Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

United States v. Seeger

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Concurrence
  
Douglas

Date decided
  
1965

Full case name
  
United States v. Seeger

Citations
  
380 U.S. 163 (more) 85 S. Ct. 850; 13 L. Ed. 2d 733; 1965 U.S. LEXIS 1666

Prior history
  
Cert. to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit

Majority
  
Clark, joined by Warren, Black, Harlan, Brennan, Stewart, White, Goldberg

Ruling court
  
Supreme Court of the United States

Similar
  
Torcaso v Watkins, Wisconsin v Yoder, Sherbert v Verner

United States v. Seeger, 380 U.S. 163 (1965),[1] was a case in which the United States Supreme Court ruled that the exemption from the military draft for conscientious objectors could not be reserved only for those professing conformity with the moral directives of a supreme being, but also for those whose views on war derived from a "sincere and meaningful belief which occupies in the life of its possessor a place parallel to that filled by the God of those" who had routinely gotten the exemption.

The case resolved, on diverse but related grounds, three cases, each involving conviction for failure to accept induction into the armed forces on the part of someone who sought conscientious objector status without "belong[ing] to an orthodox religious sect". The accused, whose cases were otherwise unrelated, were Arno Sascha Jakobson, Forest Britt Peter, and Daniel Andrew Seeger; it was Seeger's case that gave its name to the multi-case decision.

References

United States v. Seeger Wikipedia