FREYER, Senior Judge:
The appellant was convicted, in accordance with his pleas, of two specifications of failure to go to his appointed place of duty (divisional quarters), in violation of Article 86,10 U.S.C. § 886, and one specification of dereliction of duty by willfully failing to make 33 restricted men’s musters. He was sentenced to confinement for 60 days, forfeiture of $200.00 pay per month for two months, and a bad-conduct discharge. The convening authority approved the sentence but, in accordance with a pretrial agreement, suspended confinement over 45 days and forfeitures in excess of $150.00 per month for two months.
Inasmuch as the Government aggregated the failures to go to all 33 restricted men’s musters in a single specification, a bad-conduct discharge is authorized if, and only if, a bad-conduct discharge would be authorized for a single failure to go to an appointed place of duty if charged as a willful dereliction of duty. United States v. Adams, 13 M.J. 728, 730 (A.C.M.R.1982). The principal issue we must decide is whether or not the “footnote 5” principle1, now found in a bracketed “Note” following paragraph 16e(2), Part IV, Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1984, applies when a failure to go to, or going from, one’s appointed place of duty without authority, properly chargeable under Article 86(1) or (2), Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), respectively, is charged as dereliction of duty under Article 92(3), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 892(3).
As best we can determine, there was not a' single case in military law in which a “failure to go” or a “going from” was charged as a dereliction of duty from the beginning of the world until the U.S. Court of Military Appeals’ decision in United States v. Taylor, 26 M.J. 7 (C.M.A.1988), wherein it was suggested for the first time that a “failure to go” or “going from” not only might, but in some circumstances must, be so charged.
That novel suggestion, which evidently applies whether the “failures to go” or “goings from” are combined with traditional derelictions of duty or stand alone, see United States v. Mitchell, No. 88 3105 (N.M.C.M.R. 30 June 1989), is not particularly illogical nor unreasonable, certainly no more so than that it may be charged as a failure to obey a lawful order, as has long been held, see United States v. Quarles, 1 M.J. 231 (C.M.A.1975). So why has it not traditionally been so charged? The reason, we suspect, is that, if a staff judge advocate wants to “play it straight,” a “failure to go” or “going from” will be charged under Article 86, UCMJ; whereas, if the purpose is to make the offense sound as aggravated as possible, then it will be [594]*594charged under Article 92(2), UCMJ, as an orders violation, which, as we all know, strikes at the heart of military discipline. Whichever might be the staff judge advocate’s purpose, it would make no sense to resort to the intermediate dereliction of duty offense, which perhaps explains why, to the best of our knowledge, no such case exists in the pre-Taylor era.
That is also, perhaps, the reason that the Paragraph 16e Note, like its “footnote 5” antecedent, makes no reference to dereliction of duty. Especially now that the maximum punishment for willful dereliction of duty is identical to that of failure to obey a lawful order, it would perpetrate a wholesale evasion of the established “footnote 5” policy to permit a “failure to go,” “going from,” uniform violation, or any other “one-month” offense, to be punished—just like a failure to obey a lawful order—with confinement for six months, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and a bad-conduct discharge, by the simple artifice of charging it as a willful dereliction of duty.2 Surely, the Taylor court did not intend to promote such mischievous manipulation of the military justice system. The only way to prevent it is to interpret the Paragraph 16e Note as applying to charges of dereliction of duty, as well as orders violations, when the duties concerned are those imposed by lawful orders, and the gravamina of failures to obey such orders are no more than “one-month” offenses.
“Footnote 5,” which was “designed—apparently—to eliminate the confusion which might result from a conceivable contention that the commission of other specifically proscribed and relatively minor offenses should be punished as more serious violations of Article 92,” has been held to apply “to those situations which involve the failure to obey a lawful order and at the same time other misconduct specifically enumerated in the Manual’s Table of Maximum Punishments—and in which the ‘other misconduct’ is deemed to constitute the gravamen of the offense committed.” United States v. Loos, 4 U.S.C.M.A. 478, 480, 481, 16 C.M.R. 52, 54, 55 (1954) (emphasis supplied). We have emphasized the words “situation” and “involve” because they indicate that it is the nature of the situation, not the nature of the charge, which governs whether or not the “footnote 5” principle applies.
Twenty-one years later, the U.S. Court of Military Appeals again addressed “footnote 5”: “The policy behind footnote 5 is to prevent commission of specifically proscribed and relatively minor offenses from being punished as more serious violations of Article 92.” United States v. Quarles, 1 M.J. at 232-33. Although, for the reasons stated above, the court undoubtedly had in mind Article 92(1) and (2), UCMJ, both the language used and its underlying purpose are plainly broad enough to include dereliction of duty under Article 92(3), UCMJ, in the phrase “more serious violations of Article 92.” What sense would it make purposefully to prevent a “one-month” offense from being more severely punished under Article 92(1) or (2), only to allow it to be so punished under the Article 92(3) lesser-included offense of Article 92(1) and (2)?
