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[THEODORE E. ATKINSON v. M. L. STEWART ET AL.](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c9e5?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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23 Phil. 405

[ G.R. No. 8179, November 08, 1912 ]

THEODORE E. ATKINSON, PETITIONER, VS. M. L. STEWART ET AL., RESPONDENTS.

D E C I S I O N

TRENT, J.:

The petitioner in this case, Theodore  E. Atkinson, prays that a writ of habeas corpus be issued by this court requiring the respondents to produce his body, and that upon the hearing of the cause the  respondents  be ordered to release the petitioner and discharge him from custody.

The petitioner alleges that  he is unlawfully detained and restrained of liberty by the  respondents  because he was tried as a second lieutenant the  Philippine  Scouts and sentenced by a court-martial at Cuartel  de Espana, Manila, Philippine Islands, composed entirely of officers of the Regular Army of the United States; that said court-martial was illegally constituted of officers  of the Regular Army and was incompetent and without jurisdiction to try him  as  a second lieutenant of the Philippine Scouts, and that therefore the sentence pronounced against him by said court is null and void.

The petitioner also alleges that  he was tried without due process of law and in violation of the seventy-seventh and. seventy-eighth Articles of and that the sentence pronounced against him by said court is  not only illegal but absolutely null and void.

The Acting Director of Prisons in his answer to the order to show cause the writ of habeas corpus should not issue has admitted that it is true the petitioner is by him detained and restrained of his liberty by virtue of an order issued from the War Department at Washington, D. C,  dated October 25, 1911, in which  it appears  that the petitioner was sentenced by a court- martial in Manila as follows: 

"To be dismissed  the service of the United States and to be confined at hard  labor,  at such place as the reviewing authority may direct for a period of four (4) years."

This order further says: 

"The  sentence having  been  approved by  the convening authority and the record of trial forwarded for the action of the President, under the  On hundred and sixth Article of War, the following are his orders thereon: 

"THE WHITE HOUSE,
    "Washington,  October l4, 1911.

"In the foregoing case of Second Lieutenant Theodore E. Atkinson,  Philippine Scouts, the sentence is confirmed, but so much  of it as relates to confinement at hard labor for a period  of four years is mitigated to confinement at hard labor for a period  of  two years.

"WM. H. TAFT.

"Second  Lieutenant Theodore E.  Atkinson, Philippine Scouts,  ceases to an  officer of the  Army from October 25,  1911, and Bilibid Prison,  Ma Philippine Islands, is designated as the place for his confinement.

"By order of the Secretary of War.

"LEONARD WOOD,
  "Major-General, Chief of Staff"

The prayer of the petitioner and the answer of the respondents to the or to show cause why the writ should not issue, raise the following question of  law:

Are the officers and enlisted men of the Philippine Scouts in the Army of the United States  part of the permanent military establishment of the United States, and as such triable  before courts-martial composed of officers the Regular Army?

Article 77 of the Articles of War,  relied upon by the petitioner, is as follows:

"Officers of the Regular  Army shall not be  competent to sit on courts- martial to try the officers or soldiers of other forces, except as provided article 78."

Article 78 is as follows :

"Officers of the Marine Corps, detached for service with the Army by order of the President, may be associated with officers of the Regular Army on courts-martial for the trial of offenders belonging to the Regular  Army to forces of the Marine Corps so detached;  and in such cases the orders the  senior officer of either  corps, who may be present and duly author shall be obeyed."

Under article 77, Winthrop, in his work on Military Law and Precedents ( 92), says:

"By 'regular army' is to be understood the permanent military establishment especially  distinguished from volunteers, or militia in t service."

On April 22, 1898, about  the beginning of the Spanish- American War, Congress passed an Act entitled "An Act to provide for  temporarily increasing the military establishment of the United  States  in time and for other purposes" (30 Stat.  L., 361), and in section 2 of said A provided as follows:

"*  *  *  That in time  of war the Army shall consist of two branches  w shall be designated,  respectively, as the  Regular Army and the Volunteer Army of the United States."

And in section 3 provided:

"That the Regular Army is the permanent military establishment which i maintained both in peace and war according to law."

