United States v. Stribling

5 C.M.A. 531, 5 USCMA 531, 18 C.M.R. 155, 1955 CMA LEXIS 425, 1955 WL 3299
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMarch 11, 1955
DocketNo. 5591
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 5 C.M.A. 531 (United States v. Stribling) 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. Stribling, 5 C.M.A. 531, 5 USCMA 531, 18 C.M.R. 155, 1955 CMA LEXIS 425, 1955 WL 3299 (cma 1955).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Paul W. BROSMAN, Judge:

A general court-martial sitting in Stuttgart, Germany, on June 17, 1954, convicted the accused, Stribling, of two acts of embezzlement, together with one instance of failure to account for-funds, in violation of Articles 121 and 134, respectively, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 50 USC §§ 715, 728. His sentence to dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures and confinement at hard labor for five years, as well as all findings, were approved by the convening authority and affirmed by a board of review in the office of the Army’s Judge Advocate General. Although the issue was not raised at any stage of the proceedings below, we granted Stribling’s petition for review to determine whether the evidence was sufficient to establish for all purposes the two separate embezzlements alleged on the charge sheet.

II

On February 2, 1954, the accused— under orders appointing him a Class “A” Agent — received a fund totalling $3,000.00 in deutsch marks for the purpose of sale to troops in return for military payment certificates. As time passed, there was cause to believe that a substantial deficiency had come about —for within two months of his appointment as custodian, the accused, during a conversation with a friend, adverted to a shortage of $1,500.00. Judgment day, April 22, 1954, arrived in the nature of an audit conducted by the company commander, after which Stribling acknowledged orally a shortage of some $2,400.00 — a not unreasonable concession from one unable to produce four-fifths of the sum entrusted to him.

Thereafter, he executed a voluntary extrajudicial statement confessing to a withdrawal of $200.00 from the fund for his personal use, and to the appropriation of an additional $200.00 handed him by a Lieutenant Simpson in repayment for cash “borrowed” therefrom by the latter. According to his own account, the accused had contracted numerous obligations in pursuit of two favorite recreational activities — gambling and attentions to local women.

At the trial, the Government chose to divide the missing amount between two specifications — one alleging a larceny of $200.00, the other a theft of $2,200.-00. Whether the establishment of a single shortage is sufficient to sustain findings of guilt under both counts is the question before us now.

Ill

Appellate defense counsel urge that evidence sufficient to support the allegation of larceny of $200.00 is wholly wanting. Where there are several takings pursuant to a single design — the argument runs — -but a single larceny results. Therefore, in the absence of a showing of a separate intention to steal $200.00, an undivided purpose exists, characterized by several takings — and the Government may not carve out of the whole a separate larceny touching this amount.

In support of this position the defense relies heavily on People v. Cox, 286 NY 137, 36 NE2d 84. There, the defendant seems to have been engaged for several years in the larceny of subway fares — usually in amounts of from twenty-five to thirty dollars — deposited by passengers in station turnstiles. He [533]*533was charged in a single count with the theft of approximately $1,500.00 allegedly taken over a period of eleven months. In affirming the conviction, the New York Court of Appeals followed what it termed settled law, and held “that where property is stolen from the same owner and from the same place in a series of acts, those acts constitute a single larceny regardless of the time elapsing between them, if the successive takings be pursuant to a single intent and design and in execution of a common fraudulent scheme.” Because the fact situation before us here is similar — the defense concludes — this Court is bound to apply a rule requiring aggregation where successive takings occur which are consistent with a single intent.

Sound though it may be for certain purposes, we are unimpressed by the argument in this setting. The Cox case amounts to no more, we believe, than a culmination of previous judicial attempts to assist the prosecution in establishing the grand larceny guilt of offenders who take petty amounts over periods of time. That the rule would operate to the accused’s benefit here constitutes no sufficient reason for its adoption — for a less happy result to one in his general position may be expected in many other cases. Moreover, we decline to accept the position that a single intent or design characterized by multiple takings must necessarily result in no more than one larceny.

Of course, when a theft of several articles is committed at substantially the same time and place, Manual language compels us to hold that but a single crime has been committed. Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, paragraph 200a, page 361. However, we do not find in the language of this passage support for the defense’s contention. Perhaps the present accused was indeed prompted by a unitary felonious purpose unbroken by recurrences of honesty. Nonetheless, the fact is insignificant here. , . the test is not whether the criminal intent is one and the same and inspiring the whole transaction, but whether separate acts have been committed with the requisite criminal intent.” Morgan v. De-vine, 237 US 632, 59 L ed 1153, 35 S Ct 712. See United States v. McVey, 4 USCMA 167, 15 CMR 167.

Put in another fashion, “although a continuous transaction may be involved • — and one animated by but a single criminal intent — ” separate acts may be proved resulting in convictions under more than one specification. United States v. Beene, 4 USCMA 177, 15 CMR 177. Assuming that which we shall decide infra, that is, that the Government sufficiently established a separate taking of $200.00 from the fund, we find no injustice in applying the accused’s continuing intent — and the defense insists that there was but one — to the findings of guilt under both specifications. If the accused had been convicted of burglary with a design to commit larceny, and also with the larceny which formed the object of the burglary— both crimes allegedly committed pursuant to a common scheme — he certainly could not effectively complain. Morgan v. Devine, supra. We see no valid reason — and none has been advanced— for a different result in the present situation. Accordingly, we reject as distinctly inharmonious the defense’s orchestration of the “one crime, one punishment” theme.

IV

An unexplained shortage of $2,400.00 from the funds with which the accused had been entrusted would —in the absence of any sort of confession — suffice to sustain a conviction of larceny in that amount. Obviously, then, it would serve to supply the corpus delicti for a confession to a theft of that sum. The difficulty here — if one there is — arises from the circumstance that the accused was charged with, and punished for two larcenies in the amounts of $200.00 and $2,200.00, respectively.

Germane to the present problem is the principle laid down by us in United States v. Florence, 1 USCMA 620, 5 CMR 48. There an accused was convicted under a single specification alleging a stealing of currency from the personal effects of two deceased soldiers, which property it was his duty to inventory. The aggregate value of the [534]*534amounts involved exceeded $50.00— and the Government argued that punishment not to exceed confinement at hard labor for five years was authorized.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 C.M.A. 531, 5 USCMA 531, 18 C.M.R. 155, 1955 CMA LEXIS 425, 1955 WL 3299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-stribling-cma-1955.