In the instant case, the requirement to muster clearly arose, as it typically does, from a portion of the restriction orders issued to the appellant; hence, whether the charge was failure to obey one or more lawful orders or dereliction of duty, the “situation” did unquestionably “involve” the failure to obey lawful orders. As a result, the successor Paragraph 16e Note readily supports the interpretation that it applies to Article 92(3) charges when the situations giving rise to the derelictions of duty alleged involve failures to obey lawful orders the sole gravamen of which is failure, without authority, to go to one’s appointed place of duty, and nothing more.
Where the duty in question is to go to a certain place there to perform some military duty over and above the act of report-[595]*595mg, itself, it may rationally be argued that the failure to perform the additional military duty resulting from the failure to go to the appointed place of such duty would support a charge of dereliction of duty outside the scope of the Paragraph 16e Note. Any conclusions as to whether or not such an argument, if addressed to the current U.S. Court of Military Appeals, would fall under the Loos condemnation of “at once ingenious and erroneous[,]” 4 U.S.C.M.A. at 481, 16 C.M.R. at 55, may be left for another day, however, since the orders in the instant case apparently involved no duty beyond the bare duty to report.
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FREYER, Senior Judge:
The appellant was convicted, in accordance with his pleas, of two specifications of failure to go to his appointed place of duty (divisional quarters), in violation of Article 86,10 U.S.C. § 886, and one specification of dereliction of duty by willfully failing to make 33 restricted men’s musters. He was sentenced to confinement for 60 days, forfeiture of $200.00 pay per month for two months, and a bad-conduct discharge. The convening authority approved the sentence but, in accordance with a pretrial agreement, suspended confinement over 45 days and forfeitures in excess of $150.00 per month for two months.
Inasmuch as the Government aggregated the failures to go to all 33 restricted men’s musters in a single specification, a bad-conduct discharge is authorized if, and only if, a bad-conduct discharge would be authorized for a single failure to go to an appointed place of duty if charged as a willful dereliction of duty. United States v. Adams, 13 M.J. 728, 730 (A.C.M.R.1982). The principal issue we must decide is whether or not the “footnote 5” principle1, now found in a bracketed “Note” following paragraph 16e(2), Part IV, Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1984, applies when a failure to go to, or going from, one’s appointed place of duty without authority, properly chargeable under Article 86(1) or (2), Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), respectively, is charged as dereliction of duty under Article 92(3), UCMJ, 10 U.S.C. § 892(3).
As best we can determine, there was not a' single case in military law in which a “failure to go” or a “going from” was charged as a dereliction of duty from the beginning of the world until the U.S. Court of Military Appeals’ decision in United States v. Taylor, 26 M.J. 7 (C.M.A.1988), wherein it was suggested for the first time that a “failure to go” or “going from” not only might, but in some circumstances must, be so charged.
That novel suggestion, which evidently applies whether the “failures to go” or “goings from” are combined with traditional derelictions of duty or stand alone, see United States v. Mitchell, No. 88 3105 (N.M.C.M.R. 30 June 1989), is not particularly illogical nor unreasonable, certainly no more so than that it may be charged as a failure to obey a lawful order, as has long been held, see United States v. Quarles, 1 M.J. 231 (C.M.A.1975). So why has it not traditionally been so charged? The reason, we suspect, is that, if a staff judge advocate wants to “play it straight,” a “failure to go” or “going from” will be charged under Article 86, UCMJ; whereas, if the purpose is to make the offense sound as aggravated as possible, then it will be [594]*594charged under Article 92(2), UCMJ, as an orders violation, which, as we all know, strikes at the heart of military discipline. Whichever might be the staff judge advocate’s purpose, it would make no sense to resort to the intermediate dereliction of duty offense, which perhaps explains why, to the best of our knowledge, no such case exists in the pre-Taylor era.
That is also, perhaps, the reason that the Paragraph 16e Note, like its “footnote 5” antecedent, makes no reference to dereliction of duty. Especially now that the maximum punishment for willful dereliction of duty is identical to that of failure to obey a lawful order, it would perpetrate a wholesale evasion of the established “footnote 5” policy to permit a “failure to go,” “going from,” uniform violation, or any other “one-month” offense, to be punished—just like a failure to obey a lawful order—with confinement for six months, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and a bad-conduct discharge, by the simple artifice of charging it as a willful dereliction of duty.2 Surely, the Taylor court did not intend to promote such mischievous manipulation of the military justice system. The only way to prevent it is to interpret the Paragraph 16e Note as applying to charges of dereliction of duty, as well as orders violations, when the duties concerned are those imposed by lawful orders, and the gravamina of failures to obey such orders are no more than “one-month” offenses.
