
    The People ex rel. John P. Leo et al., App’lts, v. David B. Hill, as Commander in Chief, et al., Resp’ts.
    
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed June 2, 1891.)
    
    1. Military law—National guard—Order disbanding a company not beviewable by certiorari.
    An order by the commander in chief, disbanding a company of the National Guard and rendering the commissioned officers supernumerary, is not reviewable by certiorari. The officer whose command is taken away is still an officer and must seek his redress in an appeal to his superior officer.
    3. Same—Constitutional law.
    Section 5 of art. 11 of the state constitution, which declares that “no commissioned officer (in the militia) shall be removed from office unless by the senate on the recommendation of the Governor, stating the grounds on which such removal is recommended, or by the decision of a court martial pursuant to law,” is not violated by such disbanding of a company, as an officer so long as he retains his commission retains his office.
    3. Same—Laws 1883, chap. 899, § 7—Constitutional law.
    Section 7, chap. 299, Laws 1883, authorizing such disbanding, etc., is not unconstitutional as being in conflict with the Federal Constitution or statutes, as that power is implied in the power given by § 1630 of the U. S. Statutes.
    Appeal from order of the supreme court, general term, first department, denying application for writ of certiorari, directed to the commander-in-chief of the state militia, etc., to review an order made by respondent disbanding Co. I of the Twenty-second regiment, National Guard.
    
      Asa Bird Gardiner, for app’lts; Charles F. Tabor, attorney-general, for resp’ts.
    
      
       Affirming 37 N. Y. State Rep., 112.
    
   Andrews, J.

The order of October 10, 1890, disbanding Co. I, of the Twenty-second regiment of the National Guard, and rendering the commissioned officers thereof supernumerary, was made by the executive as commander-in-chief of the military forces of the state. Const., art. 4, § 4. The power to make the order was conferred by the seventh section of the Military Code (Laws of 1883, chap. 299), which authorizes the commander-in-chief to alter, divide, annex, consolidate, disband or reorganize the brigades, regiments, battalions, troops, batteries and companies of the uniformed militia, “ whenever in his judgment the efficiency of the state forces will be thereby increased.”

By the forty-fourth section, as amended by chap. 332 of the Laws of 1888, commissioned officers of disbanded organizations are characterized as “supernumerary,” and they are exempt from military duty, except in case of war, insurrection and rebellion, on condition of reporting themselves annually to the adjutant-general, but they may be assigned by the commander-in-chief to active duty.

Enlisted men, discharged by reason of consolidations or the disbandment of the organization of which they are members, fall back into the general body of citizens as part of the reserve militia of the state, and unless re-enlisted, the time of their prior service, if less than five years, is not counted in determining a claim to exemption from military or jury duty. Military Code, § 13, as amended by act of 1888; also, §§ 1, 145.

The present appeal is by the relators, one the captain and the other a private in Co. I, of the Twenty-second regiment, from the denial of the general term of the first department of' their application for a writ of certiorari to review the validity of the order of October 10, 1890. The granting of a writ of certiorari to review the determination of a body or officer is for the discretion of the general or special term. ■ Code Civ. Pro., § 2127.

This would be a conclusive answer to this appeal except for the claim that the writ was denied by the court for' want of power to issue it in the case presented. But assuming that the order of the general term denying the application proceeded exclusively upon the want of power, we are of opinion that the application was properly denied on the merits, and also for the reason that the order of October 10, 1890, disbanding the company, is not in its nature reviewable on certiorari. It is claimed that the order in question violates that clause of § 5, of art 11, of the state constitution, which declares that “ no commissioned officer (in the militia) shall be removed from office unless by the senate on the recommendation of the governor, 'Stating the grounds on which such removal is recommended, or by the decision of a court martial pursuant to law.” This question has come before the supreme court in two .cases and in both was decided adversely to the .contention of the relators. People v. Scrugham, 25 Barb., 217; People v. Ewen, 17 How., 375. The decisions in those cases proceeded upon satisfactory reasons. The deprivation of an officer of command is not a removal from his office. An officer rendered supernumerary by the disbandment of the organization in which he holds command does not thereby lose his rank or commission. He is relieved from active service until he shall be assigned to duty again by the commander in chief, or is appointed or elected to another command.

The constitution prohibits a removal of an officer from office, except in the method prescribed. But an officer, so long as he retains his commission, retains his office.

The question of the status of supernumerary officers was considered by Caleb Cushing when attorney general of the United States, in the Matter of Virginia Bounty Land Warrants, 6 Opinions of Atty.-Genl., 252. He said: “ The supernumerary officers were not out of commission nor discharged. Out of command and out of service are different things in military sense.”

The word “ office ” used in this section of the constitution is synonymous with “commission.” It is the commission which constitutes a man a military officer. The final sentence of the section, which immediately follows the language quoted, shows the identity in meaning between the two words in the understanding of the body which drafted that instrument The sentence is: “ The present officers of the militia shall hold their commissions subject to removal as above provided.”

The contention that rendering an officer supernumerary under the act of 1883 was a removal from office within the constitution, is, we think, untenable. But the main question argued before us in behalf of the relators relates to the constitutionality of the seventh section of the act of 1883 under the federal constitution and statutes. The claim, in brief, is that power in the state legislature to authorize the disbandment of any part of the military force of the state is excluded by the provisions of the federal constitution and the laws of congress enacted pursuant thereto relating to the militia.

