United States v. Marks

CEDARBURG, Chief Judge:

The Court, on its own initiative, ordered briefs regarding the legal effect of the failure of the convening authority to strictly comply with a sentencing limitation in the pretrial agreement. This failure resulted in *635appellant serving an additional 8 days of post-trial confinement. Under the terms of the pretrial agreement, the convening authority was authorized to approve a bad-conduct discharge if awarded as well as any forfeiture or fine and reduction as imposed. In respect to confinement or restraint, the pretrial agreement provided:

Confinement in excess of 31 days to be disapproved. If a BCD is awarded, confinement subsequent to Convening Authority action on record of trial to be disapproved or confinement in excess of 31 days to be disapproved, whichever comes first. Confinement shall not be mitigated to Restriction. Any restriction to be disapproved.

The convening authority, acting expeditiously on the record of trial, took his action only 17 days after trial but appellant remained in confinement for another 8 days before being released. After receipt of the record by the supervisory authority on 11 December 1979, without explanation, a second action was taken on 17 December 1979 by the convening authority. It was identical in all pertinent particulars to the first action except that it eliminated an erroneous provision purporting to execute the sentence.

Neither the record nor any allied papers disclose the reason for the timing of appellant’s release from confinement; nor do they explain the .second purported action. Neither do they disclose any complaint registered because of the noncompliance with the limit on confinement. Although the terms of the pretrial agreement and the action of the convening authority were spelled out in it, counsel submitted no objection, challenge or comment to the staff judge advocate’s review despite being accorded an opportunity to do so pursuant to United States v. Goode, 1 M.J. 3 (C.M.A.1975). The confinement limit was fixed at a maximum of 31 days. Approval of a lesser period was made conditional solely on the rapidity with which the record .was prepared and convening authority acted. The literal conditional limit was exceeded because the convening authority acted with dispatch before 31 days of post-trial confinement had elapsed and thus that term of the pretrial agreement was not strictly followed. The convening authority, however, was more generous than required by the agreement in disapproving the forfeiture amounting to $150.00 per month for 4 months imposed by the military judge. We conclude that, under the circumstances, the convening authority’s failure to exactly adhere to the confinement limit was not motivated by any deliberate impropriety.

Although the confinement term of the pretrial agreement was not followed to the letter, the plea did not rest in any significant degree on a promise or agreement of the convening authority which was not substantially fulfilled. The surrounding circumstances are not egregious, do not support a claim of deliberate noncompliance and can actually be adequately compensated at this level. We are convinced that the sentence approved by the convening authority was, in its totality, less severe than that which he was permitted to approve under the terms of the agreement. We are also satisfied that the deviation, in view of the absolute maximum confinement which was agreeable to appellant, was so minor and capable of remedy at this level so as to not affect the providence of the plea or require return of the case to allow appellant to plead anew. Cf. United States v. Cifuentes, 11 M.J. 385 (C.M.A.1981). (If a plea bargain is not complied with, a court must order compliance with the bargain or defendant be allowed to withdraw his pleas) and United States v. Holt, 12 M.J. 25 (NMCMR 1981).

We determine that appellant’s pleas were not improvident. Accordingly, the findings are affirmed. Upon reassessment, to remedy the failure to strictly comply with all terms of the pretrial agreement, we affirm only so much of the sentence as provides for a bad-conduct discharge and confinement at hard labor for 17 days. The reduction to pay grade El — 1 is specifically disapproved and all rights, privileges and property affected thereby shall be restored.

Judge SANDERS concurs.