United States v. Treat , 73 M.J. 331 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •                        UNITED STATES, Appellee
    v.
    Michael L. TREAT, Sergeant
    U.S. Army, Appellant
    No. 14-0280
    Crim. App. No. 20110402
    United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces
    Argued May 13, 2014
    Decided July 16, 2014
    OHLSON, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
    ERDMANN, J., joined. BAKER, C.J., filed a separate opinion
    concurring in the result. STUCKY and RYAN, JJ., each filed
    separate dissenting opinions.
    Counsel
    For Appellant: Major Jacob D. Bashore (argued); Colonel Kevin
    Boyle and Lieutenant Colonel Peter Kageleiry Jr. (on brief);
    Captain Aaron Inkenbrandt.
    For Appellee: Captain Daniel H. Karna (argued); Colonel John P.
    Carrell, Lieutenant Colonel James L. Varley, and Major Robert A.
    Rodrigues (on brief).
    Military Judges:    Jeffery R. Nance and Wendy Daknis
    This opinion is subject to revision before final publication.
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    Judge Ohlson delivered the opinion of the Court.
    We granted review in this case to determine whether the
    military judge created a fatal variance and violated Appellant’s
    due process rights when she made exceptions and substitutions to
    a charge and specification and found Appellant guilty of the
    revised charge and specification contrary to his plea.   We hold
    that the changes made to the charge and specification
    constituted a material variance but did not prejudice Appellant.
    We therefore affirm Appellant’s conviction.
    During the relevant time period, Appellant was a Sergeant
    (E-5) assigned to the 54th Engineering Battalion in Bamberg,
    Germany.   In September 2010, Appellant received orders notifying
    him that he was being deployed with his unit to Afghanistan in
    mid-November.   However, when the unit deployment occurred,
    Appellant was not present.   He later reported he had been
    kidnapped by Russian-speaking men during the time of the
    deployment, preventing him from being present.   Appellant was
    subsequently charged with desertion, missing movement, willfully
    disobeying a superior commissioned officer, and making a false
    official statement in violation of Articles 85, 87, 90, and 107,
    Uniform Code of Military Justice (UCMJ), 
    10 U.S.C. §§ 885
    , 887,
    890, 907 (2006).   Appellant pleaded not guilty to the charges
    and elected a judge-alone trial.
    2
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    The missing movement charge, in violation of Article 87,
    UCMJ, initially stated as follows:
    In that Sergeant Michael L. Treat, U.S. Army, did, at
    or near Bamberg, Germany, on or about 17 November
    2010, through design, miss the movement of Flight
    TA4B702 with which he was required in the course of
    duty to move.
    However, at trial the Government’s witnesses could not recall
    the flight number of the aircraft on which Appellant’s unit
    deployed.   After hearing all the evidence, the military judge
    convicted Appellant of the missing movement charge, but only
    after excepting the words “Flight TA4B702,” and substituting
    therefor the words “the flight dedicated to transport Main Body
    1 of 54th Engineer Battalion from Ramstein Air Base, Germany, to
    Manas Air Base, Kyrgyzstan.”
    The military judge also convicted Appellant of making a
    false official statement in violation of Article 107, UCMJ,
    acquitted him of the remaining charges, and sentenced him to a
    bad-conduct discharge, confinement for three months, and
    reduction to the grade of E-1.   The convening authority approved
    the findings and sentence as adjudged.   Upon review the United
    States Army Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed, finding that the
    exceptions and substitutions were neither material nor
    prejudicial.   United States v. Treat, 
    72 M.J. 845
    , 849 (A. Ct.
    Crim. App. 2013).   On Appellant’s petition we granted review of
    the following issue:
    3
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    WHETHER THERE IS A FATAL VARIANCE AND A VIOLATION OF
    APPELLANT’S DUE PROCESS RIGHT TO NOTICE WHEN THE
    GOVERNMENT ALLEGED THAT APPELLANT MISSED THE MOVEMENT
    OF A PARTICULAR AIRCRAFT BUT THE PROOF ESTABLISHED
    THAT HE MISSED THE MOVEMENT OF A PARTICULAR UNIT.
    United States v. Treat, 
    73 M.J. 241
    -42 (C.A.A.F. 2014) (order
    granting review).    We affirm Appellant’s conviction for the
    reasons stated below.
