United States v. Justice

2 M.J. 344, 1976 CMR LEXIS 636
CourtU S Air Force Court of Military Review
DecidedDecember 23, 1976
DocketACM 22091
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2 M.J. 344 (United States v. Justice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U S Air Force 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. Justice, 2 M.J. 344, 1976 CMR LEXIS 636 (usafctmilrev 1976).

Opinion

DECISION

LeTARTE, Chief Judge:

Consonant with his pleas, the accused was convicted of eight specifications of receiving bribes, in violation of Article 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 U.S.C. § 934, and was sentenced to bad conduct discharge, reduction in grade to airman basic and a fine of $6,000.00.

The assistant trial defense counsel has submitted an excellent brief which has been incorporated by reference into appellate defense counsel’s assignment of errors and which urges us to conclude:

THE MILITARY JUDGE ERRED IN OVERRULING THE DEFENSE MOTION TO DISMISS SPECIFICATIONS 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, and 8 ON THE GROUNDS THAT THE COURT-MARTIAL LACKED JURISDICTION OVER THE SUBJECT MATTER BY REASON OF THE ACCUSED’S DISCHARGE FROM THE AIR FORCE AFTER THE COMMISSION OF OFFENSES ALLEGED IN THOSE SPECIFICATIONS.1 We agree in part.

The relevant circumstances indicate that beginning on 1 January 1975, and extending through 5 October 1975, the accused received a series of payments from Korean contractors representing companies “engaged in contract business with the United States ... in recognition of services rendered or to be rendered ... in relation to [official matters] in which the United States was . . . interested, to wit: the procurement of materials [Specifications 1, 3-8] [and] the rehabilitation of military buildings [Specification 2].” During this period, the accused was assigned to the Osan Air Base, Korea, Procurement Office as Chief, Supplies Services Branch, and the payments received were “in exchange for favors in awarding government contracts to the Korean contractors.”

The evidence pertinent to the jurisdictional issue reveals that on 14 August 1971, the accused re-enlisted in the Air Force for a term of four years and that the expiration of his term of service (ETS) was established as 13 August 1975. On 30 April 1974, the accused’s request for extension of his ETS until 13 January 1976, was approved. However, on 14 August 1975, the accused was permitted to re-enlist for a term of three years and was thereafter presented with an honorable discharge certificate, dated 13 August 1975, which had been withheld pending his submission of a signed re-enlistment contract.

Based on these circumstances, we find that the Air Force lacked jurisdiction to prosecute the accused for those offenses occurring prior to his re-enlistment on 14 August 1975.

In United States v. Ginyard, 16 U.S.C.M.A. 512, 37 C.M.R. 132 (1967), a divided Court of Military Appeals formulated the following rule:

Once an enlisted man has been discharged from the armed forces, that discharge operates as a bar to subsequent trial for offenses occurring prior to discharge, except in those situations expressly saved by Article 3(a) of the Code, supra.

This rule effectively adopted the position taken by Judge Ferguson in his dissent in United States v. Noble, 13 U.S.C.M.A. 413, 32 C.M.R. 413 (1962), wherein he asserted:

Congress has carefully set down the rule which must govern jurisdiction over offenses in situations like that before us. If the offense is punishable by five years or more and not triable in an American civil court, jurisdiction continues in the military judicial system. Otherwise, the [347]*347termination of one enlistment and the beginning of another — regardless of the attendant circumstances — ends power to try the accused for what he did before the end of his earlier period of service. [Emphasis supplied.]

The stated purpose of this rule was to avoid confusion resulting from attempts “to determine the specific factual situations in each case and to relate them to particular military regulations,” as had occurred in Ginyard and several of the Court’s prior decisions. United States v. Ginyard, supra, at page 135.

Despite this “simple rule,” as so described by Judge Kilday in Ginyard, the Government contends that prosecution of the accused in the instant case for all of his offenses is justified on the basis of the Court’s earlier decision in Noble, supra. There, Noble was serving the second of two extensions of his original enlistment when, at his request, the extensions were can-celled pursuant to a special order providing that the cancellation was contingent upon his re-enlistment. On these facts, the Court found that Noble’s status as a person subject to military law was not terminated by his re-enlistment since “[l]egally and factually, the new term of enlistment was a substitute for the original enlistment and its extensions.”

Noting the similarity between Noble’s situation and the accused’s herein, the convening authority’s staff judge advocate, whose argument was adopted by appellate Government counsel for purposes of the accused’s appeal, stated his opinion that Ginyard did not overrule Noble. He reasoned that since the accused, like Noble, was obligated to serve an additional period because of the voluntary extension of his ETS, and because cancellation of the extension was contingent upon his re-enlistment, there was no “accomplished separation for the purpose of re-enlistment,” as in “Gin-yard. United States v. Noble, supra, at page 416. Accordingly, on the basis that the accused’s case is to recognized exception to the general rule enunciated in Ginyard, the staff judge advocate concluded that the military judge properly denied the defense motion to dismiss the affected specifications.

Our disagreement with the staff judge advocate’s conclusion is twofold. First, we do not agree that the accused here was serving an extension of his enlistment when he re-enlisted, as was Noble. Air Force regulations provide that “in lieu of entering the extension period,” an extension of enlistment may be “offset” prior to entry through immediate ETS re-enlistment at the time of the original ETS.2 In this respect, re-enlistment without a break in service is accomplished on the day following expiration of the serviceman’s term of service.3 Consequently, by re-enlisting on 14 August 1975, the day following his original ETS, the accused never entered his enlistment extension period.

Secondly, and of even greater significance, it is our opinion that the Ginyard rule was intended to supersede all of the Court’s prior opinions relative to this jurisdictional issue. In other words, there are no exceptions to the rule,4 For this reason, our finding that the accused had not in fact entered the extension of his re-enlistment is immaterial.

To repeat, once an enlisted man has been discharged, he cannot be tried by a military court for an offense occurring pri- or to that discharge, “regardless of the attendant circumstances,” unless such offense is punishable by confinement for five years or more and cannot be tried in one of the courts enumerated in Article 3(a), Code, supra. No other factor need be considered. In the case before us, therefore, the court [348]*348lacked jurisdiction over those offenses committed before 14 August 1975. These include the offenses alleged in Specifications 1, 2, 3, 5, and 6 in their entirety and Specifications, 7 and 8 in part.

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