United States v. Eatmon

49 M.J. 273, 1998 CAAF LEXIS 805, 1998 WL 919230
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedSeptember 29, 1998
DocketNo. 98-0068; Crim.App. No. 32664
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 49 M.J. 273 (United States v. Eatmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Eatmon, 49 M.J. 273, 1998 CAAF LEXIS 805, 1998 WL 919230 (Ark. 1998).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

SULLIVAN, Judge:

During January of 1997, appellant was tried by a general court-martial composed of officer members at Ramstein Air Base, Germany. On mixed pleas, she was found guilty of failure to obey a general regulation concerning proper use of her government American Express card; making and uttering 156 bad checks; dishonorable failure to maintain fends to cover 42 checks previously written; and dishonorable failure to pay a just debt, in violation of Articles 92, 123a, and 134, Uniform Code, of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 892, 923a, and 934, respectively. She was sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, confinement for 6 months, and reduction to E^4. On April 8, 1997, the convening authority approved this sentence. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed. 47 MJ 534.

On January 14, 1998, this Court specified the following issue for review:

WHETHER THE MILITARY JUDGE ERRED TO THE SUBSTANTIAL PREJUDICE OF APPELLANT WHEN HE REFUSED TO INSTRUCT THE MEMBERS THAT THEY SHOULD FIND APPELLANT NOT GUILTY OF SOME OR ALL OF THE BAD DRAFTS ALLEGED UNDER SPECIFICATION 2 OF CHARGE II IF THEY CONCLUDED THAT THE UNDERLYING OBLIGATION REPRESENTED BY THE DRAFTS IN THAT SPECIFICATION WAS VOID AB INITIO. SEE UNITED STATES V. ALLBERY, 44 MJ 226 (1996).

[274]*274We hold that the military judge did not err in this case because appellant was not entitled to dismissal of her dishonored-check offenses (Charge II) under this Court’s decisions in United States v. Allbery, supra, or United States v. Wallace, 15 USCMA 650, 36 CMR 148 (1966). See generally United States v. Lenton, 8 USCMA 690, 693, 25 CMR 194, 197 (1958); see also Carnival Leisure Industries, Ltd. v. Aubin, 830 F.Supp. 371 (S.D.Tex.1993).

The court below summarized the relevant facts as follows:

Appellant, while assigned to Sembach Air Base, Germany, papered virtually every government Nonappropriated Fund Instrumentality (NAFI) in the Ramstein-Sembach area with dishonored checks1 over approximately a one year period. One hundred forty of the 155 checks charged under Article 123a were to various outlets of the Army Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES). Of these, the vast majority were uttered to the Sembach Shoppette. Three dishonored cheeks were to the Auto Exchange to cover the downpayment for a new car, and 12 were to the commissary. Of the 12 checks to the commissary, which constituted one specification, one was excepted by the members in their findings of guilt.
Charge II was divided into two specifications of dishonored checks in violation of Article 134.. Specification 1 included two checks for $100 and $125 respectively to the Ramstein Enlisted Club in January of 1995. Specification 2 was for 40 checks, written between January 2 and March 3, 1996, to either the Ramstein or the Sembach Bowling Centers. The record reveals that appellant’s squadron was deluged with telephone calls and notices from appellant’s various creditors, and that she was referred to two different professional financial counselors. It further reveals that when a given bank or credit union closed her account for excessive overdrafts, she would simply open an account at another bank or credit union. When her check-cashing binges encountered a temporary hiatus because of an effective ban on check writing, or she momentarily could not find a bank to take her account, she turned to a government-issued American Express card. The practice of writing bad checks persisted well past the preferral of charges, apparently even up to the eve of trial.

47 MJ at 536 (emphasis added).

Prior to entering a plea, the defense moved to dismiss Charge II and its specifications on the ground that the checks contained in that Charge were written for the purpose of obtaining money to be used for slot machine gambling in an on-base facility. Counsel cited United States v. Allbery and United States v. Wallace, both supra. In support of the motion, appellant testified that, with regard to specification 1, she was “pretty sure” she wrote those two checks to receive cash for gambling, but she was not certain. With respect to the second specification under the same Charge, appellant testified that she used the cash from those checks to gamble in slot, machines at the bowling alleys on Ram-stein and Sembach Air Bases. The military judge denied the defense motion.

Defense counsel then requested the military judge to give an instruction to the members regarding application of Allbery to this Charge. He suggested that members be instructed that they must decide whether the checks were used for gambling as a matter of fact, and if they were, they must find appellant not guilty of this offense. The military judge denied this request, but the defense renewed it at the close of findings. The military judge again declined to provide the requested instruction and ultimately entered the following findings of fact:

1. In the two specifications of Charge II, the accused is charged with writing two cheeks, to the Ramstein Enlisted Club, and 40 drafts, to the bowling centers at Ram-stein and Sembach, and then dishonorably failing to maintain sufficient funds in her account to pay them upon presentment.
[275]*2752. The accused made and uttered all 42 of the checks and drafts as alleged.
3. The Ramstein Enlisted Club and the bowling centers at Ramstein and Sembach Air Bases have slot machines. Some of the slot machines accept quarters, others accept bills.
4. Neither of the two checks uttered to the Ramstein Enlisted Club were for the purpose of obtaining money for the slot machines.
5. Some, but not all of the drafts uttered to the Ramstein and Sembach Bowling Centers were for the purpose of obtaining money with which to gamble. At times the accused received quarters, at other times she received bills.
6. The accused was employed on a part-time basis, as a recreation aide, at the Sembach Bowling Center. At times she worked as a cashier and cashed checks. She was aware of a bad-check list and that she was on it.
7. With the assistance of Mends who worked at the bowling centers and cashiers who failed to check the bad-check list, the accused was able to cash checks even though she knew that her name was on the bad-check list and she was not supposed to be writing checks at those facilities.
8. The accused appears to suffer from an impulse control disorder due to compulsive spending.
9. There is no evidence that the management of any of the establishments in which the accused gambled was aware that [the] accused was cashing these checks for gambling or actively encouraged this accused to continue to gamble.

(Emphasis added.)

The military judge also made the following conclusions of law:

5. The basis for the Wallace decision seemed to be that the club was encouraging a naive officer to continue to gamble despite their knowledge that his gambling was causing deep financial problems. Under those circumstances, the Court was unwilling to accept that his continuing to gamble amounted to dishonorable conduct. The Allbery

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 M.J. 273, 1998 CAAF LEXIS 805, 1998 WL 919230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-eatmon-armfor-1998.