    BACKGROUND
    Appellant was a combat engineer assigned to the 54th
    Engineer Battalion, 370th Sapper Company, which was stationed in
    Bamberg, Germany.    In September 2010, Appellant was ordered to
    deploy to Afghanistan with his unit on or about November 19,
    2010.    Appellant’s orders did not include instructions to move
    on a particular flight.
    Approximately six weeks before the scheduled departure,
    Appellant was informed that he would deploy with Main Body 1 of
    the 54th Engineer Battalion on or about November 17, 2010.      He
    was also informed that the unit’s actual departure could be
    moved forward or backward by forty-eight hours or more.
    Ultimately, on November 19, 2010, Appellant’s unit boarded an
    aircraft at Ramstein Air Base that was bound for Manas Air Base,
    Kyrgyzstan.    Appellant was required to be on that flight, but he
    was not present at company formation and did not get on the
    plane.
    4
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    When Appellant returned to post the next day, he was
    immediately stopped by the military police.   Appellant later
    told investigators that he had been abducted at a German bar by
    Russian-speaking men on November 15, 2010, held for five days in
    an unknown location and for unknown reasons, and then suddenly
    released on November 20, 2010, which was after his unit had
    deployed.   Appellant was subsequently charged with desertion,
    missing movement by design, willfully disobeying a superior
    commissioned officer, and making a false official statement.
    At the military judge-alone trial, the Government’s theory
    of the case was that several days prior to his unit’s departure,
    Appellant intentionally left post, holed up at a local inn, and
    waited until he was confident that his unit had left Germany.
    The Government asserted that Appellant’s purported kidnapping
    was an elaborate story that Appellant invented in order to avoid
    the deployment and to avoid being disciplined for his absence.
    In support of its case, the Government put First Sergeant
    Barker of the 370th Sapper Company on the stand.   Barker
    testified that he first became aware Appellant was missing on
    the morning of November 17, when Appellant did not show up for
    accountability formation.   Barker stated that Appellant remained
    missing and was not with the 370th on November 19.   Barker
    testified that just before the company boarded the bus from
    Bamberg to Ramstein Air Base, he used the flight manifest to
    5
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    call the roll.    Barker noted that the flight number was printed
    on the left-hand side of the manifest, which listed each solider
    assigned to the flight by rank, name, and Social Security
    number.   Barker explained that he could not remember the
    specific flight number, but after looking at the manifest shown
    to him by the trial counsel, he testified that the 370th,
    including Appellant, was assigned to fly on flight TA4B702.
    On cross-examination trial defense counsel questioned
    Barker’s recollection of the flight number.     Defense counsel
    asked Barker:    “[Y]ou don’t remember the flight number other
    than . . . looking at the document, right?”     Barker answered:
    “No, ma’am.”    On redirect, trial counsel tried to ask whether
    Barker had any reason to believe that the actual flight number
    was not the number printed on the manifest he had consulted, but
    the defense objected.    The military judge then asked Barker:
    “[D]o you have any way of knowing what the [flight] number was
    compared to what you just looked at [on the flight manifest]?”
    Barker responded:    “No, ma’am.”   The military judge sustained
    the defense’s objection and Barker was excused.
    Next, the Government called Appellant’s company commander,
    Captain Looney, to testify.    Trial counsel asked Looney whether
    he had traveled to Afghanistan on the same flight with his
    company, and Looney stated that he did.     Then there was the
    6
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    following exchange between trial counsel, Looney, and the
    military judge:
    [TC]:   Do you remember what the flight number of that
    plane was?
    [WIT]: I do not recall off the top of my head.
    [TC]:   Is there anything that might jog your memory?
    [WIT]: Like the manifest roster would be something that
    would have it.
    TC:     Ma’am, may I approach?
    MJ:     You may. Captain Looney, did you . . . at any
    point know the flight number without referring
    to a document?
    WIT:    No, Ma’am.
    MJ:     Okay. Then    it doesn’t appear as though
    approaching   this witness is going to help
    refresh his   memory because he doesn’t have any
    independent   knowledge of the flight number.
    Trial counsel continued to question Looney in an attempt to show
    that he knew the flight number at some point in the past but
    could no longer remember it without help.     The defense objected
    to trial counsel’s second attempt to refresh Looney’s
    recollection with a copy of the flight manifest.     The military
    judge sustained the objection, and trial counsel moved on to
    other topics.
