United States v. Nixon

21 C.M.A. 480, 21 USCMA 480, 45 C.M.R. 254, 1972 CMA LEXIS 699, 1972 WL 14169
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJune 30, 1972
DocketNo. 24,888
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 21 C.M.A. 480 (United States v. Nixon) 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. Nixon, 21 C.M.A. 480, 21 USCMA 480, 45 C.M.R. 254, 1972 CMA LEXIS 699, 1972 WL 14169 (cma 1972).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Quinn, Judge:

The accused was convicted of failing to obey a lawful order (Charge II), willful disobedience of a command by a superior commissioned officer (specification 1, Charge III), biting the same officer, while he was in the execution of his office (specification 2, Charge III), and attempted escape from custody (Charge IV), in violation of Articles 92, 90 and 80, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 892, 890, 880, respectively. A panel of the United States Army Court of Military Review affirmed the findings of guilty but modified the sentence to eliminate the bad-conduct discharge. Except as to Charge II, the accused challenges the legality of all the findings of guilty.

Captain Pearl was the accused’s company commander. His order to the accused to leave a conference room at battalion headquarters and get into a jeep to be transported to a confinement facility and a later encounter with the accused are the subjects of the specifications of Charge III. At trial, civilian defense counsel acknowledged that the captain “had every right to use physical force to take the accused to the jeep.” In the context of counsel’s argument, the statement plainly conceded the legality of Captain Pearl’s decision to place the accused in pretrial confinement. On this appeal, however, the concession is repudiated.

Two assignments of error, which concern specification 1, Charge III, and Charge IV, are predicated upon a contention that the decision to confine the accused before trial was illegal because the surrounding circumstances demonstrated the likelihood of accused’s presence for trial and the minor nature of any misconduct attributed to him before the decision was made. See Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1969 (Revised edition), paragraphs 186 and 20c. Implicit in the assignments is an assumption that the matter was sufficiently ventilated at trial to provide a complete picture of the facts underlying the decision to confine. In its brief, the Government observes that illegality of the decision “was not suggested at trial nor argued ... in closing argument,” but it has not disputed the importance of the issue to the findings of guilty, and it has based its response to the assignments of error on the evidence. We think it appropriate, therefore, to pass over the preliminary question of waiver to reach the issue on the merits.

[482]*482[481]*481Captain Pearl testified that he decided to put the accused into pretrial confinement after discussion of the matter with Lieutenant Colonel Teberg, the battalion commander, and with “the concurrence of the Brigade Commander.” He so informed the accused in a conference room at battalion headquarters, and directed him to proceed to a jeep that would take him to the confinement facility. Under [482]*482Article 10 of the Uniform Code, a commissioned officer can order an enlisted person into confinement for “probable cause.” There is no evidence, and no claim by the accused, that any commander superior to Captain Pearl had imposed special limitations on the exercise of the statutory power. See United States v Jennings, 19 USCMA 88, 41 CMR 88 (1969); United States v West, 12 USCMA 670, 31 CMR 256 (1962). Certain limitations are defined in the Manual for Courts-Martial and supplemental Arngy' regulations. Manual, supra, paragraphs 186 and 20c; Army Regulation 630-1, September 13, 1962; Army Regulation 190-4, change 2, May 28, 1970. Broadly stated, under the limitations, confinement is authorized to insure accused’s presence at trial or to protect the person and property of others from serious harm. See United States v Bayhand, 6 USCMA 762, 765, 21 CMR 84 (1956); United States v Jennings, supra. Appellate defense counsel contend that neither condition obtained at the time Captain Pearl directed that the accused be placed in confinement.

First, we turn to the contention that the decision to confine was based, not on the fact that there was probable cause to believe the accused had committed a crime, but because he was “a material witness.” The foundation for the argument appears in the following excerpt from Captain Pearl’s testimony on direct examination:

“Q [Trial Counsel] When was the next time you saw the accused?
“A The next time I saw the accused was around 1330. After the incident occurred when he and I had had the interchange by the adjutant’s office, I informed the battalion commander of this. He and I discussed the advisability of putting Specialist Nixon in pretrial confinement, since he was a material witness to an incident that happened over the week-end [sic], and it was necessary that he be available. He said, ‘Put the man in pretrial confinement if you feel he is not adhering to military law.’
“DC: I object to that as being irrelevant.
“MJ: Sustained.”

Plainly, everything but the first sentence of the answer was unresponsive to the question. Consequently, defense counsel’s objection was apparently intended to encompass all of the answer but the first sentence. From that standpoint, the reference to the accused as a “material witness to an incident” would not be part of the evidence before us. However, the Government does not challenge the correctness of the answer, and since we can avoid the the necessity for additional argument as to the scope of the objection, we treat the remark as part of the record. United States v Bayhand, supra, page 765. So considered, the remark does not prove the accused’s contention that he was ordered into confinement only because he was a material witness.

It is indeed true that the accused was a material witness to a serious incident that happened over the weekend, in which two military policemen were .beaten by a group of soldiers, but his role as a witness was not the reason for his confinement. The battalion commander’s remark, as reported by Captain Pearl, clearly indicates that the decision to confine was to be based on the accused’s conduct in “not adhering to military law.” Yet, even if we disregard the admonition as hearsay, or as within the intendment of defense counsel’s objection, other testimony demonstrates that the decision to confine was based upon the accused’s own misconduct.

Protesting Captain Pearl’s order to go to the jeep, the accused asked to speak to someone else. Major Schrader, the battalion adjutant, talked to him. According to Captain Pearl, the major informed the accused of “the same facts and explained . . . what he had done” that necessitated his confinement. (Emphasis supplied.) Although the accused testified that he “felt like . . . [he] had no business going to pretrial confinement” because he had not done [483]*483“anything,” he did not deny that Major Schrader had told him what he had done that was wrong and that justified confinement. The question then is what did the accused do.

On September 12, the accused was involved in an incident with Lieutenant Colainni, who was then the acting company commander. The incident became the subject of a charge of striking a superior officer who was in the execution of his office.1 The accused was acquitted of this charge, but evidence of record demonstrates that on September 14, the date of confinement, there was probable cause to believe he had committed this offense.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 C.M.A. 480, 21 USCMA 480, 45 C.M.R. 254, 1972 CMA LEXIS 699, 1972 WL 14169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-nixon-cma-1972.