United States v. Shaughnessy

8 C.M.A. 416, 8 USCMA 416, 24 C.M.R. 226, 1957 CMA LEXIS 336, 1957 WL 4747
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1957
DocketNo. 9319
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 8 C.M.A. 416 (United States v. Shaughnessy) 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. Shaughnessy, 8 C.M.A. 416, 8 USCMA 416, 24 C.M.R. 226, 1957 CMA LEXIS 336, 1957 WL 4747 (cma 1957).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

Homer Ferguson, Judge:

We brought this case here to consider certain issues arising from the trial counsel’s cross-examination of the accused and to review the correctness of the law officer’s instructions. The accused was convicted of desertion for a period of approximately five months, terminated by apprehension. The evidence showed that just four days prior to the inception of the instant offense, the accused had been released from confinement where he had served a sentence pursuant to a conviction for absence without leave. The accused testified in his own behalf and offered as the reason for his absence the fact that his wife desperately needed an operation on her back and spine, and that because of her destitute condition it was necessary for him to return home and render all possible assistance. While at home he worked in order to earn enough money to send her to the hospital and to have the operation performed. He was apprehended by Federal 'Bureau of Investigation agents at the hospital where his wife was confined. He vigorously maintained that he had no intention to desert the service and that he had planned to surrender himself to military authorities upon his wife’s release from the hospital. He estimated that his wife would have recovered “approximately two weeks after I was apprehended.”

Trial counsel thereupon proceeded to cross-examine the accused and the very first questions propounded were these:

“Q. Private Shaughnessy, were you ever convicted of robbery?
A. No sir.
“Q. You have never been convicted of robbery?
A. Not that I can recall.”

Defense counsel raised no objection to these questions at the time they were asked. • At the completion of cross-examination, however, the law officer inquired whether defense counsel cared “to raise an objection at this time.” [418]*418After some prompting by the law officer, the defense .counsel “formally” objected. The law officer then instructed the court that the “type of question and the matter disclosed is improper.” He admonished the court-martial “to disregard completely that question and answer as raised by the trial counsel,” and further instructed that the question and answer be stricken from the record and “stricken from the minds of the members of this court.” He concluded by again instructing the court “emphatically to completely disregard that question and answer.” The trial counsel then sought “for the protection of the record” to append a document to the record of trial as an appellate exhibit. In the out-of-court conference that followed, the trial counsel- introduced a document entitled “History of Accused,” which contained a- brief notation that the accused when fourteen years of age had been convicted of robbery and placed on probation for six months. Trial counsel offered the document to show that there had been no “bad faith involved” on his part in cross-examining the accused.

I

The first issue on which review was granted concerns the trial counsel’s cross-examination of the accused on the alleged juvenile conviction. The Government contends that such cross-examination was entirely proper and that furthermore the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, draws no distinction based on the age of the witness when he committed the acts upon which his impeachment is sought. The defense, on the other hand, takes the position that the accused’s juvenile derelictions are not the proper subject of cross-examination. An identical issue was recently -considered in United States v Roark, 8 USCMA 279, 24 CMR 89, where it was held to be error to cross-examine an accused pertaining to a juvenile conviction. Our holding in that case is applicable here. We must next assess the prejudice.

Immediately following the trial counsel’s cross-examination, the law officer, on his own initiative, clearly and forcefully instructed the court-martial to “completely disregard” the improper questioning. After this instruction had been given, the president of the court-martial asked the law officer about the accused’s prior conviction for the offense of assault with a dangerous weapon which was properly admitted ■ into evidence. The law officer advised the president that the instruction to disregard was only applicable to “the question propounded as to the conviction for robbery,” and not to the evidence properly admitted concerning the assault charge. Furthermore, the document, upon which the trial counsel relied for his information, was never presented to the court. We have carefully scrutinized the entire record and find no evidence that the trial counsel acted in bad faith or that he deliberately flouted the rules of evidence so as to deprive the accused of a fair trial. The admissibility of evidence concerning juvenile convictions is a question of first impression before this Court. It therefore did not constitute an act of misconduct for the trial counsel to attempt to impeach the accused’s credibility on the basis of the juvenile conviction.

In considering the effect of the law officer’s cautionary instructions to disregard we advert to our own decision in United States v Johnson, 3 USCMA 447, 13 CMR 3, where we said that the test for determining whether an instruction is adequate to obviate any improper influence upon the findings and sentence is “whether it can be said that the mere mention of other offenses, under the circumstances of the particular case, actually influenced the verdict, notwithstanding the admonition of the law officer to disregard the statement.” Under all the circumstances of the instant case we believe that the court-martial followed the law officer’s instructions and disregarded the objectionable questioning and that the findings and sentence were free from any improper influence. United States v O’Briski, 2 USCMA 361, 8 CMR 161.

II

The second issue presented on this [419]*419appeal relates to the trial counsel’s cross-examination of the accused concerning a prior marriage. The defense invites our attention to the following questions and answers:

“Q. Your wife’s name is Shirley, is that correct?
A. Yes sir.
“Q. Isn’t it correct that you were married to Anne Shaughnessy on 3 January 1952?
A. Yes sir.
“Q. At Elizabeth, North Carolina?
A. Yes sir.
“Q. And you have never been divorced or that marriage has never been annulled?
A. Yes, it was annulled.
“Q. When?
A. Approximately March of 1953.
“Q. Where?
A. Fort George G. Meade, Maryland.” [Emphasis supplied.]

It is argued on behalf of the accused that the italicized question by trial counsel was “flagrantly accusatory in nature,” and grossly improper. The accused, however, by his answers clearly dispelled any implication that he was guilty of bigamy. Prior to this questioning a court member had asked the accused why he had made no attempt to take out an allotment in favor of his wife.

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Bluebook (online)
8 C.M.A. 416, 8 USCMA 416, 24 C.M.R. 226, 1957 CMA LEXIS 336, 1957 WL 4747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-shaughnessy-cma-1957.