United States v. Nix

11 C.M.A. 691, 11 USCMA 691, 29 C.M.R. 507, 1960 CMA LEXIS 227, 1960 WL 4547
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJuly 29, 1960
DocketNo. 13,557
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 11 C.M.A. 691 (United States v. Nix) 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. Nix, 11 C.M.A. 691, 11 USCMA 691, 29 C.M.R. 507, 1960 CMA LEXIS 227, 1960 WL 4547 (cma 1960).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

GEORGE W. Latimer, Judge:

I

Upon a rehearing, accused was arraigned before a general court-martial convened at Shaw Air Force Base, South Carolina, on two specifications of larceny, in violation of Article 121, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 921. He pleaded not guilty, but was convicted of the thefts, in conjunction with two others — Wooten and Richmond — of a total of $1,753.00 from the base finance office by claiming and accepting payments not due him. He was sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge, forfeiture of $43.00 [693]*693per month for six months, and confinement at hard labor for eighteen months. Intermediate appellate authorities affirmed, and thereafter this Court granted accused’s petition for review in order to consider several questions. Each, together with the facts germane to the resolution thereof, will be treated seriatim hereinafter. It may be helpful at this point, however, to note it is not disputed that accused presented the claims and received payment therefor, nor that the money was not due him. Rather, accused’s defense was based on certain exculpatory portions of his pretrial statements that the prosecution introduced in evidence against him. He contended that he received the money innocently as the dupe of others who schemed to- steal through a system of false vouchers.

II

One assignment of error arose in the following manner. During presentation of the Government’s case, trial counsel called Wooten as a witness. After the usual preliminary questions had been answered, Wooten was asked whether he had conversed with accused regarding the base finance office. At that juncture the witness inquired of the law officer whether he might ask him a question. The reply was in the affirmative and the following colloquy ensued:

“Witness : Is it permissible for me to exercise my rights under Article 31?
“Law OFFICER: That depends.
“Trial Counsel : Sir, at this time I would like to present to the law officer before ruling on this interlocutory question the fact that this witness’s conviction is final with regard to these two Specifications, ■and pursuant to the Manual he cannot claim his privilege under Article ■31. (Hands document to law officer.)
“Law OFFICER: In answer to your question, Airman Wooten, you cannot claim your privilege under Arti-lle .31 on this stand concerning your testimony on those offenses of which you have been convicted and on which action has finally been taken.
“Defense Counsel: Do I understand that he can still claim his privilege for possible offenses of which he has not been tried and convicted ?
“Law Officer: That is correct. Letter from Department of the Air Force, dated 14 January 1959, will be marked as Appellate Exhibit 3 and will be appended to the record.”

Thereafter trial counsel again asked about any conversation with accused, but Wooten indicated he could not recall, and neither a statement the witness had made to the Office’of Special Investigations nor a record of certain testimony he had given at his own trial refreshed his memory. He did state, however, that his testimony at his own court-martial was given under oath and he believed he had told the truth. A portion of his former testimony concerning his dealings with the accused was then received in evidence as a past recollection recorded. The defense assails the fact that knowledge of co-actor Wooten’s prior conviction for these same thefts was brought to the attention of the court-martial, and challenges the propriety of the receipt in evidence of the record of Wooten’s former testimony which was damaging to accused.

True it is that evidence of one of several accused’s conviction at a separate trial is not admissible on the guilt of another accused. United States v Humble, 11 USCMA 38, 28 CME 262. Likewise, it is true that the law officer here gave no cautionary instruction. However, it is to be noted that the fact of Wooten’s prior conviction for his complicity in the instant larcenies first came to light only with regard to the interlocutory question of his privileges under Article 31. On that issue it was both relevant and competent, for in seeking to be informed of his privilege he was endeavoring to aid the accused and it was necessary to determine the collateral question. [694]*694Furthermore, no request was made for any out-of-court hearing, and the defense requested no cautionary instruction of the law officer and failed to register any objection at that time. It was only later, when trial counsel offered Wooten’s past testimony about accused in evidence that the defense objected and moved for a mistrial on the grounds, inter alia, that “by admitting that testimony now you have placed before this court the fact that this man was convicted for these two offenses.” Assuming that objection to be sufficent to remove this issue from the rule of waiver, we nevertheless conclude there is no fair risk that accused was prejudiced. See United States v Humble, supra. Not only did the defense, in impeaching Wooten on searching cross-examination, establish that he had been convicted of numerous larcenies from the finance office in a gross amount of some $10,000.00, but on re-examination by trial counsel Wooten’s memory had apparently become more clear, and, as the defense conceded at trial, he testified substantially as he had at his own court-martial and admitted he had received a kickback from the accused. Certainly, in light of those facts, any inference they may have drawn from mention of Wooten’s conviction for his part in the two instant offenses would have no impact on the court members. And particularly is that true when it is remembered that the whole thrust of the defense was that his co-actors were the thieves and accused their unwitting pawn.

Likewise, the above discussion is dispositive of the second arm of this assignment of error. The Government argues that the extract of Wooten’s former testimony was properly admitted in evidence, but we need not pass on that question. As we have previously noted, at trial the defense, in arguing against admission of the extract, admitted it was merely cumulative of the testimony he had given on the stand. Thus, there is no reasonable probability the prior testimony had any impact, and prejudice to accused cannot have resulted. United States v Taylor, 6 USCMA 289, 20 CMR 5. Accordingly, this assignment must be resolved adversely to-accused.

III

A series of issues involve the instructions. One concerns the law officer’s charge on false pretenses. He-instructed the court-martial in this, language:

“The court is further advised that, with respect to the element that the accused wrongfully obtained the-property, obtaining property by false pretense is wrongful. A false-pretense is a false representation of a past or existing fact. The pretenses must be in fact false when, made, and the accused must have known it was false to the extent that, he did not have an honest belief that, it was true. Although the pretense need not be the sole cause inducing-the owner to part with his property, it is necessary that it be an effective- and intentional cause of the obtaining.”

This charge raises the same question that confronted us in United States v Bethas, 11 USCMA 389, 29 CMR 205, and our decision. in that instance is controlling. See also United States v Smith, 11 USCMA 321, 29 CMR 137.

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Bluebook (online)
11 C.M.A. 691, 11 USCMA 691, 29 C.M.R. 507, 1960 CMA LEXIS 227, 1960 WL 4547, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-nix-cma-1960.