United States v. Glover

33 M.J. 640, 1991 CMR LEXIS 1050, 1991 WL 149925
CourtU.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review
DecidedJuly 9, 1991
DocketNMCM 90 2595
StatusPublished

This text of 33 M.J. 640 (United States v. Glover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review 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, 33 M.J. 640, 1991 CMR LEXIS 1050, 1991 WL 149925 (usnmcmilrev 1991).

Opinion

ORR, Judge:

Contrary to his pleas, the appellant was convicted by a military judge sitting alone of missing movement by design, two specifications of disobeying orders, and malingering in violation, respectively, of Articles 87, 91, and 115, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. §§ 887, 891, and 915. He was sentenced to confinement for 3 months, forfeiture of $300.00 pay per month for 3 months, reduction to pay grade E-l, and a bad-conduct discharge. The convening authority, however, disapproved the findings of guilty as to the two order violations, reassessed the sentence by reducing the forfeitures to $200.00 pay per month for 3 months, and otherwise approved the remaining findings and sentence.

The appellant argues as the one assignment of error that the Government failed to prove his guilt of the malingering charge. The malingering specification alleged that the appellant “did ... from about 20 July 1989 and at all times thereafter for the purpose of avoiding assigned duties, field exercises and/or service as an enlisted member feign a sore foot.” The evidence offered by the Government showed that the appellant suffered a foot injury playing for his unit’s football team in August 1988. An x-ray of the foot showed chip fractures at the top of the arch of his right foot. Treatment was undertaken at the Battalion Aid Station, a branch of the local Naval Hospital, for several months with physical therapy at the hospital. During this time the appellant reported that he had dropped a weight on the top of the same foot several weeks before the football injury but had not sought medical care for that earlier injury.

When the appellant continued to experience pain in his right foot, he was referred to the podiatry clinic at the hospital where he was examined in December 1989 by a board-certified podiatrist with over 7 years

[641]*641experience in podiatry (entirely with the Marine Corps) as well as 5 years of medical training in podiatry. This doctor prescribed several courses of action to address the continuing pain and discomfort complained of by the appellant, but a month later, the appellant returned to the clinic with essentially the same complaints. The doctor noted swelling over the arch, muscle weakness in the foot, and obvious chip fractures still evident in new x-rays. The doctor ordered a bone scan of the foot and a 6-month limited duty medical board. On 20 January 1989 the board recommended that the appellant be placed on limited duty for 6 months and be precluded from field work, running, or marching, and have monthly follow-up examinations.

Although the medical board did not have the results of the bone scan at the time it made its recommendations, the podiatrist testified that the scan showed “quite an increased uptake” of the radioactive dye at the medial cuneiform tarsal bone of the right foot. Record at 170; Prosecution Exhibit 1, page 11. These bones constitute the “keystone” of the arch and support the weight of the body when standing or walking. She concluded that the increase was “certainly consistent with more than just the small flakes that we saw on the routine x-ray.” Record at 170.

Following an examination on 8 March 1989, the podiatrist handwrote a memo concerning the appellant’s injury with the following notations:

1. This member was thoroughly re-examined today & it was decided by this staff that the damage that was done to his foot has resulted in “traumatic arthritis of his cuneiform joints.”
2. This man’s rehabilitation & improvement is going to be difficult at best. It is important that he not do any further damage to his foot which is likely to happen in a field environment.
4. He is not to run, hike, march, hump or be in the field until his 6 mo. Board expires____

Prosecution Exhibit 1, pages 16-17.

The appellant’s monthly exams for April, May, June, and July indicate some improvement, but the podiatrist who saw the appellant at the July exam was not the podiatrist who had seen the appellant previously and no recommendation was made concerning the appellant or his injury after the limited duty period expired on 20 July. On 11 August the podiatrist who testified at trial and who had followed the appellant’s injury since December sent a pre-printed form memo (Prosecution Exhibit 1, page 24) to the “Area Medical Clinic Medical Officer, Battalion Surgeon, or Commanding Officer” concerning the appellant’s injury and stating, in part: “The patient’s physical findings ... are not abnormal enough to justify any disposition other than Return to Full Duty____” The podiatrist hand-wrote the following notation at the bottom of the form:

He has arthritis in his foot from his previous injury. It has improved as much as can be expected. There is no surgery for this problem. If he can’t do the USMC requirements, he can be evaluated by the Central Physical Evaluation Board for a discharge (as above in paragraph 3).

Paragraph 3 of the pre-printed form states:

If the active duty member is not able to satisfactorily perform the assigned military duties due to the musculoskeletal problem, and his military commander desires appearance before a medical board for evaluation, then please include with your return-visit request for consultation a letter from the member’s commanding Officer indicating the member’s performance deficiency and the request for a formal medical board evaluation.

On 15 August 1989, the podiatrist noted in the appellant’s health record that the appellant had received the maximum benefit of what was available at the hospital. In addition, the entry stated that the clinic had expected that the appellant would return to full duty after the 6-month period of prolonged rest, that the appellant was diagnosed with traumatic degenerative joint disease in the second metetarsal cuneiform joint of the right foot, that no further conservative care was available, [642]*642that the appellant was not a candidate for surgery, and that the appellant was returned to full duty with instructions as outlined in paragraph 3 of the 11 August memo.

On 28 August 1989, the appellant sent a memo (Prosecution Exhibit 2, page 6) to his company commander stating that he was continuing to experience problems with his right foot that prevented him from any prolonged standing, marching, running, jumping or participating in physical training. He also stated that field work caused “unbearable pain” from the rough and uneven terrain, and he implicitly requested a medical discharge. On 13 September 1989, the appellant’s company commander wrote a letter to the battalion medical officer via the battalion commanding officer requesting that the appellant be evaluated by a medical board for further service. At about the same time, the appellant was transferred from the supply company he had been in to another company within the battalion.

For reasons unknown, the battalion medical officer did not act on the 13 September request until 23 October 1989, just 6 days before the appellant was supposed to deploy with his company on field exercises for several weeks in the desert.

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22 M.J. 305 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1986)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 M.J. 640, 1991 CMR LEXIS 1050, 1991 WL 149925, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-glover-usnmcmilrev-1991.