The Volokh Conspiracy
Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent
A Monstrous Misunderstanding of Martin v. Mott: Why the Supreme Court Should Stay Its Hand Rather Than Judge Perry's Temporary Restraining Order
A guest post by Prof. John Dehn.

President Donald Trump's attempts to federalize the National Guard and use it for domestic law enforcement are the subject of ongoing litigation in California, Oregon, and Illinois. What follows is a guest post on this important issue by Professor John Dehn, a leading experts on legal issues surrounding domestic use of the military. Prof. Dehn is also a former US Army officer, who spent fifteen years serving as a military judge advocate.
Building on a previous guest post, coauthored with Josh Braver, Dehn explains why judicial deference to presidential invocations of emergency powers to federalize the National Guard is not required by the Supreme Court's 1827 decision in Martin v. Mott., which has become a central focus of contention in these cases.
I myself have written about the Illinois litigation here, California litigation here and here, and about the more general issue of judicial review of emergency powers here. What follows below was written by John Dehn, not by me (Ilya Somin), though I generally agree with it, and certainly agree on the bottom line conclusion:
The Trump administration has misinterpreted, and to this point some appellate judges have misunderstood and misapplied, the Supreme Court's narrow decision in Martin v. Mott. The administration claims Martin establishes that presidents possess judicially unreviewable authority to determine whether exigent circumstances justifying a domestic use of the armed forces exist. This would mean that President Trump may federalize and deploy National Guard troops whenever and wherever he deems appropriate. In support, it primarily relies on one sentence of the Martin opinion, which Justice Story described as a "sound rule of [statutory] construction" rather than a doctrine of constitutional law.
"We are all of opinion, that the authority to decide whether the exigency has arisen, belongs exclusively to the President, and that his decision is conclusive upon all other persons."
Although district court Judge April Perry and a Seventh Circuit panel correctly concluded that Martin is not controlling in the context of National Guard deployments to support domestic law enforcement activities, the Ninth Circuit has twice concluded that this single, unqualified sentence represents binding Supreme Court precedent. It seems some judges and even some esteemed commentators do not appreciate the very limited context to which this sentence applied, and therefore the much narrower principle or doctrine that it should be understood to establish. Here, I want to briefly add something to what I have already written about this case (with Professor Joshua Braver) and then explain why the Supreme Court should stay its hand rather than Judge Perry's temporary restraining order.
Martin v. Mott was a replevin action that collaterally attacked the court-martial conviction of a militiaman, Jacob Mott, who disobeyed an order to muster and whose mare had been seized by Martin, a deputy U.S. marshal, to satisfy the fine imposed. Justice Story's opinion addressed various challenges to that order and the prior proceedings. Regarding the sentence for which he is being cited, Story's primary concerns were the negative consequences that allowing Mott's claims would have on: discipline in the ranks, the authority of the military chain of command, and the security of the country. His opinion did not address, and in the context of the case could not have addressed, the general ability or authority of courts to review a president's purported justification for the mobilization and use of the armed forces under a statute, or the legality of any measures he may direct them to employ. No issues beyond the legal authority for the mobilization order, the court-martial, and the resulting seizure were raised.
Any doubts about this understanding of Story's opinion are clarified by his citation to an 1814 opinion from the Supreme Court of New York in Vanderheyden v. Young, about which Story wrote, "the reasons in support of [the rule Story posited] were most ably expounded by Mr. Justice Spencer." As it turns out, reviewing Spencer's exposition of that rule is incredibly helpful to understanding Story's opinion. In a suit for damages against an officer who presided over the court-martial of another delinquent New York militiaman, Justice Spencer more completely articulated the rule of construction on which Story relied but only partially articulated:
It is a general and sound principle, that whenever the law vests any person with a power to do an act, and constitutes him a judge of the evidence on which the act may be done, and, at the same time, contemplates that the act is to be carried into effect, through the instrumentality of agents, the person thus clothed with power is invested with discretion, and is, quoad hoc, a judge. His mandates to his legal agents, on his declaring the event to have happened, will be a protection to those agents; and it is not their duty or business to investigate the facts thus referred to their superior, and to rejudge his determination. [emphasis added]
Justice Spencer also explained that any contrary doctrine "would be monstrous" for military discipline (using terms later echoed by Justice Story). If soldiers could challenge such orders in this way, he said, "[n]o man would dare to obey the orders, either of the president, or of his superior officer, lest, peradventure, the president had either abused his authority, or misjudged, in relation to the occurrence of the fact, which authorized him to call forth the militia."
