United States v. Adamiak

4 C.M.A. 412, 4 USCMA 412, 15 C.M.R. 412, 1954 CMA LEXIS 500, 1954 WL 2310
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1954
DocketNo. 4032
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 4 C.M.A. 412 (United States v. Adamiak) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Military Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Adamiak, 4 C.M.A. 412, 4 USCMA 412, 15 C.M.R. 412, 1954 CMA LEXIS 500, 1954 WL 2310 (cma 1954).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

PAUL W. Brosman, Judge:

The accused was convicted, following trial by general court-martial convened at Andrews Air Force Base, Maryland, under a number of charges, including nine specifications alleging the utterance of checks followed by a dishonorable failure to maintain an account sufficient to cover them — all in violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 134, 50 USC § 728. The convening authority approved the findings and sentence, and a board of review has affirmed this action. We granted the accused’s petition for review for the purpose of determining whether he was prejudiced by a recess conversation held between a prosecution witness and certain court personnel — and to decide whether prejudicial error flowed from the manner of dealing with certain challenges stemming from this same conversation.

II

All of the checks in suit were drawn on the First National Bank of Southern Maryland — and the trial counsel initial[415]*415ly presented evidence pertaining solely to four which had been uttered at Andrews Air Force Base. Two of these— in amounts of $50 and $34 — were received from the accused by the Andrews Air Force Base Exchange on January 31,1953. They were deposited promptly in the bank with which the Exchange did business — a branch maintained at the Base by the First National Bank of Southern Maryland. Shortly thereafter the two checks were dishonored and returned to the Exchange by the bank. Two other checks — one dated January 31, 1953, the other February 2, 1953, and each for $25 — had been cashed by the accused at the Non-Commissioned Officers’ Mess at Andrews, Both were deposited on February 2 in the Andrews branch of the First National. Both were returned to the Mess.

Five other checks had been issued by the accused and made payable to the Skyline Restaurant, an establishment located within the State of Maryland and about two miles from the Air Base. The first, for $17, was dated December 22, 1952; the next two, in amounts of $25 and $50, bore date of December 23, and — it appears — had been cashed by the accused to provide funds for a forthcoming Christmas furlough. A fourth check for $20 and a fifth for $25 were accepted by Skyline on January 7 and 8 respectively. All of the Skyline paper was deposited in a Washington bank and forwarded to the drawee bank for payment. The first three checks were presented and dishonored. However, following a conversation with the accused, they were redeposited by the restaurant. Again they were returned dishonored — accompanied now by the two later checks, also dishonored.

After producing testimony to the above effect, the Government called to the stand, one Pinckney, manager of the Andrews branch of the First National Bank of Southern Maryland. Through this witness there was offered to the court a copy of the accused’s bank statement. This statement revealed that the latter’s balance on December 22, 1952, would have sufficed to cover only the first of the three checks received from the accused by Skyline in December. On December 29, 1952, the balance was reduced to $9.26. On January 6, 1953, the account was augmented in the amount of $125, due apparently to receipt by the bank of a Government cheek pursuant to a Class E allotment. By charges against the account, it was reduced by January 7, 1953, to $21.36, a sum in excess of the face of the check uttered to Skyline on that date. However, two days afterward the balance was reduced to $1.16, a figure far below the face of any of the checks involved in this case. A deposit of $55.00 made January 15, 1953, was offset that same day by charges in the same amount The balance remained at $1.16, or less, until the deposit on February 4, apparently by allotment, of a further sum of $125.00.

Mr. Pinckney. — testifying in part at least as an expert witness — also brought out that, in the normal course of business, all of the checks uttered by the accused at Andrews Air Force Base would have been deposited by February 3, 1953. He traced the path of the remaining paper from the bank in Washington — where it was deposited by Skyline — through the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Reserve Bank, in Baltimore, to the main office of the drawee, the First National Bank of Southern Maryland. According to Pinckney, the first three checks would, in the normal course of banking affairs, have been presented on or about December 30, 1952, while the latter two would have arrived at the drawee bank on or about January 15, 1953.

Following this testimony, and prior to further examination of Mr. Pinckney, a nine-minute recess took place during which there occurred the episode which now presents difficulty. This incident consisted of a conversation between Colonel Marstin, the president of the court-martial, Major Carter, who was a member of the body, and Mr. Pinckney. The assistant trial counsel also appears to have been one of the group — although he said little, if indeed anything. The accused was located some ten feet from the gathering during the conversation— and defense counsel was in the room during at least some portion of the exchange.

[416]*416When the court-martial reconvened, defense counsel promptly challenged Colonel Marstin, who then testified concerning the subject matter of the conversation. According to this witness, general hypothetical questions were discussed — ones chiefly connected with the handling of checks transmitted by a bank located in one state for presentment at a bank situated in another. The time consumed by such handling was a subject of discussion. During the conversation Colonel Marstin expressed the general view that one who issues a check must be deemed responsible for the maintenance of funds to meet the paper on presentment. He stated under examination that nothing was said with respect to the accused, Adamiak; that only hypothetical questions concerning banking procedures were involved; that no part of the discussion was oriented to the clarification of specific matters connected with the case at bar; and that the conversation would in no wise influence his decision.

When the members of the court-martial were preparing to vote on the Marstin challenge, question was raised concerning the propriety of Major Carter’s participation on the ground that he too was to be challenged by the defense in connection with the identical conversation. With a commendable attitude of fairness, Major Carter expressed his own reluctance to vote thereon — but stated that, apart from the impending challenge to his own competency, he knew of nothing which would serve to disqualify him from voting. The law officer determined that he should participate — and the challenge to Colonel Marstin was not sustained.

The members of the court-martial then proceeded to consider the challenge as to Major Carter, who under oath furnished his account of the recess conversation. He stated that the conversation was general, although it did involve a discussion of the circumstance that checks drawn on banks located in the Washington area frequently were cleared through the Baltimore Federal Reserve Bank. It was also mentioned that on occasion as much as thirty days would transpire between the date of utterance and that of presentment of a check — and it seems to have been within this context that the Colonel remarked that a drawer should be held responsible for the maintenance of an account sufficiently large to cover his checks when finally presented.

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Bluebook (online)
4 C.M.A. 412, 4 USCMA 412, 15 C.M.R. 412, 1954 CMA LEXIS 500, 1954 WL 2310, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-adamiak-cma-1954.