United States v. Moore

12 C.M.A. 696, 12 USCMA 696, 31 C.M.R. 282, 1962 CMA LEXIS 258, 1962 WL 4413
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMarch 16, 1962
DocketNo. 14,856
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 12 C.M.A. 696 (United States v. Moore) 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. Moore, 12 C.M.A. 696, 12 USCMA 696, 31 C.M.R. 282, 1962 CMA LEXIS 258, 1962 WL 4413 (cma 1962).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

FERGUSON, Judge:

Despite the original recommendation of the pretrial investigating officer that he be brought to trial only on charges of involuntary manslaughter, in violation of Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 119, 10 USC § 919, a position with which the convening authority did not agree, accused was arraigned before a general court-martial upon a specification alleging unpremeditated murder, in violation of Code, supra, Article 118, 10 USC § 918. He was found guilty and sentenced to dishonorable discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, reduction, and confinement at hard labor for forty years. The convening authority reduced the period of confinement involved to twenty years but otherwise approved the sentence. The board of review affirmed, and we granted accused’s petition for review upon two issues, In light of our action, we need, however, only reach the assignment that:

“THE LAW OFFICER ERRED IN INSTRUCTING THE COURT-MARTIAL THAT A FINDING OF GUILT OF ANY OFFENSE LESS THAN MURDER WAS NOT PERMISSIBLE.”

Stated in another way, the question before us is whether the law officer prejudicially omitted to instruct upon the lesser included offense of involuntary manslaughter. As the ultimate answer to this inquiry must lie in the evidence presented to the court-martial, we turn to the matters depicted in the transcript.

At approximately 12:15 a.m. on October 11, 1959, accused came to Airman Jackson’s quarters. He told Jackson his six-year-old adopted daughter, Mari Yvonne Moore, “was dead, or he thought she was dead,” Jackson [698]*698dressed, and the two men proceeded to the North Gate, Itazuke Air Base, Japan. There, they called an ambulance from the local Air Force hospital. On the way to the North Gate, Moore told Jackson that, in the preceding afternoon, he “had beat or whipped his child.”

Captain Harold J. Forney, an Air Force medical officer, accompanied the ambulance to accused’s home. Before he entered the house, he asked accused what was wrong with the little girl. Accused replied that “ T suppose I beat her to death.’ ” Dr. Forney proceeded directly to a bedroom in accused’s home. There, he examined Mari’s body and pronounced her dead. The body “had multiple contusions, bruises, on the front surface of her thorax, and her abdomen and her arms.” Dr. Forney caused the Air Police to be summoned.

An autopsy was performed on Mari’s body by a qualified pathologist,,Major J. Gordon Webster. He lucidly described her injuries. The body bore three types of contusions. The largest class consisted of “a multiple parallel type lesion, or bruise, applied to multiple skin surfaces over the anterior or front portion of the body, including mainly the trunk, but also present on the extremities.” The physical characteristics of these lesions suggested the use of a “flexible type of instrument.” These bruises were also present on the “surfaces of the back.”

The second type of bruise was broad. It “occurred over the extremities, or the arms, the legs, and the buttocks.”

The third type of injury was semi-lunar lacerations. There was “several small lacerations over the face, a larger one on the shoulder . . . [and on] the left hip ... a semilunar — or moon-shaped — laceration.” The “majority portions of the body had been subjected to severe multiple blows.” The tissue damage frequently extended to the underlying bony structure of the body.

Dr. Webster, based upon his detailed external and internal examination of the body, was of the view that death resulted from suffocation “due to swallowing of stomach content, precipitated by a status of secondary or delayed shock.” The “delayed shock was induced by severe multiple traumatic blows, which were deep in nature, delivered to the majority skin areas of the body.” The shock led the child to vomit, and the aspiration of the regurgitated material caused her to suffocate.

Dr. Webster was of the opinion that the multiple parallel lesions and the semilunar lacerations could have been inflicted by a flexible rubber tube found in accused’s home. This instrument was approximately twenty-nine inches in length. Its outside diameter was approximately one-half inch. The broader contusions could have resulted from use of a small baseball bat also found in accused’s home. The bat was approximately eighteen inches long and one and one-half inches in diameter at the large end. A blow which caused damage to the child’s spleen could also have come from an instrument such as the bat or “the heavy hand of a powerful individual.”

At approximately 4:00 a.m. on October 11, the accused executed a voluntary pretrial statement. In it, he disclosed that, at approximately 6:00 p.m. on the preceding day, he had become “very angry” at Mari because of her disobedience of his Japanese wife and an instance of enuretic behavior. He seized the piece of rubber tubing described above and struck the child “once or twice across the back.” She ran into her room, and accused followed her. There, he seized her and struck her “about twenty-five times on the back and the front, as she jumped and twisted.” When accused desisted, Mari ran into the living room. There, she told Mrs. Moore that she had to go to the bathroom. When told to do so, she “changed her mind,” and accused struck her “a hard blow in the right side with my open hand” for “lying about needing to go to the bathroom.” The blow “knocked her to the floor.”

Accused decided to go to the air base bowling alley. He took Mari with him. There, he purchased some food and drank a bottle of beer. He bought Mari orange juice. After drinking it, she put her head on the table and ap[699]*699peared to go to sleep, accused gathered her up and returned home. There, the family ate, and Mari drank some Pepsi-Cola. She started “to breath [sic] hard, and her eyes looked blurred.” She complained of pain and walked unsteadily. Accused put her to bed, and she appeared to go asleep. Later, he became worried and examined her to see if he had fractured a rib. Unable to detect any broken bones and noticing that her breathing was apparently normal, he returned to the living room. Approximately one hour later, he went into Mari’s room on an errand. He discovered that her eyes were “rolled back” and that she “appeared to be dead.” He shook her, listened to her heart, and felt her pulse, but could detect no sign of life. He called his wife and told her Mari was dead. His wife ran out to a nearby house and aroused their maid. Together with a Japanese male (then unknown to the accused but subsequently identified as a doctor), they returned to the house. During their absence, accused unsuccessfully attempted artificial respiration. The Japanese doctor advised contacting Air Force authorities, and accused sought the assistance of Airman Jackson as indicated above.

Moore concluded his statement by declaring his belief “that the beating I administered to MAPI was the cause of her death.”

At the trial, accused elected to testify in his own behalf. He repudiated those portions of his pretrial statement in which he recounted the infliction of a severe whipping upon the victim. He stated that he had discovered lipstick smeared on a little table in his daughter’s room. He questioned her about the matter and, when she denied having “been in the lipstick . . . stung her on her behind with the hose once.” Mari confessed, and accused hit her “approximately five times with the hose.” He then told his wife to bathe her and left to visit the base.

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Bluebook (online)
12 C.M.A. 696, 12 USCMA 696, 31 C.M.R. 282, 1962 CMA LEXIS 258, 1962 WL 4413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-moore-cma-1962.