A conflict waged by Great Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States against Germany, Italy, and Japan, formally declared in December, 1941. During the conflict, within the United States, numerous economic and other regulations came into force and some civil liberties were suspended or limited.
Late in the nineteenth century, Justice Stephen J. Field declared, “War
A major U.S. objective in World War II was to preserve the principle of constitutional government. Ironically, parts of that principle had to be sacrificed in order to preserve the whole. During World War II, the wheels of U.S. government had to be streamlined as part of the war effort. Early in 1942, in a lecture at Cornell University, Robert Cushman outlined three changes that he believed would result from that streamlining. The first was the relationship between the states and the federal government, in which the states would lose. Second was the relationship between Congress and the president, in which Congress would lose. The last change would be the impact on civil liberties, where individual citizens would lose to strengthen the nation as a whole. Cushman’s predictions proved accurate, although surprisingly few of the changes rose to the need of a Supreme Court decision.
The Constitution carefully divides the war-making powers of Congress and of the president.
One major issue involving war-making powers was the raising of military forces by involuntary means. Conscription
President Roosevelt did not want the nation caught unprepared as in 1917, but knowing that a peacetime draft would arouse strong opposition, especially with the inborn American fear of a strong government, he appointed a private citizen task force to develop a plan. The group was led by Grenville Clark, a highly respected law partner of Elihu Root (secretary of war, 1901-1904). The plan was implemented with surprisingly little opposition or refusal to register, as in 1917. The Court resolved, in Falbo v. United States
Military courts
The Constitution does not make specific provisions for emergency powers to be used by the executive branch of government. However, an issue that arose during World War II was the presidential use of emergency or discretionary funds. In 1943 Congress passed the Urgent Deficiency Appropriations Act. Section 304 of that act, initiated by the House Committee on Un-American Activities, chaired by Representative Martin Dies (Democrat, Texas), suspended salary or compensation for three federal employees after November 15, 1943, unless by that date they were reappointed by the president with the advice and consent of the Senate. The named employees were Robert Morse Lovett, William E. Dodd, Jr., and Goodwin B. Watson. They were among thirty-nine federal employees attacked in a speech in the House by Representative Dies on February 1, 1943, as being “irresponsible, unrepresentative, crackpot radical bureaucrats” and affiliates of “communist front organizations.”
Although the president did not reappoint Lovett, Dodd, and Watson, the agencies for which they worked kept them on the job after November 15, but without their salaries. The men later filed with the Court of Claims to recover their lost salaries on three grounds: that Congress has no power to remove executive employees, that section 304 violated Article I, section 9, clause 3, of the Constitution, which prohibits bills of attainder and ex post facto laws, and that it violated the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment. In United States v. Lovett
The Japanese American owner of this market in Oakland, California, put up this “I am an American” sign shortly after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. He was forced to close the store after being sent to a relocation camp.
Gordon Kiyoshi Hirabayashi was an American citizen and a student at the University of Washington in Seattle. After he was convicted of violating the curfew, he appealed on the grounds that the executive orders and the power delegated to military authorities were in violation of the Fifth Amendment. His case, Hirabayashi v. United States
Military authorities eventually decided that people of Japanese descent must be evacuated from the West Coast. When voluntary evacuation failed, a new presidential order created the War Relocation Authority, which was given the task of relocating one hundred thousand people. Fred Korematsu, from San Leandro, California, was arrested for refusing evacuation. The American Civil Liberties Union chose him as a test case for the constitutionality of the presidential order. Like Hirabayashi, Korematsu was a U.S. citizen. The Court, in an opinion written by Justice Hugo L. Black in 1944, decided Korematsu v. United States
In a case related to Korematsu, Ex parte Endo
The Court treated the internment of people of Japanese ancestry as an exercise of the government’s emergency powers and appeared to regard the suspension of civil liberties as necessary in the interest of national security.
Less than two months after the attack on Pearl Harbor, Congress passed the Emergency Price Control Act in order to prevent inflation that would hinder the war effort. In Yakus v. United States
An excellent beginning for a study of the Court and World War II is David B. Currie’s The Constitution in the Supreme Court: The Second Century--1888-1986 (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990). Peter G. Renstrom’s The Stone Court: Justices, Rulings, and Legacy (Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-Clio, 2001) is a comprehensive reference work on the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Harlan Fiske Stone, who served through the war years. Page Smith, in Democracy on Trial (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1995), presents a clear and detailed account of the Japanese internment issue. Wendy L. Ng’s Japanese American Internment During World War II: A History and Reference Guide (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2002) is a comprehensive reference source on the internment years. A Democracy at War, by William L. O’Neill (New York: Free Press, 1993), discusses many economic issues relating to World War II. Legal issues at the beginning of the war are given in The Impact of the War on America: Six Lectures by Members of the Faculty of Cornell University (Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, 1942). A classic edited by Stanley Kutler, The Supreme Court and the Constitution: Readings in American Constitutional History (2d ed., New York: Norton, 1977), gives insight into the Japanese internment and many other war-related issues. Congressional Politics in the Second World War, by Roland Young (New York: Columbia University Press, 1956), discusses many domestic issues that eventually required court action. Gary Hess, in The United States at War, 1941-1945 (Arlington Heights, Ill.: Harlan Davidson, 1986), gives a brief summary of the war and its impact on the United States. American Constitutional History (New York: Macmillan, 1989), with an introduction by Leonard Levy, gives an overview of the Court under Chief Justice Stone, 1941-1946, indicating the philosophy behind his decisions.
Bill of attainder
Conscription
Duncan v. Kahanamoku
Fifth Amendment
Japanese American relocation
Lovett, United States v.
Quirin, Ex parte
Roosevelt, Franklin D.
Stone, Harlan Fiske
War and civil liberties
War powers
Wartime seizure power
Yakus v. United States