United States v. Lyon

15 C.M.A. 307, 15 USCMA 307, 35 C.M.R. 279, 1965 CMA LEXIS 224, 1965 WL 4664
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1965
DocketNo. 18,123
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 15 C.M.A. 307 (United States v. Lyon) 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. Lyon, 15 C.M.A. 307, 15 USCMA 307, 35 C.M.R. 279, 1965 CMA LEXIS 224, 1965 WL 4664 (cma 1965).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

FERGUSON, Judge:

This is a strange case. It becomes more perplexing as the pages of the transcript unfold a drama in which the alleged “victim” is painted as an adulterer, while the accused appears to have been an injured husband of previously impeccable reputation, whose long and honorable service in the United States Air Force has earned the merited praise of his superiors. Taking action on the record, the convening authority apparently realized that the storm in which accused had become enmeshed was no more than a stirring of tea leaves and suspended all of the adjudged sentence except a reduction of one grade. It remains to be seen whether he also acted properly in affirming a conviction of attempted extortion, in violation of Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 127, 10 USC § 927, for that is the de-lict of which the accused was found guilty and on which the court-martial based a punishment of bad-conduct discharge, confinement at hard labor for eight months, and reduction to the grade of airman basic. It is also worthy of note that the court acquitted him of robbery, in violation of Code, supra, Article 122, 10 USC § 922, and another count of extortion.

The findings of guilty and sentence having been affirmed by the board of review, the accused sought relief here, and we granted his timely petition upon the issues:

[309]*309“1. Whether the law officer erred prejudicially in refusing to allow the defense to impeach Sergeant Williams in regard to alleged prior relations with the wife of the accused (R. 74), as being in accord with the defense theory, or as part of the defense case without regard to impeachment.
“2. Whether the law officer erred to the prejudice of the accused in failing to submit the defense theory of the case to the court with properly tailored instructions.”

In order to place these matters in proper perspective, we set out the evidence surrounding the alleged occurrences.

I

Two versions of the incident charged are shown in the record. According to testimony of Staff Sergeant James Williams, the matter came about in the following manner.

While at the Base Noncommissioned Officers’ Club, Minot Air Force Base, North Dakota, during the evening hours of August 17, 1963, accused invited Williams to join him at his table. Mrs. Lyon was also present. Accused had been drinking, and at Mrs. Lyon’s invitation, Williams accompanied them to their quarters. There, he drank a beer, and Lyon, indicating that he was going to bed, walked out of the room. Williams was also intoxicated and declared that the next thing which he remembered was being awakened by Sergeant Lyon in Mrs. Lyon’s bedroom. At the time he was nude and in bed with Mrs. Lyon, who was clad only in “some garment ... a negligee or housecoat or-.” To the best of Williams’ knowledge, he had not engaged in intercourse with Mrs. Lyon. However, he had been alone with her in the accused’s quarters before; he had twice gone with her to Deering, North Dakota, on social excursions; he had “parked” out in the country with her; and he had “petted her.” He had also informed her “I thought a lot of her” but had not indicated any desire to marry her. In addition, he had given her a locket, two high fidelity speakers, and she “got a diamond ring of mine,” worth approximately six hundred dollars.

Sergeant Lyon, armed with a .45 caliber automatic pistol, ordered Williams out of Mrs. Lyon’s bed and “told me to get dressed, get my clothes and go downstairs.” Williams complied, and followed Lyon down to the living room. There, Lyon, still holding the pistol, told Williams, “ ‘This is going to cost you,’ ” and asked him how much money he could obtain. Williams replied that he did not know, declaring he only had thirty-seven dollars with him. Accused stated, “ ‘I’ll take that,’ ” and did so. He then told Williams “it would cost me five hundred dollars and he said I owed him the balance of four hundred and sixty-three dollars.” He gave Williams one week in which to raise the remaining sum, and presented him with a .45 caliber cartridge “ ‘as a reminder.’ ” The victim was then allowed to depart from Lyon’s quarters through the rear door.

According to Williams, he saw the accused again “approximately a week or ten days later outside of the Base Commissary.” When Lyon reminded him of his “debt,” Williams replied that he did not have the money. Accused told him to go to the Credit Union and borrow it. Williams agreed to do so that afternoon. At 2:05 p. m., the accused picked him up at the Commissary but did not drive him to the Credit Union, as planned. Instead the parties proceeded to a bank in Minot, North Dakota, where Lyon obtained a blank note. “He filled it out, made it payable to himself, with a due date on it, and told me to sign it.” Williams complied, and accused drove him back to the base.

On September 14, Lyon and Williams met at the Noncommissioned Officers’ Club to settle the “debt.” Williams testified he paid Lyon four hundred and twenty • dollars in travelers’ cheeks and forty-three dollars in cash. Lyon, however, refused to give him a receipt and did not return the note which Williams had executed. Subsequently, on October 21, 1963, accused called Williams on the telephone and “said I’d been harassing his wife [310]*310about a ring that she had in her possession of mine, said he still had the note and I was going to pay it again. I told him no, that I’d already paid that note and he says you’re going to pay it again.” Lyon then declared that “he would just have to take it to Colonel Brown, my commanding officer.”

Williams declared he had given the accused the original sum of thirty-seven dollars in cash because “He had a weapon pointed at me, I was scared.” He executed the note later, as he was still afraid and he did not wish the incident to become known.

Williams specifically denied he had promised to pay the accused the sum of one thousand dollars in order that he might obtain a divorce from Mrs. Lyon. He had, however, in the past been involved in another incident in which he had offered to pay off a husband’s debts for household furniture in connection with the wife obtaining a divorce.

Finally, Williams conceded that, following the above occurrences, he became involved with Lyon at the NCO Club in another incident and attempted to assault him with a beer bottle.

Lieutenant Colonel Brown testified that he was Sergeant Williams’ Commanding Officer. On October 22, 1963, accused informed him Williams owed him $463.00 and had refused to pay it. He had been advised by a local attorney to see Brown, as the debtor’s commanding officer, in an effort to collect. When Brown inquired as to the circumstances, accused advised him what had occurred and “I got the impression there was an agreement made between them, a certain sum of money would be paid and nothing would be said.” Colonel Brown delayed any action until he had heard Sergeant Williams’ version of the incident. According to Williams, he was called in and informed the Colonel that he had paid the note previously.

The prosecution also introduced into evidence a properly obtained oral pretrial statement in which accused related that he had discovered Sergeant Williams in bed with his wife and, having armed himself, caused Williams to leave the bedroom. “They went downstairs where Sei'geant Williams gave him thirty-seven dollars” and “promised to pay him a thousand dollars if he kept quiet . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 C.M.A. 307, 15 USCMA 307, 35 C.M.R. 279, 1965 CMA LEXIS 224, 1965 WL 4664, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lyon-cma-1965.