And in section 4 provided:

"That the Volunteer Army shall be maintained only during the existence o war, or while war is imminent, and shall be raised and organized, as in Act provided, only after Congress has or shall have authorized the President to raise such a force or to call into the actual service of the United States the Militia of the several States: Provided, That all enlistments  for t Volunteer Army shall be for  a term of two years,  unless sooner  terminated and that all officers and men composing said army shall be discharged fr the service of the United States  when the purposes for which they were called into service  shall have been accomplished, or on the conclusion hostilities."

Thereafter,  on March  2, 1899, Congress passed  an Act entitled "An Act for increasing the efficiency of the Army of the United States, and  for other purposes" (30 Stat. L., 977), and in the enacting  clause provided follows:

"That from and after the date of approval of this Act the Army of the United States shall consist of three major-generals, six brigadier-general regiments of cavalry, seven regiments of artillery, twenty-five regiment infantry, an adjutant-general's department,  an  inspector-general's department, a  judge-advocate-general's department, a quarter- master's department, a subsistence department, a medical department, a  pay department, a corps  of  engineers, an ordnance department, a signal cor thirty chaplains, to be assigned to regiments or posts in  the  discretion the Secretary of War,  the officers of the Record and Pension Office, officers and enlisted men  of the  Army on the retired list,  the profession corps of cadets, an army-service detachment  and band at the United States Military Academy, and  such other officers and enlisted men as ma herein-after be provided for:  *   * *."

It will be  noted that the Act of April 22, 1898, provided for "temporar increasing the military  establishment of the United States in time of w This Act  was passed when the United  States was at war with Spain, and expressly provided for a volunteer army, and "That the Regular Army i permanent military establishment, which is maintained both in peace war according to law."  The Act  of March  2, 1899 was "An Act  for increasing the efficiency of the Army of the United States," and it prov section 12 for raising a force of not more  than 35,000 volunteers, with proviso that such increased regular and  volunteer force should continue service only during the necessity therefor and not later than July 1,190 Act  shows  on its face that it was intended to meet the exigencies of t military service and that its provisions  were temporary  in character, the increased forces  were to be mustered out on or before July 1, 1901. the meantime, on February 2,1901, when the Spanish-American War had ended, and the  Philippine Insurrection was about to terminate,  Congress passed an Act entitled "An  Act to increase the  efficiency of the permanent military establishment of the United States" (31 Stat. L., and in the enacting clause provided as follows:

"That from and after the approval of this Act the Army of the United States, including the existing organizations, shall consist of fifteen r cavalry, a corps of artillery,  thirty regiments of infantry, one lieutenant general, six major-generals,  fifteen brigadier-generals, an adjutant-ge department, an inspector-general's department, a judge-advocate-general' department, a quartermaster's department, a subsistence department,  a medical department, a pay department, a corps of engineers, an ordnance department, a signal corps, the officers of the Record and Pension Office the  chaplains, the officers and enlisted men of the. Army  on the retire the professors,  corps  of cadets, the Army detachments and band at the United States Military Academy,  Indian Scouts  as now authorized by law and such other officers and enlisted men as may hereinafter be provided  *   *  *."

In the Act of April 22,  1898,  above quoted, Congress provided: "That t Regular Army  is the  permanent military establishment, which is m both in  peace and war   according to law." It must be noted the the Act of February 2, 1901, is entitled "An Act to increase the efficient the permanent  military establishment of the United States and that t enacting clause  makes the Indian Scouts, as already authorized by law, part of said permanent military establishment,  and in the same clause m a part thereof "such other officers and enlisted men as may hereinafter provided for."  This Act  further provided in section 36:

"That when in his opinion the conditions in the Philippine Islands justification the President is  authorized to enlist natives of those Islands for the Army, to be organized as scouts, with such officers as he  shall  deem necessary  for their proper control, or as troops or  companies, as author by this Act,  for the Regular Army *  *   *"

The Act of April 22, 1898, provided that in time of war the Army should consist of two branches, the Regular Army and the Volunteer Army.   The Volunteer Army expired by operation of law on July 1, 1901.  Hence, the Army now in time  of peace consists of one branch, the Regular Army. The Regular Army is the permanent military establishment maintained both  in peace and war; the Indian Scouts are now part of the permanent military establishment; the Philippine Scouts exist under the same Act which make Indian Scouts part of said permanent  military establishment, and the Philippine Scouts were actually organized and are being maintained in ti peace as a part of the permanent military establishment of the United States.

