United States v. King

17 C.M.A. 17, 17 USCMA 17, 37 C.M.R. 281, 1967 CMA LEXIS 311, 1967 WL 4238
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 1967
DocketNo. 19,789
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 C.M.A. 17 (United States v. King) 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. King, 17 C.M.A. 17, 17 USCMA 17, 37 C.M.R. 281, 1967 CMA LEXIS 311, 1967 WL 4238 (cma 1967).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Quinn, Chief Judge:

The accused was arraigned before a general court-martial at Fort Gordon, Georgia, on a charge alleging premeditated murder of Private Joseph J. Poye, larceny of Poye’s automobile and more than $900.00 in cash, and twenty-seven specifications of forgery based on use of an oil company credit card, in violation of Articles 118, 121, and 123, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 918, 921, and 923, respectively. He pleaded not guilty to the murder charge and guilty to all the other charges, but was found guilty as charged, and sentenced to be put to death. The convening authority approved the findings of guilty and the sentence. However, considering the accused’s personal problems and to cure a “possible error” in the law officer’s instructions as to the sentence, the board of review mitigated the death penalty to confinement at hard labor for life. We granted further review to consider certain aspects of the instructions as to the merits.

Evidence presented by the Government established beyond all doubt that the accused killed Poye, deliberately and with premeditation, in order to take his car and money. Among other things, the prosecution established that the accused purchased a gun from a pawnshop in Augusta, Georgia, several days before Poye was killed. At the same time he wrote to a girl in Mobile, Alabama, that he intended to buy a car; the car he described as the one he “ ‘liked’ ” was Poye’s. He told a friend about the girl, and indicated he intended to make “a big impression” upon her, using $1,000.00 he expected to receive from his wife. On April 7, 1962, the accused obtained a six-day leave. He indicated that during his absence he would be in Mobile, Alabama. On April 8, he appeared in that city with Poye’s car. He also had Poye’s college ring. Using Poye’s name, he sent a telegram to Huston State Bank and Trust Company, Euston, Louisiana, asking that all but $65.00 in Poye’s account be wired to him in Mobile.1 The bank transferred some $900.00 by Western Union, and the accused obtained the money from the Western Union office in Mobile by using Poye’s identification card, upon which he had superimposed a picture of himself.

Poye was last seen between 8:00 and 9:00 p.m., on April 7, 1962. He was then with the accused in the barracks: On September 9, 1962, near Jewell, Georgia, Criminal Investigations Detachment agents found the skeletal re[19]*19mains of a human being. A periodontist compared the teeth of the skeleton with dental charts of Poye’s teeth, and concluded they were the same. Three pathologists also examined the skeleton. Their testimony established that Poye had been shot twice, once in the head and once in the back. One of the pathologists was of the opinion that Poye was first shot in the back. He based this opinion on the fact that the brain, which was still intact, did not contain an accumulation of blood. Other testimony indicated both shots were fired about the same time from a range of one to two feet. The head wound was “fatal”; and the back wound was “incompatible with life” in the absence of medical treatment.

At trial, the accused admitted he killed Poye.2 He maintained he did not do so intentionally. He testified he and Poye were “the best of friends.” Poye agreed to drive him to the bus station for his trip to Mobile. Since the bus was scheduled to leave after midnight, they visited a few bars to pass the time. Then, they returned to Fort Gordon to try to collect $4.70 owing to the accused. They could not find the debtor so they sat in Poye’s car in the parking lot. They talked and listened to the radio. Poye was in the driver’s seat of the car, a 1959 Buick convertible, and the accused was on the passenger’s side. A cat suddenly appeared on the parking lot, and seemed to be “trying to get on one side of the [utility] pole to get out of the rain.” Poye expressed the wish that he had a gun so he could shoot the cat. The accused told Poye he had a gun. He turned around and reached into his “AWOL bag,” which was on the floor of the car behind the front seats. With his left hand, he took a clip of ammunition from one side of the bag; with his right hand, he picked up the pistol. He inserted the clip and “caught the receiver,” pulling it “back to inject the first round.” He did not “know exactly what happened,” but “the gun fired.” At first he thought he “had shot the car,” but when Poye fell “over on the steering wheel” he saw “he was shot.” His next thought was to get help. Since the hospital was “directly on the other end of the same street,” he moved Poye to the passenger’s side of the car and took over the driver’s seat. He started for the hospital, but changed his mind and direction. He thought of his “past criminal record”; and that he had a gun on the post and had been drinking. He “became confused.” He knew an investigation would be made, and thought that “when they started cheeking up on” him “they” would not believe “that it was an accident.” He left Fort Gordon. He put Poye’s body in the trunk of the car and drove around the countryside for a while. Then he stopped on a bridge on a country road. He removed Poye’s body and threw it into a stream. He could not explain the second bullet wound in Poye’s body.

Lieutenant Colonel Thomas P. Mul-laney, a psychiatrist, testified as a defense witness. He stated he had examined the accused on April 23, 1964, and again on June 20, 1964.3 He described the accused as an “antisocial character, with a schizoid type personality who may or may not have an underlying thinking disorder.” In his opinion, the accused’s mental condition was such that if he had “accidentally” shot someone “under circumstances where he might be accused of an unlaw[20]*20ful killing,” he would be “likely to flee”; and before fleeing the scene, the accused could “even go so far as to shoot another bullet hole into” the body. However, Dr. Mullaney acknowledged the accused “could tell right from wrong very well” when he last saw him on June 20, and he “thought he could determine right from wrong” when he was first ■examined on April 23. The doctor further testified the accused could tell right from wrong “in April of 1962.” However, he maintained the accused did not have “any capability of long-range type planning that would lead to successful accomplishment of his particular goal.” He admitted his opinion was formulated in terms of his “own definition of long-range,” which he did not give; and he also admitted he did not know whether the accused’s inability to make long-range plans would pertain “to murder itself.” On that point, the following question and answer, in cross-examination by trial counsel, are important:

“Q Now, Colonel Mullaney, if you were advised that ‘Premeditated murder is murder committed after the formation of a specific intent to kill someone and consideration of the act intended. A murder is not premeditated unless the thought of taking life was consciously conceived and the act or omission by which it was taken was intended. It is not necessary that the intention to kill shall have been entertained for any particular or considerable length of time.’4 Could the accused premeditate according to that definition?
“A Yes, sir.”

Dr. Mullaney testified on the morning of the last day of trial. The preceding afternoon, at the end of the accused’s testimony, the law officer conferred with counsel in regard to proposed instructions.

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Related

Billie Joe King v. R. I. Moseley, Warden
430 F.2d 732 (Tenth Circuit, 1970)
United States v. Adams
18 C.M.A. 439 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 C.M.A. 17, 17 USCMA 17, 37 C.M.R. 281, 1967 CMA LEXIS 311, 1967 WL 4238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-king-cma-1967.