United States v. Leslie

9 M.J. 646, 1980 CMR LEXIS 603
CourtU.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review
DecidedApril 25, 1980
DocketNCM 79 0262
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 M.J. 646 (United States v. Leslie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Navy-Marine Corps 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. Leslie, 9 M.J. 646, 1980 CMR LEXIS 603 (usnmcmilrev 1980).

Opinions

MICHEL, Judge:

Appellant was originally charged in 20 specifications under two separate charges with multiple acts of criminality associated with his official duties as a postal clerk serving aboard the USS VANCOUVER (LPD-2). The majority of these offenses need not directly concern this Court since they were disposed of at the trial level with results favorable to appellant. We are, however, faced with the proper disposition of the five offenses of which appellant was found guilty, his pleas to the contrary notwithstanding. He was sentenced by the military judge for these offenses to confinement at hard labor for two months, forfeiture of $175.00 pay per month for six months, and a bad-conduct discharge.

Appellate defense counsel, in his initial brief submitted to this Court, assigned various errors to which appellate government counsel responded. Subsequent to submission of these briefs, this tribunal saw fit to require the parties to view the case anew and to submit additional briefs on an issue which evidently escaped the scrutiny of the drafter of the charges, the trial and defense [648]*648counsel, the trial judge, and the staff judge advocate. It is this issue which is dispositive of appellant’s case here.

The government’s theory of appellant’s larcenous conduct1 was that while acting in his official capacity as a postal clerk aboard a commissioned U. S. Navy vessel appellant came into possession of five parcels, each bearing the distinctive postal notation “COD” 2 as well as the required U. S. Postal Service accountability tags for such parcels which were attached thereto in the prescribed manner.3 Succinctly stated, the government then attempted, with obvious success, to prove that appellant delivered the parcels to their respective shipboard addresses,4 removed the accountability tags, received the amounts shown as due on these tags from each of the five addresses, and unlawfully pocketed these funds rather [649]*649than remitting them to the vendors to whom said funds were lawfully payable.5

The military judge erred as a matter of law when he found appellant guilty of the offenses set forth under Specifications 1 through 5 of Charge II. The funds paid to appellant by each of the respective addressees were for the purchase of money orders and not as a consequence of the sale of money orders. Owing to this subtle but eminent distinction, each of the separate amounts of money at issue never became the property of the United States because title to the respective monetary funds never passed to the United States. See Smyer v. United States, 273 U.S. 333, 335, 47 S.Ct. 375, 376, 71 L.Ed. 667 (1927); United States v. Bloys, 19 F.2d 364 (1927). Rather, these funds remained, at all times, private funds, not money order funds, and the memoranda in the form of accountability tags which were removed from each parcel by appellant remained mere applications for the expectant money orders. See United States v. Bloys, supra at 365. Neither did the United States ever have or acquire a superi- or right to possession of the money in question. As between appellant and the United States they stood, each to the other, in the relation of agent and principal, respectively. With regard to the disposition of the parcels here involved, appellant’s duty as an agent required him to dispose of the parcels and to collect and distribute the funds which the addressees paid over to him as a consequence of such delivery in accordance with those regulations which the government duly promulgated. See footnotes 2 and 3, supra. That is what this particular agency relationship entailed and contemplated. It did not contemplate appellant’s wrongful acts which, as a series of larcenies by trick, see paragraph 200a (4), Manual for Courts-Martial, 1969 (Rev.) (MCM), constituted a species of fraud. See BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 594 (5th ed. 1979). It was that kind of fraud from which he alone profited and from which the United States derived no benefit. See Oddo v. Interstate Bakeries, Inc., 271 F.2d 417, 422 (8th Cir. 1959). In that appellant, although ostensibly acting in the business of his principal, was really committing fraud for his own benefit, he thereby acted outside the scope of his agency. See Farm Bureau Co-op. Mill and Supply, Inc. v. Blue Star Foods, Inc., 238 F.2d 326, 335 (8th Cir. 1956), and cases therein cited. As to such transactions, the funds wrongfully obtained by the agent can not be recovered from the agent’s principal. See United States v. Oddo, supra, and cases cited therein. In that such recovery is precluded, it can not be said that the principal has a superior right to possession of the converted funds. Thus, in this case, any argument that the United States had a superior right to possession of the funds given by the respective vendees, upon delivery of the individual parcels to appellant, is unpersuasive. As neither party seriously contends nor suggests that the United States ever had actual possession of the respective sums at issue here, the United States could never be either a general or special owner of these funds. See paragraph 200a (3), MCM. That being so, the ownership element of the offense of larceny, concerning the five specifications under the Charge of which appellant was found guilty, is defective respecting each specification as a matter of law. See id. Obviously then, there is a patent variance between the pleadings, findings, and proof in this case.6 What remains to be seen is [650]*650whether or not that variance is fatal, for if it is, then appellant’s conviction must be reversed.

The question of the effect of a variance upon an otherwise unassailable conviction is not a new one. In United States v. Lee, 1 M.J. 15 (C.M.A.1975), it was posited that the underlying critical inquiry involves possible prejudice to the appellant. Prejudice, in turn, is properly measured against a dual standard: (1) has the accused been misled to the extent that he has been unable adequately to prepare for trial, and (2) is the accused qua appellant fully protected against another prosecution for the same offense. United States v. Lee, supra at 16, citing United States v. Craig, 8 U.S.C.M.A. 218, 24 C.M.R. 28 (1957), and United States v. Hopf, 1 U.S.C.M.A. 584, 5 C.M.R. 12 (1952). The first prong of the above test is satisfied by appellant’s arraignment on Specifications 6 through 10 of Charge II and Specifications 1 through 10 of Charge I,7 which, when read together, set out the entire scheme alleged as the core of appellant’s criminality,8 and by the service of both charges and the 20 underlying specifications upon him four days prior to trial.9

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Related

United States v. Leslie
13 M.J. 170 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1982)
United States v. Cohen
12 M.J. 573 (U S Air Force Court of Military Review, 1981)

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Bluebook (online)
9 M.J. 646, 1980 CMR LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-leslie-usnmcmilrev-1980.