United States v. Harris

6 C.M.A. 736, 6 USCMA 736, 21 C.M.R. 58, 1956 CMA LEXIS 288, 1956 WL 4551
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMarch 30, 1956
DocketNo. 6930
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 6 C.M.A. 736 (United States v. Harris) 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. Harris, 6 C.M.A. 736, 6 USCMA 736, 21 C.M.R. 58, 1956 CMA LEXIS 288, 1956 WL 4551 (cma 1956).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

George W. Latimer, Judge:

This case involves an 18-year-old youth with an excellent military record and no known civilian criminal past. The testimony shows him to have been mentally balanced and not substantial[739]*739ly under the influence of liquor at the time of the homicide. He was friendly with the victim and his reputation for being a peaceful soldier was established. In the light of those facts and circumstances, it is most difficult to find any reason, excuse, or motive for this gruesome killing. Even the claim of self-defense seems baseless when tested by the number and nature of the wounds inflicted. Unfortunately for the accused, his frenzied behavior resulted in a conviction before a general court-martial of premeditated murder and a sentence to death. The convening authority approved both findings and sentence. A board of review in the office of The Judge Advocate General of the Army considered, among other things, the factual issue of premeditation and affirmed the findings made by the court-martial. Pursuant to Article 67(b) (1), 50 USC § 654, the case is now before us on mandatory review. Several errors have been assigned by appellate defense counsel, and because one of them involves the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain a finding of premeditation, a detailed recitation of the facts giving rise to the charge will be made.

The accused is a member of the Negro race and the deceased was a Caucasian. On the night of the homicide, they were drinking together in the enlisted men’s mess hall at the Ikego Ammunition Depot in Japan. Some few days previous to the incident herein involved, the accused had been assigned to another unit but had returned to spend the weekend with his organizational friends. The deceased, Corporal Vaughn, had been detailed to act as charge of quarters, he was to remain in the mess hall all night, and the accused had been invited to spend the night with him. During the evening, a number of soldiers came into the mess hall for a late snack and were served by the deceased and the accused. One of these men, a Corporal Terrill, had a brief run-in with the latter. While attempting to go into the kitchen, Terrill brushed by the accused, who made a certain remark. As Terrill started to walk past, another soldier yelled, “Watch it,” and as Terrill turned around, he saw the accused with a knife in his hand, held shoulder high, about two feet away from his neck. He inquired as to what was the cause of the behavior and the accused did not answer. He merely smiled, laid the knife down, and later apologized. Soon after this incident, the soldiers departed and left the accused and the deceased alone in the mess hall.

Approximately two hours before midnight, a Japanese boilerman named Otani was walking along the road outside the mess hall, checking the steam pressure in the boilers. He peered through a window of the building and noticed that a white soldier (deceased) and a colored soldier (accused) seemed to be either “joking” or “fighting.” The colored soldier had his hand on the chest of the white soldier and was holding a knife behind his back. As the two men faced each other, the white soldier suddenly pushed away from the colored soldier and ran into the dining room, which was unlighted. The colored soldier immediately followed after him with the knife in his hand. The blade of the knife was at least six inches in length. Otani reported the incident to another Japanese national who was on duty as guard.

In the meantime two Army Security guards had been told of a disturbance in the mess hall. They were in the process of investigating the report and had stopped to glance through a window of the mess hall. The accused approached them and asked if they were trying to enter the building. The guards replied that their purpose was to investigate a purported fight in the building and Harris volunteered the information that he did not know anything about such a fight. In addition, he stated that Corporal Vaughn had asked him to wait until he returned from taking his girl friend home. To assist them, he offered to go over to the company barracks and obtain the keys from the mess hall so that the guards could enter the structure. The accused then left, saying that he would get the keys, but he never returned.

Two Japanese security guards, who also had been called to the scene, found an unlocked door and entered the mess hall where they found the body of the [740]*740deceased lying on the floor in the dining room near a steam table. At approximately 11:00 p.m., a medical officer, who had been summoned, arrived and he pronounced the victim dead. He estimated death to have occurred sometime within the two-hour period immediately preceding his arrival. In his opinion, death was caused by twelve cuts scattered over the anterior chest and shoulder on the left side of the body and about eight “slashing” wounds on the right side of the neck. There were also five penetrations on the back, particularly in the upper chest and lumbar area, and a few tiny scattered cuts on the left hand, upper left arm and shoulder. In all, the doctor noted a total of some 28 wounds which were caused by a sharp instrument.

Blood covered the floor of the mess hall in the area where Vaughn’s body was found, and bloody footprints were observed from the area immediately surrounding the body to the doorway into the kitchen. On the morning after the stabbing, a bloody knife with a six-inch blade was found stuck in the ground, behind a fence post, near one of the mess hall doors.

After being apprehended, the accused gave a voluntary pretrial statement which was introduced into evidence. In the statement he admitted stabbing the deceased but claimed that he did so because the victim grabbed him by the neck and was choking him. After the struggle, he became frightened and ran out the side door of the mess hall. He did not know how many times he stabbed the deceased, and he did not know where he had concealed the knife. After leaving the mess hall, he boarded a train and rode to Yokohama. He spent the night in the barracks of a camp near that city, and the next morning went to the Chaplain.

The defense introduced testimony to show that the accused and the deceased were close acquaintances and were on friendly terms. The accused himself elected to take the stand in his own behalf, and testified substantially in accord with what he had said in his pretrial statement. Stated in general terms, his evidence was that he and the deceased had been drinking together in the mess hall when they became involved in an argument. He was a “little bit high” but he was not drunk. Because of some words between the two, he started to leave, but the deceased called him back to have another drink. Then Vaughn suddenly grabbed him around the neck and shoulders and threw him on the side of the table. He protested but Vaughn continued to try to put pressure on his neck. At this point he observed the knife, grabbed it, once more asked the deceased to stop, and then stabbed him twice. As he looked up he saw the deceased running out of the kitchen to the dining room. Becoming dizzy, he got frightened and started to run. The next thing he remembered was waking up on a train in Yokohama, after which he became dizzy again. Sometime later, he awakened in a barracks in Camp Coe. He spent a confused day at the camp, and late in the afternoon he entered an office and asked to use the telephone. On the desk he noticed a “stop and hold sheet” on himself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 C.M.A. 736, 6 USCMA 736, 21 C.M.R. 58, 1956 CMA LEXIS 288, 1956 WL 4551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-harris-cma-1956.