(dissenting):
I dissent.
My colleagues note that accused’s initial underage enlistment was absolutely void, and they find that the Government has made no showing that accused’s status ever changed after his *689seventeenth birthday; that any continuation in his service was contingent upon a condition which was never fulfilled ; and that his mother took affirmative action to terminate accused’s status. Accordingly, they conclude the court-martial lacked jurisdiction over accused. I cannot agree.
I
In United States v Blanton, 7 USCMA 664, 23 CMR 128, we held that a youth under age seventeen is incompetent to acquire military status. We went on to point out, however, that:
“. . . Between the ages of 17 and 18 the minor is competent to serve, but his enlistment may be terminated by his parents or guardians, provided they had not consented to it.
“Here, the stipulated facts show that the accused was born on June 9, 1936. Consequently, when he enlisted in the Army on March 9, 1951, he was not yet 15 years of age. He allegedly absented himself on June 8, 1952. At that time, he had not reached his 16th birthday. Thus, at no time was he on active duty at an age when he was legally competent to serve in the military. Cf. Ex parte Hubbard, 182 Fed 76 (D Mass) (1910). In sum, the court-martial had no jurisdiction over the accused.”
In Ex parte Hubbard, to which we made reference in Blanton, the applicable minimum statutory age for enlistment with consent was sixteen. The court there rejected accused’s contention that his enlistment was void and his conviction unlawful, holding that one who enlists in the service under the minimum statutory age, who continues to serve after passing that age, “stands like a minor who has enlisted without his parents’ consent when over 16.” (182 Fed 76, 81.) Likewise, in the recent case of Barrett v Looney, 158 F Supp 224 (D Kans) (1957), affirmed, per curiam, 252 F2d 588 (CA 10th Cir) (1958), the court concluded:
“. . . that where one enlists in the Army below the age at which he can be received into the Army, but remains in the Army beyond the age when he can enlist with his parents’ consent, that he is in the Army and that the lack of parental consent is not fatal to the jurisdiction of the Army over him.”
Other eases could be cited in support of this rule, and I am confident the great weight of authority upholds the principle. Counsel for accused in their briefs have not called my attention to any decisions contrary thereto and I am certain that had they found any of a persuasive nature they would have cited them to support their arguments. Manifestly, then, unless the authorities I cite are rejected — and I am not inclined to do so — the fact that accused’s initial enlistment was void is not necessarily fatal to jurisdiction over him. Accordingly, the next question is whether, after attaining age seventeen, the accused’s status changed and he became subject to military jurisdiction.
II
Constructive enlistment is based upon two elements: Voluntary performance of military duties and acceptance of benefits. United States v Reid, 15 CMR 899. See also Mayborn v Heflebower, 145 F 2d 864 (CA 5th Cir) (1945); United States v Mellis, 59 F Supp 682 (MD NC); Hibbs v Catovolo, 145 F 2d 866 (CA 5th Cir) (1944).
In the words of my associates, accused’s affidavit shows he “attempted to stay on.” And in fact he did so since, as the majority points out elsewhere, “almost two months after he had turned seventeen, the accused went home on a three-day pass.” It is my contention that these facts by themselves suffice to show a constructive enlistment. The tenor of accused’s affidavit is not to the effect that he sought to terminate his military status, but rather to assure its continuation by getting his records changed to show his true name so he could remain in the service without fear of later difficulties. Significantly enough, accused does not aver that he ever informed military authorities of his true age and, from his admitted *690efforts to remain in the Army, it is clear that he voluntarily assumed the obligations of an enlistment contract. And from the fact that he went on pass some two months after turning seventeen, it is reasonably inferable that he willingly not only performed military duties but also accepted services provided by the Government. Moreover, he states in his affidavit that, after his release from confinement as a result of his first absence without leave, he was transferred to Fort Meade, where he was stationed for a short period of time — a further indication of performance of military duties. Finally, both accused’s record of previous convictions and the charge sheet reflect that he was receiving pay. Accordingly, I conclude a constructive enlistment is demonstrated.
My colleagues avoid the legal effect of those facts by relying upon a contention that accused’s continuation in the service was not absolute but contingent upon correction of the records, which condition was not fulfilled. That is an untenable theory in the light of this record. When accused mentioned his difficulty concerning his identity, he was informed that, in order to change the records to show his true name, he would have to submit the following: (1) an affidavit from his parents as to his true identity; (2) his brother’s birth cex--tificate; and (3) his own birth certificate. When, if ever, the first two were furnished is of no consequence as the accused avers in his affidavit that the sole purpose for his second unauthorized absence — which commenced some six months after he turned seventeen and some ten or eleven months after his discussion with his company commander — was to procure the latter certificate. Manifestly, any duty to obtain the necessary information to correct his enlistment records rested on the accused, and failure to satisfy that contingency must be attributed to himself, for the necessary documents were not provided so that the Army could make the requested correction. Surely every undocumented assertion made by a serviceman does net cast on the Government a duty to search for supporting evidence and, in this instance, until the true identity of the accused was established, inquiry about other matters would be useless. Assuming, then, for the sake of argument, that the contingency mentioned by my brothers was real and not imaginary, accused cannot prevail upon that basis. By his own procrastination, he frustrated correction of the records until too late to prevent his constructive enlistment after he reached the age of seventeen years. It thus becomes clear that after that time he was subject to military jurisdiction from which status his parents alone, in the absence of prior consent, had the right or privilege to remove him. Morrissey v Perry, 137 US 157, 34 L ed 644, 11 S Ct 57 (1890).
