United States v. Rener

17 C.M.A. 65, 17 USCMA 65, 37 C.M.R. 329, 1967 CMA LEXIS 292, 1967 WL 4256
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJune 2, 1967
DocketNo. 19,903
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 17 C.M.A. 65 (United States v. Rener) 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. Rener, 17 C.M.A. 65, 17 USCMA 65, 37 C.M.R. 329, 1967 CMA LEXIS 292, 1967 WL 4256 (cma 1967).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Kilday, Judge:

Appellant was arraigned before a general court-martial convened at Myrtle Beach Air Force Base, South Carolina, charged with adultery, unlawful cohabitation, presenting a false claim, and communicating a threat, in violation of Articles 134, 132, and 127, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 934, 932, and 927, respectively. He was found not guilty of the threat offense but guilty of the other charges and specifications, and sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge, confinement at hard labor for six months, and reduction to the grade of Airman Basic. Intermediate reviewing authorities approved the findings and sentence, and we granted review to determine whether the law officer erred to the prejudice of the appellant in overruling the defense objection to the testimony of appellant’s wife.

As its initial witness in this prosecution, the Government presented one Theresa Wise Rener who, in response to a query as to her relation to the accused, stated, “I am his wife.” At this point defense counsel objected to her testimony on the ground of spousal privilege, and in an out-of-court hearing argued that under our decision in United States v Massey, 15 USCMA 274, 35 CMR 246, the wife, while a competent witness against her husband, may not testify over his objection unless one or more of the charged offenses involves a direct injury to her person or property. Inasmuch as the charged offenses did not fall within this category, counsel contended that he was, on behalf of the accused, invoking the testimonial privilege.

The Government averred that in United States v Leach, 7 USCMA 388, 22 CMR 178, this Court held that wrongful cohabitation and adultery were injurious to the wife to the extent that she could testify over the objection of her husband, and since we did not specifically overrule Leach in our decision in Massey, the rule laid down in the former case is still controlling. With reference to the defense objection, Government counsel agreed it should be sustained insofar as the false claim and threat charges were concerned.

The law officer overruled counsel’s objection to the testimony of Mrs. Rener. He also stated, however, “Should her testimony touch on the charges involving Charge II [false claim] and the Additional Charge [threat] the court will be instructed to disregard the testimony with respect to those offenses and her testimony can only be considered as to the offenses listed in Charge I [adultery and unlawful cohabitation].”

Thereafter Mrs. Rener testified as to the date and place of their marriage, the number and names of their children, and the fact that she last resided with the appellant as husband and wife at Hampton, Virginia, in September 1965.1

We agree with defense counsel’s as[68]*68sertion that our opinion in United States v Massey, supra, is applicable here. There, in an exhaustive analysis of judicial decisions (both State and Federal, including the Supreme Court) regarding the applicability of the husband-wife privilege, we stated:

“These authorities, consisting as they do of the distilled reason and experience of many years in many jurisdictions, convince us that the proper approach to consideration of whether an offense charged against one spouse injures the other depends not upon the outrage to her sensibilities or a violation of the marital bonds, but upon some direct connection with her person or property. Almost any crime by one of the spouses can be said to affect the nature and status of the regard of the parties to the marriage one for the other. Cf. Bassett v United States, 137 US 496, 34 L ed 762, 11 S Ct 165 (1890). But if the exception to the privilege is not limited to a direct invasion of the wife’s rights, the rule will soon be judicially eliminated. Cf. Hawkins v United States . . . [358 US 74, 3 L ed 2d 125, 79 S Ct 136 (1958)]; United States v Parker . . . [13 USCMA 579, 33 CMR 111].” [Emphasis supplied; United States v Massey, supra, at page 282.]

Indeed, we had previously held that even where the wife was the recipient of physical abuse, that is, the victim in a charge of four specifications of assault and battery, the privilege could be invoked and she could not be compelled, over her objection, to testify against her husband. United States v Moore, 14 USCMA 635, 34 CMR 415. As we noted in Moore, at page 641, quoting from Hawkins v United States, supra:

“ . . The basic reason the law has refused to pit wife against husband or husband against wife in a trial where life or liberty is at stake was a belief that such a policy was necessary to foster family peace, not only for the benefit of husband, wife and children, but for the benefit of the public as well. Such a belief has never been unreasonable and is not now.’ ” [Emphasis supplied.]

In the case at bar, the appellant’s wife testified for him in mitigation at her own request. While acknowledging that she was not at that time prepared to say whether they would reconcile,2 she personally accepted responsibility for his then current predicament. She felt that she “would like to write off the last two years. I feel now as I did two years ago about him.” It does not appear that this “marriage is necessarily a failure or so unstable that enforcement of the public policy for its preservation is no longer justified.” United States v Moore, supra, at page 642.

The short answer to the Government’s contention that the Leach decision controls in this case and that a party-spouse may not invoke the testimonial privilege in a prosecution for adultery and unlawful cohabitation, on the ground that the witness-spouse is an injured party, is to repeat a portion of the above-quoted language from Massey:

“. . . whether an offense charged against one spouse injures the other depends not upon the outrage to her sensibilities or a violation of the marital bonds, but upon some direct connection with her person or property.” [Ibid., at page 282.]

If carnal knowledge, the offense charged in Massey, even when incestuous, is not a direct injury to the witness-spouse, can it be any longer maintained that adultery and unlawful cohabitation are such an injury, since they all involve, primarily, “a violation of the marital bonds.” See also Under-hill, A Treatise on the Law of Criminal Evidence, 5th ed, § 732.

[69]*69We hold, therefore, that the law officer erred in overruling defense counsel’s objection to the testimony of appellant’s wife.

The Government urges, in the alternative, that the appellant was in no way prejudiced by his wife’s testimony; that it was limited to evidence of the marital relationship, was material only to the offense of adultery, and was merely cumulative of other evidence thereon. Furthermore, the Government contends, since the court was instructed as to the limited nature of her testimony and inasmuch as her testimony did not provide any material evidence as to the specific acts involved in the offenses charged, it did-not contribute in any substantial way to the findings of guilt.

As noted above, in the out-of-court hearing on the admissibility of the wife’s testimony, the law officer limited the area of inquiry to that envisaged within the charge of adultery and unlawful cohabitation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 C.M.A. 65, 17 USCMA 65, 37 C.M.R. 329, 1967 CMA LEXIS 292, 1967 WL 4256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rener-cma-1967.