United States v. Covert

6 C.M.A. 48, 6 USCMA 48, 19 C.M.R. 174, 1955 CMA LEXIS 341, 1955 WL 3418
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 1955
DocketNo. 4974
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 6 C.M.A. 48 (United States v. Covert) 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. Covert, 6 C.M.A. 48, 6 USCMA 48, 19 C.M.R. 174, 1955 CMA LEXIS 341, 1955 WL 3418 (cma 1955).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Paul W. BROSMAN, Judge:

This case involves a further problem of mental responsibility. The accused woman was tried in England by general court-martial for the premeditated murder of her husband, in violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 118, 50 USC § 712. She was found guilty under the charge and its specification and sentenced to life imprisonment. The convening authority approved both the findings and sentence— and a board of review in the office of The Judge Advocate General, United States Air Force, with one member dissenting, has affirmed. The case is before us on both the accused’s petition for review and a certificate from The Judge Advocate General. The questions certified are as follows:

“a. Upon the state of the evidence in this ease bearing upon the issue of sanity, was the Law Officer under a duty to provide the court-martial with further specific instruction as to the possible effect of such evidence upon the mental capacity of the accused to entertain premeditation?
“b. If the answer to the preceding question is in the affirmative, may the error be purged by affirming so much of the approved findings as find the accused guilty of unpremeditated murder and thereafter reconsidering the approved sentence?”

The grant of review by the Court authorized argument on the following points, which we phrase generally:

(1) Is the evidence legally sufficient to establish, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the accused was mentally responsible for the crime charged ?
(2) Did the limitations on certain [50]*50expert witnesses testifying on irresistible impulse, which are provided in AFM 160-42, constitute an instance of improper command influence?
(3) Did the law officer err in restricting defense counsel in his cross-examination of the Government’s expert witnesses?
(4) Did the law officer err in instructing that the “policeman-at-the-elbow test” was a proper method for determining whether the accused was impelled to commit the crime by an irresistible impulse?

II

We accept defense counsel’s concession that no question respecting the cause or agency of death is involved in the present appeal. It is properly admitted by them that the evidence against the accused on this issue is undisputed — and because of this no more than a brief summary of the facts and circumstances immediately surrounding the homicide will be related. On March 11, 1953, during an interview with Mrs. Covert, .Captain Ivan C. Heisler, a psychiatrist of the 5th Hospital Group, obtained information which caused him to believe that during the previous night a killing had occurred at the quarters occupied by her husband and his family. Acting on this knowledge, he obtained a key to her and her husband’s home and — after leaving his patient in the care of a nurse — went to their quarters, accompanied by the base surgeon, and an air police officer. On arrival, they proceeded to the upstairs bedrooms, and saw in one of them a cot on which a number of blankets had been arranged. After removing these, they discovered the dead body of the deceased, the accused’s husband. A pillow covered his head, and there was much blood on the bed clothing. It was quite obvious that he had been dead for some time, and a subsequent examination revealed that death had been caused by blows on his head and face which had been inflicted by a blunt instrument. A hand ax, which was shown later to bear stains of human blood, was found near the fireplace in the first floor front room of the quarters, and a suit of bloodstained pajamas was subsequently located hidden in a laundry tub on the premises. In pretrial statements, made by the accused to various Air Force medical and investigative people, she admitted that she had committed the offense charged sometime during the night of March 10-11, 1953.

The evidence presented with respect to the accused’s mental responsibility was extensive, and included her life history and a detailed psychiatric exposition of her mental condition at the time of the homicide. According to this account, the accused had been born prematurely in Augusta, Georgia, on December 21, 1920, as a child of her mother’s second marriage. Her childhood was unhappy, and was marred by frequent quarrels between her parents and by cruel treatment directed by the father against both herself and her mother. She felt unwanted, alone, afraid, without parental love. The accused was reclusive during high school days and markedly hesitant to invite friends to her home — which she described as a dirty, broken down, three-bedroom house next door to a chicken yard and an alley. Her father she remembered as coldly indifferent, and so resentful of the fact that she had not been born a boy that — according to her mother’s account — he had on one occasion gone so far as to attempt to toss her out of a window, and on another to choke her. In 1926 her father left their home, but subsequently returned. However, in 1932 he abandoned his family permanently. His distaste for the accused appears to have been characterized by the frequent presentation to her of gifts and toys designed for boys, and he was plagued by incessant financial difficulties occasioned by gambling.

After completing high school, the accused unwillingly left her home to begin nurses’ training, since she continued to feel unwanted there. After meeting the deceased — then an infantry second lieutenant — in January 1943, she married him in March of the same year. Between May 1943, when he departed for overseas duty, and November 1945, when he returned to the [51]*51United States, her husband was frequently in financial trouble — and at one time she was required to find $600.00 to free him from custody. On resuming civilian life, he became an unqualified wastrel, took to drink, and spent most of his wife’s accumulated savings of more than $5000.00 before re-entering the military establishment in 1946 as an Air Force master sergeant.

New financial problems ensued, and by November 11, 1947, when the pair’s first child was born, their savings had been exhausted — and an insurance policy had been converted to take care of necessary medical expenses and hospitalization. During the accused’s pregnancy, Sergeant Covert had covered a $450.00 gambling loss with a worthless check. Conduct of this nature led to a separation — but the accused became nervous, sleepless, and less able to perform her daily tasks. A reconciliation was followed by the birth of a second child in September 1950.

In May 1951 the deceased was assigned to duty in England with the Seventh Air Division — and, after his wife’s arrival four months later, they resided in London until July 1952. The destruction by fire of certain goods of hers which had been stored in the United States, the poor health of her younger son and his delay in learning to speak — together with the Sergeant’s continued gambling — all served to keep the accused on tenterhooks. In December 1952, after the couple had been transferred to Upper Heyford, England, the accused was informed that she was about to inherit a sizeable sum of money — glad tidings from which, unfortunately, her present tragic situation later developed. The accused’s preference for saving this windfall for their children’s education and future welfare clashed sharply with her husband’s desire to acquire a new automobile and tour the European continent — a difference of opinion which brought further worry to the accused.

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Related

United States v. Jensen
14 C.M.A. 353 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1964)
United States v. Allen
11 C.M.A. 539 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1960)
United States v. Thompson
10 C.M.A. 45 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1958)
Reid v. Covert
354 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1957)
United States v. Walker
7 C.M.A. 669 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1957)
United States v. Doctor
7 C.M.A. 126 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
6 C.M.A. 48, 6 USCMA 48, 19 C.M.R. 174, 1955 CMA LEXIS 341, 1955 WL 3418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-covert-cma-1955.