The petitioner in this case relies upon the seventy-seventh Article of W above quoted, and the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of McClaughry vs.  Deming (186  U. S., 49) to support contention that the Philippine Scouts are "other forces" and not of the Regular Army. The Deming case was first filed in  the Circuit Cou the United States for the district of  Kansas, which court denied the pe of Peter C.  Deming for a writ of habeas corpus.  The facts were as follows:  Deming was  on.  March 29, 1900, a captain in the subsistence department in the Volunteer Army of the United States.  On t date General  Shafter, a major-general of the  Volunteer Army, ordered that a  general  court-martial composed  entirely of officers of the Reg Army should convene "for the trial  of  Capt. Peter  C. Deming, assistan commissary of subsistence,  U.   S.  Volunteers."   The  court-martial called tried Deming upon some charge and sentenced him to dismissal from the service of the United  States,  and to confinement in the penitentia three years, and this sentence was approved by the  Secretary of War and confirmed by the President of the United States.  Deming was confined in penitentiary at  Leavenworth, Kans., under a mittimus based on this judgment.  Deming averred that the sentence was void, and that he was illegally deprived of his liberty because, among other things, the court which condemned him was not regularly  constituted or organized, in that was composed entirely of officers of the Regular Army who were expressly prohibited to  hear or determine any charge against  an officer of the Volunteer Army under the Seventy-seventh Article of War.   (See Deming vs., McClaughry, 113 Fed., 639, 640.)  The Circuit Court of the Unit denied the petition of Deming for the writ of habeas corpus, and Deming appealed to the Circuit  Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit,  and  in a  v elaborate opinion by  Judge Sanborn that court sustained Deming's contended and held as follows: 

"Officers of the Regular Army are incompetent, under the Seventy-seventh Article of War, to try the  officers or soldiers  of the  volunteer forc under the acts of April 22, 1898,  and March 2, 1899 (30 Stat, 361, c. 977, c. 352)."

In  the course of the decision  of the Circuit Court of Appeals, after reviewing the history of legislation  relating to the matter of the regu forces and the volunteer forces of the Army of the United States, and th trial of officers and soldiers of said forces before courts-martial,. Ju Sanborn said (p. 644): 

"The decisions  of the courts had  recognized the  two forces as  difference the one as temporary, called forth by the exigency of the time, to ser during war or  its imminence, and then to be dissolved into its original elements; the other as permanent and perpetual, to  be maintained in pea and in war."

After an elaborate discussion of the question of whether or not the Volunteer Army raised under the acts of April 22, 1898,  and March 2, 18 were  part of the Regular Army, Judge Sanborn stated the conclusions of the court as follows (p. 649) : 

"These  facts and the considerations to which we  have adverted have irresistibly forced our minds to the  conclusion that the volunteer force under the Act of  1899 was not the same force as the Regular Army, but that it was one of the 'other forces' specified in article 77, and that officers of the Regular Army were forbidden by that article to sit on  a court-martial  to  try the  petitioner, who was an officer of the volunteer force raised under the Act of 1899."

The decision of the  Circuit Court of Appeals was rendered  on  February 10,  1912.   An  appeal  was promptly taken to the Supreme  Court of the United States, where the case was argued on April 28-29, 1902, and was decided on May 19, 1902, affirming the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals.   (See McClaughry vs.Deming, 186 U. S., 49.) An examination the decision of  the Supreme Court written by Mr. Justice Peckham will s that the court considered only the Act of April 22, 1898 (30 Stat., 361) the Act of March  2, 1899  (30 Stat., 977), and found that in said Acts distinction was kept up in the mind of Congress between  the Regular Arm and Volunteer Army of the United States, and that the declaration of sec 2 of the Act of 1898, which provides that in time of war the army shall consist of two branches  which  shall be designated, respectively, as the Regular Army and the Volunteer Army of the United States, is a plain recognition by Congress  of the difference between the two forces.   The court said  (pp. 59, 60) : 

"The Act of 1899  does not assume  to repeal  that  of 1898, excepting some specific provisions thereof,  such  as are mentioned in section eleven the Act of 1899.  The balance of the earlier Act remains in force, except to any  provision which may be in conflict with the Act  of 1899.  Upon particular matter of a distinction  between the Regular Army and the Volunteer Army, there is  no inconsistency between  the  two Acts,  and therefore the Act  of  1898 on that  subject  remains in connection with of 1899."

