(dissenting):
I dissent.
Because I feel my associates inflate a trial incident out of proportion to its importance and decide the case without a full exposition of the principles governing search and seizure in the military services, I set forth my views in this separate opinion.
I
Turning first to the question of search and seizure, I find the principal opinion mentions the five illustrations of reasonable searches and seizures enumerated in the Manual and then proceeds to illustrate why they are inapplicable. The fault of that approach is that it glosses over the remaining portion of paragraph 152 which, after setting out the examples of lawful searches listed in the majority opinion, concludes with the statement:
“. . . This example of authorized searches is not intended to preclude the legality of searches made by military personnel in the areas outlined above when made in accordance with military custom.” [Emphasis supplied.]
If then, the examples from the Manual listed by my associates are not, as they imply, all-inclusive, I wonder why consideration is not given to the question of whether this search and seizure was reasonable under the general clause hereinabove quoted. It would appear to follow that when the Court uses the Manual as the source of law, it should consider all of the relevant provisions.
We have previously touched on the principle which my brothers do not apply here, and we have indicated our belief that a commanding officer has wide discretion in determining the necesity of ordering a search of persons or property under his authority. In United States v Doyle, 1 USCMA 545, 4 CMR 137, the Chief Judge, speaking for the Court, stated:
“There has long existed in the services a rule to the effect that a military commanding officer has the power to search military property within his jurisdiction. United States v Kemerer, 28 BR 393; Dig Op JAG 1912-1940, Section 395(27); CMO 11,1929, page 5; CMO 11, 1929, page 11; United States v Worley, 3 CMR (AF) 424. The basis for this rule of discretion lies in the reason that, since such an officer has been vested with unusual responsibilities in regard to personnel, property, and material, it is necessary that he be given commensurate power to fulfill that responsibility. This rule and the reasons for it have been expressly recognized and approved by the Federal courts. United States v Best, 76 F Supp 857; *490Richardson v Zuppann, 81 F Supp 809. It is unnecessary; in this connection, to spell out the obvious policy considerations which require a differentiation between the power of a commanding- officer over military property and the power of a police officer to invade a citizen’s privacy. That there may be limitations upon the former’s power, we do not doubt. Insofar as the power bears on criminal prosecutions, both trial courts and appellate forums are available to insure that the commanding officer does not abuse his discretion to the extent that the rights of an individual are unduly impaired.”
The principle was reaffirmed in United States v Rhodes, 3 USCMA 73, 11 CMR 73. In that case, Judge Brosman, writing for a unanimous Court, stated:
. . In the Doyle and Florence cases, supra [United States v Doyle, 1 USCMA 545, 4 CMR 137; United States v Florence, 1 USCMA 620, 5 CMR 48], we recognized the well-settled military rule that a commanding officer possesses authority to make or to order an inspection or search of personnel and property under his control. That rule is expressly embodied in the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, paragraph 152, which also provides that one who is an ‘officer in charge’ is a ‘commanding officer’ within the meaning of the paragraph.”
Again in the Florence case, a similar rule was expressed. There the accused, a clerk in the Army Graves Registration Section, was suspected of stealing deceased soldiers’ personal effects which had been placed in his custody. The accused’s commanding officer directly requested that he produce his wallet which was- found to contain stolen property. In upholding the legality of the search, we said:
. • The authority of a commanding officer to make or order an inspection or search of personnel and property under his control has long been recognized in military law. In CM 248379, United States v Wilson, 31 BR 231, a board of review considered the lawfulness of a search of the persons. The facts were these: Reliable information had been received by the commanding officer that articles were being taken from Army mail packages. The accused was placed under surveillance, and when an object was noticed bulging out of his pocket he was taken into the presence of his commanding officer and was asked what he had in his pocket. He thereupon pulled out a watch box which contained stolen property. The board of review in its holding stated:
‘ “Authority to make, or order, an inspection or search of a member of the military establishment, or of a public building in a place under military control, even though occupied as an office or as living quarters by a member of the military establishment, always has been regarded as indispensable to the maintenance of good order and discipline in any military command . . . such a search is not unreasonable and therefore not unlawful.” JAG 250.413, July 23, 1930, and sec. 395(27) Dig Ops JAG 1912-40). [Italics supplied.]’
“See also CM 335526 Tooze, 3 BR-JC 313.
