United States v. Youngblood

30 M.J. 844, 1990 WL 48791
CourtU.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review
DecidedMarch 16, 1990
DocketNMCM 89 2310
StatusPublished

This text of 30 M.J. 844 (United States v. Youngblood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Youngblood, 30 M.J. 844, 1990 WL 48791 (usnmcmilrev 1990).

Opinion

FREYER, Judge:

Notwithstanding his pleas, this appellant stands convicted by a special court-martial composed of members, including enlisted members, of assault consummated by a battery upon a teen-age girl by choking her around the throat (as a lesser-included offense of assault with a means likely to produce death or grievous bodily harm), “simple assault” with a dangerous weapon [sic] on another teen-age girl (as a purported lesser-included offense of assault with a dangerous weapon), and communicating a threat. The court-martial returned the maximum sentence, which the convening authority approved. We specified an issue regarding the finding of “simple assault” with a dangerous weapon.

[845]*845The record indicates that a small group of teen-age girls from the area adjacent to Camp Pendleton had formed a special relationship with certain members of the Military Police Battalion there. The full extent of this relationship is not developed in the record, but apparently it included flirtatious and immature teasing behavior on both sides, isolated acts of “machismo” on the part of a few Marines, and intrusions by the young girls into duty areas and settings where they obviously did not belong. One such intrusion led to a charge of aggravated assault against this appellant.

Specification 2 of Additional Charge I, to which the specified issue relates, is as follows:

In that Sergeant Mark W. Youngblood, U.S. Marine Corps, Headquarters and Service Company, Military Police Battalion, Marine Corps Base, Camp Pendleton, California, did, at Camp Pendleton, California, on or about 1 September 1988, commit an assault upon Michelle Cieslinski by pointing and placing against her head a dangerous weapon, to wit: a loaded .45 caliber pistol.

The military judge instructed on the charged offense as an offer-type aggravated assault with a dangerous weapon, the lesser-included offense of assault consummated by a battery by placing the gun against the victim’s head but not as a dangerous weapon, and the lesser-included offense of “simple assault,” i.e., an offer-type assault but without a dangerous weapon. (It appears that the allegation of “pointing and placing against her head” created an unusual instructional problem leading to the inconsistency of instructing on the principal and second lesser-included offenses as offer-type assaults with an assault consummated by a battery interposed between them.) Thus instructed, the members reached the following finding:

Guilty, except the words “pointing and placing against her head.” Guilty of the lesser included offense, simple assault.

The literal effect of the members’ finding was, therefore, to find that the appellant did, at the time and place alleged,

commit an assault upon Michelle Cieslinski by a dangerous weapon, to wit: a loaded .45 caliber pistol.

In an Article 39(a) session after announcement of the findings, the following colloquy took place:

DC: And with respect to Specification 2, excepting what words, sir?
MJ: “Pointing and placing against her head.” So, of the excepted words, not guilty; of the substituted words [?], guilty. Of the Charge, as excepted and substituted [sic], guilty, of a lesser included offense of simple assault by pointing the weapon.
DC: So, I take it, sir, they took out all of the—
MJ: They took out the placing with the weapon.
DC: —the dangerous weapon, as well, sir.
MJ: Yes.
DC: This is merely a simple assault?
MJ: This is a simple assault, yes. And that’s what they intended. They have “guilty of the lesser included offense of simple assault.”
DC: Aye, aye, sir.

(Emphasis supplied.)

Considering both the literal effect of the members' finding and reasonable possibilities regarding their actual intent in light of the evidence presented, we responded to this state of the record by specifying the following issue:

CAN THE ANNOUNCED FINDING AS TO SPECIFICATION 2 OF ADDITIONAL CHARGE I, WHICH EXPRESSLY EXCEPTS THE WORDS “POINTING AND PLACING AGAINST HER HEAD” BUT INCLUDES THE WORDS “BY ... A DANGEROUS WEAPON, TO WIT: A LOADED, .45 CALIBER PISTOL”, BE SUSTAINED AS A FINDING OF GUILTY OF SIMPLE ASSAULT?

Having carefully reviewed the evidence and considered the briefs of the parties and relevant authorities, we deem the issue presented to be one of some subtlety, and we regard the interpretation of the relevant finding by the military judge to be [846]*846only one, but by no means the most likely, of several possible findings intended by the members.

We begin with the principles clearly and concisely set forth in United States v. Darden, 1 M.J. 574 (A.C.M.R.1975). As the cases demonstrate, problems in this area generally arise when the members make findings by exceptions and substitutions, and appellate courts in such cases have disregarded technicalities, even to the point of treating a finding of not guilty by exceptions as a finding of guilty of the very same matters, United States v. Williams, 21 M.J. 330 (C.M.A.1986). Before this can be done, however, the intent of the members to find the accused guilty of those matters must be discoverable to a reasonable degree of certainty. In some situations, their intent may be deduced by reconstructing the mental processes whereby the members were presumably led to deviate from the correct announcement format; and an instruction, the findings worksheet, or just the complexity of the format may be identified as responsible for the irregularity. Williams; United States v. Cameron, 34 C.M.R. 913 (A.F.B.R.1964). In others, resort is had to the evidence, and, in effect, the members are presumed to have found the accused guilty of those factual matters of which the evidence shows the accused to be guilty, provided, however, that those matters are pertinent to a legally sustainable finding of guilty and the members have manifested in some fashion an intent to find the accused guilty. United States v. Chism, 31 C.M.R. 421 (N.B.R.1961). It helps, of course, if the accused has admitted, or at least not disputed, those matters. Williams. The difficulty is not with the principles themselves, but with their application to particular cases, and so we turn to the specific facts of the case at hand.

In the early morning hours, the appellant was on duty at the relatively isolated San Luis Rey gate when Michelle Cieslinski and a young female friend of hers and the appellant’s showed up, entered the gate house, and began to pester the appellant. The following excerpts from the direct and cross-examination of Michelle Cieslinski set the stage for our application of the above legal principles:

Q. [by the trial counsel]: Okay. Now, when you were, or discussing — or with Sergeant Youngblood, did he have occasion to pull his weapon?
A. Yes.
Q. When did that occur?
A. Maybe 10 — no, 15, 20 minutes after we got there.
Q. And you got there when?
A. A little after 12:00 maybe.

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Related

United States v. Hines
7 C.M.A. 75 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1956)
United States v. Darden
1 M.J. 574 (U.S. Army Court of Military Review, 1975)
United States v. Williams
21 M.J. 330 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1986)
United States v. Sales
22 M.J. 305 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1986)
United States v. Peoples
29 M.J. 426 (United States Court of Military Appeals, 1990)

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Bluebook (online)
30 M.J. 844, 1990 WL 48791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-youngblood-usnmcmilrev-1990.