    In addition to First Sergeant Barker and Captain Looney,
    the Government also put Appellant’s battalion commander and
    squad leader on the stand.     Neither of them testified about the
    7
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    specific flight number of the aircraft on which Main Body 1 of
    the 54th Engineer Battalion deployed.
    The Government also presented a soldier who testified that
    Appellant said that he did not deploy with his unit because he
    felt like his squad leader, his platoon sergeant, and First
    Sergeant Barker “were out to get him.”   The Government’s final
    witness was a soldier who testified that Appellant had told him
    that the alleged kidnapping by Russians “didn’t happen,” and
    that during the time of the deployment Appellant “just hid out
    for a few days.”   At the close of the Government’s case, defense
    counsel did not move pursuant to Rule for Courts-Martial
    (R.C.M.) 917 for a finding of not guilty.
    The defense’s theme throughout the trial was “the truth is
    stranger than fiction.”   On cross-examination of the
    Government’s witnesses, trial defense counsel elicited testimony
    that Appellant transferred into the 370th knowing that the
    company was about to deploy, that Appellant did not attempt to
    get out of the deployment during the pre-deployment training,
    that Appellant had previously deployed to Iraq, and that
    Appellant was packed and ready to leave for Afghanistan.
    During the defense case, trial defense counsel called three
    witnesses.   The first, Appellant’s former platoon sergeant,
    testified that Appellant knew he would be deploying when he
    transferred into the 54th Engineering Battalion.   The second
    8
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    witness, who also was a sergeant, testified to an incident in
    which he was grabbed outside a Bamberg bar, put into the back of
    a car, robbed, and left several miles away approximately five
    hours later.   The third witness, a detective with the Bamberg
    police department, testified that he investigated Appellant’s
    alleged kidnapping and found a piece of rope and footprints that
    were a possible match for Appellant’s shoes outside of an inn
    nearby that matched Appellant’s description of the location
    where he had been released.   Appellant did not testify.
    After brief deliberations the military judge announced her
    findings.   She found Appellant guilty of making a false official
    statement, and not guilty of the charges of desertion and
    willfully disobeying a superior commissioned officer.   In regard
    to the missing movement offense, Charge II and its Specification
    initially read:
    In that Sergeant Michael L. Treat, U.S. Army, did, at
    or near Bamberg, Germany, on or about 17 November
    2010, through design, miss the movement of Flight
    TA4B702 with which he was required in the course of
    duty to move.
    The military judge announced her findings on this charge
    and specification as follows:
    Guilty, except the words and figures, “Flight
    TA4B702,” substituting therefor, “the flight dedicated
    to . . . transport Main Body 1 of 54th Engineer
    Battalion from Ramstein Air Base, Germany, to Manas
    Air Base, Kyrgyzstan.” Of the excepted words and
    figures, Not Guilty. Of the substituted words and
    figures, Guilty.
    9
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    APPELLANT’S ARGUMENT ON APPEAL
    Appellant argues that “[t]he military judge’s findings
    caused a material variance because she convicted [him] of an
    offense not charged after he successfully defended himself on
    the charged offense.”    Brief for Appellant at 3, United States
    v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR (C.A.A.F. Mar. 25, 2014).     Appellant
    further argues that he “thus suffered prejudice because the
    military judge substantially changed the nature of the offense
    and denied him the right to prepare and defend against the
    specification as convicted.”    
    Id.
        Accordingly, Appellant
    concludes that the military judge’s findings by exceptions and
    substitutions constituted a fatal variance, and that this Court
    must therefore set aside and dismiss the missing movement charge
    and specification, set aside the sentence, and order a sentence
    rehearing.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    Whether there was a fatal variance is a question of law
    reviewed de novo.    United States v. Salazar, 
    44 M.J. 464
    , 471
    (C.A.A.F. 1996) (“Questions of law are reviewed de novo.”);
    United States v. Ivory, 
    9 C.M.A. 516
    , 522, 
    26 C.M.R. 296
    , 302
    (1958) (Quinn, C.J., concurring in the result) (“[W]hether there
    was a fatal variance . . . . was a legal question to be decided
    by the law officer.”); United States v. Useche, 
    70 M.J. 657
    , 661
    (N-M. Ct. Crim. App. 2012) (“Whether an amended specification
    10
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    materially deviates from a charged specification is a question
    of law we review de novo.”).