“Footnote 5,” which was “designed—apparently—to eliminate the confusion which might result from a conceivable contention that the commission of other specifically proscribed and relatively minor offenses should be punished as more serious violations of Article 92,” has been held to apply “to those situations which involve the failure to obey a lawful order and at the same time other misconduct specifically enumerated in the Manual’s Table of Maximum Punishments—and in which the ‘other misconduct’ is deemed to constitute the gravamen of the offense committed.” United States v. Loos, 4 U.S.C.M.A. 478, 480, 481, 16 C.M.R. 52, 54, 55 (1954) (emphasis supplied). We have emphasized the words “situation” and “involve” because they indicate that it is the nature of the situation, not the nature of the charge, which governs whether or not the “footnote 5” principle applies.
Twenty-one years later, the U.S. Court of Military Appeals again addressed “footnote 5”: “The policy behind footnote 5 is to prevent commission of specifically proscribed and relatively minor offenses from being punished as more serious violations of Article 92.” United States v. Quarles, 1 M.J. at 232-33. Although, for the reasons stated above, the court undoubtedly had in mind Article 92(1) and (2), UCMJ, both the language used and its underlying purpose are plainly broad enough to include dereliction of duty under Article 92(3), UCMJ, in the phrase “more serious violations of Article 92.” What sense would it make purposefully to prevent a “one-month” offense from being more severely punished under Article 92(1) or (2), only to allow it to be so punished under the Article 92(3) lesser-included offense of Article 92(1) and (2)?
In the instant case, the requirement to muster clearly arose, as it typically does, from a portion of the restriction orders issued to the appellant; hence, whether the charge was failure to obey one or more lawful orders or dereliction of duty, the “situation” did unquestionably “involve” the failure to obey lawful orders. As a result, the successor Paragraph 16e Note readily supports the interpretation that it applies to Article 92(3) charges when the situations giving rise to the derelictions of duty alleged involve failures to obey lawful orders the sole gravamen of which is failure, without authority, to go to one’s appointed place of duty, and nothing more.
Where the duty in question is to go to a certain place there to perform some military duty over and above the act of report-[595]*595mg, itself, it may rationally be argued that the failure to perform the additional military duty resulting from the failure to go to the appointed place of such duty would support a charge of dereliction of duty outside the scope of the Paragraph 16e Note. Any conclusions as to whether or not such an argument, if addressed to the current U.S. Court of Military Appeals, would fall under the Loos condemnation of “at once ingenious and erroneous[,]” 4 U.S.C.M.A. at 481, 16 C.M.R. at 55, may be left for another day, however, since the orders in the instant case apparently involved no duty beyond the bare duty to report.
We hold that the “footnote 5” principle now embodied in the bracketed “Note” following paragraph 16e(2), Part IV, MCM, 1984, applies when a failure to go to, or going from, one’s appointed place of duty without authority, properly chargeable under Article 86(1) or (2), UCMJ, respectively, is charged as dereliction of duty under Article 92(3), UCMJ. Accordingly, the maximum punishment in the instant case was confinement for three months and forfeiture of two-thirds’ pay per month for three months. This maximum punishment resulted, in part, from a well-intentioned decision, undoubtedly designed to comply with Taylor, to aggregate all the missing restricted men’s muster offenses in a single willful dereliction of duty specification. In light of the paragraph 16e Note and the Adams principle that, when a series of acts are “bunched” into a single specification, the punishment is limited to that for one such occurrence, there is no way to raise the maximum punishment for the single specification of Charge II above that for one “one-month” offense. Under Taylor and Mitchell, it would apparently have been permissible to aggregate each day’s missed musters in a separate Article 86(1) specification and thereby produce a Charge Sheet with offenses for which a bad-conduct discharge would have been authorized. While it is regrettable, in a way, that the result is to penalize the convening authority for a good-faith effort to comply with Taylor, this Court cannot, in good conscience, opt for the alternative of making bad law.
In light of the sentence adjudged and United States v. Lamb, 22 M.J. 518 (N.M.C.M.R.1986), the findings of guilty and only so much of the approved sentence as extends to confinement for 45 days and forfeiture of $200.00 per month for two months are affirmed.
Judge HOLDER concurs.