United States v. Robinson

6 C.M.A. 347, 6 USCMA 347, 20 C.M.R. 63, 1955 CMA LEXIS 288, 1955 WL 3539
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedSeptember 16, 1955
DocketNo. 6490
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 6 C.M.A. 347 (United States v. Robinson) 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. Robinson, 6 C.M.A. 347, 6 USCMA 347, 20 C.M.R. 63, 1955 CMA LEXIS 288, 1955 WL 3539 (cma 1955).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Geoegb W. Latimer, Judge:

I

While assigned as a cook’s helper in the officers’ mess at Fort Leslie J. Mc-Nair, Washington, D. C., the accused was charged with willful disobedience of a lawful command of his superior officer, in violation of Article 90, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 50 USC § 684. As several defenses to the specification, he asserted that he was physically unable to comply and that his assignment to the particular duty was illegal and, therefore, the order given was without validity. The general court-martial which heard the case found otherwise, and after returning a finding of guilty, sentenced him to a bad-conduct discharge, total forfeitures, and confinement at hard labor for nine months. The convening authority and an Army board of review have affirmed the findings and sentence. In response to the accused’s petition, we granted review on the following two questions:

1. Was the accused legally assigned to the Officers’ Mess?

2. Was the evidence sufficient to establish that he was a volunteer?

II

The significant facts are these: Sometime prior to October 7, 1954, the accused became dissatisfied with his assignment as a cook at his unit mess. At the request of his commanding officer, he was interviewed at the Post Classification and Assignment Section for detail to an assignment where his military occupational specialty might be used. [350]*350On that occasion, he was recommended for assignment to the Post Officers’ Open Mess by both the section chief and the personnel sergeant major, and he was then interviewed by Captain Hagood, the Post Military Personnel Officer. Captain Hagood discussed with the accused his occupational background, the cooking experience he had had in his prior positions, and his preference with respect to further assignment on the Post as an alternative to being assigned to a different station. The Captain also discussed with him a vacancy as a cook’s helper at the Officers’ Mess and offered him that position, making the offer contingent upon accused’s desires. The accused assured Captain Hagood that he was eager to remain on the Post and was very agreeable to the proffered assignment. Thereupon, he was dispatched to the Officers’ Mess, interviewed, found acceptable by Captain Wilson, the Mess Officer, and assigned accordingly.

The accused soon became dissatisfied with his new job. At the grade he held, his military occupational specialty was that of cook’s helper, and, although he was given a trial as a cook, it soon appeared that he was not sufficiently skilled to meet the competition in the Officers’ Mess. Consequently, he was assigned to the less demanding tasks for which he was qualified and presumably he performed them uneventfully for a short time. On October 12, 1954, he failed to appear for work on time, and after he finally appeared, he refused to obey a direct order from the mess officer to perform his duties, claiming that he was sick. It was that refusal which led to the charges before us.

Ill

With respect to the first granted issue, appellate defense counsel advance two arguments, either of which, it is claimed, demonstrates the illegality of the order which the accused disobeyed. It is first contended that 10 USC § 608 prohibits the use of enlisted men in an officers’ open mess. That statute reads:

“Officers using enlisted men as servants. No officer shall use an enlisted man as a servant in any case whatever.”

A search of the Federal statutes discloses that the above-quoted law is derived ultimately from the Act of July 15, 1870, chapter 294, § 14, 16 Stat 819, which uses language to the same effect. Whether that statute bars the assignment of enlisted men as workers in officers’ open messes is not a novel question, but it is doubtful that the interpretations found in the early cases offer persuasive authority for a present day construction.

In 1909, the United States Court of Claims, in Williams v. United States, 44 Ct Cl 175, passed on the right of an officer to recover an amount of money which he had been required to return to the Treasury of the United States. The facts in that case were these. Certain enlisted men of the Navy, who had enlisted as mess attendants afloat, were detailed for mess duty at an officers’ voluntary mess on shore. They were subsisted by the mess and the money due the men in lieu of subsistence was paid to the mess fund. The Government made a demand for the return of the money diverted to the fund, and the officer was required to contribute his proportionate part of the amount which had to be repaid. By his action before the Court of Claims he sought to recover the amount of his contribution. In the course of its holding that Court stated that Revised Statutes 1232, the immediate predecessor of 10 USC § 608, prohibited the diversion of mess attendants enlisted to serve aboard ship from that assignment to an officers’ open mess on shore.

In 1918, The Judge Advocate General of the Army held that soldiers could not be detailed as servants or waiters for an officers’ open mess, and cited the Williams case as authority for the holding. Dig Op JAG, 1912-1940, § 202, 220-6, November 1,1918. Another holding to the same effect followed three years later, CM 146727 (1921). The following language from Dig Op JAG, 1912-1940, § 422(6) illustrates the interpretation given to Revised Statutes 1232 by The Judge Advocate General of the Army in the last-mentioned case:

[351]*351“An order by a superior officer to an enlisted man to wait on table at an officers’ mess is in contravention of R. S. 1232, which provides that ‘no officer shall use an enlisted man as a servant in any case whatsoever.’ Such an order is, therefore, illegal and cannot be made the basis for a conviction of willful disobedience under A. W. 64.”

Under the strained manpower conditions of World War II, a different approach was taken to the problem, and although the statute remained unchanged, an interpretation more in accord with our views of the intent of Congress, was announced. In United States v. Semioli, 53 BR 65, a board of review rationalized that the prohibition intended by Congress was to be determined by the object of the employment, that is, whether the employment was a military task beneficial to the Army, or a personal service rendered to an individual officer or group of officers. That theory appears to have been recognized partially in War Department Circular 214, July 2, 1942, which provided that enlisted attendants could be employed in officers’ messes when the post, camp, or station commander determined that it was impracticable to employ qualified civilian personnel. SPJGA 1945/3653, April 26, 1945. A further departure from the earlier interpretation appears in SR 210-60-1, dated December 7, 1948, and Letter JAGA 1952/8214, October 31, 1952, which provide that where special problems exist and certain requirements are met, enlisted personnel can be detailed to work in officers’ open messes if they volunteer for the assignment. However, the authorities are not unanimous on the legality of the employment, as the views found in United States v Shields, 32 BR 149, and Letter, JAG Army, SPJGJ 1945/3039, March 14, 1945, follow the earlier interpretation.

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Bluebook (online)
6 C.M.A. 347, 6 USCMA 347, 20 C.M.R. 63, 1955 CMA LEXIS 288, 1955 WL 3539, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-robinson-cma-1955.