United States v. West

23 C.M.A. 77
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMay 10, 1974
DocketNo. 27, 230
StatusPublished

This text of 23 C.M.A. 77 (United States v. West) 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. West, 23 C.M.A. 77 (cma 1974).

Opinions

OPINION

Duncan, Chief Judge:

After having been found guilty of three robbery offenses, in violation of Article 122, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 922, and the disobedience of a lawful order, in violation of Article 91, UCMJ, 10 USC § 891, on May 6, 1972, Airman Basic Edward M. West was sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge, total forfeitures, and confinement at hard labor for 7 years. The convening authority disapproved the disobedience offense, but approved the robbery convictions and only so much of the sentence as provided for the bad-conduct discharge, total forfeitures, and confinement at hard labor for 6 years and 6 months. We affirm.

On May 12, 1972, appellant filed a request for "proceedings in revision, reconsideration or other appropriate relief.” The request was based on a post-trial affidavit submitted by Staff Sergeant Bruce R. Dortin, a court member, and a tally sheet1 apparently used by the court members in their deliberations. The request was denied. Based on the post-trial affidavit and tally sheet, West complains that the military judge’s instructions were not followed by the court members in two ways. First, the sentence was voted in parts instead of as a whole, with the sentence to a punitive discharge voted upon before the sentence to confinement. Second, after a failure to agree on a term of confinement from among the written proposals of the members, a term of confinement was proposed orally and subsequently adopted by secret written ballot. The alleged impropriety, appellant contends, resulted in a denial of military due process and prejudice to him.

The military judge instructed:

[78]*78When the court has completed its discussion, any member who desires to propose a sentence will write his proposal on a slip of paper. The junior member will collect the proposed sentences and submit them to the president. The court will then vote by secret written ballot on the proposed sentences, beginning with the lightest, until a sentence is adopted by the concurrence of the required number of members. The junior member shall in each case collect and count the votes; the count shall be checked by the president, who shall forthwith announce the result of the ballot to the members of the court.

The affidavit states, as follows:

It was decided to consider the sentence of Airman Basic Edward M. West in 3 separate portions — discharge, amount of confinement, forfeitures. After discharge was voted on, the members by secret ballot proposed amounts of confinement. The amounts proposed were 6 months, 1 year, 3 years, 5 years, 10 years and 15 years. The seven year sentence arrived at was never proposed by a secret written ballot and was orally suggested by an unremembered member of the panel.

A threshhold question is whether the matters raised in the juror’s affidavit should be considered as competent evidence to impeach the jury’s determination.. The Court has been faced with this question only on four previous occasions. In the first case, United States v Bourchier, 5 USCMA 15, 17 CMR 15 (1954), we dealt with the affidavits of third parties, not the jurors themselves, on the subject of unlawful command influence upon the military jury. One affiant related the purported statement of a juror —later denied by affidavit of the juror himself — to the effect that the court members were told just how to vote in the case. 5 USCMA at 27, 17 CMR at 27. Another affidavit which related purported conversations between the trial counsel and a third party on the subject of the commander’s desire for a conviction in the case were denied in affidavits of the trial counsel and the third party. The claim of error was resolved as follows, Judge Brosman writing:

It is perfectly clear that the motion and supplemental affidavits represent an impermissible attempt to impeach the findings of the court-martial. The fundamental rule that the testimony of jurors will not be received to impeach their verdict, with respect to matters which essentially inhere therein, is too well settled to require citation of authority. We are not unmindful of the fact that an exception to this principle permits the reception of such testimony when it relates to extraneous influences to which the jurors have been exposed. . . . However, this exception offers little solace to the defense. The affidavits tending to impeach the findings here did not come from a member of the court-martial; they are merely those of third parties professing to report the statements of a member made without the sanction of an oath. It is equally well settled that affidavits of this nature are inadmissible, and that the declarations of jurors, not under oath, made subsequent to the trial, in the presence of third parties, are not competent to impeach the verdict.

United States v Bourchier, supra at 27, 17 CMR at 27 (citations omitted).

Three cases decided by this Court have involved post-trial actions by courts-martial members seeking clemency for the accused. In United States v Walker, 7 USCMA 669, 23 CMR 133 (1957), a letter of clemency from the court members in the record of trial was considered, not for the purpose of impeaching their verdict of premeditated murder, but for its relevance in demonstrating "the impact of incomplete instructions” with respect to evaluating "the factors which add to or detract from the capacity to premeditate.” Id. at 676, 23 CMR at 140. The Court found in the letter "proof positive that had an instruction been given as to the effect that any heat of passion actually present in the mind of the accused might have had upon his capacity to premeditate, a different finding probably would have resulted.” Id. at 677, 23 CMR at 141. Needless to say, the letter of clemency’s use in this manner went to the very merits of the case. In United States v Tucker, 14 USCMA 376, 34 [79]*79CMR 156 (1964), and in United States v Huber, 12 USCMA 208, 30 CMR 208 (1961), we rejected the view that a post-trial recommendation for clemency by the court-martial members who imposed the original sentence can be used as "the basis for concluding that the court-martial’s sentence was inconsistent in law.” United States v Huber, supra at 210, 30 CMR at 210. In so holding we relied upon the "settled law that Federal civil jurors may not impeach their verdicts by post-trial declarations.” Id. We adhered to this rule even where the clemency petition was inconsistent with the sentence by virtue of its recommendation of a "drastic reduction” in the term of confinement, and suspension or disapproval of a bad-conduct discharge and restoration to duty. United States v Tucker, supra at 382-83, 34 CMR at 162-63. Huber and Tucker, of course, did not outlaw the right of court members to recommend clemency after trial, since such a procedure is obviously not without value to the convening authority’s review of a case,2 but the two cases did clearly hold that the clemency action would not be allowed to do incompatible double duty by also serving as a vehicle to impeach an otherwise appropriate sentence.

Thus, our own case law is helpful, but does not fully resolve the real issue in this case, i.e., whether a court-martial member’s affidavit may serve to support an attack on the sentence by disclosing that the military jury, contrary to instructions, used allegedly erroneous procedures during their deliberations.

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United States v. Reid
53 U.S. 361 (Supreme Court, 1852)
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146 U.S. 140 (Supreme Court, 1892)
McDonald v. Pless
238 U.S. 264 (Supreme Court, 1915)
Stein v. New York
346 U.S. 156 (Supreme Court, 1953)
Jackson v. Denno
378 U.S. 368 (Supreme Court, 1964)
Hyde v. United States
225 U.S. 347 (Supreme Court, 1912)
United States v. Bourchier
5 C.M.A. 15 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1954)
United States v. Walker
7 C.M.A. 669 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1957)
United States v. Huber
12 C.M.A. 208 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1961)
United States v. Tucker
14 C.M.A. 376 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1964)

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23 C.M.A. 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-west-cma-1974.