    When defense counsel fails to object at trial, we review a
    military judge’s findings by exceptions and substitutions for
    plain error.   United States v. Finch, 
    64 M.J. 118
    , 121 (C.A.A.F.
    2006).
    DISCUSSION
    Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.) 918(a)(i) explicitly
    authorizes a court-martial to make findings by exceptions and
    substitutions.   However, at times this authority lies in tension
    with an accused’s constitutional right “to receive fair notice
    of what he is being charged with.”   United States v. Girouard,
    
    70 M.J. 5
    , 10 (C.A.A.F. 2011); see also Schmuck v. United
    States, 
    489 U.S. 705
    , 717 (1989) (“It is ancient doctrine of
    both the common law and of our Constitution that a defendant
    cannot be held to answer a charge not contained in the
    indictment brought against him.”).
    In the instant case, Appellant acknowledges that the court-
    martial had the authority to make findings by exceptions and
    substitutions, but also avers that the resulting differences
    between the initial charge sheet and the military judge’s
    findings constituted a fatal variance because he was not
    provided fair notice of the crime he ultimately was convicted of
    11
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    committing. 1   However, it is well established that in order “to
    prevail on a fatal variance claim, an appellant must show both
    that the variance was material and that he was substantially
    prejudiced thereby.”    United States v. Marshall, 
    67 M.J. 418
    ,
    420 (C.A.A.F. 2009) (emphasis added).
    It is both clear and uncontested that a variance occurred
    in the instant case.    Therefore, the first question this Court
    must answer is whether the exceptions and substitutions made by
    the military judge constituted a “material” variance.    The test
    for whether a variance is material is whether it “substantially
    changes the nature of the offense, increases the seriousness of
    the offense, or increases the punishment of the offense.”
    Marshall, 67 M.J. at 420 (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted).   Appellant does not argue, and there is no basis to
    conclude, that the military judge’s exceptions and substitutions
    increased the seriousness of the offense or increased the
    punishment of the offense.    Rather, Appellant solely argues that
    the military judge’s exceptions and substitutions substantially
    changed the nature of the offense.
    1
    We do not find that, pursuant to the provisions of R.C.M.
    905(e), waiver applies here. First, during his closing argument
    on the merits, Appellant challenged the Government’s theory of
    the case regarding the flight number. Second, the Army Court of
    Criminal Appeals held that Appellant did not waive this issue at
    trial, and the Government did not appeal this adverse decision
    to this Court.
    12
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    It is a close question as to whether the military judge’s
    exceptions and substitutions did, indeed, substantially change
    the nature of the offense.    The offense charged continued to be
    a violation of Article 87, UCMJ, and Appellant knew from the
    outset of the court-martial proceedings that regardless of how
    the specific flight was characterized or described, the gravamen
    of the offense with which he was charged was that he failed to
    be present on the aircraft with his unit when it deployed from
    Germany to Afghanistan.
    On the other hand, we note that “[i]f a person . . . is
    ordered to move as a passenger aboard a particular ship or
    aircraft, . . . then missing the particular sailing or flight is
    essential to establishing the offense of missing movement.”    See
    Manual for Courts-Martial, United States pt. IV, para.
    11.c.(2)(b); cf. United States v. Kapple, 
    40 M.J. 472
    , 473–74
    (C.A.A.F. 1994) (requiring the government to prove that the
    accused had been ordered to move aboard a specific aircraft).
    In the original charging document in the instant case, the
    Government chose to describe the specific aircraft as Flight
    TA4B702, and thus that specific flight number became an integral
    part of an element of the offense.    Under these circumstances,
    we decline to hold that only a minor variance occurred.
    Although we find that a material variance occurred, that is
    not the end of our inquiry.   Consistent with our long-standing
    13
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    precedent, we must next turn our attention to the question of
    whether the material variance in the instant case prejudiced
    Appellant.   Indeed, as we stated in Finch, this Court has
    “placed an increased emphasis on the prejudice prong” of the
    fatal variance analysis.   64 M.J. at 121.
    “A variance can prejudice an appellant by (1) putting ‘him
    at risk of another prosecution for the same conduct,’ (2)
    misleading him ‘to the extent that he has been unable adequately
    to prepare for trial,’ or (3) denying him ‘the opportunity to
    defend against the charge.’”   Marshall, 67 M.J. at 420 (quoting
    United States v. Teffeau, 
    58 M.J. 62
    , 67 (C.A.A.F. 2003)).
