United States v. Thurman

10 C.M.A. 377, 10 USCMA 377, 27 C.M.R. 451, 1959 CMA LEXIS 301, 1959 WL 3649
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1959
DocketNo. 12,219
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 10 C.M.A. 377 (United States v. Thurman) 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. Thurman, 10 C.M.A. 377, 10 USCMA 377, 27 C.M.R. 451, 1959 CMA LEXIS 301, 1959 WL 3649 (cma 1959).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

HomeR Ferguson, Judge:

The accused was convicted of stealing a package from the mails, in violation of Article 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 934, and was sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, and confinement at hard labor for three years. The convening authority reduced the confinement to a period of two years, but otherwise approved the findings and sentence. Following action by the board of review affirming the sentence, we granted the accused’s petition for review in which several errors were assigned. Only one of these assignments requires extended discussion.

The specification of the single charge upon which the accused was arraigned and tried alleges that the accused, “did, at Ashiya Air Base, on or about 14 March 1957, steal a certain package, addressed to Mister James Burrows, 2832 South West 7th Street, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, which said package was then mail matter in Air Post Office 75, before said package was delivered to the person to whom it was directed.” (Emphasis supplied.)

In support of these allegations, the Government adduced evidence tending to show that on March 14, 1957, the accused, a parcel post clerk at the Ashiya Air Base Post Office, took a package from the post office to the home of a Japanese girl asking her to conceal it for him. The package was, in all respects, mail matter and had been accepted by the accused two days earlier; he issued air mail stamps and a receipt for insured mail covering the same.

According to the testimony of the girl, about six weeks after she surrendered the contents of the package— a Nikon camera valued at $162.00 — to agents of the Office of Special Investigations, the accused begged her assistance in defending himself against the present charge. He proposed, she averred, that she write to the chaplain explaining that she had received the camera from a gentleman she entertained during the night of March 13, 1957. When the accused observed it in her possession the following night, he told her to get rid of it because it would lead to serious trouble. She complied with his request and mailed a [379]*379letter setting out this version of the incident. In addition, she sent a letter of similar content to the accused.

After demonstrating the girl’s moral laxity in his efforts to impeach her credibility, the accused became a witness in his own behalf. He categorically denied the charge against him, and declared the true version of the manner in which the girl came into possession of the camera was that set out in her letter to him and to the chaplain. He further denied that these expressions were products of his imagination. Indeed, he declared, he could not have seen the girl at the time she described for he had spent that time in Osaka, several miles away.

Other evidence relied upon by both parties as supportive of their respective positions was before the court-martial, but need not be detailed here. It is sufficient to state that the record, as a whole, reflects substantial evidence tending to establish each essential element of the offense charged. Accordingly, the record does not support the accused’s first assignment of evidenti-ary insufficiency.

The principal assignment urged by the defense relates to the law officer’s instructions upon the elements of the crime. After advising the court that, in order to warrant a conviction the evidence must establish, inter alia, that “the accused, without authorization, stole a certain package,” he undertook to define “steal.” He did so in this language:

“The court is further advised that the word ‘steal’ as used in this specification means any wrongful taking, that is, a taking without right or permission.”

In its prior consideration of the offense of tampering with military mail, as distinguished from mail in the custody of the United States postal service, this Court has noted that the framework of the essentials of proof is derived from the Federal mail statutes. 18 USC §§ 1702, 1708. United States v Lorenzen, 6 USCMA 512, 20 CMR 228; United States v Peoples, 7 USCMA 534, 22 CMR 324; United States v DiCario, 8 USCMA 353, 24 CMR 163.

The offense alleged in the instant case is patterned upon the latter of the cited statutes. It provides:

“Whoever steals, takes, or abstracts, or by fraud or deception obtains, or attempts so to obtain, from or out of any mail, post office, or station thereof, letter box, mail receptacle, or any mail route or other authorized depository for mail matter, or from a letter or mail carrier, any letter, postal card, package, bag, or mail, or abstracts or removes from any such letter, package, bag, or mail, any article or thing contained therein, or secretes, embezzles, or destroys any such letter, postal card, package, bag, or mail, or any article or thing contained therein; or
“Whoever steals, takes, or abstracts, or by fraud or deception obtains any letter, postal card, package, bag, or mail, or any article or thing contained therein which has been left for collection upon or adjacent to a collection box or other authorized depository of mail matter; or
“Whoever buys, receives, or conceals, or unlawfully has in his possession, any letter, postal card, package, bag, or mail, or any article or thing contained therein, which has been so stolen, taken, embezzled, or abstracted, as herein described, knowing the same to have been stolen, taken, embezzled, or abstracted—
“Shall be fined not more than $2,000 or imprisoned not more than five years, or both. (June 25, 1948, ch 645, § 1, 62 Stat 779; May 24, 1949, ch 139, § 39, 63 Stat 95; July 1, 1952, ch 535, 66 Stat 314.)”

This section was designed “solely to protect the mails, and . . . while it includes larceny as under-stood at common law, it is not restricted to that offense, but makes criminal any unauthorized abstraction from the mails of postal matter.” United States v Trosper, 127 Fed 476 (SD Cal) [380]*380(1904). The opinion in the Trosper ease makes explicit that which is infer-able from a reading of the statute itself: The words “steals, takes, or abstracts, or by fraud or deception obtains,” etc., as used in the statute, denote several distinctly different acts, the commission of any of which, in the context of the enactment, shall constitute a punishable offense. Neither the statute itself nor the numerous opinions by which it has been construed purport to alter the meaning of these words, or to cast them in any light other than that in which they are ordinarily found in criminal law generally. All that the provision is designed to do, and the only effect it in fact accomplishes, is to proscribe “any unauthorized abstraction from the mails of postal matter,” with only a general regard for the criminal means by which such abstraction is achieved. United States v Trosper, supra.

Necessarily, then, the military counterpart of this crime has the same purpose. In recognition of this, the framers of the Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, have provided two separate forms for use in connection with such cases. The first is patterned upon Title 18, section 1702,1 and covers the taking “with design to obstruct the correspondence,” or to “pry into the business or secrets” of another. Appendix 6e, Manual for Courts-Martial, supra, Form 151.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 C.M.A. 377, 10 USCMA 377, 27 C.M.R. 451, 1959 CMA LEXIS 301, 1959 WL 3649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-thurman-cma-1959.