United States v. Massey

15 C.M.A. 274, 15 USCMA 274, 35 C.M.R. 246, 1965 CMA LEXIS 220, 1965 WL 4660
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedApril 2, 1965
DocketNo. 17,319
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 15 C.M.A. 274 (United States v. Massey) 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. Massey, 15 C.M.A. 274, 15 USCMA 274, 35 C.M.R. 246, 1965 CMA LEXIS 220, 1965 WL 4660 (cma 1965).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

FERGUSON, Judge:

This case has been here before upon the certified issue whether the accused was entitled to a continuance in order to avail himself of the services of a particular military defense counsel. At that time, we reversed the board of review’s decision that the continuance should have been granted and remanded the case for further appellate proceedings. See United States v Massey, 14 USCMA 486, 34 CMR 266. Such resulted in affirmance of accused’s conviction and a sentence extending to dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, confinement at hard labor for four years, and reduction to airman basic. We thereupon granted accused’s timely petition for further review upon the issues whether:

“D. THE LAW OFFICER ERRED IN ALLOWING THE ACCUSED’S WIFE TO TESTIFY AS A WITNESS FOR THE PROSECUTION IN THE FACE OF THE ACCUSED’S ASSERTION OF PRIVILEGE [and]
“Assuming Issue ‘D’ is answered in the negative, is the admissibility of the testimony by the wife controlled by the offense on trial or by the lesser offense found by the court-martial ?”

These questions require reiteration of some of the factors set forth in our previous opinion as well as an examination of the evidence adduced at trial. Accused was arraigned upon three counts of carnal knowledge of N, in violation of Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 120, 10 USC § 920, and two specifications of indecent acts, one with N and the other with G, in violation of Code, supra, Article 134, 10 USC § 934. He was acquitted of the offense involving G and of the allegations of carnal knowledge, but was found guilty of the lesser included offense of indecent acts with N as to each such specification and of the same crime with N, as separately and originally alleged. The, law officer set aside the findings of guilty as to one specification, following an appropriate motion by the defense counsel, based on the provisions of the Statute of Limitations, Code, supra, Article 43, 10 USC § 843, leaving in effect a conviction of three specifications of indecent acts with N. Accused was sentenced to dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, confinement at hard labor for six years, and reduction. As noted above, the period of confinement involved has since been reduced to four years.

Accused’s alleged victim, N, is his daughter, and, at the time of the trial, was nine years of age. She testified to the nature of the indecent acts which accused performed on her, but denied he had carnally known her. She also declared she had reported one of the incidents to her mother in 1981 or 1962, when the family lived in Spangdahlem, Germany, and again in 1963, when the most recent incident occurred. Medical examination disclosed the absence of the hymenal membrane, but it could not be determined whether she had been sexually molested.

Thereafter, accused’s wife was called as a witness, over assertion by the defense of the husband-wife privilege, and permitted to testify as to her daughter’s complaints to her both in Spangdahlem and in 1963 concerning [276]*276the accused’s acts. As to the earlier complaint, she indicated she and her husband had consulted an Air Force chaplain concerning the incident, but that she took no further action, except to watch her children more closely, as they were then overseas and she wished to avoid scandal. As to the incident reported to her by N in 1963, she told her daughter “that we just have to bear with it for a few more days,” until her parents arrived. She “continued to live with . . . [her] husband for ten days” before complaining to the authorities, because “I wanted my father’s backing.” Elsewhere in her testimony she detailed a stormy marriage, characterized by ill treatment and her husband’s drinking, which further deteriorated following N’s initial complaint in May 1962. Nevertheless, an additional child was born of the marriage in April 1963.

Accused, testifying in his own behalf, denied his guilt of the offenses charged. He also depicted steadily worsening marital conditions, attributing “forty percent of my troubles” to his parents-in-law. He had disciplined his children strictly, particularly N and G, for lying and stealing. His security clearance was withdrawn on the basis of his family difficulties. He and his wife were of differing religions, and his mother-in-law sought to have her leave him. Inferentially, Sergeant Massey’s testimony indicates the accusations by his children probably grew out of his unhappy marital state.

Mrs. Massey, recalled as a witness by the court, conceded that N had informed her “she had lied about her accusations against her father, that they were not real, but that she had dreamed it.” This, however, “was in the presence of her father after he had threatened her and browbeaten her.” N later repudiated her withdrawal of the accusation.

From the above, it will be seen that the record before us is not a pretty one. If N’s testimony, as corroborated by that of her mother, is believed, the accused is guilty of reprehensible acts toward his own child — indeed, whát defense counsel himself characterized “as nasty an accusation” as can be made. On the other hand, if the accused is to be accorded credibility, he is the blameless victim of marital discord and false charges designed to hasten the separation of the parties thereto. The question of where the truth lay was one entirely for the fact finders below, for there is ample evidence to sustain the findings of guilty. But we are required to decide whether it was meet for the Government, over the accused’s timely invocation of privilege, to cast into its pan of the scales the testimony of Mrs. Massey in order to corroborate that of her daughter.

The basic foundation of the husband-wife witness privilege — as opposed to that involving confidential communications — in military law is found in the Presidential prescription of the pertinent rule of evidence pursuant to Code, supra, Article 36, 10 USC § 836:

“Husband and wife are competent witnesses in favor of each other. Although husband and wife are also competent witnesses against each other, the general rule is that both are entitled to a privilege prohibiting the use of one of them as a witness (sworn or unsworn) against the other. This privilege does not exist, however, when the husband or wife is the individual or one of the individuals injured by the offense with which the other spouse is charged, as in a prosecution for an assault upon one spouse by the other, for bigamy, polygamy, unlawful cohabitation, abandonment of wife or children or failure to support them, for using or transporting the wife for ‘white slave’ or other immoral purposes, or for forgery by one spouse of the signature of the other to a writing when the writing would, if genuine, apparently operate to the prejudice of such other.” [Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, paragraph 148e.]

We recently had occasion to examine the fabric of this privilege in United States v Moore, 14 USCMA 635, 34 CMR 415. There, we held accused’s wife, though clearly competent to testify as to assaults by her husband upon [277]*277her person, could not be compelled to do so. In reversing, the Chief Judge declared, for a unanimous Court, at page 636:

. . The rule [of privilege] is founded upon the venerable and ancient policy of the state to avoid possible destruction of the marital bond by pitting a wife against a husband, in a trial in which his liberty is at stake.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 C.M.A. 274, 15 USCMA 274, 35 C.M.R. 246, 1965 CMA LEXIS 220, 1965 WL 4660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-massey-cma-1965.