    Appellant argues that the last minute changes made by the
    military judge denied him the opportunity to adequately prepare
    his defense and defend against the missing movement charge.
    This Court looks closely at the specifics of the defense’s
    trial strategy when determining whether a material variance
    denied an accused the opportunity to defend against a charge.
    In so doing, we consider how the defense channeled its efforts
    and what defense counsel focused on or highlighted.    Marshall,
    67 M.J. at 421; Teffeau, 58 M.J. at 67; United States v. Lovett,
    
    59 M.J. 230
    , 236 (C.A.A.F. 2004).
    In the instant case, Appellant’s defense was squarely
    focused on the assertion that he was prevented from moving with
    the 370th Sapper Company because he was kidnapped.    Trial
    14
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    defense counsel did not claim in any manner that Appellant was
    not present on the date of his unit’s movement because he was
    unaware of the specific aircraft he was supposed to be on or the
    unit he was supposed to move with.   Rather, right from the
    beginning of the case, Appellant channeled his efforts into
    convincing first the investigators and then the court-martial
    that, as stated by defense counsel in her opening statement,
    Appellant “did not intend to miss the movement, but he was
    prevented from going with his unit . . . because of what had
    happened to him.”
    While trial defense counsel did mention the lack of
    evidence of the flight number in her closing argument, she did
    not channel her efforts into disproving the Flight TA4B702
    element.   Furthermore, despite citing the lack of proof that it
    was specifically Flight TA4B702 that Appellant missed, trial
    defense counsel did not move pursuant to R.C.M. 917 for a
    finding of not guilty on that particular charge.
    Importantly, the defense has not identified for this Court
    any different trial strategy it might have employed if Appellant
    originally had been charged with “missing the flight dedicated
    to transport Main Body 1 of 54th Engineer Battalion from
    Ramstein Air Base, Germany, to Manas Air Base, Kyrgyzstan.”    All
    indications are that Appellant’s defense of impossibility due to
    kidnapping would have remained precisely the same whether or not
    15
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    he was charged per the original specification or per the
    exceptions and substitutions, and we see no reasonable
    possibility that the verdict in this case would have been any
    different.   Accordingly, we find Appellant was not denied the
    opportunity to defend against the charge on which he was
    convicted.   We therefore hold that the variance created by the
    military judge, although material, did not prejudice Appellant
    and thus was not fatal. 2
    DECISION
    The decision of the United States Army Court of Criminal
    Appeals is affirmed.
    2
    When counsel fails to object at trial, we review a military
    judge’s findings by exceptions and substitutions for plain
    error. Finch, 64 M.J. at 121. Under plain error review,
    Appellant has the burden of demonstrating that: (1) there was
    error, (2) the error was plain or obvious, and (3) the error
    materially prejudiced a substantial right of the accused. Id.
    Regardless of whether the error in the instant case was “plain
    or obvious,” Appellant cannot prevail because he has not
    successfully established the third prong –– material prejudice
    to a substantial right.
    16
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    BAKER, Chief Judge (concurring in the result):
    I concur in the result for the following reasons.   A
    variance between pleadings and proof exists when evidence at
    court-martial “establishes the commission of a criminal offense
    by the accused, but the proof does not conform strictly with the
    offense alleged in the charge.”   United States v. Teffeau, 
    58 M.J. 62
    , 66 (C.A.A.F. 2003) (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted).   A variance is material if it “substantially
    change[s] the nature of the offense or . . . increase[s] the
    seriousness of the offense or the maximum punishment for it.”
    
    Id.
       A variance is prejudicial if it places an appellant “at
    risk of another prosecution for the same conduct” or if it
    prevented him from “adequately . . . prepar[ing] for” court-
    martial or “denied [him] the opportunity to defend against the
    charge.”   
    Id. at 67
     (citations omitted).   Thus, a variance that
    is both material and prejudicial is deemed to be “fatal,” a
    rather grim and dramatic way to describe reversible error.
    United States v. Marshall, 
    67 M.J. 418
    , 420 (C.A.A.F. 2009)
    (citations omitted).   In short, the purpose of variance analysis
    is to distinguish between those exceptions and substitutions
    that merely clarify and correct and those that change the nature
    of the offense, or the terms of exposure, and thus conflict with
    due process principles.
