United States v. Yanuski

16 C.M.A. 170, 16 USCMA 170, 36 C.M.R. 326, 1966 CMA LEXIS 284, 1966 WL 4471
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedMarch 25, 1966
DocketNo. 19,066
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 16 C.M.A. 170 (United States v. Yanuski) 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. Yanuski, 16 C.M.A. 170, 16 USCMA 170, 36 C.M.R. 326, 1966 CMA LEXIS 284, 1966 WL 4471 (cma 1966).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court

Kilday, Judge:

Appellant was arraigned before a general court-martial convened at Malmstrom Air Force Base, Montana, charged with taking indecent liberties with a female under the age of sixteen, in violation of Article 134, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 934, and attempted carnal knowledge of the same individual, in violation of Article 80, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 880. He pleaded not guilty to both charges. He was found not guilty of the indecent liberties charge but guilty of attempted carnal knowledge. He was sentenced to a bad-conduct discharge, confinement at hard labor for one year, and reduction to the grade of airman basic. The convening authority approved the sentence. A board of review in the office of The Judge Advocate General of the Air Force affirmed the findings of guilty and the sentence. By direction of the Secretary of the Air Force, appellant was transferred to a retraining group.

This Court granted review to consider two issues which will be hereafter stated.

At the time of trial, appellant was a staff sergeant. He is fifty-one years of age, and has over nineteen years of service, including combat duty in World War II and service in Korea during that conflict. He has no prior record of civilian or court-martial convictions, no punishment under Article 15, Uniform Code of Military Justice, 10 USC § 815, and he was rated as “An Excellent Airman.” Appellant is a watchmaker by profession and his duties in the Air Force have been in that connection and in instrument maintenance. The nature of his specialty and consequent duties may have militated against him to some extent, as the staff judge advocate saw fit to include in his post-trial review the statement, “Sgt. Yanuski strikes one by his appearance and attitudes as more of a watch maker than a non-commissioned officer in the Air Force.” The fact that appellant’s wife, during the pendency of these charges and for reasons foreign to them, instituted suit for divorce found its way into the record of trial; and the staff judge advocate saw fit to include in the post-trial review the statement, referring to appellant, “He had no record of [172]*172former disciplinary action prior to the events which led to this trial, and he disclaimed any civilian convictions. He has, however, experienced increasingly turbulent domestic difficulties.” These domestic difficulties and the irritation they had been to appellant’s commander were before the convening authority, in the clemency report of his squadron commander who stated, “SSgt Yanuski’s attitude and behavior during his service in CAMS has not always been up to Air Force standards. He has had frequent marital difficulties often involuing [sic] the undersigned. The CAMS First Sergeant and Air Police. His marital difficulties are further complicated by a drinking habit. In his home life as in his duty performance he displays a marked lack of self-control particularly with minor children.” Much of this seems contrary to appellant’s rating as “excellent airman.”

The prosecution presented but two witnesses, the child who detailed the alleged misconduct and an Office of Special Investigations agent who testified that, in three interviews, appellant steadfastly denied the allegations.

Charges in this case were preferred more than eighty days after the alleged offense. The delay is unexplained. The Article 32 hearing was begun five months after charges were preferred. This delay is properly accounted for, primarily because of a requested psychiatric examination of appellant and two serious surgical operations performed upon him. The trial began more than nine months after the date of the alleged offense.

At the trial the child witness testified she was then nine and one-half years old. As to the offense, she testified that, in early July 1964, she went to the home of appellant to play with his daughter. The appellant agreed to play hide-and-seek with the girls. Appellant is alleged to have told them he would be “it” and that one of the girls was to hide upstairs and the other downstairs. She testified that they hid only one time. According to the child, she went downstairs and hid in the bathroom. She was followed by appellant who proceeded to seat her up on a clothes dryer, remove her pants, and try to place his penis in her. She testified he quit because it hurt her and his penis wouldn’t fit. She made no resistance because she was scared. Then she said appellant took her into another room and, in her presence, engaged in an act of masturbation. Appellant’s daughter then came downstairs and the child witness told her she had to go home. She left but did not tell her mother about the alleged incident until four or five days later because she was afraid her father would get mad. The day following the incident, however, she went with appellant and his daughter to a picnic.

The only other prosecution witness was the Office of Special Investigations agent who testified that he interviewed the appellant on three occasions at which times the appellant denied the allegation but stated that “while his wife was away ... he played hide and seek in his quarters with his daughter” and the child witness on about the dates claimed by such witness.

Appellant’s wife appeared as a witness in his behalf. She testified that the alleged victim’s mother had telephoned her concerning the alleged offense, and she immediately went to the home of the child to discuss the matter, at which time the parents discussed sending the child to a civilian doctor for an examination. An appointment with the doctor was made, but the child refused to go to him. Thereafter, the child’s father came to the home of the appellant and announced he was taking the child to the Air Force base. An examination of the child by the service physician proved to be negative. Appellant’s wife also testified that the alleged victim had frequently played with her daughter at her home and had spent several nights there, the last being on the date of the offense. She also testified that on the day before the alleged offense she had told the alleged victim she could not again eat at her home because upon returning home from work she had found her house “in a mess.” .The day after telling the [173]*173child this, the child sent a note to the witness reading, substantially, “ ‘I know you don’t like me so I am not coming to your house any more.’ ” Notwithstanding, the child spent that night at the witness’ home and on the following day appellant, in the company of the two children, drove the witness to work and then appellant took the two children to a picnic at the base. On this occasion the alleged victim did not “evidence any emotion . . . toward” appellant. Appellant’s wife testified that she had commenced action for divorce against appellant, for reasons not connected with the alleged offense, but she then hoped the marriage would continue.

The . appellant’s sixteen-year-old stepson appeared as a witness in appellant’s behalf, and testified that the alleged victim had made a statement to him at about Christmas time, prior to the trial — hence about six months after the alleged offense — that “the only reason she was doing this [was] because my mom wouldn’t let her eat at our house any more,” referring to the accusation of the child against the appellant. Trial counsel was then permitted, over defense objection, to adduce in open court an admission by the stepson that he had been “convicted” by a juvenile court in Minnesota and given a year’s probation for breaking and entering.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 C.M.A. 170, 16 USCMA 170, 36 C.M.R. 326, 1966 CMA LEXIS 284, 1966 WL 4471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-yanuski-cma-1966.