In conclusion on this point the court said (p. 62): 

"We conclude that the Acts of 1898 and  1899 still left the Volunteer Ar as a separate or other force from the Regular Army of the United States.

As before observed, the Act of 1898 provided for of the United St in  time "temporarily increasing the military establishment o of the Act of 1800 was an Act "for increasing the efficiency  of the Army the United States;" and both acts  provided for the organization and maintenance of temporary troops called the Volunteer Army of the United States; but the Act of February 2, 1901, was passed for a very difference purpose, as' shown by its title and its provisions.  It is entitled "An increase  the efficiency of  the permanent military  establishment of t United States."  The Volunteer Army, which had been organized and maintained under the Acts of 1898 and 1899, was  under the law to be mustered out on or before July 1, 1901, and  Congress in the Act of February 2,1901, intended to increase the efficiency of the "permane military establishment of the United States," that is, the Regular

There is and can be no Volunteer Army in time of peace. The very acts providing for the organization of a Volunteer Army show on their face th the Volunteer Army was of a temporary character.   Congress did not make the Philippine Scouts a temporary or volunteer force, and they do not correspond to State militia, but are a part  of the United States Army u an Act of Congress that relates solely to the permanent military establishment.  While said Act does not purport to provide for temporary forces in the Army of the United States, it does provide for a "provisio regiment"  of infantry for service in Porto Rico;  but this regiment was fact, treated by Congress as  part of the permanent military establishment in  time of  peace, and in the appropriation bill of  March 2, 1903 (32 934), under the heading "Philippine Scouts," Congress provided "that cit Porto Rico shall be eligible for enlistment in the Regular Army, and the Rico  regiment may be ordered for service outside of the  Island of Port Rico;" and by section 1 of the Act of May 27, 1908 (35  Stat., 392), Con provided that "on and after the 30th day  of June, 1908, the Porto Rico provisional  regiment of infantry shall be designated the Porto  Rico Regiment of infantry of the United  States Army;" that is  to  say, the "provisional"  was dropped from the name of the regiment and its permanent  character  in  the  military establishment made certain.

It therefore appears that the distinction that  is  made in the Articles between officers of the Regular Army and officers of other forces, which distinction is applicable to the Volunteer Army organized under the Acts 1898 and 1899, does not exist between the Regular Army  and the permanent forces maintained in time  of  peace, called the Philippine  S in the United States  Army.   All  the forces provided for  in the  Act February 2, 1901, are parts of the "permanent military establishment, wh maintained both in peace and war," which was the definition of "Regular Army" given in section 3 of  the Act of April 22, 1898.

In this connection it may be noted that section  4 of the Act of April 2 1898, provides : 

*  *  *  That all enlistments for the  Volunteer Army shall be for a term two years, unless sooner terminated, and that all officers  and men composing said army  shall be discharged  from the service of the United States when the purposes for which they were called into service shall h been accomplished, or on the conclusion of hostilities."

And the Act of March 2, 1899, in section 12, provides: 

"*   *   *  That  such increased regular and  volunteer force shall continue service only during the necessity therefor, and not later than July 1,  1901."

The Act of February 2, 1901, contains no such provision or any similar li as to the enlistment of Philippine Scouts; in other words, the Philippine are part of the permanent military establishment of the United States, an enlisted in the same manner and for the same term as other soldiers of the United States Army under existing law, and are now and will continue to b portion of the United States Army, maintained  both  in  peace  and war, until  action by Congress  providing  for their  discharge or discontinuation same as might be the case with cavalry or infantry regiments.

This is the interpretation  given  by  the President  and the Secretary o to the Acts of Congress relating to the Army.  The President, in review and record in Atkinson's case,  after his trial as a second lieutenant of Philippine Scouts in the United States Army by a court-martial consisting of infantry cavalry, and  artillery officers, as well as in reviewing other cases  of kind,  has given his sanction to this interpretation of the law.

