United States v. Rascoe

31 M.J. 544, 1990 WL 106238
CourtU.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review
DecidedMay 15, 1990
DocketNMCM 88 0566
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 31 M.J. 544 (United States v. Rascoe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Rascoe, 31 M.J. 544, 1990 WL 106238 (usnmcmilrev 1990).

Opinion

ALBERTSON, Judge:

Appellant was convicted, pursuant to his pleas, by a general court-martial for violating Article 121 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 10 U.S.C. § 921. He was found guilty of nine specifications of larceny for altering and presenting nine of his U.S. Government paychecks and obtaining $5,200.00 in excess of that authorized. He was sentenced by a court composed of officer members to a dishonorable discharge, 6 months confinement, forfeiture of all pay and allowances, and payment of a fine of $6,000.00 or additional confinement for 5 years if the fine was not paid. The convening authority approved the sentence as adjudged.

After the convening authority approved the sentence, and upon petition of appellant, a hearing was held in accordance with Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 1113(d)(3), Manual for Courts-Martial (MCM), United States, 1984, to determine appellant’s ability to pay the fine. The hearing officer found appellant was indigent and unable to pay the fine, but then recommended that the convening authority order the additional 5 years confinement in lieu of payment of the fine executed. The staff judge advocate also advised the convening authority of certain facts and, based on those additional facts, recommended to the convening authority that he execute the confinement [548]*548in lieu of payment of the $6,000.00. The convening authority adopted the indigence finding and recommendations of the hearing officer and staff judge advocate and, in accordance with R.C.M. 1113(d)(3), ordered executed that portion of the sentence extending appellant’s confinement for an additional 5 years in lieu of payment of the fine, but suspended the execution of that confinement in excess of 18 months for 12 months from the date of trial.

Appellant assigns the following issue as error:

THE TOTAL SENTENCE TO CONFINEMENT, INCLUDING CONFINEMENT IN LIEU OF THE FINE, SHOULD BE LIMITED TO THE MAXIMUM SENTENCE TO CONFINEMENT PROVIDED FOR IN THE PRETRIAL AGREEMENT BECAUSE APPELLANT WAS NOT MADE AWARE OF THE FINE PROVISION OF THE PRETRIAL AGREEMENT UNTIL TRIAL.

He cites in support of his position United States v. Walker, 26 M.J. 813 (ACMR 1988). We will resolve the issue by addressing it in three parts: (1) Were the appellant’s pleas provident since he was unaware of the full ramifications of the monetary punishment provisions of his pretrial agreement, including the provision for additional confinement in lieu of payment of the fine until the military judge conducted the pretrial agreement inquiry in accordance with United States v. Green, 1 M.J. 453 (C.M.A.1976)?1 (2) Did the convening authority act legally when he approved the adjudged sentence, including the confinement in lieu of payment of the fine, when that period of confinement, in combination with the adjudged confinement, was in excess of the total confinement authorized by the pretrial agreement? (3) Was the convening authority’s supplementary action ordering the execution of confinement in lieu of payment of the adjudged fine lawful? We answer the first two questions in the affirmative, but the third in the negative.

I. Providency of the Appellant’s Pleas

Appellant contends and we agree that it is apparent from the discussion during the providence inquiry that the appellant did not fully understand the nature of a fine enforcement provision nor was he fully aware of the consequences of the forfeitures/fine provision in the pretrial agreement. He also had not given any thought, during his negotiation for the pretrial agreement, to the possibility that the convening authority could approve confinement in addition to the confinement adjudged if he failed to pay the fine adjudged. Even his defense counsel was unaware that the court could sentence an enlisted person to a fine amounting to more than the enlisted member’s pay. Additionally we note that at this plea inquiry stage, defense counsel and the appellant admitted to the military judge that it was their understanding that since the appellant was in a no-pay status, the forfeiture and fine provision of the pretrial agreement was ineffectual because appellant could not forfeit any pay nor pay any fine. Upon further discussion, the military judge called a recess to give the trial counsel the opportunity to contact the convening authority to determine if his understanding was the same as that of the defense. The trial counsel thereafter informed the military judge that the defense understanding of the forfeiture and fine provision was not the same as that of the convening authority and that the convening authority adhered to his original understanding that the appellant could still be adjudged forfeitures and a fine that could be approved and ordered executed despite his no-pay status. The military judge advised the appellant of his option either to plead not guilty and forego the protection of the pretrial agreement or to plead guilty and defer to the convening authority’s interpretation of the forfeiture and fine provision of the pretrial agreement. The military judge was careful to advise appellant to exercise caution in making his decision:

[549]*549But actually there are two distinct decisions: You going [sic] to accept and make that part of the agreement and have it binding upon you; and are you going to plead guilty or not guilty regardless of the agreement, in either event? Because remember, now, when you pled earlier you did it with a significant misunderstanding as to the sentence max that you could receive. (Emphasis added.)2

Appellant stated he desired to continue to plead guilty and accepted the convening authority’s interpretation of the pretrial agreement. Although the military judge identified for appellant the fine enforcement provision in paragraph 2 of the pretrial agreement and the lack of limitations expressed in Part 4 of the Maximum Sentence Appendix during his discussion with appellant about the maximum sentence authorized, he gave appellant no detailed advice or explanation as to the practical application of that enforcement provision as he did later during the pretrial agreement inquiry. During the pretrial agreement inquiry, the following is recorded:

MJ: ... Now paragraph two says that if part of this maximum — I’m going to read the last couple of sentences — “shall expressly include any limitations, if any, upon enforcement provisions regarding any adjudged fine. Any applicable punishment not addressed in the sentencing portion of this agreement shall signify that such punishment may be approved by the convening authority.” The sentence limitation does not contain any restrictions on the enforcement provisions of a fine.
Now, the convening authority or the court can adjudge a fine. And also, in its discretion, can say that if you do not pay the fine, that you be confined for a period of time that they determine until the fine is paid, basically.
Now, by law the only limitation on that enforcement provision confinement [sic] is that the confinement adjudged separately as part of a sentence and the confinement adjudged as an enforcement provision, the sum cannot exceed the maximum permissible period of confinement, which is in this case 45 years. Do you follow so far?
ACCUSED: Yes, sir.

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Bluebook (online)
31 M.J. 544, 1990 WL 106238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rascoe-usnmcmilrev-1990.