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    A variance occurred in this case when the military judge
    excepted “Flight TA4B702” and substituted “the flight dedicated
    to transport Main Body 1 of 54th Engineer Battalion from
    Ramstein Air Base, Germany, to Manas Air Base, Kyrgyzstan.”
    Thus, the specification for which Appellant was ultimately
    convicted read:
    In that Sergeant Michael L. Treat, U.S. Army, did, at or
    near Bamberg, Germany, on or about 17 November 2010,
    through design, miss the movement of the flight dedicated
    to transport Main Body 1 of 54th Engineer Battalion from
    Ramstein Air Base, Germany, to Manas Air Base,
    Kyrgyzstan[,] with which he was required in the course of
    duty to move.
    However, this variance was not material because the offense
    remained the same before and after the military judge’s
    exception and substitution.   Appellant was charged with missing
    movement by missing the flight deploying his unit.   The
    government can charge this offense in a general way, by mode of
    transport, or in a more specific way, by reference to the
    movement of a particular unit.   How the government charges the
    offense may depend on whether a unit moved en masse or an
    individual was ordered to join a unit already deployed.    Yet
    while the government has flexibility in how it charges an
    Article 87, UCMJ, 
    10 U.S.C. § 887
    , offense, it must live with
    the result; it cannot charge the missing of a flight and then
    convict an accused for the missing of a unit movement (as
    2
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    opposed to the flight carrying the unit) or the missing of a
    ship.
    Contrary to Appellant’s argument, the exception and
    substitution in this case did not change the offense from the
    missing of a flight to the missing of a unit.     Appellant was
    originally charged with missing his flight to Manas Air Base,
    which was carrying his unit, and he was convicted of missing his
    flight to Manas Air Base, which was carrying his unit.     The
    military judge’s exception and substitution did no more than
    accurately describe the flight that Appellant was always charged
    with missing.   The change was akin to correcting the name of the
    victim on a larceny charge or, by further illustration, to
    saying, “I missed my flight to Dallas,” rather than “I missed
    Mohawk Airways Flight 12345, which was en route to Dallas.”       The
    specification also used the language “on or about,” thus making
    it clear from the outset that it was the missing of a flight and
    not the particular aircraft used for that flight that formed the
    gravamen of the offense.    As a result, Appellant was on notice
    regarding the nature of the offense before and after the
    military judge’s exception and substitution.
    In addition, none of the purposes behind material variance
    doctrine were offended.    Appellant is not at risk of another
    prosecution for the same conduct.     He was not misled as to the
    nature of the offense or unable to prepare adequately for court-
    3
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    martial.   Nor was he denied the opportunity to defend against
    the charge.   Marshall, 67 M.J. at 420.   In short, the military
    judge’s substitution did not change the nature of the offense,
    substantially or at all.
    4
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    STUCKY, Judge (dissenting):
    The military judge convicted Appellant by exceptions and
    substitutions to the specification alleged in the charge sheet.
    Appellant did not object to that finding until after the court-
    martial was adjourned, when he submitted matters to the
    convening authority under Rule for Court-Martial (R.C.M.) 1105.
    Appellant’s failure to raise the issue before the court
    adjourned constitutes waiver.     R.C.M. 905(e).   If Appellant did
    not waive his ability to raise the issue on appeal, then the
    finding by exceptions and substitutions was a fatal variance
    (both material and prejudicial).     Therefore, I respectfully
    dissent.
    I.   Waiver
    Citing United States v. Finch, 
    64 M.J. 118
    , 121 (C.A.A.F.
    2006), the majority asserts that:     “[W]e review a military
    judge’s findings by exceptions and substitutions for plain
    error.”    United States v. Treat, __ M.J. __ (11) (C.A.A.F.
    2014).    I disagree.
    Finch cites R.C.M. 905(e) as the basis for this plain error
    standard but does not examine the language of the rule.     R.C.M.
    905(e) provides:
    Failure by a party to raise defenses or objections or
    to make motions or requests which must be made before
    pleas are entered under subsection (b) of this rule
    shall constitute waiver. The military judge for good
    cause shown may grant relief from the waiver. Other
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    motions, requests, defenses, or objections, except
    lack of jurisdiction or failure of a charge to allege
    an offense, must be raised before the court-martial is
    adjourned for that case and, unless otherwise provided
    in this Manual, failure to do so shall constitute
    waiver.
