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Mr. Justice Black delivered the opinion of
the Court.
The petitioner, an American citizen of Japanese
descent, was convicted in a federal district court for remaining
in San Leandro, California, a “Military Area,” contrary
to Civilian Exclusion Order No. 34 of the Commanding General
of the Western Command, U.S. Army, which directed that after
May 9, 1942, all persons of Japanese ancestry should be excluded
from that area. No question was raised as to petitioner's loyalty
to the United States. The Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed,
and the importance of the constitutional question involved caused
us to grant certiorari.
It should be noted, to begin with, that all
legal restrictions which curtail the civil rights of a single
racial group are immediately suspect. That is not to say that
all such restrictions are unconstitutional. It is to say that
courts must subject them to the most rigid scrutiny. Pressing
public necessity may sometimes justify the existence of such
restrictions; racial antagonism never can.
In the instant case prosecution of the petitioner
was begun by information charging violation of an Act of Congress,
of March 21, 1942, 56 Stat. 173, 18 U.S.C.A. 97a, which provides
that
“... whoever shall enter, remain in,
leave, or commit any act in any military area or military zone
prescribed, under the authority of an Executive order of the
President, by the Secretary of War, or by any military commander
designated by the Secretary of War, contrary to the restrictions
applicable to any such area or zone or contrary to the order
of the Secretary of War or any such military commander, shall,
if it appears that he knew or should have known of the existence
and extent of the restrictions or order and that his act was
in violation thereof, be guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction
shall be liable to a fine of not to exceed $5,000 or to imprisonment
for not more than one year, or both, for each offense.”
Exclusion Order No. 34, which the petitioner
knowingly and admittedly violated was one of a number of military
orders and proclamations, all of which were substantially based
upon Executive Order No. 9066, 7 Fed.Reg. 1407. That order,
issued after we were at war with Japan, declared that “the
successful prosecution of the war requires every possible protection
against espionage and against sabotage to national-defense material,
national-defense premises, and national-defense utilities.”
One of the series of orders and proclamations,
a curfew order, which like the exclusion order here was promulgated
pursuant to Executive Order 9066, subjected all persons of Japanese
ancestry in prescribed West Coast military areas to remain in
their residences from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. As is the case with the
exclusion order here, that prior curfew order was designed as
a “protection against espionage and against sabotage.”
In Kiyoshi Hirabayashi v. United States, 320 U.S. 81, 63 S.Ct.
1375, we sustained a conviction obtained for violation of the
curfew order. The Hirabayashi conviction and this one thus rest
on the same 1942 Congressional Act and the same basic executive
and military orders, all of which orders were aimed at the twin
dangers of espionage and sabotage.
The 1942 Act was attacked in the Hirabayashi
case as an unconstitutional delegation of power; it was contended
that the curfew order and other orders on which it rested were
beyond the war powers of the Congress, the military authorities
and of the President, as Commander in Chief of the Army; and
finally that to apply the curfew order against none but citizens
of Japanese ancestry amounted to a constitutionally prohibited
discrimination solely on account of race. To these questions,
we gave the serious consideration which their importance justified.
We upheld the curfew order as an exercise of the power of the
government to take steps necessary to prevent espionage and
sabotage in an area threatened by Japanese attack.
In the light of the principles we announced
in the Hirabayashi case, we are unable to conclude that it was
beyond the war power of Congress and the Executive to exclude
those of Japanese ancestry from the West Coast war area at the
time they did. True, exclusion from the area in which one's
home is located is a far greater deprivation than constant confinement
to the home from 8 p.m. to 6 a.m. Nothing short of apprehension
by the proper military authorities of the gravest imminent danger
to the public safety can constitutionally justify either. But
exclusion from a threatened area, no less than curfew, has a
definite and close relationship to the prevention of espionage
and sabotage. The military authorities, charged with the primary
responsibility of defending our shores, concluded that curfew
provided inadequate protection and ordered exclusion. They did
so, as pointed out in our Hirabayashi opinion, in accordance
with Congressional authority to the military to say who should,
and who should not, remain in the threatened areas.
In this case the petitioner challenges the
assumptions upon which we rested our conclusions in the Hirabayashi
case. He also urges that by May 1942, when Order No. 34 was
promulgated, all danger of Japanese invasion of the West Coast
had disappeared. After careful consideration of these contentions
we are compelled to reject them.
Here, as in the Hirabayashi case, supra, 320
U.S. at page 99, 63 S.Ct. at page 1385, “... we cannot
reject as unfounded the judgment of the military authorities
and of Congress that there were disloyal members of that population,
whose number and strength could not be precisely and quickly
ascertained. We cannot say that the war-making branches of the
Government did not have ground for believing that in a critical
hour such persons could not readily be isolated and separately
dealt with, and constituted a menace to the national defense
and safety, which demanded that prompt and adequate measures
be taken to guard against it.”
Like curfew, exclusion of those of Japanese
origin was deemed necessary because of the presence of an unascertained
number of disloyal members of the group, most of whom we have
no doubt were loyal to this country. It was because we could
not reject the finding of the military authorities that it was
impossible to bring about an immediate segregation of the disloyal
from the loyal that we sustained the validity of the curfew
order as applying to the whole group. In the instant case, temporary
exclusion of the entire group was rested by the military on
the same ground. The judgment that exclusion of the whole group
was for the same reason a military imperative answers the contention
that the exclusion was in the nature of group punishment based
on antagonism to those of Japanese origin. That there were members
of the group who retained loyalties to Japan has been confirmed
by investigations made subsequent to the exclusion. Approximately
five thousand American citizens of Japanese ancestry refused
to swear unqualified allegiance to the United States and to
renounce allegiance to the Japanese Emperor, and several thousand
evacuees requested repatriation to Japan.
