United States v. Adams

5 C.M.A. 563, 5 USCMA 563, 18 C.M.R. 187, 1955 CMA LEXIS 406, 1955 WL 3307
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedApril 1, 1955
DocketNo. 5300
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 5 C.M.A. 563 (United States v. Adams) 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. Adams, 5 C.M.A. 563, 5 USCMA 563, 18 C.M.R. 187, 1955 CMA LEXIS 406, 1955 WL 3307 (cma 1955).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

ROBERT E. Quinn, Chief Judge:

A general court-martial convicted the accused of two specifications of murder in violation of Article 118, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 50 USC § 712, and sentenced him to a dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, and confinement at hard labor for twenty-five years. On appeal, a divided board of review affirmed only a finding of guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and modified the sentence by reducing the period of confinement to fifteen years. We granted further review to consider certain claims of error by the accused.

On December 8, 1953, a part of the accused’s battalion was encamped in a training area in Korea. The personnel were quartered in squad tents. In the early evening, the accused, Corporal R. Hughes, and two other persons were engaged in a stud poker game in one of the tents. A few men watched the game. At the turn up of a hand dealt by one of the' others, Hughes charged that the accused cheated. He asserted that the accused had six cards, one of which came from the dealer’s discard. The accused denied the charge and, claiming to be the winner, he took up the money. Thereupon, Hughes threatened to kill the accused; he “invited him outside.”

Hughes was about the accused’s build and height, but weighed approximately five to fifteen pounds more. As they proceeded to the tent entrance, the accused pulled a bayonet from a scabbard. Outside the tent, however, they were separated by other soldiers. Hughes again made “some smart remark about going to kill the accused” before morning.

The accused went to his own tent. He took his rifle from under his bunk, put in a full clip of bullets, inserted a round into the chamber, and put on the safety. He remarked to a tentmate “this is in case he come [sic] in and starts messing with me after I get to [567]*567sleep.” He talked with others in the tent. There were eleven persons present. A few minutes later, Hughes came “tearing at the front door.” He kept shouting to the accused that he wanted his money or he would kill him. A Sergeant Flanagan opened the tent flap. Hughes came in. He had two fist-sized rocks in his hands. He started down the aisle, hut apparently stopped when he saw the accused holding his rifle. Hughes seized Flanagan to use him as a shield.

According to Flanagan, the accused remarked, “come back here and get it.” The accused then approached Hughes, pushed him in the chest with the barrel of his rifle, forcing him back. Hughes still insisted he wanted his money, or he would kill the accused. The accused’s only reply was “get out of here . . . leave me alone.”

As they moved back toward the tent entrance, the accused kept prodding Hughes with the rifle. Suddenly, Hughes bent down and snatched a rifle from under a cot. He also seized a clip from a cartridge belt hanging on the edge of the cot. He inserted the clip into the gun. The muzzle pointed in “the general direction” of the accused. The accused “knocked the safety off” his own weapon and fired twice. One shot killed Hughes. The other passed through the tent, entered another nearby, and lodged in the back of the skull of a Sergeant Garcia. He, too, was killed.

Witnesses testified that the action was very fast. One described the seizure of the rifle by Hughes as “one, swift, grab, grab, grab, deal.” Flanagan estimated the interval of time between the accused’s last push and the shooting as “a matter of seconds.” A third witness said he turned around to extinguish a candle that had fallen down; when he looked up he saw Hughes with the rifle, and “it was just a moment until he fell.” Several of the persons present testified that if the accused had not shot Hughes, he would have killed the accused. Typical is the testimony by one that, “The way things were happening, Adams would have gotten shot if he didn’t shoot Hughes.”

Immediately after the shooting, the accused appeared to one witness to be in a “sort of hysterical state.” Some of the bystanders heard him say, “He made me do it,” or “I had to do it.” Flanagan said that the accused “turned around and said, You see, it was self-defense.”

The accused voluntarily gave a pretrial statement to the Criminal Investigation Division agents which was admitted in evidence, and he also testified at the trial. The statement and his testimony are inconsistent, but the inconsistencies are not important on this appeal. In his testimony, the accused said he was reading a letter when Hughes started the commotion outside the tent. Hughes kept “pressing me” so he picked up his rifle and an ammunition clip and started loading the weapon. Someone called, “Look out, Adams.” He hurriedly completed the loading, and started toward the front of the tent. He did not notice anything in Hughes’ hands. When he reached Hughes, he pushed him in the chest with the rifle. He told Hughes “[he] didn’t want this; [he] . . . didn’t want no trouble or for him to lose his stripes.” When Hughes seized the rifle from under the bed and loaded it, he “got scared and nervous.” He “figured” that he could not run. His general reaction is expressed in the following excerpts from his testimony.

“Q What was the reason you pulled the trigger?
A He was releasing the bolt, he let his hand go from the bolt, and I knew the bolt was going home; I knew I would have to shoot, or he would have .killed me.
“Q Do you feel that he meant to shoot you?
A Yes, I do, sir.
“Q Now, when you were backing Hughes up, and the rifle was pointed, and he went to pick up a rifle and turned to get that clip of ammunition, did you stand there and watch?
A My reaction was to run, but I was too scared, because if I run, he would have shot me.
“Q So you let him grab the rifle? [568]*568You just stood there and watched him pick it up?
A After he grabbed the rifle, I started to run, but I was scared and I figured he would have shot me.”

The accused’s first contention is that the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction for voluntary manslaughter. Voluntary manslaughter is an unlawful killing in the heat of sudden passion caused by adequate provocation. In certain circumstances, the passion may be engendered by fear. Cf. United States v. Black, 3 USCMA 57, 11 CMR 57. Fear, however, may also provide the predicate for a claim of self-defense. The ultimate effect of the emotion must be judged in relation to all the surrounding circumstances. See United States v. Troglin, 3 USCMA 385, 12 CMR 141. Here, the accused testified that he shot Hughes because he feared that otherwise Hughes would kill him. But his testimony and the other evidence do not only raise an issue of self-defense, they also provide a basis for a determination that the accused acted from sudden passion and without motive. As was pointed out by the United States Supreme Court in Stevenson v. United States, 162 US 316, 40 L ed 980, 16 S Ct 839:

. . It is difficult to think of a case of killing by shooting, where both men were armed and ■ both in readiness. to shoot, and when both did shoot, that the question would not arise for the jury to answer whether the killing was murder or manslaughter, or a pure act of self-defense.”

A board of review has the power to make findings of fact.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 C.M.A. 563, 5 USCMA 563, 18 C.M.R. 187, 1955 CMA LEXIS 406, 1955 WL 3307, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-adams-cma-1955.