United States v. Fair

2 C.M.A. 521, 2 USCMA 521, 10 C.M.R. 19, 1953 CMA LEXIS 851
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMay 20, 1953
DocketNos. 908 and 1188
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2 C.M.A. 521 (United States v. Fair) 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. Fair, 2 C.M.A. 521, 2 USCMA 521, 10 C.M.R. 19, 1953 CMA LEXIS 851 (cma 1953).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

ROBERT E. Quinn, Chief Judge:

The accused in these cases were tried jointly by general court-martial in Austria on charges of premeditated murder in violation of Article 118 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, 50 USC § 712. Both accused were found guilty and sentenced. to death. Army reviewing authorities have upheld the findings and sentence, and the case is here for mandatory review pursuant to Article 67(b) (1) of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, 50 USC § 654.

Disposition of this case requires that the facts be set out in some detail. On the night of August 13, 1951, the accused Fair, a member of the 440th Transportation Truck Company, had an argument with Sergeant Richard C. Byrd in the “EM Bali Club,” in Weis, Austria. The following evening the accused Boyce, the accused Fair and Private Harold Joseph were all present at the Bali Club. While discussing the incident of the previous evening, Fair told Joseph that “he [Fair] was going to get Sergeant- Byrd.” At about 11 p.m. Joseph left the club and stood near the end of the driveway which leads to the club. He was later joined by the two accused. Shortly thereafter, Sergeant Byrd, Elisabeth Holzner, and Private First Class McGee left the club and passed Joseph and the two accused. They were followed by Corporal Gist and Private Rutledge. While Gist con[525]*525tinued down the street in the same direction Byrd and his group had gone, Rutledge and Joseph exchanged words, but almost immediately thereafter Rutledge followed Gist. According to Joseph, “after Private Rutledge left me, I was going back to the entrance of the club just in the driveway about two steps in the driveway, and I heard a^ clicking noise and I saw Boyce and Fair with pistols. Boyce raised the pistol and fired in the direction of Rutledge and McGee and the rest of them.” At the time of the shooting Fair “had his pistol out, but he wasn’t doing anything.” Gist, hearing two shots in the direction from which he had just come, turned and saw Rutledge lying on the ground. He then heard a second series of shots coming from the direction of Sergeant Byrd and his companions. McGee was asked to and did dispose of a pistol for Sergeant Byrd. As Rutledge lay on the ground, blood was observed flowing from a wound on his nose. Sergeant Byrd called someone from the club and Rutledge was placed in a car and taken to the hospital. Private Joseph testified that later in the evening he saw Boyce in the latter’s room at the company. Joseph informed him that Rutledge “got killed,” to which accused Boyce replied, “Ja.”

In the course of the investigation following the shooting, Private McGee took Agent Joseph Colombo to the scene of the incident and pointed to where he had thrown the weapon given him by Byrd. The agent searched this area and found the gun, a 7.65 caliber automatic pistol. A clip containing two rounds of ammunition was inserted in the weapon at the time it was found.

Captain Howard L. Carbaugh, 124th Station Hospital, Camp McCauley, Austria, was medical officer of the day on the night of August 14, 1951. At approximately 11:20 p.m. a male negro patient was admitted and was pronounced, dead on arrival. The identity of this person as Private William Rutledge was established by a stipulation entered into by the prosecution, the defense, and each of the accused. The following morning Captain Carbaugh performed an autopsy which revealed a “gun shot wound of the head and a penetration of the brain and component parts.” In his opinion death was caused by a “gun shot wound of the head,” and must have occurred at approximately 11 p.m.

' Later the same day Captain Carbaugh gave the bullet which he had taken from the deceased’s head to Major Thomas W. Wilson, then Provost Marshal of the Linz Military Post, in the presence of Agent William J. Burden, 12th MP, CID. The Major marked the bullet with a nail clipper and turned it over to Agent Burden. The bullet was subsequently examined by Master Sergeant George A. Gordon, 27th Military Police Crime Laboratory, and Mr. Josef Frasl, Vienna Police Department, ballistic experts. Each testified that he had examined the. projectile in question and found it to be a 9-mm. bullet. It was the opinion of both experts that the bullet could not have been fired from the 7.65 caliber pistol found through Private McGee.

Each of the accused, having been advised of his rights to testify on his own behalf, elected to remain silent. The court then recalled several of the prosecution witnesses each of whom reiterated the substance of his previous testimony.

Agent Burden testified additionally that, subsequent to extensive interrogation concerning the pistol, the accused Boyce had in his possession the night of the shooting, Boyce “told me that he would take me to Weis to where he had hidden the pistol he was in possession of on the evening of thé 14th.” On the afternoon of August 21, 1951, he accompanied the accused Boyce to No. 4 Karl Loy Strasse in Weis, located approximately two blocks from the Bali Club. At that address the accused dismounted from the vehicle in which they were riding and “procured the pistol off of a rafter of a canopy which overhangs the sidewalk.” The rafter, approximately seven feet above the sidewalk and about eight inches wide, would normally not be visible to a passer-by. The agent identified Court Exhibit 1, a caliber 9-mm. pistol, as the weapon handed him by the accused. When he first obtained the pistol, he looked in[526]*526side the barrel and noticed what appeared to be “burnt powder residue.”

Master Sergeant Gordon, also recalled by the court, testified that he had examined Court Exhibit 1 and had compared the projectile (Pros Ex 2) with bullets known to have been fired from the exhibit weapon. On the basis of these comparison tests he stated: “I cannot say Exhibit. 2 was fired from Exhibit 4 [Court Exhibit 1]. I can just say it might have been fired from there.”

Testifying in extenuation and mitigation, Sergeant Joseph L. Herbert, a member of the accused’s unit, stated that he had known the accused Fair for two years and the accused Boyce for approximately eighteen months. He had always found the two to be cooperative in the performance of their duties and he considered them to be average soldiers. Sergeant First Class Lemorn Bailey, also a member of .the 440th Transportation Truck Company, testified that he had known the accused Boyce for two years and the accused Fair for ten months. He had never had any difficulties with either Boyce or Fair and as a result of an observation of their performance of duties he felt that both were good soldiers.

It is first claimed by defense that prejudicial error was committed by the law officer in permitting trial counsel to read extracts from legal authorities at the beginning of the trial. Trial counsel requested permission to read the extracts in question, and permission was granted. Defense interposed ho objection at this point. Trial counsel proceeded to read extracts from the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, and several Army board of review opinions concerning the legal elements of murdei', theories allowing conviction of aiders' and abettors as. principals, and ■ the effect to be given circumstantial evidence. During the process, defense objected several times on the ground that some of the extracts were not from “authoritative sources.” The objections were overruled. At the conclusion of the reading, defense- was offered an opportunity to demonstrate inaccuracies in the matter read or to present other legal authorities. Counsel did not, however, avail himself of the opportunity.

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Bluebook (online)
2 C.M.A. 521, 2 USCMA 521, 10 C.M.R. 19, 1953 CMA LEXIS 851, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-fair-cma-1953.