We uphold the exclusion order as of the time
it was made and when the petitioner violated it. Cf. Chastleton
Corporation v. Sinclair, 264 U.S. 543, 547, 44 S.Ct. 405, 406;
Block v. Hirsh, 256 U.S. 135, 154, 155 S., 41 S.Ct. 458, 459,
16 A.L.R. 165. In doing so, we are not unmindful of the hardships
imposed by it upon a large group of American citizens. Cf. Ex
parte Kumezo Kawato, 317 U.S. 69, 73, 63 S.Ct. 115, 117. But
hardships are part of war, and war is an aggregation of hardships.
All citizens alike, both in and out of uniform, feel the impact
of war in greater or lesser measure. Citizenship has its responsibilities
as well as its privileges, and in time of war the burden is
always heavier. Compulsory exclusion of large groups of citizens
from their homes, except under circumstances of direst emergency
and peril, is inconsistent with our basic governmental institutions.
But when under conditions of modern warfare our shores are threatened
by hostile forces, the power to protect must be commensurate
with the threatened danger.
It is argued that on May 30, 1942, the date
the petitioner was charged with remaining in the prohibited
area, there were conflicting orders outstanding, forbidding
him both to leave the area and to remain there. Of course, a
person cannot be convicted for doing the very thing which it
is a crime to fail to do. But the outstanding orders here contained
no such contradictory commands.
There was an order issued March 27, 1942,
which prohibited petitioner and others of Japanese ancestry
from leaving the area, but its effect was specifically limited
in time “until and to the extent that a future proclamation
or order should so permit or direct.” 7 Fed.Reg. 2601.
That “future order,” the one for violation of which
petitioner was convicted, was issued May 3, 1942, and it did
direct exclusion from the area of all persons of Japanese ancestry,
before 12 o'clock noon, May 9; furthermore it contained a warning
that all such persons found in the prohibited area would be
liable to punishment under the March 21, 1942 Act of Congress.
Consequently, the only order in effect touching the petitioner's
being in the area on May 30, 1942, the date specified in the
information against him, was the May 3 order which prohibited
his remaining there, and it was that same order, which he stipulated
in his trial that he had violated, knowing of its existence.
There is therefore no basis for the argument that on May 30,
1942, he was subject to punishment, under the March 27 and May
3rd orders, whether he remained in or left the area.
It does appear, however, that on May 9, the
effective date of the exclusion order, the military authorities
had already determined that the evacuation should be effected
by assembling together and placing under guard all those of
Japanese ancestry, at central points, designated as “assembly
centers,” in order “to insure the orderly evacuation
and resettlement of Japanese voluntarily migrating from military
area No. 1 to restrict and regulate such migration.” Public
Proclamation No. 4, 7 Fed.Reg. 2601. And on May 19, 1942, eleven
days before the time petitioner was charged with unlawfully
remaining in the area, Civilian Restrictive Order No. 1, 8 Fed.Reg.
982, provided for detention of those of Japanese ancestry in
assembly or relocation centers. It is now argued that the validity
of the exclusion order cannot be considered apart from the orders
requiring him, after departure from the area, to report and
to remain in an assembly or relocation center. The contention
is that we must treat these separate orders as one and inseparable;
that, for this reason, if detention in the assembly or relocation
center would have illegally deprived the petitioner of his liberty,
the exclusion order and his conviction under it cannot stand.
We are thus being asked to pass at this time
upon the whole subsequent detention program in both assembly
and relocation centers, although the only issues framed at the
trial related to petitioner's remaining in the prohibited area
in violation of the exclusion order. Had petitioner here left
the prohibited area and gone to an assembly center we cannot
say either as a matter of fact or law, that his presence in
that center would have resulted in his detention in a relocation
center. Some who did report to the assembly center were not
sent to relocation centers, but were released upon condition
that they remain outside the prohibited zone until the military
orders were modified or lifted. This illustrates that they pose
different problems and may be governed by different principles.
The lawfulness of one does not necessarily determine the lawfulness
of the others. This is made clear when we analyze the requirements
of the separate provisions of the separate orders. These separate
requirements were that those of Japanese ancestry (1) depart
from the area; (2) report to and temporarily remain in an assembly
center; (3) go under military control to a relocation center
there to remain for an indeterminate period until released conditionally
or unconditionally by the military authorities. Each of these
requirements, it will be noted, imposed distinct duties in connection
with the separate steps in a complete evacuation program. Had
Congress directly incorporated into one Act the language of
these separate orders, and provided sanctions for their violations,
disobedience of any one would have constituted a separate offense.
Cf. Blockburger v. United States, 284 U.S. 299, 304, 52 S.Ct.
180, 182. There is no reason why violations of these orders,
insofar as they were promulgated pursuant to congressional enactment,
should not be treated as separate offenses.
The Endo case (Ex parte Mitsuye Endo) 323
U.S. 283, 65 S.Ct. 208, graphically illustrates the difference
between the validity of an order to exclude and the validity
of a detention order after exclusion has been effected.
Since the petitioner has not been convicted
of failing to report or to remain in an assembly or relocation
center, we cannot in this case determine the validity of those
separate provisions of the order. It is sufficient here for
us to pass upon the order which petitioner violated. To do more
would be to go beyond the issues raised, and to decide momentous
questions not contained within the framework of the pleadings
or the evidence in this case. It will be time enough to decide
the serious constitutional issues which petitioner seeks to
raise when an assembly or relocation order is applied or is
certain to be applied to him, and we have its terms before us.
Some of the members of the Court are of the
view that evacuation and detention in an Assembly Center were
inseparable. After May 3, 1942, the date of Exclusion Order
No. 34, Korematsu was under compulsion to leave the area not
as he would choose but via an Assembly Center. The Assembly
Center was conceived as a part of the machinery for group evacuation.