“The rule of the Wilson and Tooze cases is cited with approval in ACM 4023, Arteaga (1951), 1 CMR 632. In that case a search of accused’s person and footlocker, directed by his commanding officer because of reliable information received, resulted in the discovery of three marihuana cigarettes and an envelope containing marihuana. It was there pointed out that searches and seizures have been made pursuant to military command, as distinguished from civil warrant, ever since the foundation of this Government, and that military law does not prohibit searches without warrant, citing United States v Clark, 31 Fed 710, and In re Grimley, 137 US 147, 34 L ed 636, 11 S Ct 54. That decision points out that as there is in the Manual for Court’s *491Martial no requirement for the affidavit of probable cause required by civil statute, an appropriate commanding officer’s exercise of discretion in authorizing a particular search is the acceptable substitute and cannot ordinarily be questioned, citing ACM 1458, United States v Worley, 3 CMR (AF) 424; ACM 3682, United States v Hopkins, 4 CMR (AF) 553).”
For support of my position, I need not rely solely on military authorities, for there are numerous civilian cases which uphold the foregoing proposition. In Richardson v Zuppann, 81 F Supp 809 (MD Penn) (1949), I find the following statement:
“The Fourth Amendment prohibits only unreasonable searches and seizures. ‘There is no formula for the determination of reasonableness. Each case is to be decided on its own facts and circumstances.’ In this case, ‘In an occupied country under Military Government, a search and seizure deemed necessary by the highest military commanders, ordered by them to be conducted in the manner customarily employed by the military, with their orders relayed down the chain of military command, and executed in an orderly manner by military personnel, cannot be termed unreasonable.’ I therefore conclude that petitioner’s rights under the Fourth Amendment were not violated.”
Grewe v France, 75 F Supp 433 (ED Wisc) (1948), upheld a search ordered by the commanding officer. There the trial judge commented:
“. . . At the time involved, although open hostilities had ceased, it was highly essential that the commanding officer of our forces maintain strict discipline and control over the German population in that area, as well as over our own troops and those accompanying them. Underground opposition to our forces was almost to be expected. The situation was still tense and fraught with danger. In this setting petitioner was arrested in good faith. Under military law no warrant for his arrest was required. A search without a warrant was just as much in order as if the commanding officer had searched the barracks occupied by his troops. In fact, no courts from which a search warrant could be obtained were functioning. The Fourth Amendment condems [sic] only unreasonable search and seizure. Under the circumstances present the search of the government controlled premises occupied by the petitioner was not unreasonable.”
Best v United States, 184 F 2d 131 (CA 1st Cir) (1950) is another case in which the court, after concluding the guarantees of the Fourth Amendment were available to the defendant, held a commanding officer could order a search when deemed necessary by him. The court stated:
“. . . We are in agreement with the analysis and conclusion of the district judge in the following paragraph of his memorandum denying the motion to suppress, 76 F Supp at 864:
‘Orders for the search of defendant’s apartment and seizure of his property proceeded from the staff of the Commanding General of United States Forces in Austria, to the Commander of the 430th Counter Intelligence Unit, and down the line to hi's subordinates who executed the search. The military knew that Best was suspected of treason and had been engaged in broadcasting activities for the German Reich. (Affidavits of military persons concerned.) It is not for this court to say that defendant’s papers did not constitute a threat to the safety of the military occupation, or that the means employed by the commander were not calculated to remove the threat. Here in the United States we can afford to pay, for the freedom from arbitrary police methods, the slight cost of an occasional unpunished offender. In Austria, the Military Commander would not find the bargain so desirable. The cost might be, not an unpunished criminal here and there, but an *492enemy of the occupation forces spreading his influence into receptive channels, feeding the discontent of the population, organizing resistance movements, and hampering the reconstruction of a friendly state and the restoration of freedoms so recently destroyed by the Nazi regime. In this setting, in an occupied country under Military Government, a search and seizure deemed necessary by the highest military commanders, ordered by them to be conducted in the manner customarily employed by the military, with their orders relayed down the chain of military command, and executed in an orderly manner by military personnel, cannot be termed unreasonable. Thus defendant’s rights under the Fourth Amendment were not violated.’ ”
Mr. Larkin, speaking for the Code Committee, notified members of the Armed Services Committee of the House that military law on search and seizure did not follow the civilian authorities. This is his statement:
“The rule on searches and seizures, for instance is not exactly the same as it is in a Federal court. It is, of course, applied where military personnel or their families are billeted in a home of their own, where a warrant would be required, but on camps, stations, and posts and so forth we do not follow the normal search and seizure. Frequently you could not find anybody to issue a warrant.” [Hearings before House Armed Services Committee, 81st Congress, 1st Session, on H. R. 2498, page 1062.]
From the foregoing discussion, it is clear beyond question that a commanding officer has the authority to conduct or order the search of the personnel or property under his command apart from any pre-existing apprehension and without the necessity of obtaining a search warrant. Such a search is clearly “in accordance with military custom” and has been so recognized by the Army and Navy for a period of many years. Without doubt the principle embodied in the quoted cases was the basis for the terminal provision of paragraph 152 of the Manual.
