United States v. Judd

11 C.M.A. 164, 11 USCMA 164, 28 C.M.R. 388, 1960 CMA LEXIS 349, 1960 WL 4443
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJanuary 22, 1960
DocketNo. 11,901
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 11 C.M.A. 164 (United States v. Judd) 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. Judd, 11 C.M.A. 164, 11 USCMA 164, 28 C.M.R. 388, 1960 CMA LEXIS 349, 1960 WL 4443 (cma 1960).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

ROBERT E. Quinn, Chief Judge:

A general court-martial convicted the accused of the murder of his wife in their trailer home near- Anchorage, Alaska, and imposed a sentence which included a dishonorable discharge and [166]*166confinement at hard labor for twenty-five years. On review, a board of review reduced the findings of guilty to involuntary manslaughter and reassessed the sentence by reducing the period of confinement to three years. The Judge Advocate General of the Air Force certified the case to this Court to review the correctness of the board of review’s action, reducing the findings of guilty. From the opinion of the board of review, we were unable to determine whether it based its decision upon new findings of fact, or upon an erroneous conception of the applicable principles of law. Accordingly, we returned the record of trial to the board of review for clarification of its action. United States v Judd, 10 USCMA 113, 27 CMR 187.

On further review, the board of review emphasized that its earlier action had been predicated upon its interpretation of the rules of law. It affirmed the court-martial’s finding of guilty of murder, and approved a sentence which includes confinement at hard labor for twenty years. The accused then petitioned this Court for review alleging eight grounds of error.

Three of the alleged errors pertain to the evidence. First, it is contended the board of review erred in holding “that the evidence of the record establishes any wrongful act on the part of the accused.” The pertinent facts are set out in the opinion on the first appeal. We there held that as a matter of law the evidence was sufficient to sustain the findings of murder. It follows, therefore, that there is no merit to this assignment of error.

A second allegation of error in regard to the evidence is that the board of review incorrectly concluded that the admission of certain hearsay testimony did not prejudice the accused. The challenged testimony was given by the mother-in-law of the accused, in cross-examination by the assistant defense counsel. Earlier, other witnesses testified to the relations between the accused and his wife. In her direct examination the mother-in-law testified that “Towards the last . . . [the accused and his wife] didn’t get along at all”; frequently the accused would “backhand her across the mouth” and inflict “black and blue marks” on her; he called her “bad names”; and he was generally “mean and cruel to her.” In the course of the direct examination there were several appropriate defense objections on the ground of hearsay. On cross-examination the witness was asked the following question and gave the answer indicated.

“Q. Did your daughter indicate to you she wanted to leave her husband?
“A. She said — I know you can’t prove it, but she said, Tf I leave him, he threatened to kill me.’ ”

The answer was generally responsive to the question. Having elicited the answer and having made no effort at the trial to strike it from the record, the defense cannot now contend that the testimony was prejudicial to its case. See United States v Holley, 5 USCMA 661, 18 CMR 285.1

The third contention relating to the evidence is that it does not support the instruction by the law officer which allowed the court-martial to return a verdict of guilty of murder if it found either that the accused had an intent to kill his wife, or that he was engaged in an act inherently dangerous to others and showed a wanton disregard of human life. The following quotation from our opinion on the first appeal provides a full and adverse answer to this contention.

“First, the facts in this record are sufficient to support the findings made by the court-martial and, therefore, [167]*167the board of review was not required to find, as a matter of law, that murder predicated on either an intent to kill or seriously injure or on the commission of an act inherently dangerous and evincing a wanton disregard for the lives of accused’s wife and child was not established. The board held that much when it found within its own standards that the law officer was required to instruct on each theory.
“Second, while we have held Article 118 (3) applies only when the act performed is inherently dangerous and evinces a wanton disregard for the life of more than one individual, this case is within that rule for the board properly found the acts of the accused endangered both members of the family. United States v Stokes, 6 USCMA 65, 19 CMR 191; United States v Davis, 2 USCMA 505, 10 CMR 3; and other cases.”

Moving to the post-trial proceedings, the accused maintains he did not have a full and impartial review by the convening authority. The claim is predicated partly upon the fact that the assistant staff judge advocate who prepared the post-trial review had before trial also prepared a memorandum for trial counsel for the trial of the ease, and partly upon a comparison of the two documents for the purpose of showing that he “took a partisan interest” in the proceedings. It is, of course, not always easy to mark the line between permissible official action in the pretrial and post-trial proceedings, and partisan participation. See United States v Turner, 7 USCMA 38, 45, 21 CMR 164. Mere preparation of the pretrial memorandum did not disqualify the assistant staff judge advocate from later review of the record of trial. United States v Haimson, 5 USCMA 208, 17 CMR 208; United States v DeAngelis, 3 USCMA 298, 12 CMR 54. We have read appellate defense counsel’s comparison of the two documents and we find nothing to support the claim of partisanship. Appellate defense counsel characterizes the assistant staff judge advocate’s statement that the accused “took the stand and . . . admitted that his wife died from a bullet wound from a gun discharged while in his hands” as a “biased, direct and unconscionable misstatement of fact.” He contends that the accused “Nowhere [made] any such admission.” While the accused did not in fact say his wife died from the wound of a bullet fired from a gun in his hands, he had earlier stipulated to a certificate of death which showed that his wife’s death occurred “instantaneously” as a result of a“gun shot wound,” and he expressly admitted his wife was shot by a bullet discharged from a gun he was holding. The following excerpts from the record of the accused’s testimony constitute sufficient refutation of the accused’s claim of unconscionable misstatement.

“Q. Wayne, directing your attention to the night of the accident, will you please tell the court what happened ?
“A. Well, I went home from work between 4:15 and 4:30 that afternoon, and stopped by Airman Back-haus’s house and left a note, he wasn’t home, I left a note for him to go out to Sergeant Degler’s house, a sergeant down at the warehouse, to go fishing. From there I went on home. So I got home, I parked my ear there, went inside, and, well, I think the paper was there, then I read a little bit out of the paper. The baby started crying, I picked it up, my wife was cooking supper, so I picked the baby up. We let the baby cry all the time so it will get hungry. And so she started warming up the food, baby food, brought it over to me. I started feeding it. In the meantime she went back to the stove, she was cooking supper, and so then she set supper down on the table and she started eating, I told her to eat, she started eating.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 C.M.A. 164, 11 USCMA 164, 28 C.M.R. 388, 1960 CMA LEXIS 349, 1960 WL 4443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-judd-cma-1960.