In the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Deming vs.  McClaughry (113 Fed.,  641), Judge Sanborn said: 

"But the opinions of the officers of  the  executive  department of a Government relative to the construction of a statute whose execution has been  intrusted to them justly command  and should receive the careful consideration of the courts, and in doubtful  cases they should  be permit to lead the way to their decisions.  Their opinions ought not to be overruled or disregarded unless upon a deliberate and  careful review of the decision  which they  render it clearly appears that they are tainted with error. the other hand, the decisions of these officers are not controlling or co upon the courts.  It is the function and duty of the judicial department Government to construe its statutes and to declare their  meaning.  That the courts may  not renounce or abandon to others,  and in its discharge they must exercise their own independent judgments, guided only by the established principles of the law and the recognized canons  of  interpretation. While the opinions  of  the officers of the executive department of the Government may be permitted to lead the way to the proper construction of ambiguous  statutes intrusted to them to  enforce, yet where the  words the act are plain,  and their meaning is clear, these must prevail."

On August 25, 1902, upon hearing the result of the appeal to  the Supreme Court of the United States in the  case of McClaughry  vs.  Deming U.  S., 49),  the commanding general in Manila sent a cablegram  to Washington,  as follows:

"MANILA, P. I., August 25, 1902.

"AGWAR, Washington.

"Shall we  continue to try officers  enlisted men  Philippine Scouts, co composed of regular officers?

*           *           *           *           *           *

"CHAFFEE."

And the following reply was received:

"WASHINGTON, September 4, 1902.

"CHAFFEE, Manila.

"Acting  Secretary  of War decides officers and enlisted men,  Philippine Scouts, will continue to be tried by courts composed of regular officers.

"CARTER."

For more than ten  years this construction  of the Act of February 2, 19 has continued.

It can not be  said  that this Act clearly shows that  the Scouts are "other forces."  The question,  at  least, is very doubtful.   Consequently, the opinions of the officers of the executive department relative  to  the construction of said Act should not be disturbed under the circumstances These officers have been  directly entrusted  with the execution  of the Act and the procedure which has been established and followed so long should not be set aside.  These executive officers, in  reaching their conclusions, no doubt took  into consideration the whole of the Act, and especially that part wherein it  is stated that "the  President is authority enlist natives of those Islands  for service in the Army." The real  reason the Seventy-seventh Article of War declares that officers  of  the  Regular Army are not competent to sit on courts-martial to try the officers an soldiers of other forces does not exist in the case at bar, that reason as stated by the court (p.  644) in the case of Deming vs. McClau (supra), that -

"The officers  of the Regular Army are generally taught in their youth laws that govern the  regular force, that high  regard for truth and  h and  that  prompt  and exact obedience to orders which condition its hi efficiency. The officers of the volunteers spend their earlier days wit knowledge of military law,  preparing for agriculture, mechanical, mercantile or professional  pursuits, unaccustomed to military  discipline, and ex from  the controlling commands of superiors.  The officers of the Reg Army make the discipline of that army, the preparation for war, and  wa itself the work of their lives.   Their hopes and  their  aspirations excel  in  this,  their  chosen profession, and upon it they rely for t livelihood.  The officers  of the volunteers look to civil  pursuits fo ultimate success and sustenance.  They leave these pursuits for a few s months at the call of their country to subdue a rebellion against  or t defeat an enemy of their nation. They  seek not so much to discipline t army they join, and to prepare it for war, as  to speedily conclude the restore  peace, and return to their chosen pursuits.   Their hopes and aspirations center, not in their temporary occupation, but in  the  pursuits they  have left, and to which they are soon to  return.  More than  all the officers of the Regular Army know the unwritten code of military thought and action, and the  habit of the trained soldier's life, and k them so well that their practice is  involuntary, while a neglect of the seems inexcusable.   The officers of the volunteer force come to the army in ignorance of this code and custom.   They have short time to learn o to practice them.   Their invariable practice does  not always seem to essential to the defeat of the enemy and a speedy peace, and the heinousness of a disregard of some of their requirements  does not alwa impress' them.   So it is that the thoughts, actions, habits, and ambit the officers of the Regular Army differ widely from those of the volunteer Many  things in the life of the soldier  seem  vital to the former that small importance in the eyes  of the latter. Many  military offenses seem heinous  to the  former that appear venal to the latter  *  *  *."