Thus, Story's citation to Vanderheyden establishes that the cited sentence in the Martin opinion pertains only to the military chain of command and to damages or other redress available to disobedient militiamen punished by their superiors. It is not a general statement about the authority of courts to review such presidential determinations in suits for relief from actual or impending injuries stemming from a president's alleged misuse of statutory powers involving the armed forces.
But there are even more reasons why Martin v. Mott should not be understood as controlling in the present litigation. For example, the Act at issue in Martin has been amended and was later deconstructed and codified not only in 10 U.S.C. § 12406 but also 10 U.S.C. § 251, § 252, § 253, and § 254. The lower federal courts have yet to fully address and account for the effect of these changes, as Judge Nelson's confused concurring opinion in the most recent Ninth Circuit decision demonstrates.
Additionally, the use of federal armed forces or federalized National Guard troops for domestic law enforcement is now generally prohibited by the Posse Comitatus Act, "except in cases and under circumstances expressly authorized by the Constitution or Act of Congress." (emphasis added) It is also a sound rule of statutory construction that exceptions to general criminal prohibitions are to be construed narrowly, which arguably empowers courts to ensure that a president has done so. Thus, one might fairly conclude that even if the President invokes the Insurrection Act, an exception to the Posse Comitatus Act, and notwithstanding any statutory text that appears to grant broad presidential discretion to do so, courts may engage in judicial review to determine whether his invocation was proper. Dalton v. Spector is not controlling when a president exercises statutory discretion in a way that raises constitutional issues, as has been alleged in Illinois v. Trump.
Moreover, as Professor Steve Vladeck has explained, an overbroad reading of this sentence from Martin would be monstrous for the Constitution, the country, and the rule of law. Generally applying Story's incompletely articulated rule of statutory construction to statutes authorizing domestic use of the armed forces in emergencies is not only irreconcilable with recent Supreme Court decisions addressing similar issues (e.g. Loper Bright), it also would allow a president to unilaterally militarize or supplant the Constitution's framework for civil governance on a whim. Congress possesses no constitutional authority to grant a president such discretionary power, and courts should generally interpret statutes in a manner that avoids raising such serious constitutional issues. (E.g., Edward J. DeBartolo Corp. v. Fla. Gulf Coast Bldg. & Constr. Trades Council) For the same reasons, the Court should not interpret Mott or the present circumstances as falling within the category of a non-justiciable political question.
All of these observations provide ample reasons for the Supreme Court to stay its hand in these cases rather than the temporary order of a lower federal court. Its consideration of the complicated and, as yet, underexamined legal and factual issues in these cases would clearly benefit from further proceedings and, dare I say, additional legal scholarship that is undoubtedly in the works.
There is yet another important reason the Supreme Court should stay it hand in this case: the Trump administration's "unclean hands." Although an administrative stay is not technically a form of equitable relief to which the clean hands doctrine may be applied, federal courts consider similar factors when deciding whether to grant one. The heavy-handed, unconstitutional tactics of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have undoubtedly increased the number and intensity of the protests against ICE operations in Chicago. In a separate case, Judge Sarah Ellis determined that federal agents in Chicago have used excessive force against protestors, members of the media, and others presenting no imminent threat of harm to the officers or others, which entail violations of (at a minimum) the First and Fourth Amendments. Upon finding that the administration may be ignoring her first order Judge Ellis amended it, granting additional relief. News reports also indicate that ICE has engaged in war zone-like operations that involve what appear to be additional violations of the Fourth Amendment and perhaps of an applicable consent decree as well. This abusive and dehumanizing behavior is not only unconstitutional but seems calculated to instigate the very outrage that the administration now claims it needs federalized National Guard troops to protect itself from. The Supreme Court should not effectively condone such reprehensible and cynical behavior by granting the administration's request for a stay.
John Dehn is associate professor and faculty director, National Security and Civil Rights Program at Loyola Law School.
Editor's Note: We invite comments and request that they be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of Reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I'm not convinced. If Mott's deployment was unconstitutional, then the order deploying him was void ab initio and he had no duty to obey it. The Court was saying that we can't have such a state of affairs, of individual militiamen challenging their deployment in court, which is why courts will not review such orders. Period.
