United States v. Hall

6 C.M.A. 562, 6 USCMA 562, 20 C.M.R. 278, 1955 CMA LEXIS 249, 1955 WL 3565
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedDecember 16, 1955
DocketNo. 7117
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 6 C.M.A. 562 (United States v. Hall) 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. Hall, 6 C.M.A. 562, 6 USCMA 562, 20 C.M.R. 278, 1955 CMA LEXIS 249, 1955 WL 3565 (cma 1955).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Paul W. BROSman, Judge:

An Army general court-martial found the appellant here guilty under two specifications alleging larceny — in violation of. Article 121, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 50 USC § 715. Both were concerned with the theft of clothing said to have been taken on the same date. Hall’s sentence to dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures and confinement at hard labor for one year — together with all findings — were approved by the convening authority and affirmed by a board of review. We granted review to determine the single question of whether the evidence is suf-ficieift to establish that the offenses charged were in fact separate.

II

The accused and another soldier named Sossaman were members of the third platoon of their unit, which was quartered at one end of the third floor of a barracks building at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey. On the day in question at approximately nine o’clock in the morning, the pair — prompted apparently by a desire to replace missing clothing of their own — decided to appropriate certain wearing apparel principally from personnel of the fifth platoon. This latter element was housed in the farther end of the long barracks building occupied by both and directly opposite the billet of the third. A hallway — some fifty yards in length —separated the domains of the two platoons, each of which was partially enclosed by a tier of lockers.

Having decided on this course of action, the accused opened several of these lockers located near the center of the fifth platoon area, and ultimately carried a khaki shirt and a similar pair of trousers back to that of his own group. Sossaman remained with Hall in the third platoon section for approximately thirty minutes after the theft. Subsequently, during the afternoon of [564]*564the same day, the latter exhibited to Sossaman a gray flannel suit identical to the one described in the first specification as the property of one Conte — a fellow member of the appellant’s own platoon. At no time during the morning period, while the two were together, was Sossaman aware that the accused had removed any item from third platoon lockers.

A fully corroborated extrajudicial confession — as to the voluntariness of which no sort of objection was raised by the defense — established beyond doubt the accused’s guilt of the theft of the pieces of clothing described on the charge sheet. In the course of his statement, the accused admitted that he had taken a set of khakis from the locker of a private named Brown, located in the fifth platoon area, and that —following a similar scheme — he had appropriated a suit belonging to a member of his own element. However, it is now said that the statement affords some substantial indication that the peculations were not separate acts for the present purpose, but were committed at the same time and place.

Ill

Appellate defense counsel focus their attack on the Government’s election to allege two instances of larceny at the trial, rather than to aggregate the items of clothing stolen into a single transaction. Thus, we are told that, since the two takings occurred at substantially the same time and place, there results but a single theft, although the articles appropriated belonged to different persons — and a Manual provision to this effect is cited as controlling. Prejudice is apparent, the argument runs, because of the fact that an aggregation within the confines of a single specification could have produced legally no more than a maximum confinement of six months — as compared with the imposed sentence to confinement for one year under the separate allegations used. See Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, paragraph 127c, page 223, Table of Maximum Punishments.

It may not be amiss at this juncture to set down, in highly abbreviated fashion, some of our thinking on the general problem before us. If one were to enter a room and to take, with the necessary intent and at one and the same time, six articles all belonging to the occupant, in at least one — and we believe an ultimate — sense, it may properly be said that six larcenies resulted. Certainly, the accused stole six items— that is, there was a larcenous taking of each.

However, for a very long time, and in both civilian and military law, the punishment imposable for larceny has borne a direct relation to the value of the property taken and carried away. Thus — in the absence of some sort of limiting rule — punitive action might well be caused to depend on nothing more substantial than the whim of the prosecutor as expressed in his pleadings. For this reason, rules of thumb related to larceny allegations have been set up in various legal sources — one of which is the “same time and place” precept invoked by the defense here. To us, however, these injunctions are essentially practical in character, and are distinctly subsidiary to first principles operative in the area.

Therefore, all that an accused person —concededly guilty for the purposes of the present disquisition — is entitled to ask, and all that the several mentioned pleading reagents do, or’ should, seek to accord him, is the right to be 'punished on the basis of reasonably discrete offenses. To put the matter otherwise— and this time from the point of view of the Government’s pleader — it need only be demanded that the prosecutor, in his allegations of larceny, recognize fair and distinct interruptions in the current of the accused’s criminality, and acknowledge them alone, resolving doubts, of course, in favor of the latter’s penal interest. And we will undertake to see to it that these divisions, the offense “breaks,” utilized by him, are defensible, and that doubts are thus appropriately'resolved — as, indeed we have already indicated in many of the cases cited in later paragraphs of this opinion. But if the separative allegations of the Government — or its actions in [565]*565refusing to separate — are in fact fair, tenable and reasonably uniform, we shall not at all require a micrometer caliper for use in the disposition of cases of this ilk. Of course, the present problem is not found in larceny pleading alone — but is to be recognized as well in a wide variety of other legal situations. Bell v United States, 349 US 81, 75 S Ct 620.

IV

We recognize, of course, that when a theft of several articles is committed at substantially the same time and place, Manual language provides that we hold that but a single crime has been committed, although different owners may be involved. Manual, supra, paragraph 200a, page 361. Further, we are equally aware of the rule that, where the Government elects to separate the value of property allegedly taken into more than one specification, its lawyers must negate the likelihood that only one offense occurred. See United States v Taylor, 6 USCMA 289, 20 CMR 5; United States v Florence, 1 USCMA 620, 5 CMR 48. Our problem then is to determine whether — as claimed by the defense — the accused’s confession compels the conclusion that the Government failed to establish the necessary separateness.

We are quite willing to accept the notion that, in determining whether takings are simultaneous, an accused’s own recitation of the facts is entitled to great weight.

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Bluebook (online)
6 C.M.A. 562, 6 USCMA 562, 20 C.M.R. 278, 1955 CMA LEXIS 249, 1955 WL 3565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-hall-cma-1955.