United States v. Robinson

13 C.M.A. 674, 13 USCMA 674, 33 C.M.R. 206, 1963 CMA LEXIS 258, 1963 WL 4840
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedApril 26, 1963
DocketNo. 16,491
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 13 C.M.A. 674 (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, 13 C.M.A. 674, 13 USCMA 674, 33 C.M.R. 206, 1963 CMA LEXIS 258, 1963 WL 4840 (cma 1963).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Kilday, Judge:

The appellant stands convicted, on his purported plea of guilty, of larceny, conspiracy, wrongful sale of Government property and unlawfully receiving Government property, in violation of Articles 121, 81, 108 and 184, Uniform Code of Military Justice, respectively, 10 USC §§ 921, 881, 908 and 934. He was sentenced to bad-conduct discharge, forfeiture of all pay and allowances and confinement at hard labor for one year. The convening authority approved the sentence. A board of review in the office of The Judge Advocate General of the Army affirmed the findings of guilty and the sentence.

This Court granted review on the following assigned issue:

Whether the arraignment of the accused took place in an out-of-court hearing, and his plea of guilty was entered and accepted in said out-of-court hearing, rather than before the court members.

The proceedings which give rise to the question before us were of an admittedly unusual nature. By the record it is made to appear that the court-martial to which this case was [676]*676referred for trial was scheduled to assemble on the afternoon the trial began. At an earlier hour than that set for the assembly of the court, the lieutenant colonel who had been appointed as law officer, the lieutenant appointed as trial counsel, the lieutenant appointed as defense counsel, the individual civilian defense counsel, the appellant, and the reporter met in a “preliminary hearing” called in the absence of “any and all members of the court.”

In the course of his statement as to the purpose of the meeting, the lieutenant colonel made the following statements:

“. . . The purpose of this preliminary hearing is to properly expedite the general court-martial trial of the accused. . . . The accused is advised at this time that this preliminary hearing has been called at the instance of the trial counsel inasmuch as the members of the court have been advised to be here at a later time this afternoon. . . . By holding this hearing before the convening of the court, we will perhaps be able to complete this case today, which is desirable, inasmuch as the law officer has come from a great distance and it would be inconvenient to several persons if we waited for the court to convene before holding an out of court hearing. . . . Does the trial counsel desire to go through some of the preliminaries now. We have accounted for those present, and I believe that the next in order would be to give introductory remarks and then swear the reporter.”

Thereupon trial counsel announced “The court will be convened” and made reference to the appointing orders of the court-martial. In the continued absence of all of the members of the court-martial, proceedings were had in the manner provided by paragraph 61, Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, for the preliminary organization of the court, through paragraph 61 g. The reporter having been previously sworn, the “law officer” was sworn and thereafter the trial counsel, defense counsel, and individual defense counsel were sworn. The “law officer” then stated:

“The parties are now qualified to act in this court-martial despite the absence of the members of the court. This proceeding will constitute a portion of the trial and a verbatim transcript of this proceeding will be incorporated in the record of trial at an appropriate point when I declare it during the trial.”

The “law officer” further stated that a preliminary hearing prior to the assembly of the members of the court was an unusual procedure and that he did not feel it appropriate to proceed unless the appellant specifically consented to proceeding in the out-of-court hearing. Upon inquiry from the “law officer,” the appellant signified his consent, as did defense counsel and individual civilian defense counsel.

Trial counsel then proceeded to state by whom the charges were preferred, by whom forwarded, and by whom investigated. Trial counsel then announced that the law officer would not be a witness for the prosecution, indicated the records disclosed no grounds for challenge, and advised that if the law officer knew of any facts which he felt might be grounds for challenge he should so state. The “law officer” then disclosed that he had sat as law officer on three cases of other soldiers charged in companion cases, but asserted he would not be influenced thereby. It was stated that there was no challenge of the law officer.

Reading of the charges was waived. The defense made motions for appropriate relief and the law officer ruled upon them. Through counsel, the defendant entered a plea of guilty to all specifications and charges. The “law officer” explained to appellant the consequences of his plea, examined into the providence thereof, explained each specification, and secured appellant’s acknowledgment that each allegation was true or that the facts alleged existed. A pretrial agreement was presented and read to appellant, who agreed to its terms. Appellant re[677]*677affirmed that he still wished to plead guilty and the “law officer” stated:

“All right, I will announce to the court that your plea of guilty has been accepted and will be a matter of record.”

Shortly thereafter the out-of-court hearing terminated.

It may be noted that the “out-of-court preliminary hearing” continued for one hour and eight minutes and consumes eighteen pages of the record prior to findings. The hearing before the full court, to be hereafter developed, continued for a period of thirty minutes and consists of only five pages of proceedings prior to the time the members retired to deliberate on findings.

Very shortly after the termination of the preliminary hearing, the record indicates that the trial before the court began. Trial counsel announced that the prosecution was ready to proceed and also stated that at the “preliminary hearing” the competency and qualifications of counsel were inquired into and satisfied. Trial counsel also announced that at such preliminary hearing counsel and the law officer were sworn. Inquiry was made as to enlisted men on the court, and the members of the court were then sworn. It should be noted that the law officer, trial counsel, defense counsel, individual defense counsel, and the reporter were never sworn after the assembly of the court. The only oath by any of them was at the “preliminary out-of-court hearing.”

The nature of the charges was stated by trial counsel, copies of the charges and specifications were distributed to the court members, voir dire conducted, and a member of the court peremptorily challenged by the appellant.

Proceedings at that juncture, before the court-martial, are important to our inquiry. The accused was not arraigned before the full court. He entered no plea before the full court, nor was he called upon to do so. However, the law officer informed the court-martial of the proceedings at the pretrial hearing and stated in conneetion therewith:

“. . . Also, the accused was arraigned upon the charges, a copy of which you have before you. He pleaded guilty to the charges and specifications and I now announce that his plea of guilty is accepted, by the court, and is now entered of record in the case.”

Thereupon trial counsel stated that in view of the appellant’s plea of guilty he had no evidence to present, and the defense also rested.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 C.M.A. 674, 13 USCMA 674, 33 C.M.R. 206, 1963 CMA LEXIS 258, 1963 WL 4840, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-robinson-cma-1963.