United States v. Pond

17 C.M.A. 219, 17 USCMA 219, 38 C.M.R. 17, 1967 CMA LEXIS 249, 1967 WL 4361
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedAugust 18, 1967
DocketNo. 19,977
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 17 C.M.A. 219 (United States v. Pond) 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. Pond, 17 C.M.A. 219, 17 USCMA 219, 38 C.M.R. 17, 1967 CMA LEXIS 249, 1967 WL 4361 (cma 1967).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

KILDAY, Judge:

Appellant was arraigned before a general court-martial convened at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama, charged with two specifications of larceny and three specifications of conduct unbecoming an officer and a gentleman, in violation of Articles 121 and 133, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 921 and 933, respectively. He pleaded not guilty but was found guilty of only one specification of each of the-above-numbered articles and sentenced to be dismissed from the service. Intermediate appellate authorities have approved the findings and sentence. We granted review to consider several assignments of error.

A short recital of the evidence is necessary to place this case in proper perspective. Two witnesses, Mr. E and Mrs. M, both employees of the Town and Country Store at Gunter Air Force Base,1 testified that they observed the appellant remove a price tag from a plastic covered six-cup muffin tin, priced to sell at $1.00, and place it on a twelve-cup muffin tin, similarly covered with plastic, priced to sell at $1.80. He then placed the larger tin in his shopping cart with his other items and proceeded to the check-out counter. While Mr. E went to-get the manager, who was in a store three doors away, Mrs. M went to the check-out counter and assisted in placing the appellant’s purchases in a bag. A third party recorded the purchases on the register, and the tape, which was stapled to the bag after completion, reflected one item as having been sold at $1.00. The manager, who arrived during this procedure, asked whether he could check the purchases and requested that the appellant accompany him to the stock room. There the manager looked at the muffin tin and observed that it bore a price tag of $1.00. He then placed it on a heater in the stock room. It almost at once began to sizzle and when he grabbed it off the heater, the price tag was gone. It had either burned or melted.

[221]*221While the manager was conversing with the appellant, Mr. E arrived in the stock room with a six-cup muffin tin from which the price tag had been removed.

Mrs. M also testified that she had a particular reason for watching the appellant and that she alerted the other witness to keep an eye on the lieutenant. She stated that about two months previously, while she was acting as cashier, the appellant attempted to purchase a Teflon sauce pan. When he brought it to the check-out counter, the pan had a $3.50 price tag on it. She refused to sell it to him, stating that it belonged to a set. After replying that he had bought other pieces like it, he replaced it on the shelf. The witness later examined the sauce pan and the price tag was gone.

On cross-examination, she testified that she first became suspicious of him in September 1964, some fifteen months prior to the current incident. At that time, she was selling pipes in the Base Exchange. The appellant purchased a pipe as she was leaving for lunch. Since the pipe appeared to be of a value more than $1.90, the amount registered by the cashier, a temporary employee, she reported the incident to the manager of the Exchange.

The appellant testified at trial and categorically denied the charges. He recounted his activities in the store, in pertinent part, as follows:

“I got a cart and I picked up some milk, bread, and several other things. As I was walking down the east side when I got to the area where the muffin tins were, since we had two Teflon articles and my wife was quite pleased with them I thought it very logical to get a Teflon muffin tin. She also burns muffins. I picked up the small one and saw it was one dollar. I looked at the large one and it was $1.80. I was holding them up, looking back and forth, seeing which one she might prefer, and I glanced down and noticed the second one of the large ones, which was then on top — the second one had a dollar tag on it. This was pleasing to me. I picked it up to look at it to see where it was damaged and I could not see any damage enough to warrant not buying it, so I thought I could get the large one for the price of the small one. I noticed the price tag was only about half stuck and I pushed it down as I put it in my cart. I guess this took two or three minutes in all.”

Thereafter, the appellant stated, he proceeded to the check-out counter and paid for his purchases. When approached by the manager, he acceded to his request to accompany him to the stock room. There the manager proceeded to remove the articles from the shopping bag and to check them off against the sales slip. When he came to the muffin tin, the manager inquired of Mr. E, who was also present, as to the price of the article. When the latter replied, “ ‘$1.80,’ ” the manager turned to the appellant and said, “ ‘You owe us eighty cents.’ ” While reaching for his wallet to pay the eighty cents, and as he was about to explain that the muffin tin had a one dollar tag on it, Mr. E stated, “ ‘And I saw him switch the tags.’ ” At that point appellant decided,

“. . . I wasn’t going to pay anybody anything. I wanted to know what he was driving at. Mr. F . . . said again, ‘You owe us eighty cents.’ Mr. E . . . said something to the effect that he saw me tear the cellophane. In the meantime Mr. F . . . had turned the thing upside down and set it on the heater, and he said again — only this time I considered it to be in a very condescending tone of voice. . . .
“TRIAL COUNSEL: I object as to the tone of voice.
“LAW OFFICER: He can make an observation. Objection overruled.
“A. (Continued) This time he said, ‘You owe us eighty cents’ — well, I blew by this time — I was already worked up. I said, ‘In the first place I did not switch tags; in.the second place you are burning up the cellophane on the heater; in the third place I resent all of this.’ He said, ‘Go get the police.’ ”

According to the appellant’s testi[222]*222mony Mr. E left the stock room and when he returned Mrs. M was with him. He further related,

“. . . She walked up and said, T saw him switch tags, too.’ I protested. I decided the boss of this was Mr. F . . . and I turned the conversation back to Mr. F . . . , and said, ‘I don’t know whether you are aware of the eighty cent discrepancy in the price; it had a dollar tag on it. I will give you the eighty cents, or you give me my dollar back and keep the muffin tin, but let’s settle this thing now.’ I guess he thought he was committed. The Air Police showed up, and the Air Policeman, Mr. E . . . , Mrs. M . . . , and myself walked over to the Air Police office.”

By testimony and stipulation, the defense established the excellent reputation, character, credibility, and efficiency of the appellant.

The entire thrust of the defense in this case, in addition to the denial by the appellant, was aimed toward convincing the court that no price tags were ever switched and that not infrequently identical items are marked differently. In this regard, Mr. E, on cross-examination, admitted that it was not unusual for price stickers to fall or come off merchandise, especially where one item was stacked on top of another, as in this case; that he had torn hundreds of similar stickers from cellophane wrappers in the course of his employment and it was his experience every time he did so the cellophane under the sticker would tear off also. Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 C.M.A. 219, 17 USCMA 219, 38 C.M.R. 17, 1967 CMA LEXIS 249, 1967 WL 4361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-pond-cma-1967.