DocketNumber: No. 30595.
Judges: Land, O'Neill, Overton, Rogers
Filed Date: 6/2/1930
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Defendant is charged with the crime of murder, was found guilty as charged, and sentenced to be hanged.
On appeal he has presented seven bills of exceptions for review by this court. *Page 620
The state's attorney objected to this plea on the ground that it came too late. This objection was sustained by the judge a quo for the following reasons: "The court was of the opinion that if the defendant intended to rely upon a plea of insanity, the State was entitled to have had that plea tendered on January 10th, when the defendant was arraigned and his case fixed for trial. The court was at the time, and is now, of the opinion that much unnecessary delay to the State would result if those charged with the commission of a crime, after having joined issue with the assistance of counsel by a plea of not guilty, and after having had the case fixed for trial on that issue, should be permitted to change the issue after the case has been regularly fixed and the day for trial reached."
The indictment charges the defendant with the murder of Mary Ella Watts on May 8, 1929. Defendant was not arraigned until January 10, 1930, at which time he entered a plea of not guilty, and delayed until January 23, 1930, the day fixed for his trial, before he tendered the plea that he was insane at the time the homicide was committed.
It is not pretended in the motion to withdraw the plea of not guilty that counsel for defendant had just discovered his insanity at the time of the homicide, or that the fact of his insanity was not known on January 10, 1930, the date of the arraignment. The trial judge must have concluded, therefore, that counsel for defendant was trifling with the court, and had resorted to the withdrawal *Page 621 of the plea of not guilty in a mere attempt to obtain a continuance.
It is provided in article
It is also provided in article
In our opinion, articles 265 and 267 must be construed with reference to each other, and the latter article must be interpreted as vesting a sound discretion in the trial judge to determine, under the circumstances of the case, whether a plea of not guilty may be withdrawn and another substituted, even though such plea be insanity as a defense.
We do not approve, however, the broad statement, made in the per curiam to this bill, that the state is entitled to have the plea of insanity made at the time of the arraignment. It may well be that the existence of insanity as a defense was not known to counsel for a defendant at the date of the arraignment, or that the present insanity of a defendant has developed since the arraignment. But, at all events, the plea of insanity, when urged as a defense, must be made timely and in good faith, and should not be entertained by the trial judge if presented for mere delay. *Page 622
Counsel for defendant objected. The objection was overruled by the court for the following reasons stated in the per curiam to this bill: "The court's charge was in writing and at the request of the jury was repeated in whole. The court's charge has not been objected to as improper — but only as having been repeated at the request of the jury. The court is unable to see any prejudicial error in complying with the jury's request to repeat the charge."
The objection to the repetition of the charge to the jury is without the slightest merit. It is expressly provided in article 396 of the Code of Criminal Procedure that: "Should the jury or any member thereof, after having retired to deliberate upon the verdict, wish further instructions, the officer in charge shall bring the jury into court, and the judge shall, in the presence of accused, his counsel, if he have counsel, and the district attorney, further instruct the jury, provided such further instructions may be verbal."
The minutes of the court below show that defendant was duly arraigned on January 10, 1930, and pleaded not guilty; that on January 23, 1930, defendant filed a plea of insanity, *Page 623 which was argued and overruled as coming too late; and that a jury was then impaneled and defendant was tried and convicted of murder as charged.
The minutes do not show, as alleged by defendant, that "on the day of trial defendant withdrew all former pleas and arraignment," or that "defendant was put on trial without being required to make any plea to the indictment."
On the contrary, the minutes show clearly that defendant was duly arraigned and pleaded not guilty, and that this plea was not withdrawn by defendant prior to trial before the jury. T. 15, 16.
As the motion in arrest is not based upon any defect patent upon the face of the record, it was properly overruled. Code Crim.Proc. art. 517.
We have already disposed of the first ground set forth in the motion. The second ground presents nothing capable of being reviewed by this court. Const. 1921, art. 7, § 10.
In the per curiam to this bill, it is stated by the trial judge: "The state did suggest the appointment of a sanity commission and counsel for defendant acquiesced in the suggestion, whereupon the court appointed the commission which reported the defendant sane. The court would have granted defendant a trial on the question of his sanity if the report of the commission had raised any doubt whatever of his sanity at the time of the commission of the crime."
The minutes of the lower court show that, immediately after sentence, counsel for defendant filed a motion for a new trial, and thereupon the district attorney tendered the defendant in open court for examination by a lunacy commission, to be appointed by the court, to report upon the sanity of defendant, to which counsel for defendant consented. T. p. 18.
The lunacy commission reported that: "After a complete and thorough mental, physical and neurological examination, and, after considering all evidence presented to us, concerning his history and the commission of the crime, such evidence being obtained from the prisoner himself, members of his family, kinsmen, physician and officials, as well as former employers, we have come to the following conclusion: That Butler Watts is able to appreciate the usual, natural and probable consequence of his acts, and that he was sane at the time of the alleged commission of the crime and is sane at the present time."
No objection was made to the filing of this report by counsel for defendant, and no bill reserved. Defendant, by his express acquiescence, has waived his right to trial of the plea of insanity before a jury, under article
Although the minutes of the court show that counsel for defendant made no objection to the resentencing of the accused, it is stated in the bill reserved that defendant was resentenced a second time to be hanged, over the objection of counsel for defendant demanding that he be tried by a jury as to his sanity.
Having waived trial by jury by acquiescing in the appointment of the lunacy commission to act upon and dispose of the plea of insanity, at the time of the commission of the homicide, and not having objected to the filing of the report, defendant has waited too late to demand a trial of this plea by jury at the time he was resentenced.
It is ordered that the conviction and sentence appealed from be affirmed.
OVERTON, J., concurs in decree.
ROGERS, J., dissents.
O'NIELL, C.J. dissents on the ground that the defendant had the right to have the question of insanity as a defense tried by the *Page 626
jury as a question of fact on which depended the question of guilt or innocence. Even, according to article