While the foregoing cases deal principally with searches of houses or living quarters, the theories expounded are equally applicable to searches of persons. Certainly the preservation of the home is as important a guarantee as protecting the sanctity of the wearing apparel, and it has long been recognized that the necessities of the services require a more liberal rule in searching persons.
Mr. Robinson Everett, in his work, Military Justice in the Armed Forces of the United States, 1956, page 103, calls attention to the well-established custom of searching military personnel:
“According to the Manual for Courts-Martial, a search may permissibly be conducted in accordance with military custom. The trouble arises in knowing exactly what falls within military custom. Probably the exemplar of this type of search is the ‘shakedown inspection’ to which a serviceman quickly becomes accustomed.”
I do not contend a commanding officer has unlimited power to search members of his command, but I do assert he is not circumscribed by all the refinements applied in civilian cases. He has many occasions, other than searches to obtain incriminating evidence, which justify orders to search members of his command while on station. These are not present in the civilian community and, under any conceivable theory, it is only when his orders to search and seize cannot be considered reasonable that they are unlawful. What constitutes a reasonable search depends upon the facts and circumstances of each individual case, and in the military there are many factors which must be considered. United States v DeLeo, 5 USCMA 148, 17 CMR 148; Go-Bart Importing Co v United States, 282 US 344, 75 L ed 374, 51 S Ct 153; Harris v United States, 331 US 145, 91 L ed 1399, 67 S Ct 1098.
The word “reasonable” as it must be interpreted in military law is not *493limited to those situations where the commander has probable cause to believe a particular person possesses contraband and he alone can be searched. If it were so limited, then the civilian doctrine might be applicable. But it must be remembered that a commanding officer has the duty to maintain law and order and to protect the welfare, health, well-being, and safety of the command. He cannot sit idly by and await positive information that offenses are being committed. He has an obligation to prevent any misbehavior which will impair the efficiency and good order of his command. Surely the captain of a ship is not required to allow liquor or drugs to be smuggled aboard because he cannot fix with certainty the particular culprit. While a civilian can be denied the right to board the ship, under ordinary circumstances a member of its complement may not, and searching is the only effective way to reach the evil if the smuggling is being done by sailors. The same principle is involved when Army or Air Force personnel come on station. Therefore, in order to determine whether a commander has reasonable cause to order a search, consideration must be given to his duties and responsibilities to maintain a combat ready outfit, and his judgment should not be questioned unless he clearly abuses his authority.
As was stated by the Air Force Judicial Council in United States v Hopkins, 4 CMR (AF) 553:
“. . . Because of necessities of the military service, he [the President] has substituted for the search warrant issued under civil law the authorization of a commanding officer who, by virtue of his very position, must be a person of discretion and responsibility; such authorizing officer is substituted for the independent judicial officer authorized to issue search warrants under civil law. It has been held that as there is in the Manual for Courts-Martial no requirement for anything like the affidavit of probable cause required by civil statutes, an appropriate commanding officer’s exercise of discretion in authorizing a particular search cannot be questioned (ACM 1458, Worley, 3 CMR 424, 442).”
It remains then to be seen whether this commanding officer acted reasonably in ordering the search of the returning soldiers. Not only do I believe he acted within reason, but I am of the opinion he would have failed in his duties to his command if he had not taken some affirmative action to prevent the importation of habit-forming drugs into his area. This search could have been justified on a protective theory alone. It is to be remembered that an officer in command of a military area in a combat zone on foreign soil has more reason to order searches of the individuals coming in and going from the area than would an officer stationed in the United States. In the case at bar, the unit was stationed in South Korea, and the illegal flow of narcotic drugs from North Korea and Communist China into the general area and eventually into the hands of American troops was a scourge with which commanders in that country had to deal, for:
“The Communists have planned well and know a well-trained soldier becomes a liability and a security risk from the moment he takes a shot of heroin.” [The Traffic in Narcotics, Anslinger and Tompkins, 1953, page 95.]
The officer knew that heroin was destroying the combat efficiency of his command as, prior to the night in question, there had been two previous convictions of members of the unit arising out of the use and possession of the drug and a third man had been seized with narcotics on his person, only to escape prosecution because of an invalid chain of custody of the contraband. Other men in the unit were suspected of similar activity, and the condition was of sufficient notoriety that the officer had apprised his noncom-missioned officers of the situation. At the time of the search, the suspects had been under surveillance for several months, and the commander’s decision to make the search was prompted by *494information that one of the suspects had borrowed ten dollars from a comrade. While this fact may appear rather unimportant, we must remember the circumstances in which it occurred. Necessities and proper merchandise were available through regular military outlets, the borrower had been suspected of narcotic offenses for some months, and the money was loaned immediately before the borrower would have an opportunity to deal with vendors of narcotics. Whether the commanding officer knew this particular accused was in possession of the contraband is unimportant. He had reason to believe someone in the group was involved in importing the drug, and his duty was to intercept the contraband. That it was found on the accused is unfortunate for him, but he may be likened to the citizen who seeks to smuggle contraband into this country. Each may be searched upon suspicion and, if they are caught, they must pay the penalty.
