United States V. Tobita

3 C.M.A. 267, 3 USCMA 267, 12 C.M.R. 23, 1953 CMA LEXIS 683, 1953 WL 2174
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedSeptember 4, 1953
DocketNo. 710
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 3 C.M.A. 267 (United States V. Tobita) 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. Tobita, 3 C.M.A. 267, 3 USCMA 267, 12 C.M.R. 23, 1953 CMA LEXIS 683, 1953 WL 2174 (cma 1953).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Paul W. BROSMAN, Judge:

On common trial with one Parker— petitioner in No. 731 — the accused, Tobita, was convicted by a general court-martial convened at Ascom City, Korea, of the rape of a Korean girl, in violation of Article of War 92, 10 USC § 1564.1 The conviction was affirmed by intermediate reviewing authorities, and this Court has granted accused’s petition for further review to consider the matters dealt with hereafter.

II

On oral argument, it appeared for the first time that there existed a discrepancy in an important particular between the original record of trial provided this Court and the copy furnished the accused. According to the latter, First Lieutenant Arnold R. Sanchez, although a member, had not sat with the court-martial which tried the accused. However, the original record reflects that Lieutenant Sanchez did in fact participate in the proceedings as a court-martial member. The importance of this matter is paramount: if Lieutenant Sanchez did not sit, the membership of [269]*269the court-martial was reduced to a number below a legal quorum and the court was without jurisdiction. However, the immediate question has to do with the effect to be accorded this discrepancy between the original record and the copy in the hands of the accused.

At the time of the hearing before this Court, appellate defense counsel did no more than present what was characterized as page 2 of the copy of the record of trial furnished the accused, Tobita. A comparison of this paper with page 2 of the original record disclosed the situation described in the preceding paragraph. No reference to this disparity was made in briefs of counsel, nor was the legal position of the accused made entirely clear at the time of argument. Following the completion of arguments on errors previously assigned, a continuance was granted by this Court sua sponte. In view of the location and status of the personnel concerned, we requested the Government to secure appropriate affidavits bearing on the problem for the purpose of augmenting whatever information might be secured by appellate defense counsel through the same or other avenues.

Following the request of this Court, the Government has procured affidavits from Lieutenant Sanchez and from Major Colin 0. Villines, the officer who served as trial counsel in the case at bar. Sanchez states in brief that he was appointed to serve as a member of the general court-martial which later tried the accused. This particular court sat at intervals from February 1951 to a date in October of the same year — and during this lengthy period necessarily heard a great many cases, many of them involving rape and other serious crimes of violence. Sanchez is a medical officer, and, while the court was in existence, was required frequently to be at the front. His affidavit relates that he is entirely without present recollection of the case to which the accused, Tobita, was a party, and cannot say with any degree of certainty whether he sat as a member of the court at the time Tobita was tried.

Major Villines, on the other hand, is unequivocal. He avers that his memory of the case and the circumstances surrounding the case is quite good, even at this date,” and that Lieutenant Sanchez did in fact sit. He states with assurance that that part of the accused’s copy reflecting the absence of Lieutenant Sanchez can be the product of nothing more serious than a reporter’s error. Ruefully he sets out the subsequently discovered lack of competence of the soldier who served >as reporter at this trial but at none thereafter. He recalls numerous errors which required correction, including some in “that portion [of the record] pertaining to the accounting for the members present or absent.” These required the retyping and substitution of several pages. The Major seeks to explain the discrepancy with which we are confronted by suggesting that, although an accurate court-sheet— page 2— was substituted in the original record, through carelessness this must not have been done in the case of the copy furnished the accused. Finally, Major Villines states positively that no trial in which he served as trial counsel ever “proceeded or continued when a quorum of members was not present.” He is certain of the accuracy of the original record, and of the incorrectness in this particular of the copy which appears to have been supplied the accused. No information concerning the discrepancy has been furnished the Court by the accused.

It is now the position of appellate defense counsel that in one way or another error was committed in the area under consideration. If the copy furnished the accused is accurate, and the original record is not, then the court was without jurisdiction for want of a membership of “not less than five.” Uniform Code of Military Justice, Articles 16, 29, 50 USC §§ 576, 593; Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, paragraph 45. On the other hand, if the reverse is the case, and the original reflects the true situation, then Article 54(c) of the Code, supra, has been violated in that no accurate “copy of the record of the proceedings . . . [was] given to the accused as soon as authenticated.” See also Manual, supra, paragraph 82^ (1).

[270]*270Principally counsel for the accused appear to ai-gue that the original record of trial before this Court does not report correctly the membership of the court-martial which tried Tobita and his co-accused. If this is true, the inaccuracy must necessarily be the product either of deliberate falsification or of gross negligence — this in the face of the authenticating signatures of the president of the court and the law officer and the approving signature of the lawyer who represented the accused at that time. It is clear that the burden must be on one who advances such a contention to produce — at the very least — • some evidence to support his assertion. There is and can be no presumption that public officers have violated their legal duties. That burden has not been sustained here. It is certainly true that we are without the positive assurance of Lieutenant Sanchez that he sat as a member of the court in question. It is also true that the Government has supplied us with no statements from either the defense counsel at the trial or any member of the court-martial. The reporter, too, has not been heard from. Finally, it may be — as appellate defense coúnsel argue — that trial counsel’s affidavit must be regarded as in some measure self-serving. However, it does not at all follow that it is untrue. Indeed, so far as we are concerned, it is wholly true. We must and do accept it without reservation. Major Villines has asserted that he remembers the trial of the instant case in detail, and that Lieutenant Sanchez participated as a member of the court. Moreover, he has offered a reasonable explanation for the variance between the original record and its copy. On the other hand, nothing has reached us from the accused. We can only conclude that the record has not been impeached, that Lieutenant Sanchez sat as reported therein, and thus that the accused was tried by a general court-martial of not less than five members.

It' follows from what we have said that the accused may not have been furnished with an accurate copy of the record of his trial, as required by Article 54(c) of the Code, supra. Although the word “accurate” is not used in the legislation with which we are dealing, any reasonable interpretation thereof must be deemed to require its inclusion. We shall assume that he was not, and that this defect constituted error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 C.M.A. 267, 3 USCMA 267, 12 C.M.R. 23, 1953 CMA LEXIS 683, 1953 WL 2174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-tobita-cma-1953.