United States v. Christensen

4 C.M.A. 22, 4 USCMA 22, 15 C.M.R. 22, 1954 CMA LEXIS 617, 1954 WL 2245
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1954
DocketNo. 2394
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 4 C.M.A. 22 (United States v. Christensen) 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. Christensen, 4 C.M.A. 22, 4 USCMA 22, 15 C.M.R. 22, 1954 CMA LEXIS 617, 1954 WL 2245 (cma 1954).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Paul W. Brosman, Judge:

The accused was convicted by an Army general court-martial in Korea of assault with intent to murder, and of offering violence to a superior officer while in the execution of his office-violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Articles 134 and 90, 50 USC §§ 728 and 684, respectively. He was sentenced to receive a dishonorable discharge, to forfeit all pay and allowances, and to be confined at hard labor for twenty years. Following approval by intermediate authorities, we granted the accused’s petition for review to determine three issues:

1. Whether the instructions upon the elements of assault with intent to commit murder were prejudicially erroneous.
2. Whether the accused was prejudiced by the failure of the law officer’s instructions to embrace assault with a dangerous weapon as a lesser included offense.
3. Whether the findings and sentence involved multiplicity.

II

A brief resume of the evidence will serve to put these issues in perspective. After drinking a considerable quantity of alcoholic liquor, some of it a Korean beverage referred to colloquially as “yak juice,” the accused entered his company’s mess hall. Finding a seat, he began “blowing a horn and making a disturbance” which led the mess sergeant to direct him to maintain silence. The accused then left the structure, but returned shortly thereafter with a carbine. Sergeant Coleman, the accused’s first sergeant, approached for the purpose of ordering him from the mess hall. The accused took up the weapon and thrust a round into the chamber— but a nearby soldier succeeded in disarming him. Once more the accused departed, only to return shortly thereafter with another carbine and a gallon jug, which appears to have contained an appreciable quantity of “yak juice.” Sergeant Coleman again approached the accused, who threatened to fire if the latter drew nearer. Sergeant Coleman testified that the accused remarked at the time that he really did not wish to harm him — but instead desired to shoot “a second john.” A further witness testified that the accused had remarked to Coleman at the time that “if Lt. [25]*25Maguire comes down here, he is the man I want.” Following the conversation with Sergeant Coleman, the accused resumed his meal — still in possession of the second carbine and the jug. At this point, Second Lieutenant Arthur T. Maguire, the mess officer, made his appearance, having been informed of the preceding disturbances. Upon glimpsing the accused, the officer approached him, whereupon the accused threatened, “Come any closer and I’ll shoot you.” Maguire continued his advance, although at a slow pace. One Burke, a soldier standing nearby, attempted to grasp the accused’s carbine, but the latter was able to raise his weapon and fire twice. Only the first round struck Maguire and penetrated the left side of his chest. Before further rounds could be fired, Burke succeeded in disarming the accused. This soldier testified that during the interval between the two shots, the accused had commented, “I am going to give him two,” and that after the second report, the accused added “I shot him, I am glad I did.” According to Burke, the accused made a similar statement thereafter in the orderly room.

A defense witness testified that the accused was staggering to some extent and in the former’s opinion was drunk. The accused took the stand and testified to the consumption of a substantial quantity of whiskey and “yak juice.” Unfortunately the defense was unable to produce expert testimony concerning the intoxicative effect of the latter concoction because, as defense counsel put it, “the experts are either dead or in the stockade.” The accused remembered blowing “a tin whistle made out of a beer can,” talking with the mess sergeant, securing a carbine, conversing with Sergeant Coleman, being disarmed, going to the guard house, acquiring another carbine, reentering the mess hall, and glancing up and seeing “Lt. Ma-guire coming at me.” The accused then continued his narrative: “I told him not to . . . with me, and I think I was backing away from him, and I thought I had my weapon pointed at the floor and there was a blur and the two shots, and I remember being up in the orderly room and they was asking me why I did it. The only reason I can give you is that I was drunk.”

The accused did not remember the action of Burke in grasping him, but he did recall that, when struck, Lieutenant Maguire “reeled like in a western movie.” The accused denied any sort of animosity toward his victim. There seems to be no doubt that the accused had been drinking heavily immediately before the incident in question, and that his actions on the present occasion were altogether unlike his conduct when sober.

Ill

During the course of instructions upon the offense of assault with intent to murder, the law officer defined the elements of murder, and included therein the following: “That, at the time of the killing, the accused intended to kill or inflict great bodily harm.” In United States v. Floyd, 2 USCMA 183, 7 CMR 59, we held that, as to the offense of assault with intent to murder, the term “murder” must be limited to that variety of the crime characterized by an intent to kill. Since no such limitation was placed upon the term in these instructions, error resulted. United States v. Woodson, 3 USCMA 372, 12 CMR 128. The mere showing of error, however, does not establish prejudice, and it has been suggested that a “mountain-molehill” approach can properly be applied in the case at bar. See United States v. Jenkins, 1 USCMA 329, 3 CMR 63; United States v. Moynihan, 1 USCMA 333, 3 CMR 67. To adopt such a view here would require a determination that the court-martial could not reasonably have concluded that the accused intended merely to inflict great bodily harm to Lieutenant Maguire, but did not intend to kill him. Undeniably the evidence of record is sufficient to support a finding of intent to kill. As a rule of circumstantial evidence, a court-martial is certainly free to infer that a sane person intends the natural and probable consequences of his conduct. See Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, paragraph 138a. Among the natural and probable consequences of discharging a carbine at an[26]*26other from a distance of fifteen feet, or less, would certainly be included in the target’s death — although happily that particular result did not eventuate in the present instance.

To say, however, that the evidence would support a finding of intent to kill is quite distinct from an assertion that it compels such a conclusion. For example, in light of the evidence suggesting the complete absence of previous hostility on accused’s part toward the victim, Maguire, the court might have concluded that the accused did not intend at all to kill the lieutenant, but merely wished to block his attempt to quell the disturbance created by the former in the mess hall. Thus, among the rational possibilities proper for the court-martial’s consideration was a finding that the accused intended only to disable the lieutenant seriously, rather than to kill him. Unfortunately the law officer’s instructions misinformed the court-martial to the effect that its members might convict of assault with intent to murder, although they found only an intent to inflict grievous bodily harm. We must conclude, therefore, that the accused was prejudiced as to this finding.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 C.M.A. 22, 4 USCMA 22, 15 C.M.R. 22, 1954 CMA LEXIS 617, 1954 WL 2245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-christensen-cma-1954.