United States v. Glover

2 C.M.A. 164, 2 USCMA 164
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedFebruary 6, 1953
DocketNo. 829
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2 C.M.A. 164 (United States v. Glover) 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. Glover, 2 C.M.A. 164, 2 USCMA 164 (cma 1953).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

George W. Latimer, Judge:

This case is before us on certificate from The Judge Advocate General, United States Army, requesting that we review the decision of the Army board of review which, because of having concluded the law officer erred in failing to give certain instructions, approved only so much of a finding of guilty of larceny as finds the accused guilty of the lesser included offense of misappropriation.

The original charge and specification alleged larceny of an automobile. Upon arraignment1 accused pleaded not guilty to that charge but guilty to the lesser included offense of wrongful appropriation. He persisted in his plea after being informed fully by the law officer that it admitted every act or omission and every element of the lesser offense; that it subjected him to a finding of guilty without further proof; and that he could be sentenced by the court to the maximum punishment authorized for that offense.

[165]*165At the time of the offense, accused was stationed at Camp McCoy, Wisconsin, where he was ■ a member of Service Battery, 330th Field Artillery Battalion. The Government established a prima facie case of larceny of the motor vehicle and the accused, to support his plea that he did not intend permanently to deprive the owner of the vehicle, testified as follows: That on November 13, 1951, he left the camp on pass and spent the following two or three days in surrounding cities, apparently consuming a considerable quantity of intoxicating liquor; that sometime during the night or early morning of November 15-16, 1951, he entered a black Chevrolet sedan automobile which was parked in an alley behind a hotel in Winona, Minnesota; that the keys were not in the ignition lock of the car, but he found them by searching through the glove compartment; that he drove the vehicle to LaCrosse, Wisconsin, where he parked it on a side street; that he ran short on funds and wired his father for $10.00; that he waited in LaCrosse until November 17, 1951, for a reply to his wire, but no answer was received; that later that day he met three soldiers from Camp McCoy and during the course of their conversation he offered to drive them back to camp for a stated price which they accepted; that he then returned to the car, exchanged the license plates for Illinois plates which he took from a nearby car, and drove back to eamp; that after discharging his passengers he attempted to leave the camp with the automobile but was stopped by a patrol sergeant who noticed that the car had no post tags; that in response to questions asked by the' sergeant, he stated that he had no driver’s license, that the automobile was not his own, and that he had borrowed it from a person whose name he could not remember; and that at all times he intended to return the car to the true owner.

After the taking of evidence had been completed and after arguments by counsel, the law officer, in his charge, included instructions on the elements of the offense of larceny, and the duty of the court to return a verdict on the lowest degree of the offense charged concerning which there was no reasonable doubt. He did not, however, include in his instruction the necessary elements of the included offense of wrongful appropriation. Defense counsel made no objections to the instructions as given and did not request any amplifying or additional instructions. The court-martial found accused guilty of larceny as charged and sentenced him to be dishonorably discharged from the service, to forfeit all pay and allowances and to be confined at hard labor for two years. The convening authority approved, and the' case was forwarded to the board of review for consideration.

The board of review held that the lesser included offense of misappropriation was placed in issue by the plea of not guilty to larceny and by the evidence, and that the failure of the law officer to instruct on it and to mention that it was a lesser included offense of the crime of larceny constituted error prejudicial to the accused. The board based its holding on the decisions of this Court in United States v. Clark (No. 190), 2 CMR 107, decided February 29, 1952, and United States v. Williams (No. 251), 2 CMR 137, decided March 14, 1952. Accordingly, it approved only so much of the finding as found the accused guilty of wrongful appropriation and the sentence was reduced to a dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, and confinement at hard labor for one year and six months.

The question certified by The Judge Advocate General is substantially whether the law officer committed prejudicial error by failing to instruct on the elements of the offense of misappropriation.

Article 121, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 50 USC § 715, in defining larceny and misappropriation states:

“(a) Any person subject to this code who wrongfully takes, obtains, or withholds, by any means whatever, from the possession of the true owner or of any other person any money, pérsonal property, or article of value of any kind —
[166]*166(1) with intent permanently to deprive or defraud another person of the use and benefit of property or to appropriate the same to his own use or the use of any person other than the true owner, steals such property and is guilty of larceny; or
(2) with intent temporarily to deprive or defraud another person of the use and benefit of property or to appropriate the same to his own use or the use of any person other than the true owner is guilty of wrongful appropriation.”

A cursory glance at the two subsections will disclose that the offenses are identical except with respect to intent. In larceny a person must intend permanently to deprive the owner of his property; .while in misappropriation the intent must be temporarily to deprive. Because of the similarity of the offenses and because of the plea of guilty to misappropriation, the only issue for the court-martial to decide was whether the accused possessed the intent necessary to permit a conviction for larceny.

A reading of the opinion of the board of review persuades us that the members misconstrued the rule announced in our previous cases on instructions. The legal principles with which we are here involved differ from those considered by us in United States v. Clark, and United States v. Williams, supra. They more nearly approach our holding in United States v. Lucas (No. 7), 1 CMR 19, decided November 8, 1951. In the former cases there were pleas of not guilty and this placed in issue all elements of all offenses, that is, the major offense charged and all those necessarily included. In the latter case, a guilty plea was entered and there was no real issue left for determination on any offense. Furthermore, the posture of the evidence in the former cases was such as to permit the court to consider the possibility of choosing between a finding of guilty of the greater offense, guilty of the lesser, or not guilty. The rationale of those cases is that before the court-martial could find properly the degree of the offense, it must be informed as to what elements were necessary to make up any offense alleged, or included, that the evidence fairly tended to establish. And, in addition, that merely to furnish the court-martial with the elements of the greater offense left the court with only three alternatives, namely,' to find the accused guilty of the greater offense, to speculate on the elements of the included offense or offenses, or to find the accused not guilty. The vice of that procedure is apparent.

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2 C.M.A. 164, 2 USCMA 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-glover-cma-1953.