The power to exclude includes the power to do it by force if
necessary. And any forcible measure must necessarily entail
some degree of detention or restraint whatever method of removal
is selected. But whichever view is taken, it results in holding
that the order under which petitioner was convicted was valid.
It is said that we are dealing here with the
case of imprisonment of a citizen in a concentration camp solely
because of his ancestry, without evidence or inquiry concerning
his loyalty and good disposition towards the United States.
Our task would be simple, our duty clear, were this a case involving
the imprisonment of a loyal citizen in a concentration camp
because of racial prejudice. Regardless of the true nature of
the assembly and relocation centers-and we deem it unjustifiable
to call them concentration camps with all the ugly connotations
that term implies-we are dealing specifically with nothing but
an exclusion order. To cast this case into outlines of racial
prejudice, without reference to the real military dangers which
were presented, merely confuses the issue. Korematsu was not
excluded from the Military Area because of hostility to him
or his race. He was excluded because we are at war with the
Japanese Empire, because the properly constituted military authorities
feared an invasion of our West Coast and felt constrained to
take proper security measures, because they decided that the
military urgency of the situation demanded that all citizens
of Japanese ancestry be segregated from the West Coast temporarily,
and finally, because Congress, reposing its confidence in this
time of war in our military leaders-as inevitably it must-determined
that they should have the power to do just this. There was evidence
of disloyalty on the part of some, the military authorities
considered that the need for action was great, and time was
short. We cannot-by availing ourselves of the calm perspective
of hindsight-now say that at that time these actions were unjustified.
Mr. Justice Frankfurter, concurring.
According to my reading of Civilian Exclusion
Order No. 34, it was an offense for Korematsu to be found in
Military Area No. 1, the territory wherein he was previously
living, except within the bounds of the established Assembly
Center of that area. Even though the various orders issued by
General DeWitt be deemed a comprehensive code of instructions,
their tenor is clear and not contradictory. They put upon Korematsu
the obligation to leave Military Area No. 1, but only by the
method prescribed in the instructions, i.e., by reporting to
the Assembly Center. I am unable to see how the legal considerations
that led to the decision in Kiyoshi Hirabayashi v. United States,
320 U.S. 81, 63 S.Ct. 1375, fail to sustain the military order
which made the conduct now in controversy a crime. And so I
join in the opinion of the Court, but should like to add a few
words of my own.
The provisions of the Constitution which confer
on the Congress and the President powers to enable this country
to wage war are as much part of the Constitution as provisions
looking to a nation at peace. And we have had recent occasion
to quote approvingly the statement of former Chief Justice Hughes
that the war power of the Government is “the power to
wage war successfully.” Hirabayashi v. United States,
supra, 320 U.S. at page 93, 63 S.Ct. at page 1382 and see Home
Bldg. & L. Ass'n v. Blaisdell, 290 U.S. 398, 426, 54 S.Ct.
231, 235, 88 A.L.R. 1481. Therefore, the validity of action
under the war power must be judged wholly in the context of
war. That action is not to be stigmatized as lawless because
like action in times of peace would be lawless. To talk about
a military order that expresses an allowable judgment of war
needs by those entrusted with the duty of conducting war as
“an unconstitutional order” is to suffuse a part
of the Constitution with an atmosphere of unconstitutionality.
The respective spheres of action of military authorities and
of judges are of course very different. But within their sphere,
military authorities are no more outside the bounds of obedience
to the Constitution than are judges within theirs. “The
war power of the United States, like its other powers ... is
subject to applicable constitutional limitations,” Hamilton
v. Kentucky Distilleries, Co., 251 U.S. 146, 156, 40 S.Ct. 106,
108. To recognize that military orders are “reasonably
expedient military precautions” in time of war and yet
to deny them constitutional legitimacy makes of the Constitution
an instrument for dialetic subtleties not reasonably to be attributed
to the hard-headed Framers, of whom a majority had had actual
participation in war. If a military order such as that under
review does not transcend the means appropriate for conducting
war, such action by the military is as constitutional as would
be any authorized action by the Interstate Commerce Commission
within the limits of the constitutional power to regulate commerce.
And being an exercise of the war power explicitly granted by
the Constitution for safeguarding the national life by prosecuting
war effectively, I find nothing in the Constitution which denies
to Congress the power to enforce such a valid military order
by making its violation an offense triable in the civil courts.
Compare Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brimson, 154 U.S.
447, 14 S.Ct. 1125; Id., 155 U.S. 3, 15 S.Ct. 19, and Monongahela
Bridge Co. v. United States, 216 U.S. 177, 30 S.Ct. 356. To
find that theConstitution does not forbid the military measures
now complained of does not carry with it approval of that which
Congress and the Executive did. That is their business, not
ours.
Mr. Justice Roberts, dissenting.
I dissent, because I think the indisputable
facts exhibit a clear violation of Constitutional rights.
This is not a case of keeping people off the
streets at night as was Kiyoshi Hirabayashi v. United States,
320 U.S. 81, 63 S.Ct. 1375, nor a case of temporary exclusion
of a citizen from an area for his own safety or that of the
community, nor a case of offering him an opportunity to go temporarily
out of an area where his presence might cause danger to himself
or to his fellows. On the contrary, it is the case of convicting
a citizen as a punishment for not submitting to imprisonment
in a concentration camp, based on his ancestry, and solely because
of his ancestry, without evidence or inquiry concerning his
loyalty and good disposition towards the United States. If this
be a correct statement of the facts disclosed by this record,
and facts of which we take judicial notice, I need hardly labor
the conclusion that Constitutional rights have been violated.