It is fairly simple when you aren't trying to get the anti-Trump result.
That's also why there is a distinction between the enlisted and officers. Enlisted personnel do not have any right to question such well regulated orders. That's distinct from any exigency in the moment not to follow a particular illegal order, like firing on unarmed non-combatants.
Officers have a different path: they can resign their commissions. As the SOUTHCOM commanding admiral just did. Not a judgement on why, but certainly possible he was uncomfortable with the legality of the orders he was given.
There is nothing inherently illegal about what the guard might be doing, even if its federal mobilization by the president was not legal.
Bullshit. You are missing the professor's point.
"His opinion did not address, and in the context of the case could not have addressed, the general ability or authority of courts to review a president's purported justification for the mobilization and use of the armed forces under a statute, or the legality of any measures he may direct them to employ."
Whatever comment you have about challenging the constitutionality of the president's decision; that case and the case pending in IL fed court are about 'statutory authorization." If Mott had a constitutional claim he either didn't raise it or it wasn't preserved for appeal as it didn't factor into the decision. Since it didn't make up any part of the case or its legal reasoning; using it to support your made up hallucination on a topic not addressed is completely illogical and pointless.
It may seem a detail but Mott didn't challenge his deployment in court, he simply disobeyed and tried to use the constitutionality argument as a post hoc justification. I don't see any difficulty with a rule that judicial review is available but in the interim you have to obey. Absent a stay that's how it works with court orders.
The current cases about Trump are not individual militiamen challenging their deployment in court and thus Mott does not apply.
wvattorney13 — Equally simple, and more pertinent: a rule to free military discipline from entanglement by endorsing command power is not like a constitutional rule to constrain command power. Neither of those can sensibly be applied as a corrective to the other. They must stand independently.
During Obama's presidency an officer sued to block his deployment order because Obama, being foreign born, was not really the Commander in Chief. The court said even if true his allegations did not save him from the duty to obey orders.
The courts are not consistent in choosing when to allow collateral challenges and when to follow the "de facto officer" doctrine. In the context of the military they say if it walks like a president and quacks like a president, it is a president. Challenges to authority of civilian adminstrative law judges are much more welcome.
"We are all of opinion [sic], that the authority to decide whether the exigency has arisen, belongs exclusively to the President, and that his decision is conclusive upon all other persons."
Should be: "We are all of opinion,[sic] that the authority to decide whether the exigency has arisen,[sic] belongs exclusively to the President, and that his decision is conclusive upon all other persons."
No "the" is needed before "opinion" (I assume that's why) and the two commas are wrong. Unless extra needless commas and "the opinion" are legalese.
Oh dear. Google reports a mere 26,400 published cases contain the phrase "we are of opinion." The phrase has also been employed by various lightweight authors like Jules Verne and Sigmund Freud.
Seems like sort of an embarrassing way to start off a screed that's literally all about second-guessing this crystal-clear statement of our forebears.
The usage is odd enough in modern times that the [sic] seems reasonable. It usually implies an error by the original author, but doesn't need to.
"Monstrous" LOL
I strenuously object!
(Not every legal disagreement against Trump needs to be framed as armageddon.)
I think it’s a play on this from the article:
Justice Spencer also explained that any contrary doctrine "would be monstrous" for military discipline (using terms later echoed by Justice Story).
I see, President Trump has misinterpreted a “narrow” holding that make "his decision… conclusive upon all other persons” Martin v. Mott, 25 U.S. 19, 30 (1827).
But Wong Kim Ark applies broadly to accord birth right citizenship to the children of illegals notwithstanding that the case didn’t concern illegals.
Law professors certainly have a nuanced understanding of consistency.
I agree with this. Lawyers do it. When you don't like a case, you say "Oh, but it wasn't about X, Y, and Z" When you like a case you stretch the holding to cover everything.
Wong Kim Ark provides a large piece of the legal argument about birthright citizenship, but not all of it. The other piece is that there was no such thing as illegal immigration in 1868.
Just so you know, the legal domicile of Wong Kim Ark's parents was central to the issue presented and holding.
Somehow I suspect that when you said, "I see," you didn't mean it.
