United States v. Roark

8 C.M.A. 279, 8 USCMA 279, 24 C.M.R. 89, 1957 CMA LEXIS 384, 1957 WL 4710
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedOctober 4, 1957
DocketNo. 9279
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 8 C.M.A. 279 (United States v. Roark) 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. Roark, 8 C.M.A. 279, 8 USCMA 279, 24 C.M.R. 89, 1957 CMA LEXIS 384, 1957 WL 4710 (cma 1957).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

George W. Latimer, Judge:

Accused was brought to trial before a general court-martial upon charges of desertion and disobedience of straggler’s orders, in contravention of Articles 85 and 92, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC §§ 885 and 892, respectively. Two specifications under the first charge alleged separated absences between November 25, 1955, and February 6, 1956, the first of some forty-seven days and the next of some seventeen days duration, both terminated by apprehension, and that each absence was without authorization and with the intent to remain away permanently. Accused pleaded not guilty to the desertion charge and specifications but guilty to the lesser included offenses of unauthorized absence under Article 86,10 USC § 886. To the second charge and specification he entered a plea of guilty. The court found him guilty as charged and sentenced him to a bad-conduct discharge, total forfeitures, and confinement at hard labor for three years. The findings and sentence were approved by the convening authority, and a board of review affirmed save to reduce the confinement and forfeitures segments of the sentence to two years. The single error assigned in the petition to this Court concerns trial counsel’s attempt to impeach the accused, who had taken the witness stand in his own behalf. That assignment becomes important since the basis for the attempted impeachment was accused’s juvenile misconduct. Such evidence is claimed to have been incompetent and inadmissible and the cross-examiner’s continual discussion and interrogation in regard to it prejudicial error.

In his direct testimony the accused, a member of the United States Marine Corps, stated that after he had already spent about six weeks at his home in Roanoke, Virginia, in an absence-without-leave status, he started back to the service. Money had been provided by his father for that purpose, but he had decided instead to visit his sister, who lived in Linden, New Jersey. He ran out of money in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, but chanced to meet a “buddy” there who was a member of the United States Army. This friend had an automobile in which he hoped to return to his post at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. The accused decided the trip was alluring, and the pair took off for the South.' Subsequently, his peregrination took him to North Carolina, where he was picked up by civilian authorities. He sojourned in the Fort Bragg stockade until receipt of his straggler’s orders to return to Quantico, Virginia. Upon their receipt, he started a journey by' train to that post but, during a stop at' Richmond, Virginia, he left the train in quest of something to eat. He claims to have “blacked out” for about three hours in an alley, but thereafter he returned to his home in Roanoke. On the day before he was finally apprehended, he told his friends, with remarkable prescience, that he was returning to the service on the following day. Before he’ could get up the next morning to return,1 the authorities appeared and he was escorted to military control. i

Trial counsel, in his cross-examination of the accused, sought to develop-the facts surrounding accused’s asserted meeting with the serviceman on the' streets in Philadelphia. This brought' to light the fact that the two men' had first known each other at a school [281]*281which the witness named as the Beaumont Training School. Trial counsel asked what kind of school this was, but the law officer sustained defense counsel’s objection to the question as being immaterial, despite trial counsel’s assertion that the question was proper as the answer would cast light on accused’s credibility. The matter was further pursued in an out-of-court hearing, and there trial counsel presented a letter from the Chief Probation Officer and Clerk of the Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court of Danville, Virginia, certifying that the accused had been committed to the State Board of Welfare and Institutions on January 22, 1953, after committing numerous offenses of larceny and breaking and entering. The law officer was referred to a provision of the Juvenile and Domestic Relations Court Law of the State of Virginia, which provided that: “no adjudication or judgment upon the status of any child under the provisions of this law shall operate to impose any of the disabilities ordinarily imposed by conviction for crime, nor shall . . . such adjudication be denominated a conviction,” Code of Virginia, § 16.1-179. In pursuance of that statute, he ruled out any use of the letter on the theory that an adjudication by a juvenile court was not a conviction under the Virginia statute. However, he decided to permit cross-examination into any possible prior acts of misconduct or offenses by the accused during his minority which might have involved moral turpitude, including those which were the cause of the juvenile court proceedings, with the limitation that a denial by the accused was to be binding on the prosecution.

When court reconvened, trial counsel resumed his questioning of the witness as follows: “Roark, is it correct that you were committed to the State Board of Welfare and Institutions of the State of Virginia on the 22nd of January, 1953?” The accused answered, “Yes, sir.” The defense objected, and the law officer sustained the objection and instructed the court members to disregard the question and answer. Trial counsel rephrased his questions several times, and, while he received no answers, either because of rulings by the law officer or silence of the accused, we are sure the court-martial was permitted to consider that the accused was confined by the Juvenile Court because of having committed offenses involving moral turpitude. Part of the reason for that conclusion is drawn from the fact that the law officer tacitly conceded the admission of some testimony by instructing the court that the evidence sought from the witness as to his juvenile misconduct was solely for the purpose of testing his credibility; that it had absolutely no effect in any way to show a propensity to commit crime or the like; and that it was not for the purpose of determining his guilt.

Appellant assails the limiting instructions as being confusing and ambiguous and upon the ground that since the accused was the witness, there is a danger that the court used impeachment material as substantive evidence of his present guilt. We need only cite United States v Moore (No. 5026), 5 USCMA 687, 18 CMR 311, as dispositive of this contention. In that instance, instructions practically in these same words were approved by this Court in a situation where prior misdeeds of an accused were introduced for impeachment purposes. If the court members followed the instructions, they disabused themselves of any thought that guilt could be established by prior misconduct.

The question of real importance in this case is posed by accused’s next assignment of error. He argues forcefully that the proceedings under the juvenile delinquency laws of Virginia are corrective in nature rather than penal and that records of juvenile adjudication are inadmissible for all purposes. The question is not stated quite accurately, for trial counsel was refused permission by the law officer to introduce in evidence any record of supporting documents. But the admissibility of the accused’s previous acts of misconduct during his infancy is posed fairly and must be considered. To place the issue in its proper perspective, it is necessary to state that, in view of accused's guilty pleas, the only issue for the court to decide was [282]*282whether or not he had formed an intent to remain away permanently from the service during either or both of his unauthorized absences.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 C.M.A. 279, 8 USCMA 279, 24 C.M.R. 89, 1957 CMA LEXIS 384, 1957 WL 4710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-roark-cma-1957.