With the passing of Herman Wouk on
May 17 at 103, we can remember his great masterpiece The CaineMutiny about sailors on a World
War II destroyer minesweeper who mutiny against their incompetent Captain
Queeg. Wouk wrote The Caine Mutiny play and for a while worked
on the script for the movie in which Humphrey Bogart gave an Oscar winning
performance as Captain Queeg in the Caine Mutiny movie.
The basic
facts underlying the court-martial case are that Lieutenant Stephen Maryk
relieves Queeg of command of the USS Caine when Captain Queeg freezes up during
a typhoon. Maryk has a belief from Queeg’s prior behavior that he is mentally
unbalanced. Maryk is on trial for conduct to the prejudice of good order and
discipline.
Lieutenant
Greenwald’s cross-examination of Queeg is the high point in the movie. Beyond
that, it is a superb illustration of how to conduct a concession-seeking
cross-examination. The concession-seeking cross-examination strategy is
discussed at length in Cross-Examination Handbook.
Time
after time, Greenwald confronts Queeg with truths that Queeg must concede
or stamp his answer as either a lie, mistaken or ridiculous. Why must Queeg
concede? It is because Greenwald can prove what he is asserts either by circumstantial
or direct evidence or by plain common sense. Greenwald knows the answers to
every cross-examination question he asks.
It is
Greenwald’s turn to testify, not Queeg’s. It’s his opportunity to lay out the
truths. These truths all support the ultimate conclusion—Queeg is unstable and
unfit for command.
Here are
those truths: (1) Queeg steamed over the Caine’s tow line; (2) Queeg was
distracted during the towing maneuver because he was reprimanding a seaman over
an un-tucked shirt; (3) Queeg having just testified that Maryk was unfit had
previously written a glowing fitness report about him; (4) Queeg ordered that
the Caine steam ahead of an attack force, drop a yellow dye marker and retreat;
and (5) Queeg was obsessed with a search for a key that would have led to a
missing quart of strawberries when he had been told by an officer that the mess
boys had eaten the strawberries. When confronted by Greenwald with the fact
that the officer who told Queeg about the mess boys eating the strawberries
could be called to testify, Queeg loses his composure, rolling two metal balls
around in his hand as he babbles on (masterful performance by Bogart).
Naturally, Maryk is acquitted.
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