1. Justice Spencer : It is a general and sound principle, that whenever the law vests any person with a power to do an act, and constitutes him a judge of the evidence on which the act may be done, and, at the same time, contemplates that the act is to be carried into effect, through the instrumentality of agents, the person thus clothed with power is invested with discretion, and is, quoad hoc, a judge. His mandates to his legal agents, on his declaring the event to have happened, will be a protection to those agents; and it is not their duty or business to investigate the facts thus referred to their superior, and to rejudge his determination.
From which Prof Dehn extracts this :
2. Justice Spencer also explained that any contrary doctrine "would be monstrous" for military discipline (using terms later echoed by Justice Story). If soldiers could challenge such orders in this way, he said, "[n]o man would dare to obey the orders, either of the president, or of his superior officer, lest, peradventure, the president had either abused his authority, or misjudged, in relation to the occurrence of the fact, which authorized him to call forth the militia."
3. Thus, Story's citation to Vanderheyden establishes that the cited sentence in the Martin opinion pertains only to the military chain of command and to damages or other redress available to disobedient militiamen punished by their superiors.
I say nothing about the rest of his piece, but this is remarkbale stuff.
Paragraph 1 - the principle Justice Spencer actually expounds says precisely nothing about the military chain of command specifically and is phrased in very general terms : general and sound principle ; whenever the law vests any person; His mandates to his legal agents (note not "his orders to his troops" but "legal agents")
Paragraph 2 describes why a departure from this general principle would be disastrous in the military context (the actual context of the case he was judging) - but it in no way purports to limit the application of the general principle to the military chain of command. It is simply the application of the general principle established by paragraph 1 to the case at hand.
Paragraph 3 is just Prof Dehn seeing what he wants to see. And what he wants to see is not there. There is nothing at all in Paragraph 1 that limits its general scope to the military context.
There may, or may not, be good reasons for believing some or all of the rest of Prof Dehn's piece, but the bit I have quoted above puts Prof Dehn pretty deep in the hole when it comes to establishing his credibility.
Fine. Assuming you are correct then you just run into a separation of powers issue or non-delegation problem. Congress can give the executive *some* of their authority. They can't give it *ALL* of one of their enumerated powers lest the constitution's words don't mean anything and are not binding on any branch of govt.
I don't think that is the rule any of these judges would advocate. Do you?
“I say nothing about the rest of his piece…” is what I said and what I meant. I am merely noting that one of the points he made struck me as obvious nonsense.
You may be right that there are other arguments that might be made successfully. I’m just pointing out that this particular argument is hopeless. And consequently unhelpful to his credibility. But if those other arguments stand by themselves the damage he does to his credibility with the nonsense point is of little account.
That said, Prof Somin does advertise the guy as a “leading expert” in the field, so his supposed credibility is advanced as a reason to pay attention.
“Paragraph 2 describes why a departure from this general principle would be disastrous in the military context (the actual context of the case he was judging) - but it in no way purports to limit the application of the general principle to the military chain of command.”
Paragraph 2 of the given excerpt of Dehn’s article or Spencer’s opinion?
Paragraph 2 of the numbered paragraphs in my comment to which you are replying. The one beginning “Justice Spencer also explained…”
The point the court was making here is that the agents can't be blamed for following the president's orders. Not that the orders are inherently lawful just because the president gives them.
Correct or not, your point is entirely irrelevant to Prof Dehn's claim that the rule stated by Justice Spencer is restricted in application to the military chain of command.
He's basically throwing spaghetti against the wall. This particular strand did not stick.
If the lower courts and judges are confused by the SCOTUS's previous rulings the ideal way to fix it is to have the SCOTUS take up the case and clarify what the law says. The only reason to oppose the SCOTUS doing so would be fear of an adverse ruling. Tell me Mr. Somin do you fear an adverse ruling or are you confident enough in your position
to let the SCOTUS hear the case and make a hopefully clear and final decision?
Why do you think that won't happen? Also the judges are not confused.
Well, the OR trial court sure seemed to be confused. He dwelled on § 12406(2) (Rebellion) when § 12406(3) (inability to enforce federal law with regular forces) was the subsection invoked.
It very much depends on whether any appeals court rules against the USG. CA apparently didn’t appeal the CA panel reversal for an en banc 9th Circuit. And, I think that it was the IL case where en banc hearing was voted down by the 7th Circuit. That leaves an en banc 9th Circuit reversal of the panel decision, and that, in turn, requires a vote of the entire 9th Circuit. So, if the case gets an en banc hearing, and their en banc decision is against the USG, then it will likely be summarily dismissed by the Supreme Court. Likely I think 6-3 vote adopting the panel decision and 2-3 votes for the Concurrence. Maybe more.
