United States v. Choate

32 M.J. 423, 1991 CMA LEXIS 479, 1991 WL 121188
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJuly 10, 1991
DocketNo. 64,657; CM 8900679
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 32 M.J. 423 (United States v. Choate) 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. Choate, 32 M.J. 423, 1991 CMA LEXIS 479, 1991 WL 121188 (cma 1991).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

SULLIVAN, Chief Judge:

In January and February of 1989, appellant was tried at Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana, by a special court martial composed of officer and enlisted members. Contrary to his pleas, he was found guilty of three specifications alleging violations of Article 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 934. He was sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge. The convening authority approved this sentence. On February 23, 1990, the Court of Military Review affirmed the findings and sentence in a short-form opinion.

This Court granted review of the following issue raised by appellate defense counsel:

[424]*424WHETHER “MOONING”[1] IS AN INDECENT EXPOSURE.

This question is raised with respect to only one of the offenses of which appellant was found guilty. We hold that, under the circumstances of the instant case, the challenged specification states an offense under Article 134 and the evidence of record supports the findings of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. United States v. Sanchez, 11 USCMA 216, 217-18, 29 CMR 32, 33-34 (1960); United States v. Snyder, 1 USCMA 423, 426, 4 CMR 15, 18 (1952).

The evidence of record shows that in June 1987, Georgia June Cline was on her way to work when she noticed appellant standing nude in his trailer and masturbating. A few days later, Mrs. Cline again saw appellant masturbating in his trailer, and he was facing her. That morning she reported the incidents to the trailer court manager. A few days after the second incident, Mrs. Cline again saw appellant masturbating in the window and looking at her. When she returned from work, she called the police. When the police arrived, Mrs. Cline went with them to appellant’s trailer. Appellant was not there, so his wife called him at work. Later that day, appellant came over to Mrs. Cline’s trailer and told her that his wife was pregnant and that she might need Mrs. Cline’s help. Appellant then told her, “You did it to me too.” These acts formed the basis for conviction on the first specification.

In June 1988, Mrs. Nancy Chojnacki and her husband, who worked with appellant, moved into a trailer next to appellant’s trailer. During one of her occasional visits with appellant and his wife, she had felt “uncomfortable” because appellant was sitting in a chair wearing shorts without underwear which exposed his genitals. Another time, when he was helping Mrs. Chojnacki plant flowers, he bent down, and his penis became exposed. Then, he said, “You saw that, didn’t you?” Later that month, when she took some magazines to his trailer, he answered the door while naked. Still later Mrs. Chojnacki agreed to go with him to return a rented car. On the way back to the trailer park, he stopped at a stop sign, turned off the engine, and pulled his pants down to show her — as she explained it — “how little pubic hair” he had. Then he asked her to “show me yours.” When she refused, “he said that’s not fair,” but he did take her home.

On July 26, at about 6 o’clock in the morning, appellant — who was wearing only a green Army T-shirt — knocked on Mrs. Chojnacki’s door and offered to empty her trash. She accepted and went to her car to go to work. While backing out of the driveway, she saw appellant standing next to the garbage cans. As Mrs. Chojnacki continued down the driveway, appellant lifted up his T-shirt and “showed [her] his butt.” The next day, he inquired how she had liked the “moon” he had given her. This conduct was the subject of the challenged specification.

The conduct covered by the third specification occurred on July 29. Appellant again came to her trailer to offer to take out the trash. He was wearing shorts and had an erection that, as Mrs. Chojnacki explained, “was just sticking right through ... his shorts.” Appellant requested to use her bathroom. While in there, he told her that “a lot of women like watching men jack; do you like watching that?” When he left the bathroom, he told Mrs. Chojnacki, “Look at me; I’m hard as a rock.”

Appellant was found guilty, inter alia, of the following offense under Article 134:

In that [appellant] did, at the Hess Trailer Court, located on Fort Benjamin Harrison, Indiana, on or about 26 July 1988, while standing outside with only a green army Tee shirt on, willfully and wrongfully expose in an indecent manner to public view his buttocks.

On appeal, he challenges this finding of guilty for several reasons. He initially contends that indecent exposure, as a matter [425]*425of military law, should be limited to incidents where genitalia are exposed. He also argues that, even if this civilian limitation on this offense is not recognized, the required exposure must be obscene and excite lust. His undraping, he asserts, was a mere prank which he impliedly suggests provoked only laughter. Finally, he asserts that the offense of indecent exposure should be limited to incidents where sexual aggression is intended and not apply to those situations where simple insult or amusement is the object.

Appellant’s challenges are all premised on the assumption that he was found guilty of the military offense of indecent exposure. See generally para. 88, Part IV, Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1984.2 His legal arguments assert that, for various reasons, the challenged specification or evidence adduced thereon failed to establish the elements of this particular offense as a matter of military3 or civilian law.4 Accordingly, he argues that his conduct in parading naked before the wife of a fellow soldier and neighbor on post could not be prosecuted at a court-martial.

We note, however, that appellant was not charged with indecent exposure as an assimilated civilian crime under the third clause of Article 134. See United States v. Schumacher, 2 USCMA 134, 7 CMR 10 (1953). Moreover, he was not charged with indecent exposure under a particular provision of the Uniform Code of Military Justice prohibiting this offense. Instead, as noted above, he was charged with exposure of his buttocks in an indecent manner under the service-disorder or discredit clause of Article 134. See generally United States v. Davis, 26 MJ 445, 448 (CMA 1988). Accordingly, the specific elements of the crime of indecent exposure as a matter of civilian or military law are not particularly relevant. See United States v. Sanchez, 11 USCMA at 217, 29 CMR at 33. Cf. United States v. Caune, 22 USCMA 200, 201, 46 CMR 200, 201 (1973).

The case of United States v. Sanchez, supra, is closely analogous to the case at bar. There, a soldier was charged with committing an act of carnal copulation with a chicken. The defense contended that this act did not constitute sodomy under Article 125, UCMJ, 10 USC § 925, or an indecent act with another person, prohibited under Article 134. See App. 6c, Sample Specification 149, Manual for Courts-Martial, United States 1951. This Court held that the charged conduct’s purported failure to constitute these particular offenses did not preclude its prosecution as a service-discrediting offense under Article 134. The real question, the Court said, was whether the “conduct ... directly and adversely affected the good name of the service.” 11 USCMA at 218, 29 CMR at 34. In the case at bar, the question is whether the charged conduct was “palpably prejudicial to good order and discipline.”

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Bluebook (online)
32 M.J. 423, 1991 CMA LEXIS 479, 1991 WL 121188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-choate-cma-1991.