[3] As an officer and supporter of Janko Vukotić, he came into conflict with the Minister of War, Mitar Martinović, which is why he spent almost a year in prison under accusation that he was the opponent of King Nicholas.
[4] After the Balkan Wars, he though about joining the Royal Serbian Army, however, he named commander of the border company in Đakovica.
[6] During the Austro-Hungarian occupation of Montenegro, he was interned in Hungary, where he remained in a prison camp until the end of the war.
[9] From the end of 1942, he was an advisor to the commander of the Third Strike Division, as well as a councilor at the First Session of AVNOJ and a member of ZAVNO of Montenegro and Boka.
[11] His older son Vojislav died in the war, and the younger Branko was the first president of the Montenegrin Academy of Sciences and Arts.