The Government's argument, and the opinion
of the court, in my judgment, erroneously divide that which
is single and indivisible and thus make the case appear as if
the petitioner violated a Military Order, sanctioned by Act
of Congress, which excluded him from his home, by refusing voluntarily
to leave and, so, knowingly and intentionally, defying the order
and the Act of Congress.
The petitioner, a resident of San Leandro,
Alameda County, California, is a native of the United States
of Japanese ancestry who, according to the uncontradicted evidence,
is a loyal citizen of the nation.
A chronological recitation of events will
make it plain that the petitioner's supposed offense did not,
in truth, consist in his refusal voluntarily to leave the area
which included his home in obedience to the order excluding
him therefrom. Critical attention must be given to the dates
and sequence of events.
December 8, 1941, the United States declared
war on Japan.
February 19, 1942, the President issued Executive
Order No. 9066,1 which, after stating the reason for issuing
the order as “protection against espionage and against
sabotage to national- defense material, national-defense premises,
and national-defense utilities,” provided that certain
Military Commanders might, in their discretion, “prescribe
military areas” and define their extent, “from which
any or all persons may be excluded, and with respect to which,
the right of any person to enter, remain in, or leave shall
be subject to whatever restrictions” the “Military
Commander may impose in his discretion.”
February 20, 1942, Lieutenant General DeWitt
was designated Military Commander of the Western Defense Command
embracing the westernmost states of the Union,-about one-fourth
of the total area of the nation.
March 2, 1942, General DeWitt promulgated
Public Proclamation No. 1,2 which recites that the entire Pacific
Coast is “particularly subject to attack, to attempted
invasion ... and, in connection therewith, is subject to espionage
and acts of sabotage.” It states that “as a matter
of military necessity” certain military areas and zones
are established known as Military Areas Nos. 1 and 2. It adds
that “Such persons or classes of persons as the situation
may require” will, by subsequent orders, “be excluded
from all of Military Area No. 1” and from certain zones
in Military Area No. 2. Subsequent proclamations were made which,
together with Proclamation No. 1, included in such areas and
zones all of California, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, Montana,
Nevada and Utah, and the southern portion of Arizona. The orders
required that if any person of Japanese, German or Italian ancestry
residing in Area No. 1 desired to change his habitual residence
he must execute and deliver to the authorities a Change of Residence
Notice.
San Leandro, the city of petitioner's residence,
lies in Military Area No. 1. On March 2, 1942, the petitioner,
therefore, had notice that, by Executive Order, the President,
to prevent espionage and sabotage, had authorized the Military
to exclude him from certain areas and to prevent his entering
or leaving certain areas without permission. He was on notice
that his home city had been included, by Military Order, in
Area No. 1, and he was on notice further that, at sometime in
the future, the Military Commander would make an order for the
exclusion of certain persons, not described or classified, from
various zones including that in which he lived.
March 21, 1942, Congress enacted3 that anyone
who knowingly “shall enter, remain in, leave, or commit
any act in any military area or military zone prescribed ...
by any military commander ... contrary to the restrictions applicable
to any such area or zone or contrary to the order of ... any
such military commander” shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.
This is the Act under which the petitioner was charged.
March 24, 1942, General DeWitt instituted
the curfew for certain areas within his command, by an order
the validity of which was sustained in Hirabayashi v. United
States, supra.
March 24, 1942, General DeWitt began to issue
a series of exclusion orders relating to specified areas.
March 27, 1942, by Proclamation No. 4,4 the
General recited that “it is necessary, in order to provide
for the welfare and to insure the orderly evacuation and resettlement
of Japanese voluntarily migrating from Military Area No. 1 to
restrict and regulate such migration”; and ordered that,
as of March 29, 1942, “all alien Japanese and persons
of Japanese ancestry who are within the limits of Military Area
No. 1, be and they are hereby prohibited from leaving that area
for any purpose until and to the extent that a future proclamation
or order of this headquarters shall so permit or direct.”
No order had been made excluding the petitioner
from the area in which he lived. By Proclamation No. 4 he was,
after March 29, 1942, confined to the limits of Area No. 1.
If the Executive Order No. 9066 and the Act of Congress meant
what they said, to leave that area, in the face of Proclamation
No. 4, would be to commit a misdemeanor.
May 3, 1942, General DeWitt issued Civilian
Exclusion Order No. 346 providing that, after 12 o'clock May
8, 1942, all persons of Japanese ancestry, both alien and non-alien,
were to be excluded from a described portion of Military Area
No. 1, which included the County of Alameda, California. The
order required a responsible member of each family and each
individual living alone to report, at a time set, at a Civil
Control Station for instructions to go to an Assembly Center,
and added that any person failing to comply with the provisions
of the order who was found in the described area after the date
set would be liable to prosecution under the Act of March 21,
1942, supra. It is important to note that the order, by its
express terms, had no application to persons within the bounds
“of an established Assembly Center pursuant to instructions
from this Headquarters ....” The obvious purpose of the
orders made, taken together, was to drive all citizens of Japanese
ancestry into Assembly Centers within the zones of their residence,
under pain of criminal prosecution. The predicament in which
the petitioner thus found himself was this: He was forbidden,
by Military Order, to leave the zone in which he lived; he was
forbidden, by Military Order, after a date fixed, to be found
within that zone unless he were in an Assembly Center located
in that zone. General DeWitt's report to the Secretary of War
concerning the program of evacuation and relocation of Japanese
makes it entirely clear, if it were necessary to refer to that
document,-and, in the light of the above recitation, I think
it is not,-that an Assembly Center was a euphemism for a prison.
No person within such a center was permitted to leave except
by Military Order.
In the dilemma that he dare not remain in
his home, or voluntarily leave the area, without incurring criminal
penalties, and that the only way he could avoid punishment was
to go to an Assembly Center and submit himself to military imprisonment,
the petitioner did nothing.
