State v. Burton
State v. Burton
Opinion of the Court
This case is a criminal complaint charging the respondent with operating a motor vehicle on Thames street, a public highway in the city of Newport, at an unreasonable rate of speed.
The respondent is a machinist mate, second class, regularly enlisted in the United States Naval Reserve Force, and said alleged violation of law occurred while the respondent was on duty as a dispatch driver. The case is before us upon the certification by the Superior Court of a question of law raised by the Attorney General.- The question certified is as follows:
“1. Is a machinist mate, second, class, regularly enlisted in the United States Naval Reserve Force, while on duty as a dispatch driver, and acting -under the specific instructions of his superior officer to proceed with all possible dispatch and assumed by the officer to necessitate the violation of the 'speed laws, and which instructions he was obliged to obey, in a matter by said officer deemed to be of urgency and in a matter appertaining to the conduct of the war between the United States and Germany, amenable to the laws of the State of Rhode Island for violating the speed laws under the provisions of Chapter 298, Section 5 of the General Laws?”
The respondent is a sailor in the service of the United States, and was bound to obey the lawful orders of his superior officer. The order in question, although it called for a disregard of the ordinary rules of conduct, was not illegal in the circumstances, but on its face was one which was justified by the rules of war and the situation then existing at Newport. It should protect the respondent.
In the argument before us it was suggested that the prosecution of this complaint was in some measure forced upon the police authorities of Newport in an effort to restrain the inconsiderate use of motor vehicles in the congested streets of that city by a few men in the military and naval service, who have appeared to consider that their connection with that service relieved them from an observance of the ordinary highway and traffic regulation of the State and city. If such condition exists this opinion should in no degree foster such false and un-American notion. Such an attitude is undoubtedly contrary to the spirit of the general orders and regulations of the United States Army and Navy. The principle which we have enunciated in this opinion is without application to cases which show a failure to comply with our laws and ordinances when no military necessity exists. In the case In re Waite, 81 Fed. 359, the court, after stating the proposition that in matters within the sole control of the government of the United States its officers carrying forward such matters should not be interfered with by criminal proceedings instituted in the State court, said: “By this it is not meant to assert that because a person is an officer or agent of the federal government he is thereby excepted out from the jursidiction of the state or the binding force of its laws. The mere fact that when the acts by him *307 done were done he was an officer of the United States, charged with certain duties to that government, will not afford him immunity from prosecution under the laws of the state, nor will the mere fact that he claims that the acts done were within the line of his official duty afford him protection, if the acts are such as to show that the claimed immunity is a mere subterfuge, and that under no fair consideration of his official duty could he have assumed that he was acting in his official capacity when the acts complained of were done by him.”
The question certified, as we have interpreted its intent and as we have reframed it, in our opinion should be answered in the negative and we so decide.
The papers in the case with this decision certified thereon are sent back to the Superior Court for further proceedings.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State v. William Burton.
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published