Viewed in the light of these facts, I not only find the officer had cause to order the search, but his alertness was commendable. As a commander, he stood responsible for the welfare of his men and simply took steps to protect them from the ravages of a widespread devastating and prevalent evil. Habit-forming drugs are ruinous to men and fatal to military organization. To deny a commanding officer the right to search men returning to their units after being exposed to drug peddlers in foreign countries is to cripple the services in their endeavors to protect their men and maintain peak combat efficiency.
It can, of course, be contended that the necessities of the service might permit searches to prevent importation of morale destroying goods but, unless there was good cause to search the particular person, the evidence cannot be used to support criminal prosecution. The answer to that contention is that if the only risk the smuggler takes is confiscation of the smuggled goods, he can well afford to take the chance — his loss on particular occasions would but constitute a cost of doing business, to be recouped in profits from his undiscovered activities. I am not prepared to let him off that easily.
II
The other aspect of the majority opinion is equally contrary to my view. I encounter considerable difficulty in reconciling the statement that the accused was prejudiced by the law officer’s alleged arbitrariness in curtailing argument, with the comment that the circumstances surrounding the matter argued are developed sufficiently “to permit an informed appellate judgment thereon.” Moreover, apart from that inconsistency in the majority’s approach, I deem it indeed unfortunate that the law officer is castigated for his ruling, and particularly is that true when, rather than being prejudiced, accused was, as I understand the law, accorded a distinct benefit.
I believe all members of the Court are genuinely interested in strengthening the role of the law of-ficer and making him in the image of a Federal trial judge. Yet, opinions such as this eat away that possibility. A trial judge in a civilian court is not a mere figurehead who must bend with the will of the advocates. He is the master of the court and is entitled to require that cases be tried properly and expeditiously. He need not listen to every harangue proposed by counsel and, if he considers an objection premature and inappropriate, he need not have the jury confused and the record cluttered by a lot of immaterial argument. The same authority ought to inhere to a law officer in the military courts. If the judge or law officer is satisfied that there is no merit to the objection upon any legal ground, he is not required to allow counsel to expound on the objection. If he errs and there is any valid basis for excluding the evidence, he is subject to reversal providing the accused was prejudiced. In the cáse at bar, my associates assert the law officer’s ruling was uninformed. I contend to the contrary and say he exhibited an understanding of the rules of evidence. The point at issue is simply this. An objection to the introduction of real evidence obtained by an al*495legedly illegal search and seizure should be made at the time the exhibit is offered in evidence. Before the offer can be made, if the article has been in several hands, a chain of custody must be established.- This is a preliminary matter, and the question to which the objection was offered had only to do with forging the links in the chain of custody of the heroin. The objection made at that time was premature, and the law officer understood that for, when the containers were offered in evidence by trial counsel, the defense objected and assigned unlawful search as the predicate for the objection. Accordingly, it seems to me that the law officer is being criticized for requiring counsel to try the case properly.
For my second point of disagreement on this issue, I will assume the law officer erred. Based on that assumption, I assert the accused was benefited by the ruling. The authorities cited by the Court announce good rules of law which should be applied in the military, but they are inapposite in the present setting. The rule is, of course, that if an appellant seeks a reversal on appeal because of an erroneous ruling by a trial judge on an objection, he must have specified the grounds of his objection. Orderly procedure requires the application of that principle because, for example, if it is contended the evidence is irrelevant, its relevancy can be shown at the proper time; if an assertion of incompetency of testimony is made, its competency can be established; and if the objection is based on the claim that secondary evidence is being used, a base for its admission can be established. It must not be overlooked, however, that there is a complementary rule which states the objector must, on appeal, rely on the specific basis he assigns in the trial forum. Interpreting the principles together, what is the position of this accused? Under the law officer’s ruling, he was limited to a general objection. That makes it possible for him to attack the ruling on any ground. Instead of being limited to a specific reason for his objection, he has the' entire field in which he can argue the evidence was inadmissible. If at the present time he could show this Court any ground for a legal objection to the question asked, he would win his point. He loses, in my view, not because he failed to assign the grounds for his objection but because it was not well taken by any rule of evidence.
For the foregoing reasons, I would aifirm the decision of the board of review.