I'm running out of crying towels.
I'm running out of containers for all the Marxist tears.
The National Guard is not "enforcing laws." They are not arresting anyone. The National Guard is being called upon to protect federal facilities and employees.
If the Portland PD and Chicago PD acted responsibly, and extended the equal protection of the law to federal employees and assets in Portland and Chicago, the National Guard would not be needed. Instead they have been ORDERED by their respective local leadership not to respond to requests of illegal activity taking place against federal facilities and employees.
If the National Guard is not "enforcing laws" than the whole legal argument Trump is using falls apart. Protecting federal facilities and employees is not an enumerated use of the National Guard.
Is sending them into a lawless area a legitimate use? Claiming local PD is ordered to not defend ICE facilities and personnel, at least for certain categories of lawlessness, appears to be the argument.
All of that is a laughable stretch (hence hyperbolating a thrown sandwich) but there you go.
In accordance with the traditional military policy of the United States, it is essential that the strength and organization of the Army National Guard and the Air National Guard as an integral part of the first line defenses of the United States be maintained and assured at all times. Whenever Congress determines that more units and organizations are needed for the national security than are in the regular components of the ground and air forces, the Army National Guard of the United States and the Air National Guard of the United States, or such parts of them as are needed, together with such units of other reserve components as are necessary for a balanced force, shall be ordered to active Federal duty and retained as long as so needed.
If the federalized NG need to protect federal property and/or employees, in order for the President to enforce federal laws, then they can perform that function. Whatever that takes. What they cannot do under § 12406 activation is perform LEO functions (such as arrest people) that is still forbidden under Posse Comitatus. (That requires Presidential invocation of the Insurrection Act).
I have been reading and thinking this over. Protection of federal facilities still falls within “executing the laws of the United States” under § 252. Congress already gave civil agencies—like the Federal Protective Service and U.S. Marshals—authority to secure federal property under 40 U.S.C. § 1315 and related statutes. That power is continuous and civilian; it doesn’t extend to military deployment or broad crowd control. When civil capacity proves insufficient, the President may invoke the Insurrection Act—but only after issuing the § 254 proclamation.
Section 12406 applies to domestic execution of law or suppression of rebellion; it mobilizes Guard units but confers no authority to employ them. The use of federal resources arises, if at all, under §§ 251–253, and only through the procedural hinge of § 254. That sequence—§ 254’s notice, § 252’s authorization, and § 12406’s augmentation—preserves both process and hierarchy.
Historically, presidents have followed that order: Eisenhower issued Proclamation 3204 (1957) before enforcing desegregation orders, and George H. W. Bush issued Proclamation 6427 (1992) before deploying troops during the Los Angeles riots.
Given that structure, if § 254’s proclamation has not issued, is the employment of those mobilized resources lawful at all?
Nope. § 12406 allows NG activation in three different situations. The relevant one here is whenever:
“(3) the President is unable with the regular forces to execute the laws of the United States;”
Nothing in § 12406(3) requiring invasion or insurrection. Just not being able to enforce federal laws with the regular forces available. The Insurrection Act is different. It is more powerful, and requires more formalities. It’s plain silly to think that state NG troops can be activated under § 12406, by the President, in order to execute federal laws, prevent invasion or insurrection, but can’t do anything to effect those goals. The implication is that the NG troops can do anything to effect those goals, as long as they aren’t prohibited (e.g. Posse Comitatus).
"it also would allow a president to unilaterally militarize or supplant the Constitution's framework for civil governance on a whim."
Welcome to COVID. My state's civil defense law allows the governor to declare an emergency and rule by decree exercising any power which the legislature could have constitutionally granted him. Other states have similar laws. In 2020 executive authority not seen in our lifetime was claimed. No paint at Home Depot! No church! One way traffic in the supermarket aisles.
But, but, but it saved lives.
While the Unclean Hands doctrine isn't seen to apply to administrative stays directly, it seems to me quite directly related when governors seek court relief from ICE enforcement via troop backup. This is why I found it surprising that none of the district courts restraints on the feds troops even mentioned the existence of the petitioners Sanctuary State or City status. It might be seen to bar such relief as they oppose and/or obstruct federal law enforcement.