The  decision in McClaughry vs.  Deming was based upon (1)  the provisions of law which prohibited the trial of members of the Voluntee Army by courts-martial composed of Regular Army officers, and (2) an exposition of the reasons underlying such legislation.  The law  application that case, as remarked by Judge Sanborn, was  so plain that "the question does not seem difficult, nor the true answer to it doubtful."   As so admirably set forth in his  decision, the whole  trend  of legislation, decision, and  practice has been to sharply distinguish between the Reg Army and the militia or volunteers in the matter of courts-martial. The question raised by the petitioner is, we believe, an open one as  to the courts.   We have attempted to show that both the legislative and executive branches  of the  Government have ruled that the organization to which petitioner belonged is a part of the Regular  Army,   In the quotation from McClaughry vs. Deming (supra) are set forth many cogent reasons for the position taken  in that case.  The officer of the Regular Army, because of his totally different conception of military s is shown to be  unfit to sit  in judgment upon the offenses of the Volunteer Army officer.  Military service is the vocation of the one, avocation  of the other. To the one obedience to orders  is  an end; to the  other a means to an end.  The one realizes the full significance o soldier's creed; the other is handicapped by his unfamiliarity with that creed. These are some of the potent arguments which impelled the various departments of the Government to recognize the unjustness and impracticability of allowing officers of the Regular Army to sit on court martial for the trial of Volunteer Army officers.  In the case at bar, advances an  ingenious interpretation of the law which will exclude the Philippine Scouts from the Regular Army, classify them as "other force within, the  meaning of  the Seventy-seventh Article of War, and free h client from a prison sentence.  His only argument in support of this proposition  is the technical one that the law so reads.   Were such the ca that reason  alone would be sufficient for us to acquiesce in  that interpretation of  the law.  It would be unnecessary nor would we ask o seek for other reasons for supporting counsel's contention.  But counsel interpretation of the law is at best a doubtful one.   Laws are, as a r based upon reason and justice.  The underlying principle of a law, the motives of the legislature in enacting it, and the effect of its practice operation, are  all matters properly to  be considered  where its  language is so  far ambiguous as to require the application of judicial rules of construction  and interpretation.   Counsel  has invited our attention of these  matters  but he has cited the case of Deming vs. McClaughry Are the underlying principles of that case  applicable to the petitioner.  The Philippine Scouts, on their organization, were officere above the of first lieutenant by officers of the Regular Army.  Its staff officer first and second lieutenants were selected from non-commissioned officer enlisted men of the  Regular Army with not less than two years' service by members of the volunteer army who had served subsequent to a specified date.  The Articles of War and the regulations governing th Regular Army were applicable to the Scouts from the outset and are stil applicable.   The same drill regulations are used by both forces.   The equipment of the two forces is very similar.  They are paid from a comm fund by  the  same  force of  paymasters.   (33 Stats.  L., 259.) Those enlisted men of the Regular Army who become officers of the Philippine Scouts receive credit for such service on the same basis as if they were serving in the Regular Army in computing the date of their retirement f the service. Counsel states that the petitioner himself served as private corporal,  and sergeant in Company B of  the  Twentieth United States Infantry.  With all these points in common, can it be said  that a diff or higher conception of discipline or duty prevails in the one organization than in the  other?   Is  it reasonable to presume  that  the commanding officers of the Scouts, fresh from their experience in the Army and tea the  same  regulations to their troops that they themselves were  taught respect and obey, will place a different  or laxer  interpretation upon regulations  in their new positions?  Such  a presumption can  not be indulged in.  The discipline is  the same,  and the punishments for disobedience are the same,   No officer of the Scout organization can consistently plead his ignorance of  or unfamiliarity with the strict m code when he comes  from the organization  which has developed and carried into practice that code which he was trained to obey long before he entered upon his duties as a Scout officer, and which, in his new postion he is obliged to respect and enforce.   The reason of the rule promulgation by  article 77 of the Articles of War, so ably expounded by Judge Sanborn, is not applicable to the Philippine Scouts.   The Philippine S a part of the Regular Army of the United States. (Digest of Opinions of Judge-Advocate-General  of United States Army, citing file C-19272, Mar 14, 1906.)

For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the Philippine Scouts are not "other  forces" within  the meaning of the Seventy-seventh  Article of The  petition is  therefore denied, with costs.

Arellano,  C. J., Torres, Mapa, Johnson, and Carson, JJ., concur.


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