United States v. Shavrnoch

49 M.J. 334, 1998 CAAF LEXIS 1568, 1998 WL 955549
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Armed Forces
DecidedSeptember 30, 1998
DocketNo. 96-1089; Crim.App. No. 31564
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 49 M.J. 334 (United States v. Shavrnoch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Shavrnoch, 49 M.J. 334, 1998 CAAF LEXIS 1568, 1998 WL 955549 (Ark. 1998).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

EFFRON, Judge:

Following mixed pleas, a general court-martial composed of officer members convicted appellant of a variety of offenses, only one of wMch is at issue in tMs appeal: violation of a lawful general regulation — Air Force Regulation (AFR) 215-7 — by consuming alcohol while under the legal age for doing so, in violation of Article 92, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 892.1 He was sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge, confinement for 2 years, total forfeitures, and reduction to the lowest enlisted grade. The convening authority approved these results. Both on its imtial review and on subsequent remand from tMs Court, the Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the trial results. See 47 MJ 564 (1997).

We granted appellant’s most recent petition for review on the following issues:

WHETHER THE AIR FORCE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT WITHOUT GOOD CAUSE SHOWN, OR UNLESS A MANIFEST INJUSTICE BE THREATENED, FAILURE TO RAISE AN ISSUE BEFORE THAT COURT IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE RULES OF PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE OF THE COURTS OF CRIMINAL APPEALS SERVES TO WAIVE THE ISSUE.
WHETHER THE AIR FORCE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT APPELLANT’S PLEAS OF GUILTY TO A VIOLATION OF AFR 215-7 CONSTITUTED WAIVER.
WHETHER APPELLANT’S PLEAS OF GUILTY TO ADDITIONAL CHARGE I AND ITS SPECIFICATION ARE IMPROVIDENT SINCE AIR FORCE INSTRUCTION 34-119 (THE SUCCESSOR TO AFR 215-7) HAS BEEN FOUND TO BE NON-PUNITIVE.

We hold that appellant’s guilty pleas to violating AFR 215-7 were improvident but that a conviction may be affirmed for the closely related offense of dereliction of duty. United States v. Bivins, 49 MJ 328 (1998).

I. NATURE OF THE OFFENSE UNDER ARTICLE 92(1)

The statute proscribing violation of a lawful general regulation, Article 92(1), provides:

Any person subject to tMs chapter who—
(1) violates or fails to obey any lawful general order or regulation;
shall be pumshed as a court-martial may direct.

[336]*336The President, in paragraph 16c(l)(e) of the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States (1995 ed.), has made it clear that there are limits on the types of general orders or regulations which may proscribe conduct that can be punished under Article 92(1). He has stated:

(e) Enforceability. Not all provisions in general orders or regulations can be enforced under Article 92(1). Regulations which only supply general guidelines or advice for conducting military functions may not be enforceable under Article 92(1).

The Drafters’ Analysis of Article 92 states:

The general order or regulation violated must, when examined as a whole, demonstrate that it is intended to regulate the conduct of individual servicemembers, and the direct application of sanctions for violations of the regulation must be self-evident.

Manual, supra at A23-5. The Manual reflects the fact that a myriad of regulations, instructions, and manuals govern virtually every aspect of military life, and that most of these issuances are not intended to establish the criminal offense of violating a lawful general regulation. See United States v. Nardell, 21 USCMA 327, 329, 45 CMR 101, 103 (1972); United States v. Hogsett, 8 USCMA 681, 684, 25 CMR 185, 188 (1958); see also DiChiara, Article 92: Judicial Guidelines for Identifying Punitive Orders and Regulations, 17 AF.L.Rev. 61, 62 (1975).

Under the Manual and our decisions, if a regulation does not contain language establishing that it is a punitive regulation, a violation of the regulation is not a criminal offense under Article 92(1). A non-punitive regulation, however, may be considered in the context of establishing a standard of military conduct with respect to the less serious offense of dereliction of duty. Bivins, 49 MJ at 339.

II. THE LAW IN THE AIR FORCE AS TO THE PUNITIVE NATURE OF RELEVANT REGULATIONS

A. Air Force Instruction 34-119

In United States v. Hode, 44 MJ 816 (A.F.Ct.Crim.App.), pet. denied, 46 MJ 113 (1996), the accused was convicted of violating the regulation governing underage drinking, paragraph 1.1.2 of Air Force Instruction (AFI) 34-119 (25 July 1994), which provided:

The minimum age for purchasing, possessing, or drinking alcoholic beverages on Air Force bases must be consistent with the law of the state, territory, possession, or foreign country (all referred to as “state” for purposes of this paragraph) in which the installation is located.

The regulation also stated in paragraph 1.1.5:

The Air Force may punish a military member who violates these restrictions under Article 92, Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ).

A unanimous panel of the Air Force Court of Criminal Appeals held that paragraph 1.1.2 “is not enforceable as a lawful general regulation under Article 92(1), UCMJ.” Noting that the instruction appeared “at first blush” to be a punitive regulation, the court concluded that “it is apparent from a reading of the entire Instruction that it is not.” 44 MJ at 818. The court focused on the following factors: (1) the overall purpose of the regulation appeared to provide general guidance to installation commanders and others on how to manage and implement an alcoholic beverage program, rather than to enact a code of conduct for individual members; (2) even paragraph 1.1 and its subparagraphs, which were the only possible exceptions to the first observation, were “written only in general terms”; (3) paragraph 1.1.7, which recognized that state laws could change over time, “clearly requires installation commanders to promulgate some type of ‘drinking-age guidance’ to implement the policies of the Instruction,” underscoring the court’s view that the instruction was not self-executing; (4) paragraph 1.2 and its subparagraphs permitted installation commanders to request exceptions from the general policy, which meant that an individual could not read the policy and know exactly what was prohibited; (5) the purpose statement of the instruction contained “no notice to individual service [337]*337members that any portion of the Instruction might be enforceable under Article 92”; and (6) the notice of possible criminal sanctions in paragraph 1.1.5 did not mean that the Secretary intended to establish the entire regulation as a punitive regulation under Article 92(1) but only reflected the possibility that members who engaged in “ ‘underage drinking’ [could] be punished under Article 92(3) for dereliction of duty____”

The Government could have appealed this decision to our Court through a certification by the Judge Advocate General under Article 67(a)(2), UCMJ, 10 USC § 867(a)(2) (1994). It did not do so.

Six months later, an entirely different panel of the Court of Criminal Appeals, citing Hode, set aside a conviction under Article 92(1) for violating a general regulation in a guilty plea case involving an underage drinking offense under the same regulation. United States v. Bivins, 45 MJ 501 (A.F.Ct. Crim.App.1996), aff'd, 49 MJ 328 (1998).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 M.J. 334, 1998 CAAF LEXIS 1568, 1998 WL 955549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-shavrnoch-armfor-1998.