Standing on one's constitutional rights cannot be "unclean hands." (Every so often cops try to pull that crap with citizens, arguing that someone's refusal to let the cop into the home for a warrantless search constitutes "obstruction." It's bogus then, and it's bogus when you do it.)
I'm open to seeing a fair hearing on that issue of the appropriateness of an unclean hands barrier to any of the Sanctuary State or City petitioners for judicial foreclosures of federal power on the POTUS attempting to enforce federal law without the means he deems needed. But we've had no mention of it so far. I see the Sanctuaries' chaotic result as now rising to an open, organized and armed rebellion, or at least risk of rebellion, against federal law. And if that is so, as the POTUS has seen, their criminal advocacy and conspiracy is no constitutional right. And unclean hands should be applied to their judicial standing.
I'm also in favor of a Trump impeachment for various illegal acts and power abuses. But to be fair, I'd also favor a Congressional go ahead to hold the aproppriate Sanctuary State or City leaders as insurrectionist for the purpose of a 14th Amendment bar from federal office. (Which, by the way, I think Trump also deserved for his Jan. 6 actions.)
"The heavy-handed, unconstitutional tactics of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have undoubtedly increased the number and intensity of the protests against ICE operations in Chicago."
lmao... if only I could forget the images of Minneapolis, or Baltimore burning, and the then-mayor telling the police, "give them space to destroy."
uh, no. violent protestors are gonna protest.
Nothing like finding an out-of-context decade-old quote for an argument!
yet...10 years later the Portland Police are still giving the protesters space to destroy things. The simple solution would have been for the Portland Police to step in and do their jobs so that no rocks are thrown, and no windows broken and no one gets assaulted.
Now, even if the Portland Police said they were going to do something, no one believes them. As soon as the National Guard is gone, the protesters will be back to violence.
As my screen name says, I am not a lawyer. Could someone explain in plain English how Justice Spencer's logic does not apply to the "I was just following orders" defense for a junior Soldier who commits a war crime at the behest of those appointed over him?
Neither Young nor Mott were ordered to commit crimes.
Ilya is wrong, yet again. He blatantly misrepresents the facts in evidence and says the Guard is acting as law enforcement when in it is protecting federal government assets, exactly its legal role. John Dehn parrots the same egregious errors of Mr. Somin.
The Trump administration is using the National Guard in exactly the role it was created for, protecting federal assets in a district with chaotic political and judicial conditions.
Their Martin v. Mott argument is a straw man conjured up to either inflate their own egos or mislead the public. Invariably it is a combination of these two objectives.
The only abusive and dehumanizing behavior originates from Keith Wilson and Bob Day in Oregon and their like in Illinois who refuse to uphold their oaths of office to enforce the law.
Judge Ellis in Chicago should face impeachment for her politically motivated and factually inaccurate comments.
This is a coordinated campaign conducted by a group of pathological sociopaths to promote chaos and prevent the enforcement of the rule of law.
As there is precisely zero chance the Supreme Court is going to adopt Somin's peculiar, neo-Confederate notions on this topic, they hardly merit response, but, as something of a Civil War buff, his use of the word "monstrous" did ring a bell.
On April 15, 1861, President Lincoln issued a proclamation, calling forth the state militias into federal service:
Per the proclamation, Secretary of War Simon Cameron sent telegrams to the governors of the states, informing them of the quota of troops they were expected to provide. Missouri Governor Claiborne Fox Jackson responded:
Gov. Jackson called a special session of the state legislature, which he addressed on May 2:
3 The Messages and Proclamations of The Governors of The State Of Missouri (Buel Leopard & Floyd C. Shoemaker eds., 1922) 344-46 (boldface added, italics in original).
I imagine Somin would have been in accord. The plaintive, neo-Confederate wails, in which Somin joins, of a few Democrat governors today are identical to those of a few Democrat governors in the 1950s and 1960s: federal troops are unwanted here, they are unneeded, and we have everything under control. But, ultimately, it's not their call, but the President's. See, e.g., Martin v. Mott, 25 U.S. 19 (1827).
I would encourage those concerned about support for the arguments and those who want to engage seriously with them to read the earlier blog post as well as the Martin and Vanderheyden opinions. As we mentioned in the earlier piece, they are replete with references to the military chain of command and the need to protect officers from liability for following orders.
No officer is personally liable for following a lawful order in a lawful manner without exceeding its scope. Good faith and obedience is not an issue here.