June 12, 1942, an Information was filed in
the District Court for Northern California charging a violation
of the Act of March 21, 1942, in that petitioner had knowingly
remained within the area covered by Exclusion Order No. 34.
A demurrer to the information having been overruled, the petitioner
was tried under a plea of not guilty and convicted. Sentence
was suspended and he was placed on probation for five years.
We know, however, in the light of the foregoing recitation,
that he was at once taken into military custody and lodged in
an Assembly Center. We further know that, on March 18, 1942,
the President had promulgated Executive Order No. 91027 establishing
the War Relocation Authority under which so-called Relocation
Centers, a euphemism for concentration camps, were established
pursuant to cooperation between the military authorities of
the Western Defense Command and the Relocation Authority, and
that the petitioner has been confined either in an Assembly
Center, within the zone in which he had lived or has been removed
to a Relocation Center where, as the facts disclosed in Ex parte
Mitsuye Endo, 323 U.S. 283, 65 S.Ct. 208, demonstrate, he was
illegally held in custody.
The Government has argued this case as if
the only order outstanding at the time the petitioner was arrested
and informed against was Exclusion Order No. 34 ordering him
to leave the area in which he resided, which was the basis of
the information against him. That argument has evidently been
effective. The opinion refers to the Hirabayashi case, supra,
to show that this court has sustained the validity of a curfew
order in an emergency. The argument then is that exclusion from
a given area of danger, while somewhat more sweeping than a
curfew regulation, is of the same nature,-a temporary expedient
made necessary by a sudden emergency. This, I think, is a substitution
of an hypothetical case for the case actually before the court.
I might agree with the court's disposition of the hypothetical
case. 8 The liberty of every American citizen freely to come
and to go must frequently, in the face of sudden danger, be
temporarily limited or suspended. The civil authorities must
often resort to the expedient of excluding citizens temporarily
from a locality. The drawing of fire lines in the case of a
conflagration, the removal of persons from the area where a
pestilence has broken out, are familiar examples. If the exclusion
worked by Exclusion Order No. 34 were of that nature the Hirabayashi
case would be authority for sustaining it. But the facts above
recited, and those set forth in Ex parte Metsuye Endo, supra,
show that the exclusion was but a part of an over-all plan for
forceable detention. This case cannot, therefore, be decided
on any such narrow ground as the possible validity of a Temporary
Exclusion Order under which the residents of an area are given
an opportunity to leave and go elsewhere in their native land
outside the boundaries of a military area. To make the case
turn on any such assumption is to shut our eyes to reality.
As I have said above, the petitioner, prior
to his arrest, was faced with two diametrically contradictory
orders given sanction by the Act of Congress of March 21, 1942.
The earlier of those orders made him a criminal if he left the
zone in which he resided; the later made him a criminal if he
did not leave.
I had supposed that if a citizen was constrained
by two laws, or two orders having the force of law, and obedience
to one would violate the other, to punish him for violation
of either would deny him due process of law. And I had supposed
that under these circumstances a conviction for violating one
of the orders could not stand.
We cannot shut our eyes to the fact that had
the petitioner attempted to violate Proclamation No. 4 and leave
the military area in which he lived he would have been arrested
and tried and convicted for violation of Proclamation No. 4.
The two conflicting orders, one which commanded him to stay
and the other which commanded him to go, were nothing but a
cleverly devised trap to accomplish the real purpose of the
military authority, which was to lock him up in a concentration
camp. The only course by which the petitioner could avoid arrest
and prosecution was to go to that camp according to instructions
to be given him when he reported at a Civil Control Center.
We know that is the fact. Why should we set up a figmentary
and artificial situation instead of addressing ourselves to
the actualities of the case? These stark realities are met by
the suggestion that it is lawful to compel an American citizen
to submit to illegal imprisonment on the assumption that he
might, after going to the Assembly Center, apply for his discharge
by suing out a writ of habeas corpus, as was done in the Endo
case, supra. The answer, of course, is that where he was subject
to two conflicting laws he was not bound, in order to escape
violation of one of the other, to surrender his liberty for
any period. Nor will it do to say that the detention was a necessary
part of the process of evacuation, and so we are here concerned
only with the validity of the latter.
Again it is a new doctrine of constitutional
law that one indicted for disobedience to an unconstitutional
statute may not defend on the ground of the invalidity of the
statute but must obey it though he knows it is no law and, after
he has suffered the disgrace of conviction and lost his liberty
by sentence, then, and not before, seek, from within prison
walls, to test the validity of the law.
Moreover, it is beside the point to rest decision
in part on the fact that the petitioner, for his own reasons,
wished to remain in his home. If, as is the fact he was constrained
so to do, it is indeed a narrow application of constitutional
rights to ignore the order which constrained him, in order to
sustain his conviction for violation of another contradictory
order.
I would reverse the judgment of conviction.
Mr. Justice Murphy, dissenting.
This exclusion of “all persons of Japanese
ancestry, both alien and non-alien,” from the Pacific
Coast area on a plea of military necessity in the absence of
martial law ought not to be approved. Such exclusion goes over
“the very brink of constitutional power” and falls
into the ugly abyss of racism.
In dealing with matters relating to the prosecution
and progress of a war, we must accord great respect and consideration
to the judgments of the military authorities who are on the
scene and who have full knowledge of the military facts. The
scope of their discretion must, as a matter of necessity and
common sense, be wide. And their judgments ought not to be overruled
lightly by those whose training and duties ill-equip them to
deal intelligently with matters so vital to the physical security
of the nation.
At the same time, however, it is essential
that there be definite limits to military discretion, especially
where martial law has not been declared. Individuals must not
be left impoverished of their constitutional rights on a plea
of military necessity that has neither substance nor support.
