United States v. Ayers

14 C.M.A. 336, 14 USCMA 336, 34 C.M.R. 116, 1964 CMA LEXIS 309, 1964 WL 4976
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJanuary 3, 1964
DocketNo. 16,856
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 14 C.M.A. 336 (United States v. Ayers) 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. Ayers, 14 C.M.A. 336, 14 USCMA 336, 34 C.M.R. 116, 1964 CMA LEXIS 309, 1964 WL 4976 (cma 1964).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Quinn, Chief Judge:

Concerned about the absence of Take Ota, one of her waitresses, the proprietress of the Top Three Bar in Henoko, Okinawa, called the police. Police Officer Sakugawa broke into Take’s apartment and found her dead body. An autopsy disclosed fifteen knife wounds on her face, back, and chest, and indicated that Take had been dead for several days. Death resulted from loss of blood from the severed carotid artery. Doctor Kuniaki Kinjo, a qualified pathologist who performed the autopsy, testified that the victim had also been choked before death, and suffered a fractured tongue bone.

Investigation of the homicide led to the accused and Private Calvin Nay. The latter admitted that on the morning of July 7, 1961, he and the accused perpetrated the crime, with the accused committing the actual act. He said that after the homicide, he and the accused searched the victim’s room for a wallet belonging to the accused, which he had left with Take on the evening of July 6th. In the course of the search, another wallet was found which contained $23.00. The accused divided the money, giving Nay $10.00 and keeping $13.00 for himself “because he did the work.” While in confinement pending trial on the present charge, the accused told one of the confinement personnel that if he entered the accused’s cell he would “ ‘cut . . . [him] to ribbons just like I stabbed that neisan — I stabbed her seventeen times, but I’ll cut your throat from ear to ear.’ ”

The accused was tried for premeditated murder, in violation of Article 118, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 918. Nay testified against him. The commission of the offense and the accused’s role in it were compellingly established, and the accused was found guilty as charged. He was sentenced to dishonorable discharge, confinement at hard labor for life and accessory punishments. Intermediary authorities affirmed the findings of guilty and the sentence. On this appeal, the accused contends he was prejudiced by two allegedly erroneous rulings of the law officer excluding defense evidence, and by part of the law officer’s instructions on the legal effect of certain circumstances surrounding the offense.

At trial, the accused testified in his own behalf. He admitted he and Nay left camp without authority and went to Take’s apartment. He conceded he assaulted Take without provocation. First, he choked her; then he stabbed her with a knife he picked up from the stove. He and Nay searched for his wallet; when they found the one with the $23.00 in it, he divided the money, [339]*339taking the “extra $3 for the transportation to Koza” and for food and cigarettes. Answering direct questions by his counsel, he said he did not have “any intention of killing Take OTA” or of robbing her. Asked what his intentions were at the time he stabbed the victim, he said, “I don’t know.” On cross-examination, he testified he “wanted . . . [the victim] to stop screaming. That’s all I was thinking about.”

In his testimony, the accused indicated he ingested some kind of pills on a number of occasions. These pills were somewhat smaller than aspirin and bluish green in color. On June 21-22, he took forty such pills, along with some “sloe gin.” Between 10:00 p.m. on July 6th and his departure from camp on the morning of July 7th, he purportedly ingested the “same” pills, had “one shot” of gin, and consumed several bottles of sake. He further testified that after ingestion of the pills the reactions he experienced at the time of the offense were the same as those he had had in June. However, in June, the accused passed into a state of unconsciousness and was hospitalized. During his stay in the hospital, which lasted about three or four days, he slept “almost all the time,” and his main recollection of events was merely that he was “sacked in the rack.” Contrastingly, at the time of the offense he felt he wanted “to keep moving all the time”; it was as though he had “springs” in his feet; and his breathing was “short” and “fast.”1 Also, instead of being rendered unconscious or substantially unaware of his surroundings and actions, the accused gave a very detailed account of what he did and said from the time he left camp to the time he killed Take, divided the money taken from her house, and fled to Koza, where he and Nay stayed for several days.

Before the accused took the stand, Corporal Rufus Alford testified as a defense witness. He was a member of accused’s company and was the duty noncommissioned officer from 8:00 a.m., July 6th, to 8:00 a.m., July 7th. By “Marine Corps Order” the duty non-commissioned officer was required to maintain a log “of everything that goes on.” A number of remarks regarding the accused were posted in the log. The first entry notes that at 11:15 p.m. the accused was detained at Battalion and placed in restriction. The last entry is as follows:

“0516 Saw Pvt Ayers & Pvt Nay in civilian cloth ask[ed] them where they were going & they said on liberty (Pvt Ayers was under the influence of Drug).”

When defense counsel offered the entire log in evidence, trial counsel consented, except as to the parenthetical remark on the accused’s condition. He objected to that part because it represented an opinion the duty noncom-missioned officer was “not qualified to give.” After further testimony by Alford, the entry was again offered and again refused. If this were the whole [340]*340of the matter, the law officer’s rulings were plainly correct. Although the details of the “Order” under which the log was maintained do not appear in the record, it is reasonably inferable from Alford’s testimony that it required the recording only of actual facts or events. With some special exceptions, such as the opinion of a pathologist in an autopsy report, a statement of opinion is not the kind of “fact or event” entitled to admission in evidence as part of an “official” record or business entry. See Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, paragraph 1446, d; United States v LaRue, 11 USCMA 470, 29 CMR 286. Consequently, Alford’s opinion as to the cause of the accused’s apparent physical condition was not entitled to admission in evidence merely because it was noted in the duty log. However, going beyond the log, the accused contends Alford was qualified by experience to state his opinion, but was not allowed to give it by erroneous rulings of the law officer.

In several ways, defense counsel worked toward eliciting from Alford a direct statement of his opinion of the accused’s condition. At one point, he asked Alford what he had “observed[d]” when he last saw the accused. Alford’s answer was interrupted by trial counsel. It is as follows: “When I last saw him on that date I assumed that he was under the influence of —.” (Emphasis supplied.) Trial counsel objected to the answer as unresponsive to defense counsel’s question. The objection was sustained. That ruling is patently correct. The witness was asked to state what he saw, not what he thought. Later, after Alford testified to his observations of the accused’s appearance and actions, he was asked if he had had any experience “in observing persons . . . known to be under the influence of drugs.” He replied that before he entered the Marine Corps, he had seen two persons take “an overdose” of heroin. His testimony continues as follows:

“Q. Now, did you make any observation on this morning of the 7th in relation to AYERS’ condition regarding his being under the influence of alcohol. Did you form any opinion from his appearance at that time?

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Bluebook (online)
14 C.M.A. 336, 14 USCMA 336, 34 C.M.R. 116, 1964 CMA LEXIS 309, 1964 WL 4976, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ayers-cma-1964.