The power conferred upon congress by subd. 16, § 8, art. 1 of the federal constitution, “ to provide for organizing, arming and disciplining the militia, and for governing súch part of them as may be employed in the service of the United States; reserving to the states respectively the appointment of the officers and the authority of training the militia according to the discipline prescribed by congress,” does not exclude state legislation upon the same subject, unless the power conferred on congress is actually exercised.

The power to control and organize the militia resided in the several states at the time of the adoption of the constitution of the United States and was not taken away by that instrument. The power of legislation over the subject, after its adoption, was concurrent in the states and in congress, and the power of state legislation remained until congress, in the exercise of the power conferred upon it by the constitution, had legislated. State legislation in relation to the militia is only excluded when repugnant to, or inconsistent with, federal legislation enacted within the purview of the power conferred by the federal constitution, and there is authority for regarding state legislation as inconsistent, which undertakes to supplement laws passed by congress, covering the subject of the power, by annexing new qualifications or incidents not prescribed by the federal law. The general question was elaborately considered in the case of Houston v. Moore, 5 Wheat, 15, which involved the question of the right of courts martial, organized under the laws of a state, to punish delinquent militia men.

In the absence, therefore, of a law of congress prohibiting it or inconsistent with a state statute which authorizes the disbandment of a company of the National Guard, the order of the general term is not in contravention of the federal constitution. The acts of congress in respect to the militia, commencing with the act of 1792, are now consolidated in the Revised Statutes of the United States. Section 1625, et seq. By these acts the militia comprised the whole population of the several states between the ages of eighteen and forty-five years. They provide for their enrollment and equipment and their organization and arrangement into divisions and other subordinate bodies, and that the discipline prescribed for the regular army shall be observed. The statutes are filled with details which are practically obsolete in the actual situation. The system has grown up and prevails in most of the states of organizing therein, under state authority, certain bodies of men out of the great body of the militia, as a uniformed force known as the National guard. They are part of the militia of the state. Their limited number makes it possible to arm, equip, and discipline them more perfectly, and to bring them to a much higher degree of efficiency as a militia force than can be attained by the great body of the militia They are always available in an emergency requiring the prompt exertion of the military power of the state and nation, and their usefulness was signally proved in the war of the rebellion. The state assumes’the burden of maintaining them. They are subject to the orders of the chief executive of the state as commander in chief, until called into the actual service of the United States. State Const., § 2, art. 2. They are organized and governed pursuant to state statutes, and are disciplined in substantial conformity with the discipline of the army of the United States. Laws 1883, chap. 299, § 8.

We perceive no reason to doubt the power of the state to organize the National guard. Section 1630 of the United States Revised Statutes declares that “ the militia of each*"state shall be arranged into divisions, brigades, regiments, battalions and companies, as the legislature of the state may direct.” The fact that but a portion of the militia have been so organized does not impair the validity of such organizations as have been made.

It is contended, however, that the power of the state to disband an organization once made is not conferred by the section of the United States statute above quoted. Assuming, but without deciding, that authority to disband a company must be found in the Federal statute, we are of opinion that this power is implied in the power given by § 1630 of the United States Statutes above quoted to organize and arrange. It would be a very inconvenient construction to hold that the power to organize did not include the power to rearrange or disband a particular organization, to promote the efficiency of the force. We entertain no doubt that it was the intention of congress that the whole subject of organization and reorganization should remain under the control of the respective states, subject to the power of congress, and that the power conferred on the commander-in-chief by the act of 1880, to disband an existing military organization, is not. in conflict with the constitution or statutes of the United States. The certiorari might have been properly refused on the merits, as was in fact the case, as appears from the opinions below. See Proctor v. Slone, 1 Allen, 193, and opinion of judges annexed.

We are also of'opinion that, assuming the invalidity of the order of October 10, 1890, the question is not reviewable. on certiorari at the instance of the relators. It is the order of the commander-in-chief of the military forces of the state. It is revocable by the authority which issued it. The relators have no such interest as entitles them to the interposition of the civil courts. The order deprives them of no property, subjects them to no penalty, and affects no personal right cognizable in a civil tribunal. The officer who complains is still an officer as before, and the fact that his command is taken away is the result of a military order of his superior, and he must seek his redress in an appeal to him. Deprivation of command is not a civil injury. The private soldier who complains has no vested right which is affected by his discharge from the service. See People v. Roper, 35 N. Y., 629.

If the order is void Company I is not disbanded and the relator is still a member of the company. The order was not a judicial determination and such determination only is reviewable on certiorari. People ex rel. Corwin v. Walter, 68 N. Y., 410; People v. Board of Commissioners, etc., 97 id., 43. The statute authorizing it put the matter in 'the discretion of the commander-in-chief, and because that discretion was confided to his judgment this did not make its exercise a judicial act. Mor does the fact that an act of the legislature is unconstitutional alone authorize the intervention of the judicial power. Where such an act is sought to be enforced against an individual, so as to touch some private right or interest cognizable by courts of law, then he may invoke their aid.

The facts of this case do not, we think, authorize such intervention by certiorari. See Adams, Petitioner, etc., 4 Pick., 25; Grove v. Mott, 46 N. J. L., 328.

The order should, therefore, be affirmed.

All concur.  