Thus, like other claims conflicting with the asserted constitutional
rights of the individual, the military claim must subject itself
to the judicial process of having its reasonableness determined
and its conflicts with other interests reconciled. “What
are the allowable limits of military discretion, and whether
or not they have been overstepped in a particular case, are
judicial questions.” Sterling v. Constantin, 287 U.S.
378, 401, 53 S.Ct. 190, 196.
The judicial test of whether the Government,
on a plea of military necessity, can validly deprive an individual
of any of his constitutional rights is whether the deprivation
is reasonably related to a public danger that is so “immediate,
imminent, and impending” as not to admit of delay and
not to permit the intervention of ordinary constitutional processes
to alleviate the danger. United States v. Russell, 13 Wall.
623, 627, 628; Mitchell v. Harmony, 13 How. 115, 134, 135; Raymond
v. Thomas, 91 U.S. 712, 716. Civilian Exclusion Order No. 34,
banishing from a prescribed area of the Pacific Coast “all
persons of Japanese ancestry, both alien and non-alien,”
clearly does not meet that test. Being an obvious racial discrimination,
the order deprives all those within its scope of the equal protection
of the laws as guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment. It further
deprives these individuals of their constitutional rights to
live and work where they will, to establish a home where they
choose and to move about freely. In excommunicating them without
benefit of hearings, this order also deprives them of all their
constitutional rights to procedural due process. Yet no reasonable
relation to an “immediate, imminent, and impending”
public danger is evident to support this racial restriction
which is one of the most sweeping and complete deprivations
of constitutional rights in the history of this nation in the
absence of martial law.
It must be conceded that the military and
naval situation in the spring of 1942 was such as to generate
a very real fear of invasion of the Pacific Coast, accompanied
by fears of sabotage and espionage in that area. The military
command was therefore justified in adopting all reasonable means
necessary to combat these dangers. In adjudging the military
action taken in light of the then apparent dangers, we must
not erect too high or too meticulous standards; it is necessary
only that the action have some reasonable relation to the removal
of the dangers of invasion, sabotage and espionage. But the
exclusion, either temporarily or permanently, of all persons
with Japanese blood in their veins has no such reasonable relation.
And that relation is lacking because the exclusion order necessarily
must rely for its reasonableness upon the assumption that all
persons of Japanese ancestry may have a dangerous tendency to
commit sabotage and espionage and to aid our Japanese enemy
in other ways. It is difficult to believe that reason, logic
or experience could be marshaled in support of such an assumption.
That this forced exclusion was the result
in good measure of this erroneous assumption of racial guilt
rather than bona fide military necessity is evidenced by the
Commanding General's Final Report on the evacuation from the
Pacific Coast area. 1 In it he refers to all individuals of
Japanese descent as “subversive,” as belonging to
“an enemy race” whose “racial strains are
undiluted,” and as constituting “over 112,000 potential
enemies ... at large today” along the Pacific Coast. 2
In support of this blanket condemnation of all persons of Japanese
descent, however, no reliable evidence is cited to show that
such individuals were generally disloyal, or had generally so
conducted themselves in this area as to constitute a special
menace to defense installations or war industries, or had otherwise
by their behavior furnished reasonable ground for their exclusion
as a group.
Justification for the exclusion is sought,
instead, mainly upon questionable racial and sociological grounds
not ordinarily within the realm of expert military judgment,
supplemented by certain semi-military conclusions drawn from
an unwarranted use of circumstantial evidence. Individuals of
Japanese ancestry are condemned because they are said to be
“a large, unassimilated, tightly knit racial group, bound
to an enemy nation by strong ties of race, culture, custom and
religion.” They are claimed to be given to emperor worshipping
ceremonies” and to “dual citizenship.” Japanese
language schools and allegedly pro-Japanese organizations are
cited as evidence of possible group disloyalty, together with
facts as to certain persons being educated and residing at length
in Japan. It is intimated that many of these individuals deliberately
resided “adjacent to strategic points,” thus enabling
them “to carry into execution a tremendous program of
sabotage on a mass scale should any considerable number of them
have been inclined to do so.” The need for protective
custody is also asserted. The report refers without identity
to “numerous incidents of violence” as well as to
other admittedly unverified or cumulative incidents. From this,
plus certain other events not shown to have been connected with
the Japanese Americans, it is concluded that the “situation
was fraught with danger to the Japanese population itself”
and that the general public “was ready to take matters
into its own hands.” Finally, it is intimated, though
not directly charged or proved, that persons of Japanese ancestry
were responsible for three minor isolated shellings and bombings
of the Pacific Coast area, as well as for unidentified radio
transmissions and night signaling.
The main reasons relied upon by those responsible
for the forced evacuation, therefore, do not prove a reasonable
relation between the group characteristics of Japanese Americans
and the dangers of invasion, sabotage and espionage. The reasons
appear, instead, to be largely an accumulation of much of the
misinformation, half-truths and insinuations that for years
have been directed against Japanese Americans by people with
racial and economic prejudices-the same people who have been
among the foremost advocates of the evacuation. A military judgment
based upon such racial and sociological considerations is not
entitled to the great weight ordinarily given the judgments
based upon strictly military considerations. Especially is this
so when every charge relative to race, religion, culture, geographical
location, and legal and economic status has been substantially
discredited by independent studies made by experts in these
matters.