    It does not say “forfeit,” “forfeit absent plain error,” or
    “waive absent plain error.”   It says “shall constitute waiver.”
    Therefore, as Appellant failed to object before the court-
    martial was adjourned, we should consider the variance issue
    waived.
    The majority cites two grounds for concluding that the
    issue should not be considered waived:   (1) Appellant challenged
    the Government’s theory of the case concerning the flight number
    during his closing argument; and (2) the Government did not
    appeal the United States Army Court of Criminal Appeals’ adverse
    ruling on this issue to this Court.   Treat, __ M.J. at __ n.1
    (12 n.1).   But Appellant made no R.C.M. 917 motion for a finding
    of not guilty, 1 and his findings argument alone, in which he
    challenged the sufficiency of the Government’s evidence that he
    missed flight TA4B702, is not an objection to the military
    judge’s finding by exceptions and substitutions.   And whether
    1
    Nor did the military judge raise the issue of her own accord.
    I recognize that the defense counsel may have intentionally not
    made an R.C.M. 917 motion, fearing that the military judge would
    have permitted the trial counsel to reopen the case. R.C.M.
    917(b) Discussion. Nevertheless, choices have consequences.
    See United States v. Marshall, 
    67 M.J. 418
    , 420 (C.A.A.F. 2009)
    (concluding an R.C.M. 917 motion was sufficient to preserve the
    issue of a fatal variance for appeal).
    2
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    the Government failed to raise the issue of waiver on this
    particular issue is irrelevant.    R.C.M. 905(e) clearly states
    that an accused’s failure to raise the issue before the court-
    martial is adjourned constitutes waiver, unless the objection is
    covered by some other rule.   In this case, Appellant failed to
    object, and the objection is not covered by another rule.
    Appellant’s failure constitutes waiver, and we should not
    consider this assignment of error.
    II.   Plain Error
    If, as the majority holds, we must review the finding by
    exceptions and substitutions for plain error, Appellant has
    established that the material variance was obvious error that
    prejudiced his substantial rights:      (1) he may have been
    convicted of missing the very flight the military judge
    acquitted him of missing; and (2) he was denied adequate notice
    and the opportunity to defend.
    Appellant was charged with missing the movement of a
    specific flight, flight TA4B702.       The defense counsel initiated
    a three-pronged attack against the Government’s case.        First,
    she established that all elements of Appellant’s unit did not
    deploy together, suggesting that Appellant may not have been
    required to deploy with Main Body 1.      Second, with the
    assistance of the trial counsel and the military judge, the
    defense counsel successfully frustrated the Government’s
    3
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    attempts to prove the number of the flight that Appellant was
    charged with missing and to enter the flight manifest into
    evidence.   And third, she highlighted the Government’s failure
    to disprove the inability defense Appellant had raised in the
    sworn statement he provided to a military policeman and which
    the Government introduced into evidence:   that he missed the
    movement because he had been kidnapped.
    The defense counsel made the failure of the Government to
    prove the flight number one of the foci of her closing argument:
    Well, the government has charged that Sergeant Treat
    missed a flight on that date. A flight that,
    according to all sources, never existed. It did not
    take off. There was no movement to miss on the 17th
    of November, ma’am, because that flight didn’t go
    anywhere. And what happened on the 17th according to
    Sergeant Mathis? He called Sergeant Treat and said,
    “We’re not leaving today. Stand down.”
    There is simply no evidence with which to convict
    Sergeant Treat of missing a movement under Article 87
    since that movement didn’t exist. We don’t even know
    the flight number for sure. There has been no
    credible evidence before this court as to what the
    actual the [sic] flight number was on the 17th of
    November. None of the witnesses knew the flight
    number. We don’t even know if the flight number would
    have stayed the same or changed when they actually
    flew on 19 November.
    The military judge thereafter convicted Appellant by exceptions
    and substitutions of missing “the movement of the flight
    dedicated to transport Main Body 1 of the 54th Engineer
    Battalion.”
    4
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    The majority holds that the military judge’s finding was a
    material variance.    I agree.   The military judge’s finding
    substantially changed the nature of the offense.     See Marshall,
    67 M.J. at 420–21 (changing the name of the individual from whose
    custody the appellant allegedly escaped was a material variance)
    (citing Finch, 64 M.J. at 121).     But I cannot agree with the
    majority’s conclusion that Appellant was not prejudiced.      Treat,
    __ M.J. at __ (16).
    In United States v. Nedeau, the appellant was charged in
    one specification with larceny of various specific food items --
    seven pounds of ground beef, ten pounds of canned ham, five
    pounds of cheese, etc.    
