United States v. Seigle

22 C.M.A. 403
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJuly 20, 1973
DocketNo. 26,584
StatusPublished

This text of 22 C.M.A. 403 (United States v. Seigle) 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. Seigle, 22 C.M.A. 403 (cma 1973).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

Duncan, Judge:

The appellant, Airman Basic Robert K. Seigle, after having been given all cautionary warnings required, confessed in writing to larceny of 74 phonograph record albums and a General Electric portable phonograph from the Base Exchange at Minot Air Force Base. Herein, we are concerned with whether there is sufficient evidence corroborative of the confession as required by paragraph 140a (5) Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1969 (Rev.). Our review further enjoins upon us the duty to determine the effect of the military judge’s declination, after request by the defense, to instruct the jury on the corroboration requirement. Hereinafter, the reasons for our affirmance of the action of the Court of Military Review are set forth.

Paragraph 140a (5) of the Manual conditions the admission in evidence of an accused’s confession upon the presence of independent evidence "which corroborates the essential facts admitted sufficiently to justify an inference of their truth.” That paragraph provides for a lesser degree of proof than was required under the 1951 Manual.1 United States v. Hise, 20 USCMA 3, 42 CMR 195 (1970). Like many legal standards applicable at trial, the standard called for by present paragraph 140a (5) of the Manual tends to defy further semantic structuring, but is, as we believe it should be, a standard that accommodates the facts of each case so as to generate fairness in this troublesome area of trial practice. Following the interpretation of the Manual change in Hise, we believe that the new standard does not require that there be some independent evidence tending to prove each element of a crime as a threshold requirement for the admission of the confession in evidence. What evidence of record leads us to hold that the corroboration requirement is fulfilled?

I

THE ACCUSED

Seigle turned over to law enforcement authorities 74 phonograph records and a General Electric phonograph and confessed in writing that he stole the items from the Base. Exchange over a 2-week period beginning the first part of January 1972. The confession, admitted in evidence over appellant’s objection,2 also recites that Airman Martinez was with him when he stole an album; that both Airmen Martinez and Durant were with him when he stole the phonograph on about January 10, 1972; that both those individuals, as well as Airman Mc-Daniels, had knowledge of his thefts. The appellant also admitted stealing the records because he wanted them, and that he figured that if he were caught he would be able to get out of the service.

MARTINEZ

Airman Roy Martinez, a social friend of appellant, stated that he had accompanied Seigle to the Base Exchange two or three times during the months of January and February 1972, and on one occasion saw him take a record album without paying for it.

[405]*405DURANT

Airman Basic Paul Durant, who roomed with appellant, stated that during January and February 1972, he also, on five or six occasions, went to the Base Exchange with Martinez and Seigle. He testified that he saw Seigle take records from the Base Exchange without paying for them about six times, taking two or three at a time.

LANDWEHR

Airman First Class Douglas Landwehr, a former roommate of the appellant, was present in Seigle’s room around the end of January when Seigle stated to him, when discussing the record player sitting on the desk, that he "ripped it off from the BX,” meaning that he had stolen it. Seigle also sold record albums to Land-wehr.

TRUDELL

Mr. Louis Trudell, the Base Exchange assistant store manager, identified 6 of the 74 albums in evidence as having come from the Base Exchange. Identification of the 6 albums was made through coded stock numbers, manufacturer’s numbers, or Base Exchange breakaway tickets. ;

The General Electric phonograph (Prosecution Exhibit 2) was a standard stock item at the Base Exchange. Tru-dell could not state that the phonograph was stolen from the Base Exchange, but did testify that similar appliances were available for purchase in the area. However, he stated that the box in which the phonograph was packaged (a part of Prosecution Exhibit 2) bore a Base Exchange stock number.

McDaniels

Airman Walter McDaniels, a friend of Seigle, and Martinez’ roommate during January and February 1972, stated that he and Martinez went with the appellant to the Base Exchange where Seigle put about 15 albums in a stack and a sold sticker was placed on the top one. Seigle then walked around the Exchange and left with the albums under his arm. He could not say whether or not the albums were paid for; however, Seigle told him that he "ripped them off.”

Not forgetful of the basic mistrust courts have shown for confessions and admissions, for there is no evidence that faster quickens the pace down the path toward conviction than the accused’s acknowledgment of guilt, the safeguards established to protect against those that are any less than voluntary, and reasonably accurate, remain. Paragraph 140a (5), MCM.

Martinez’s testimony that he saw Seigle take record albums from the Base Exchange without paying for them is direct evidence of the appellant’s larceny of at least one album. Corroboration becomes more concrete with the direct evidence from Durant that together with Martinez and Seigle he went to the Exchange where he saw Seigle take records about six times, two or three at a time. The appellant complains that the testimony of these witnesses furnishes no detail of the exact step-by-step method by which the thefts were accomplished. We believe the evidence to be relevant and properly in evidence. If, in the view of the defense, more detail were lacking, cross-examination was available to attack the general nature of the observations of the witnesses. Without reference to other evidence, we conclude that as to the 74 record albums there is ample evidence which bolsters the "essential facts admitted sufficiently to justify an inference of their truth.”

Independent of the confession there is no direct evidence of a larceny of the phonograph. After Article 31 warnings, the appellant physically turned the phonograph over to investigators. The Base Exchange carried in inventory and sold a number of the same kind of record players during January and February 1972. Prosecution Exhibit 2, the phonograph and a box with it, were examined by Trudell. He testified that "[t]his particular one has our stock number on the side of the box.” Adding only the additional circumstance that Seigle had been observed taking record albums from the Base Exchange without paying for them, we believe the total of these circumstances satisfy the requirements of paragraph 140a (5), MCM. Evidence that provides the basis for the inference that the phonograph, physically turned in by the appellant, was [406]*406once a part of the stock of the Base Exchange, alongside appellant’s observed theft of record albums, permit our finding that there was sufficient evidence that the confession was not made up by him with the intent to deceive.

The confession together with other evidence of record provides a sufficient fact basis from which the appellant could be found guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of the larceny of the record albums and the phonograph.

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Related

United States v. Manuel
3 C.M.A. 739 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1954)
United States v. Landrum
4 C.M.A. 707 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1954)
United States v. Winborn
14 C.M.A. 277 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1963)
United States v. Hise
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Bluebook (online)
22 C.M.A. 403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-seigle-cma-1973.