The military necessity which is essential to the validity of
the evacuation order thus resolves itself into a few intimations
that certain individuals actively aided the enemy, from which
it is inferred that the entire group of Japanese Americans could
not be trusted to be or remain loyal to the United States. No
one denies, of course, that there were some disloyal persons
of Japanese descent on the Pacific Coast who did all in their
power to aid their ancestral land. Similar disloyal activities
have been engaged in by many persons of German, Italian and
even more pioneer stock in our country. But to infer that examples
of individual disloyalty prove group disloyalty and justify
discriminatory action against the entire group is to deny that
under our system of law individual guilt is the sole basis for
deprivation of rights. Moreover, this inference, which is at
the very heart of the evacuation orders, has been used in support
of the abhorrent and despicable treatment of minority groups
by the dictatorial tyrannies which this nation is now pledged
to destroy. To give constitutional sanction to that inference
in this case, however well- intentioned may have been the military
command on the Pacific Coast, is to adopt one of the cruelest
of the rationales used by our enemies to destroy the dignity
of the individual and to encourage and open the door to discriminatory
actions against other minority groups in the passions of tomorrow.
No adequate reason is given for the failure to treat these Japanese
Americans on an individual basis by holding investigations and
hearings to separate the loyal from the disloyal, as was done
in the case of persons of German and Italian ancestry. See House
Report No. 2124 (77th Cong., 2d Sess.) 247-52. It is asserted
merely that the loyalties of this group “were unknown
and time was of the essence.” Yet nearly four months elapsed
after Pearl Harbor before the first exclusion order was issued;
nearly eight months went by until the last order was issued;
and the last of these “subversive” persons was not
actually removed until almost eleven months had elapsed. Leisure
and deliberation seem to have been more of the essence than
speed. And the fact that conditions were not such as to warrant
a declaration of martial law adds strength to the belief that
the factors of time and military necessity were not as urgent
as they have been represented to be.
Moreover, there was no adequate proof that
the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the military and naval
intelligence services did not have the espionage and sabotage
situation well in hand during this long period. Nor is there
any denial of the fact that not one person of Japanese ancestry
was accused or convicted of espionage or sabotage after Pearl
Harbor while they were still free,15 a fact which is some evidence
of the loyalty of the vast majority of these individuals and
of the effectiveness of the established methods of combatting
these evils. It seems incredible that under these circumstances
it would have been impossible to hold loyalty hearings for the
mere 112,000 persons involved- or at least for the 70,000 American
citizens-especially when a large part of this number represented
children and elderly men and women.16 Any inconvenience that
may have accompanied an attempt to conform to procedural due
process cannot be said to justify violations of constitutional
rights of individuals.
I dissent, therefore, from this legalization
of racism. Racial discrimination in any form and in any degree
has no justifiable part whatever in our democratic way of life.
It is unattractive in any setting but it is utterly revolting
among a free people who have embraced the principles set forth
in the Constitution of the United States. All residents of this
nation are kin in some way by blood or culture to a foreign
land. Yet they are primarily and necessarily a part of the new
and distinct civilization of the United States. They must accordingly
be treated at all times as the heirs of the American experiment
and as entitled to all the rights and freedoms guaranteed by
the Constitution.
Mr. Justice Jackson, dissenting.
Korematsu was born on our soil, of parents
born in Japan. The Constitution makes him a citizen of the United
States by nativity and a citizen of California by residence.
No claim is made that he is not loyal to this country. There
is no suggestion that apart from the matter involved here he
is not law- abiding and well disposed. Korematsu, however, has
been convicted of an act not commonly a crime. It consists merely
of being present in the state whereof he is a citizen, near
the place where he was born, and where all his life he has lived.
Even more unusual is the series of military
orders which made this conduct a crime. They forbid such a one
to remain, and they also forbid him to leave. They were so drawn
that the only way Korematsu could avoid violation was to give
himself up to the military authority. This meant submission
to custody, examination, and transportation out of the territory,
to be followed by indeterminate confinement in detention camps.
A citizen's presence in the locality, however,
was made a crime only if his parents were of Japanese birth.
Had Korematsu been one of four-the others being, say, a German
alien enemy, an Italian alien enemy, and a citizen of American-born
ancestors, convicted of treason but out on parole- only Korematsu's
presence would have violated the order. The difference between
their innocence and his crime would result, not from anything
he did, said, or thought, different than they, but only in that
he was born of different racial stock.
Now, if any fundamental assumption underlies
our system, it is that guilt is personal and not inheritable.
Even if all of one's antecedents had been convicted of treason,
the Constitution forbids its penalties to be visited upon him,
for it provides that “no Attainder of Treason shall work
Corruption of Blood, or Forfeiture except during the Life of
the Person attained.” Article 3, 3, cl. 2. But here is
an attempt to make an otherwise innocent act a crime merely
because this prisoner is the son of parents as to whom he had
no choice, and belongs to a race from which there is no way
to resign. If Congress in peace-time legislation should enact
such a criminal law, I should suppose this Court would refuse
to enforce it.
But the “law” which this prisoner
is convicted of disregarding is not found in an act of Congress,
but in a military order. Neither the Act of Congress nor the
Executive Order of the President, nor both together, would afford
a basis for this conviction. It rests on the orders of General
DeWitt. And it is said that if the military commander had reasonable
military grounds for promulgating the orders, they are constitutional
and become law, and the Court is required to enforce them. There
are several reasons why I cannot subscribe to this doctrine.
It would be impracticable and dangerous idealism
to expect or insist that each specific military command in an
area of probable operations will conform to conventional tests
of constitutionality. When an area is so beset that it must
be put under military control at all, the paramount consideration
is that its measures be successful, rather than legal. The armed
services must protect a society, not merely its Constitution.
The very essence of the military job is to marshal physical
force, to remove every obstacle to its effectiveness, to give
it every strategic advantage. Defense measures will not, and
often should not, be held within the limits that bind civil
authority in peace. No court can require such a commander in
such circumstances to act as a reasonable man; he may be unreasonably
cautious and exacting. Perhaps he should be. But a commander
in temporarily focusing the life of a community on defense is
carrying out a military program; he is not making law in the
sense the courts know the term. He issues orders, and they may
have a certain authority as military commands, although they
may be very bad as constitutional law.