    7 C.M.A. 718
    , 719, 
    23 C.M.R. 182
    , 183
    (1957).    The court members convicted him by exceptions and
    substitutions of larceny of “foodstuffs.”     
    Id.,
     23 C.M.R. at
    183.   The Court of Military Appeals held that the finding of the
    court-martial changed the nature and identity of the offense
    charged.   Id. at 720, 23 C.M.R. at 184.    As a finding by
    exception “constitutes a finding that the accused is not guilty
    of what is alleged in the excepted language,” it appears that
    Staff Sergeant Nedeau must have been convicted of larceny of
    food items other than those alleged in the specification.       Id.,
    23 C.M.R. at 184.    This was a fatal variance.   Id. at 721, 
    23 C.M.R. 185
    .
    5
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    Sergeant Treat is in a somewhat similar situation.     By
    excepting the flight number, the military judge acquitted him of
    missing the movement of flight TA4B702 but convicted him of more
    general language -- “missing the movement of the flight
    dedicated to transport Main Body 1 of the 54th Engineer
    Battalion from Ramstein Air Base, Germany, to Manas Air Base,
    Kyrgyzstan.”   I see two related problems resulting from this
    finding:
    (1) Flight TA4B702 is necessarily a subset of the universe
    of flights that could have transported Main Body 1.   By
    substituting for the excepted language the more general
    language, Appellant may have been convicted of missing the
    movement of TA4B702, the same flight he was acquitted of
    missing.   That would amount to a Double Jeopardy Clause
    violation.   See United States v. Stewart, 
    71 M.J. 38
    , 43
    (C.A.A.F. 2012) (finding accused guilty of aggravated sexual
    assault for engaging in a sexual act with a person who was
    substantially incapable of declining participation in the sexual
    act, after acquitting him of aggravated sexual assault for
    engaging in a sexual act with a person who was substantially
    incapacitated violated the Double Jeopardy Clause).
    (2) If Appellant was convicted of missing the movement of
    some flight other than TA4B702, then he was not given notice and
    an opportunity to defend against it.   By broadening the offense
    6
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    from missing flight TA4B702 to missing whatever flight was
    scheduled to transport Main Body 1, the military judge made
    Appellant’s defense -- that the Government failed to establish
    that he missed flight TA4B702 -- irrelevant.
    Therefore, if Appellant did not waive the issue, I would
    hold that the material variance in this case was fatal, and
    would reverse.
    7
    United States v. Treat, No. 14-0280/AR
    RYAN, Judge (dissenting):
    I join Judge Stucky’s dissent, with a single caveat.    While
    I agree with Judge Stucky’s analysis as to why the majority is
    wrong that there is no waiver, United States v. Treat, 73 M.J.
    __, __ (1-3) (C.A.A.F. 2014) (Stucky, J., dissenting), I am
    nonetheless skeptical that we should find waiver where, as here,
    the military judge clearly determined that the Government did
    not prove one of the elements -- which is why she excepted the
    language that pled it.   See Rule for Courts-Martial (R.C.M.)
    917(a) (“The military judge . . . sua sponte, shall enter a
    finding of not guilty of one or more offenses charged after the
    evidence on either side is closed and before findings on the
    general issue of guilt are announced if the evidence is
    insufficient to sustain a conviction of the offense affected.”).
    Thus, irrespective of Appellant’s duty to object at trial, see
    United States v. Finch, 
    64 M.J. 118
    , 121 (C.A.A.F. 2006), in my
    view the military judge had an independent duty to dismiss the
    charge, including giving the parties an opportunity to be heard,
    and the military judge failed to fulfill that duty.   See R.C.M.
    917(a), (c).   Absent waiver, I fully agree that there was
    prejudice to a substantial right of the accused, see Article
    59(a), Uniform Code of Military Justice, 
    10 U.S.C. § 859
    (a)
    (2012), and would reverse the decision of the United States Army
    Court of Criminal Appeals.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 14-0280-AR

Citation Numbers: 73 M.J. 331

Judges: Baker, Erdmann, Ohlson, Ryan, Stucky

Filed Date: 7/16/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/31/2023