Ill
Accordingly, my next consideration is the majority’s contention that accused’s mother acted affirmatively to terminate his status. Title 10 USC § 3816 provides:
“Upon the application of the parents or guardian of a regular enlisted member under 18 years of age who enlisted without the written consent of his parents or guardian, the Secretary of the Army shall discharge the member with the pay and form of discharge certificate to which his service entitles him.”
However, that is not to say that a non-consenting parent may, at any time, effectuate a minor son’s discharge by making application under the statute. In many cases, Federal courts have considered this problem in connection with the statute then in force and the following quotation from Allen v Wilkinson, 129 F Supp 73, 76 (MC Pa) (1955) — an opinion in a habeas corpus proceeding involving slightly different facts — is illustrative of the holdings:
. . Even assuming that petitioner enlisted fraudulently when under the statutory enlistment age provided in 10 U.S.C.A. § 628, Act of June 28, 1947, the right to set aside the enlistment would have been only in the parents had they not consented, ex parte Foley, DC WD Ky, *691243 F 470, but here they not only consented but were parties to any such fraud if it existed. . . . and certainly, having continued to serve and receive pay after attaining age seventeen, with the parents having consented, the court-martial would have had jurisdiction of offenses committed during such service. Ex parte Hubbard, 182 F 76, 81. . . . Moreover, the overwhelming weight of authority is that neither a minor soldier or his parents, even where no consent has been given, may void such^an enlistment or effect the release of such soldier when he is held for a military offense or is under sentence for a military offense.11”
See also In re Miller, 114 Fed 838 (CA 5th Cir) (1902), in which ease the minimum statutory age was sixteen and the court said:
. . It is not reasonable that a minor, of age to enlist, who secures the honorable and responsible position of a soldier in the United States army, could abandon his colors in the face of the enemy and on the eve of battle, and avoid trial and punishment for desertion by the intervention of his parents, who had not consented to his enlistment, but who had taken no step to avoid it before the soldier’s arrest for desertion; or that he could endanger the army by betraying its secrets to the enemy, and not be amenable to military jurisdiction, his parents objecting. We cannot approve a view that leads to such results. When an enlisted soldier is imprisoned by military authority upon a charge of desertion or other military crime, a civil court will not interfere on habeas corpus when such military authorities have jurisdiction; and if a minor, over the age of 16 years, enlisted in the service, is so, charged and detained, a civil court will not, either on his own application or that of his parents or guardian, discharge him until he has been released from the prosecution pending against him.”
To place this issue in its proper perspective, it is necessary to set out some controlling dates insofar as they can be gleaned from the facts presented to us. The accused reached the age of seventeen on April 1, 1956. He first brushed with the law by going absent without leave on May 31, 1956. At that time his contract of enlistment was only voidable as he had passed age seventeen. He served some forty-five days in confinement and was then returned to a duty status. On November 4, 1956, he again ran afoul of the Code by leaving his station without authority. It was not until January 22, 1957, that he was apprehended by civil authorities. Two days later he was turned over to military control and subsequently transported to Fort McPherson, Georgia, where on January 31, 1957, he was confined. On February 14, 1957, he committed the present offense. The first information I find in the record concerning a request by a parent for the accused’s release from the Army consists of a letter written by his mother dated January 30,1957. That was some eight days after he was confined and awaiting trial for his absence without leave offense. Conceding for the purpose of this issue that she made some inquiry at Selective Service and a recruiting headquarters about her son, she was informed by those agencies that they had no jurisdiction and that she should correspond with the appropriate Army headquarters. Her letter of January 30, 1957, refers to this advice, but it is of some importance to note that at that time she knew the accused had been apprehended for a crime.
It is clear under the authorities I have cited above that any action taken by accused’s mother after he was apprehended for his second unauthorized absence is of no consequence, for accused committed the instant disobedi*692ence infraction while he was in confinement as a result of his conviction for that violation of Article 86. Hence, I look at her actions prior to that time: From her statement, it is apparent she did nothing to effect his discharge. She talked to her son, she corresponded with accused and his commanding officer with respect to applying for her son’s birth certificate, she went to the draft board for advice, and she spoke with someone in a recruiting office. It is clear the correspondence with the commanding officer was for the purpose of assisting her son in his desire to remain in the service. The dates of the communications and the subject of conversations with the draft board and Selective Service are not fixed, but it matters little whether on those occasions she was seeking to aid him in remaining in the service or trying to return him to civilian life, for it appears she was informed that they could not give her any relief and that she would have to direct her application to Army authorities. She neglected to heed the advice until after she learned that her son was apprehended for an offense. That was some thirteen months after she knew he had fraudulently enlisted in the Army and eight days after he was confined to stand trial. While her application at that time was incomplete, a matter which 1 disregard, it was too late. In light of those facts, I am unable to agree with my associates that her acts can be effective to terminate accused’s status.
Consequently, I am constrained to conclude that the instant court-martial had jurisdiction over accused, and I would affirm the decision of the board of review.
“11 Ex parte Dostal, DC ND Ohio, 243 F 664 (and cases cited); Ex parte Dunakin, DC ED Ky, 202 F 290, 292 (and eases therein cited); Ex parte Beaver, DC ND Ohio, 271 F 493; Ex parte Rush, DC MD Ala, 246 F 172; Ex parte Foley, DC WD Ky, 243 F 470; United States ex rel. Lazarus v Brown, DC ED Pa, 242 F 983; Hoskins v Dickerson, 5 Cir, 239 F 275.”