But if we cannot confine military expedients
by the Constitution, neither would I distort the Constitution
to approve all that the military may deem expedient. This is
what the Court appears to be doing, whether consciously or not.
I cannot say, from any evidence before me, that the orders of
General DeWitt were not reasonably expedient military precautions,
nor could I say that they were. But even if they were permissible
military procedures, I deny that it follows that they are constitutional.
If, as the Court holds, it does follow, then we may as well
say that any military order will be constitutional and have
done with it.
The limitation under which courts always will
labor in examining the necessity for a military order are illustrated
by this case. How does the Court know that these orders have
a reasonable basis in necessity? No evidence whatever on that
subject has been taken by this or any other court. There is
sharp controversy as to the credibility of the DeWitt report.
So the Court, having no real evidence before it, has no choice
but to accept General DeWitt's own unsworn, self-serving statement,
untested by any cross-examination, that what he did was reasonable.
And thus it will always be when courts try to look into the
reasonableness of a military order.
In the very nature of things military decisions
are not susceptible of intelligent judicial appraisal. They
do not pretend to rest on evidence, but are made on information
that often would not be admissible and on assumptions that could
not be proved. Information in support of an order could not
be disclosed to courts without danger that it would reach the
enemy. Neither can courts act on communications made in confidence.
Hence courts can never have any real alternative to accepting
the mere declaration of the authority that issued the order
that it was reasonably necessary from a military viewpoint.
Much is said of the danger to liberty from
the Army program for deporting and detaining these citizens
of Japanese extraction. But a judicial construction of the due
process clause that will sustain this order is a farm more subtle
blow to liberty than the promulgation of the order itself. A
military order, however unconstitutional, is not apt to last
longer than the military emergency. Even during that period
a succeeding commander may revoke it all. But once a judicial
opinion rationalizes such an order to show that it conforms
to the Constitution, or rather rationalizes the Constitution
to show that the Constitution sanctions such an order, the Court
for all time has validated the principle of racial discrimination
in criminal procedure and of transplanting American citizens.
The principle then lies about like a loaded weapon ready for
the hand of any authority that can bring forward a plausible
claim of an urgent need. Every repetition imbeds that principle
more deeply in our law and thinking and expands it to new purposes.
All who observe the work of courts are familiar with what Judge
Cardozo described as “the tendency of a principle to expand
itself to the limit of its logic.” A military commander
may overstep the bounds of constitutionality, and it is an incident.
But if we review and approve, that passing incident becomes
the doctrine of the Constitution. There it has a generative
power of its own, and all that it creates will be in its own
image. Nothing better illustrates this danger than does the
Court's opinion in this case.
It argues that we are bound to uphold the
conviction of Korematsu because we upheld one in Kiyshi Hirabayashi
v. United States, 320 U.S. 81, 63 S.Ct. 1375, when we sustained
these orders in so far as they applied a curfew requirement
to a citizen of Japanese ancestry. I think we should learn something
from that experience.
In that case we were urged to consider only
that curfew feature, that being all that technically was involved,
because it was the only count necessary to sustain Hirabayashi's
conviction and sentence. We yielded, and the Chief Justice guarded
the opinion as carefully as language will do. He said: “Our
investigation here does not go beyond the inquiry whether, in
the light of all the relevant circumstances preceding and attending
their promulgation, the challenged orders and statute afforded
a reasonable basis for the action taken in imposing the curfew.”
320 U.S. at page 101, 63 S.Ct. at page 1386. “We decide
only the issue as we have defined it—we decide only that
the curfew order as applied, and at the time it was applied,
was within the boundaries of the war power.” 320 U.S.
at page 102, 63 S.Ct. at page 1386. And again: “It is
unnecessary to consider whether or to what extent such findings
would support orders differing from the curfew order.”
320 U.S. at page 105, 63 S.Ct. at page 1387. However, in spite
of our limiting words we did validate a discrimination of the
basis of ancestry for mild and temporary deprivation of liberty.
Now the principle of racial discrimination is pushed from support
of mild measures to very harsh ones, and from temporary deprivations
to indeterminate ones. And the precedent which it is said requires
us to do so is Hirabayashi. The Court is now saying that in
Hirabayashi we did decide the very things we there said we were
not deciding. Because we said that these citizens could be made
to stay in their homes during the hours of dark, it is said
we must require them to leave home entirely; and if that, we
are told they may also be taken into custody for deportation;
and if that, it is argued they may also be held for some undetermined
time in detention camps. How far the principle of this case
would be extended before plausible reasons would play out, I
do not know.
I should hold that a civil court cannot be
made to enforce an order which violates constitutional limitations
even if it is a reasonable exercise of military authority. The
courts can exercise only the judicial power, can apply only
law, and must abide by the Constitution, or they cease to be
civil courts and become instruments of military policy. Of course
the existence of a military power resting on force, so vagrant,
so centralized, so necessarily heedless of the individual, is
an inherent threat to liberty. But I would not lead people to
rely on this Court for a review that seems to me wholly delusive.
The military reasonableness of these orders can only be determined
by military superiors. If the people ever let command of the
war power fall into irresponsible and unscrupulous hands, the
courts wield no power equal to its restraint. The chief restraint
upon those who command the physical forces of the country, in
the future as in the past, must be their responsibility to the
political judgments of their contemporaries and to the moral
judgments of history.
My duties as a justice as I see them do not
require me to make a military judgment as to whether General
DeWitt's evacuation and detention program was a reasonable military
necessity. I do not suggest that the courts should have attempted
to interfere with the Army in carrying out its task. But I do
not think they may be asked to execute a military expedient
that has no place in law under the Constitution I would reverse
the judgment and discharge the prisoner.
Source: Toyosaburo Korematsu v. United
States, 323 U.S. 214 (1944).
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