United States v. Turner

18 C.M.A. 55, 18 USCMA 55, 39 C.M.R. 55, 1968 CMA LEXIS 182, 1968 WL 5059
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedDecember 13, 1968
DocketNo. 21,106
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 18 C.M.A. 55 (United States v. Turner) 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. Turner, 18 C.M.A. 55, 18 USCMA 55, 39 C.M.R. 55, 1968 CMA LEXIS 182, 1968 WL 5059 (cma 1968).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

FERGUSON, Judge:

Upon his plea of guilty, the accused was convicted of five specifications involving the possession, use, transfer, and sale of a dangerous drug, a hypnotic sedative (Seconal capsules), and one specification of violation of a lawful general regulation, for possession of these same capsules under Uniform Code of Military Justice, Articles 134 and 92, 10 USC §§934 and 892, respectively. He was sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, confinement at hard labor for five years, and reduction. The convening authority affirmed the conviction but reduced the sentence to a bad-conduct discharge, forfeiture of $85.00 per month for two years, and confinement at hard labor for a similar period, and the reduction. The board of review affirmed the findings and sentence.

Following affirmance by the board of review, the Judge Advocate General of the Navy certified the case to this Court on the following issue:

“Whether the Board of Review was correct in its determination that the maximum punishment for each offense alleged under Charge I included confinement at hard labor for five years and that therefore the pleas of guilty of the accused were providently made?”

In addition, we granted review on two issues, the first of which also deals with the providence of the plea in view of an apparent misunderstanding as to the forfeitures to be approved, as noted in the pretrial agreement, and the second with the sufficiency of the law officer’s instructions on sentence.

In both the certified issue and the first issue granted by this Court, we are initially concerned with the contents of the pretrial agreement. Therein, in return for the accused’s plea of guilty to the charged offenses, the convening authority agreed to approve no sentence greater than: a dishonorable discharge; confinement at hard labor for thirty-six months; forfeitures such that the accused would be able to provide the $40.00 contribution required per month from the accused’s pay to insure the accúsed’s wife received basic allowances for quarters’ allotment; and reduction to [57]*57Private E-1 (unsuspended). This agreement, Appellate Exhibit 0, was signed by the accused and the convening authority on August 11, 1967. The date of signing is important to the first granted issue, as will be shown below.

Subsequent to accused’s entry of a plea of guilty and during the law officer’s inquiry into the providence of the plea, it was agreed by all parties concerned that in view of the multiplicity of certain of the charges and specifications the maximum imposable sentence to confinement at hard labor was thirteen years. This was also, apparently, the understanding of the accused, his counsel, and the convening authority at the time the pretrial agreement was executed. Accordingly, the law officer so instructed the court and the accused was sentenced to five years confinement and other penalties.

In his post-trial review of the case, the staff legal officer, however, noted his disagreement with this view. He opined that the offenses charged under Article 134, involving as they did the use, possession, etc., of Seconal, which is not “a habit forming narcotic drug” or “marihuana” (Manual for Courts-Martial, United States, 1951, paragraph 213a), should be considered as only simple disorders and punishable as such by imprisonment for four months as contrasted with the five-year confinement provided for in narcotic drug offenses (Manual, supra, paragraph 127e).

The board of review agreed that Seconal is not a narcotic but rather found it to be a chemical derivative of barbituric acid and, as such, a habit-forming drug. The board then proceeded to quote at length from publications of the United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, the Bureau of Drug Abuse Control, and others, pointing up the dangers in the use and abuse of barbiturates. For the reasons set forth therein, the board reached “easy concurrence with government counsel that offenses of possession, use, sale, gift of the depressant drug, Seconal, are closely related to offenses involving narcotics and marihuana, and are punishable as such with the maximum of five years’ confinement at hard labor. Arriving at this conclusion, we differ with the Staff Legal Officer and with appellate defense counsel, and hold that the accused was not misled into an improvident plea of guilty.”

We find ourselves in basic disagreement with the final views of all concerned because of an apparent failure on their part to appreciate the significance of a punishment provision of the Manual for Courts-Martial and two particular acts of Congress — the passage of the “Dangerous Drug Act for the District of Columbia,” Public Law 764, 70 Stat 612, 84th Congress, 2d Session, July 24, 1956, and the “Drug Abuse Control Amendments of 1965,” Public Law 89-74, 79 Stat 226, 89th Congress, 1st Session, July 15, 1965. While the former created a wholly new chapter 7 to Title 33, Food and Drugs, District of Columbia Code, the latter amended several sections of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (21 USC § 321, et seq.) In each, however, there was created a new offense involving the misuse and abuse of certain dangerous drugs.

In order to place this issue in proper perspective, a brief resumé of the military offense of the possession, sale, use, etc., of habit-forming narcotic drugs is deemed necessary. Since there is no such offense specified within the punitive articles of the Uniform Code, the Charge and specification is laid under Article 134, the general article. Paragraph 213a, Manual, supra, entitled, Disorders and Neglects to the Prejudice of Good Order and Discipline in the Armed Forces, provides, in pertinent part, at page 382, “It is a violation of this article wrongfully to possess marihuana or a habit forming narcotic drug. Possession of marihuana or of a habit forming narcotic drug is presumed to be wrongful unless the contrary appears.” The Legal and Legislative Basis for the Manual states, at page 294, that, “The presumption arising from possession [58]*58of marihuana or a habit forming narcotic drug finds precedent in 21 USC 174. . . . The presumption in paragraph 213a is limited to ‘habit forming’ narcotic drugs. This is for the same reason that marihuana has been included within the presumption — because of its inherent characteristics.” The sample specifications for this offense found in Appendix 6c, page 490 of the Manual, supra, both refer to the possession or use of habit-forming narcotic drugs or marihuana.

The Table of Maximum Punishments under Article 134, lists a specific punishment to confinement of five years for drug offenses as follows: “Drugs, habit forming, or marihuana, wrongful possession or use.” Determining that Seconal is recognized as a habit-forming drug, the board of review below, and the Government counsel here, concluded that it came within this punishment provision and thus subjected the accused to a five-year penalty. The Table of Maximum Punishments reference, however, is not the whole of the matter. The Manual, supra, expressly provides that the description of offenses in the Table is merely a convenient means of identifying the offense and in “case of discrepancy between a heading or description of an offense in the table and any other part of this manual, such other part shall be controlling.” (Emphasis supplied.) Manual, supra, paragraph 127c, page 217-218.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 C.M.A. 55, 18 USCMA 55, 39 C.M.R. 55, 1968 CMA LEXIS 182, 1968 WL 5059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-turner-cma-1968.