United States v. Simone

6 C.M.A. 146, 6 USCMA 146, 19 C.M.R. 272, 1955 CMA LEXIS 337, 1955 WL 3432
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedJuly 1, 1955
DocketNo. 6153
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 6 C.M.A. 146 (United States v. Simone) 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. Simone, 6 C.M.A. 146, 6 USCMA 146, 19 C.M.R. 272, 1955 CMA LEXIS 337, 1955 WL 3432 (cma 1955).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Paul W. BROSMAN, Judge:

A general court-martial sitting at Fort Dix, New Jersey, found the accused, Simone, guilty of desertion terminated by apprehension — in violation of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, Article 85, 50 USC § 679. The sole evidence tending to show the fact of apprehension was reflected in Prosecution Exhibit 1, an extract copy of a unit morning report. This evidence took the form of an entry asserting that the accused was “app civ auth Bklyn NY & rtn mil cont Conf Ft Jay NY EDCSA 10 Sept 54 & conf post stockade eff 14 Sep 54.” Translated, this entry recites that Simone was apprehended by civilian authorities in Brooklyn, and was thereafter returned to confinement under military control. The only issue before us on the accused’s present appeal has to do with whether this data, set out in a morning report, may suffice to sustain a finding of apprehension.

II

In three cases in the past we have considered the effect of entries in official records when offered in evidence to establish the termination of a desertion by apprehension. The first of these was United States v. Coates, 2 USCMA 625, 10 CMR 123, which involved a service record entry relating in substance that the:

“. . . Accused was apprehended by civilian authorities at Laurens, South Carolina, April 9, 1952. At that time he was dressed in civilian clothes. On April 11 he was surrendered to military control at Donaldson Air Force Base, Greenville, South Carolina, and placed in the station hospital there under guard. Later during the same day, he escaped through a window of his hospital quarters. Three days thereafter, on April 14, he was apprehended once more by civilian police and surrendered a second time to authorities at Donaldson Air Force Base. On April 16 he was delivered to the United States Navy Recruiting Substation, Greenville, South Carolina. Thence he was transferred to the Recruiting Station at Columbia, South Carolina, and, from there to the Receiving Station, Charleston, South Carolina.”

We observed in that case that the provisions of Article C-7804 of the Navy’s Bureau of Personnel Manual directed that a commanding officer report in an absentee’s service record, “Circumstances of return, whether surrendered or delivered.” This provision we interpreted to demand that the reporting officer prepare “a report of whether the absentee was apprehended, together with other relevant facts.”

Later in United States v. Bennett, 4 USCMA 309, 15 CMR 309, there was brought into question the effect of an entry contained in the service record of a Marine Corpsman, which indicated that he had been apprehended by members of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. A similar entry had been effected in a Formal Report of Deserters or Absentees and was likewise offered in evidence at Bennett’s trial. Relying on their own construction of the Coates case, supra, appellate defense counsel had conceded that the entries found in [148]*148these official records were legally sufficient to sustain a finding of apprehension. However, a majority of this Court disagreed with that view because of the interpretation that under pertinent Marine Corps directives — which differed from the provisions of the Navy’s Bureau of Naval Personnel Manual — there existed no official duty to record the apprehension of an absentee in his service record. At the same time, it was pointed out that — subsequent to the dates of the entries with which the Court was there concerned — the Marine Corps had issued directives which left “no doubt that following June 19, 1953, a duty has existed in the Marine Corps to record apprehension of deserters in service record books and in the Formal Report.”

In light of later developments, our discussion in Bennett of Army and Air Force precedents dealing with morning report entries merits repetition here:

. . Out of an abundance of caution, we should perhaps add that the decision in United States v. Coates, supra, was in no respect designed to impinge on the rationale of the numerous Army and Air Force decisions holding that morning report entries reflecting apprehension are inadmissible under the hearsay rule. Moreover, we are little disposed to substitute for those decisions our own views concerning official duties imposed by the necessarily technical Army and Air Force directives governing the preparation of morning reports. Unless and until those directives are modified, the result of existing Army and Air Force decisions will stand so far as we are concerned.
“It must be clear that the distinction in outcome between Coates and the case at bar hinges wholly on differences in the duties imposed by the directive under which the documents reporting apprehension were prepared. Uniformity in result as among the several services is indeed a goal to be sought. However, this Court cannot with propriety achieve this happy end in instances where— as here — judicial action must be geared to the regulations of the several services, and where these regulations differ among themselves. Thus, while recognizing that a prima facie case of desertion terminated by apprehension is appreciably less difficult of establishment in a court-martial conducted under Navy auspices— or under those of the Marine Corps under current directives — than in one administered by the Army or Air Force, we are troubled little by this lack of uniformity. It is attributable solely to differing regulations among the several Armed Forces — and these may be changed at will. Each service may well be able to cite sound policies in support of its present position in this area — and naturally we express no opinion in the matter.” [United States v. Bennett, 4 USCMA 309, 316, 15 CMR 309.]

One of us dissented in the Bennett case, but the position taken in the separate opinion expressing disagreement was based on the view that the entries in question had been made pursuant to an official duty reposing on the reporting officer, and that those entries sufficed fully to uphold the finding of apprehension there.

Finally there came United States v. Kitchen, 5 USCMA 541, 18 CMR 165, which brought into question the effect, in an Air Force desertion case, of a morning report entry asserting that the accused had returned to military control involuntarily. As we pointed out there, the Coates case had involved a holding that “in light of existing Navy Regulations — an entry in the accused’s service record to the effect that he had been apprehended was admissible and legally sufficient to establish the fact recited.” (Emphasis supplied). We distinguished Bennett where, under the phrasing of pertinent Marine Corps directives, “no official duty [existed] to record the fact of apprehension in an absentee’s service record, and therefore . . . such a recital was neither admissible nor legally sufficient to support such a finding.” [Emphasis supplied.]

We concluded that under Air Force directives in force at the time the entry concerning Kitchen was made, the term “involuntary return” did not necessarily [149]*149equate to “apprehension.” However, it was noted that there did exist in that Service an official duty to recite that the return was “involuntary,” if such was the case, with the result that, if material and relevant, the entry in question was admissible on the issue of apprehension — although not of itself legally sufficient to support a finding thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 C.M.A. 146, 6 USCMA 146, 19 C.M.R. 272, 1955 CMA LEXIS 337, 1955 WL 3432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-simone-cma-1955.