the call of the Executive of Georgia, if enforced against them, will interfere with the performance of their duties, and suspend the operation of the revenue laws in tlieiv districts. As between these conflicting laws, (if they be in conflict,) the law of the Confederate States is Supreme, and the law of Georgia must yield. So says the Constitution, and we cannot say otherwise.
Judgments Eeversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Thomas W. Cobb, in Error v. Wm. B. Stallings, in Error B. A. Baldwin, in Error v. John West, in Error
- Status
- Published