United States v. Yarborough

1 C.M.A. 678, 1 USCMA 678
CourtUnited States Court of Military Appeals
DecidedSeptember 12, 1952
DocketNo. 443
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 1 C.M.A. 678 (United States v. Yarborough) 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. Yarborough, 1 C.M.A. 678, 1 USCMA 678 (cma 1952).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court

ROBERT E. Quinn, Chief Judge:

Petitioners Marshall and Yarborough were each convicted, at common trial by general court-martial in Korea, of conspiracy to malinger; malingering; and misbehavior before the enemy. Each was sentenced to a dishonorable discharge, total forfeitures, and confinement for ten years. Army reviewing authorities have upheld the findings and sentence, including the board of review which affirmed without opinion. We granted petition for review limited to the issues of whether there is sufficient evidence to support the findings and whether there is a multiplicity of charges based on offenses arising out of the same transaction.

In order to assess the sufficiency of the evidence, it will be necessary to set out the evidence in some detail.

Private John W. Yarborough, Private First Class Herman Marshall, Corporal Porter W. Phelps, Jr., Private First Class Roseoe B. Shriver, Corporal Edward F. Duckett, and Private First [681]*681Class William F. Chapius were, on July 9, 1951, all members of Company H, 5th Infantry Regiment. On that date accused Yarborough sustained a wound described as “wound in a stoe of his right foot,” and accused Marshall was wounded in the index finger of his right hand.

Corporal Phelps, who had been with a section attached to Fox Company on the front line, returned on July 9, 1951, to the command post area, leaving his weapon in the tent shared by accused Yarborough and Marshall, and assembled with Yarborough, Marshall, Campbell, Shriver, Duckett, and Chapius at a spring near the company command post. The men drank beer, after which all but Yarborough left to eat. Later the same evening, at about 7:00 p.m., Marshall, Yarborough and Phelps were in the tent of the accused. Yarborough had placed Phelps’ weapon out of the way. Marshall picked up the weapon and pointed it toward his foot, asking Phelps and Yarborough if they dared him to shoot. Marshall then put the weapon down, and Chapius entered with some beer. During the time he was with the accused, Phelps heard each of them say that they were leaving but they did not state when they were going. Phelps recalled Yar-borough stating that he might go to Seoul and Marshall replying, “If you do, I will go with you.” Neither of the accused mentioned how they were going to Seoul. Phelps did not know whose weapon it was that had-been fired, but stated that it might have been his. His weapon had been fired and was inside the tent after the shooting.

Private First Class Roscoe B. Shriver testified that on July 9, 1951, at about 7:30 p.m., he, Phelps, Chapius, Marshall, and Yarborough were in Shriver’s tent. Prior to that time they had been drinking beer at the spring. At noon of the same day Shriver heard Marshall and Yarborough say that they were leaving. While they were in the tent, Shriver saw the accused pick up a rifle in a joking manner and point it at their overlapped feet, talking of shooting each other with one round. Shriver departed to talk with a jeep driver and to await the commencement of a movie. At about 8:30 he heard a shot and ran over to the place from which it came. He noticed a wound on the hand of Marshall and one on the foot of Yarborough.

Corporal Duckett, a member of the group at the spring, overheard a conversation between Marshall and Yarbor-ough in which each stated that he intended to go to Japan that night and in which each declared that he did not care how he went. Duckett observed Marshall obtain a gun which had been lying behind Yarborough and which belonged to Chapius. Marshall pointed the gun at Yarborough’s foot and threatened to shoot. Yarborough told him to “go ahead,” that he didn’t “give a damn.” Duckett remonstrated that they had better not, as all accidents were being investigated, to which the accused replied that it didn’t make any difference to them.

Private First Class Chapius, who had been a member of the group at the spring, did not see Marshall do anything with a carbine with relation to Yarbor-ough at that time. During the course of his association with the two accused, Chapius heard each say that they were going to Japan that night and did not care how they went. He also heard them discuss how to shoot themselves and get away with it, though from the tenor of. the conversation he didn’t believe that they meant it. He added that it was usual for soldiers to discuss in a joking manner about wounds and returning to Japan.

At about 8:20 or 8:30 p.m., Chapius. Marshall, and Yarborough were alone together in a tent. Yarborough was lying back on his elbows and Marshall was lying on his right side. Chapius observed Marshall place his finger on Yarborough’s foot and put the muzzle of the rifle against his finger. Chapius then looked away for a period of about a minute and, during that time, heard the rifle fire. Yarborough jumped up and yelled, “I’m hit.” Chapius saw a wound on Yarborough’s foot and blood on Marshall’s hand. Chapius enacted the positions of the accused to illustrate that Marshall was sitting at a point parallel to the hips of Yarborough, facing Yarborough’s foot. Marshall placed his right hand over the right foot of [682]*682Yarborough, the palm outward, facing Marshall. The muzzle of the carbine was one inch from the finger of the other hand of Marshall; the stock of the carbine was between his legs. Marshall had his left hand by the stock of the carbine. Chapius did not see Marshall pull the trigger of the gun. Chapius did not know to whom the carbine belonged though he did know that the gun was not supposed to be loaded. He did not observe Marshall examine the rifle to see if it were loaded, and was surprised when the gun fired. Immediately after the gun went off each of the accused appeared to be surprised. Yar-borough looked at his foot as if he did not believe it. Chapius also stated that Yarborough was talking to him at the time that Marshall placed his finger on Yarborough’s foot and there was nothing in Yarborough’s actions to indicate that he expected to be shot. Chapius believed that Yarborough knew the gun was pointed at his foot, but that Yar-borough thought the gun was unloaded. There was a directive that all guns were to be unloaded around the company area, and the directive was enforced.

Chapius stated that he had served with Yarborough on the line in combat from November 1950 to April 1951, as second gunner. In his opinion, Yarbor-ough was a good soldier and a good fighter, and had been awarded a bronze star for valor.

Accused Marshall testified in his own behalf. He had been in the company command post area during the day, and had been with the others at the spring. About an hour previous to the accident he had delivered mail to George Company. He returned to the spring, talked a while, and then went to the tent, which he and Yarborough shared, in the company of Yarborough and Chapius. There they kidded as they usually did, Marshall “messing” with a carbine. He laid the carbine down and Chapius and Yarborough entered the tent and lay down. Marshall went out to see if the “movie” had started.

When Marshall re-entered the tent Yarborough was lying flat on his back, with the soles of his shoes facing the direction of Marshall’s entry. Marshall was on his knees crawling towards Yar-borough’s face. Marshall entered the tent at the left side of the opening. Yar-borough was in the middle of the tent, and Chapius was on the right side. Two carbines were in the tent lying between Yarborough and Marshall. The muzzles . of the carbines were pointing out of the tent; the butts were to the rear of the tent.

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1 C.M.A. 678, 1 USCMA 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-yarborough-cma-1952.