DocketNumber: 16479
Citation Numbers: 64 S.E.2d 130, 219 S.C. 97
Judges: Oxner, Stuices, Tayror, Tide, Fishburne, Stukes, Eishburne
Filed Date: 3/19/1951
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Appellant killed his wife about nine o’clock on Monday morning, March 6, 1950. He was indicted and arraigned during the March, 1950 term of Court of General' Sessions for Chester County and two members of the Chester Bar were appointed to represent him. On motion of these attorneys, the Court ordered that appellant be examined by the staff of the South Carolina State Hospital. The authorities of that institution declared him sane. At the June, 1950, term of Court he was tried and found guilty of murder and sentenced to death by electrocution. The principal questions for determination on this appeal are whether the Court below erred in holding that there was no evidence of manslaughter and in failing to submit to the jury the defense of insanity. A determination of these questions necessitates a review of the.testimony. . • ' . ‘ ; j
Appellant next worked at a colored theater for several months when he says he was again discharged on account of the conduct of his wife. He claims that he was then unable to secure a job anywhere around Chester and during December, 1949, went to Statesville, North Carolina, and secured employment in a furniture factory. After working several days, he returned to Chester to get his wife and baby but was immediately arrested on a warrant for vagrancy issued at the instance of his mother-in-law. A week’ or two later another warrant was issued for non-support. After remaining in jail for several weeks, he was released on bond. This charge of non-support was pending when the Court of General Sessions convened on the morning of'the homicide and the deceased had been’instructed to come to the Court House for the purpose of going before the Grand • Jury.
The twelve year old sister of the deceased testified that appellant came to the house about eight o’clock.and tried to get his wife to go with him to the court house, stating that it would be unnecessary to get there until ten or eleven o’clock, but the deceased insisted that she was .to be there, at nine and asked her to go to a neighbor’s house and call a taxi; that when she left, appellant, and his wife did not seem to be mad and were “calling each other honey”;.that after telephoning for a taxi, she returned and found her sister lying on the floor and, at the suggestion of appellant, called the officers. Two officers arrived within a few minutes. Immediately after they entered the house, appellant stated to them that he had -just killed his wife with a butcher knife, and was “ready to go and ready to be electrocuted”. His wife was lying,on the kitchen floor and died in- a few minutes. The
Shortly after noon on the day of the homicide, appellant signed a confession at the jail in which he stated that he went to the house for the purpose of killing his father-in-law but found he was not at home; that he and his wife got into an argument and he stabbed her; and that he had previously determined that if his wife did not withdraw the non-support warrant, he was going to kill her.
An examination of the body disclosed a brutal killing. There was a deep wound in the left side which cut the kidney and large blood vessels. The undertaker removed the blade of a butcher knife from this wound. There was also a deep wound in the upper abdomen below the breast bone and a deep wound in the left side of the chest. These two wounds appeared to have been made by an instrument about the size of scissor blades. There were several bruises and scratches “on the front of the throat”. On the day after the homicide, one of the officers discovered a pair of bloodstained scissors on a cabinet in the kitchen where the deceased was found. The points seemed to have been freshly broken.
One of the physicians from the State Hospital testified that their examination and observation of appellant disclosed that he was “an emotionally tense” person, had the “intelligence of a borderline individual” and a “mental age — -if you graded him — of approximately ten to eleven years”, but it was the unanimous opinion of the three examining physicians that appellant “was not insane” and “knew right from wrong”.
Voluntary manslaughter is usually defined as the unlawful killing of a human being in sudden heat of passion upon a sufficient legal provocation. In determining whether the act which caused death was impelled by heat of passion or by malice, all the surrounding circumstances and conditions are to be taken into1 consideration, including previous relations and conditions connected with the tragedy, as well as those existing at the time of the killing. While there is some evidence that appellant was in a fit of passion or frenzy at the time of the homicide, the difficult question is whether there is any evidence tending to show that such passion, if found to’1 exist, was engendered by an adequate provocation-. Our decisions are uniformly to the effect that where death is caused by the use of a deadly weapon, words alone, however opprobrious, are not sufficient to constitute a legal provocation. State v. Levelle, 34 S. C. 120, 13 S. E. 319; State v. Davis, 50 S. C. 405, 27 S. E. 905, 911.; State v. Gilliam, 66 S. C. 419, 45 S. E. 6; State v. Judge, 208 S. C. 497, 38 S. E. (2d) 715, In State v. Davis, supra, the Court said: “It may be concluded, therefore, that ‘the sudden
Assuming that appellant did not go to the home of his father-in-law with a formed purpose or design to kill his wife, a jury would still be warranted under the evidence in concluding that he assulted and stabbed her in a fit of anger because she refused to withdraw the charge of non-support. Under this view of the evidence,' a sufficient legal provocation would be wholly lacking. But is this the only inference to be drawn from appellant’s testimony? He says that his wife “jumped on me” and “me and her got into it”. These expressions can reasonably be construed as meaning nothing more than that appellant’s wife severely reprimanded or violently censured him, and that they became engaged in a heated argument. On the other hand, they might be subject to the construction that there was some overt, threatening act or a physical encounter. At least there is sufficient doubt thereabout, we think, to warrant submission to the jury of the question of manslaughter.
We now turn to the issue of insanity.
The preliminary question is raised that in view of the finding of the staff at the State Hospital that appellant had only a mental age of ten or eleven years, he was entitled to the same presumption of incapacity which is given to a child between the ages of seven and fourteen. But it has been uniformly held that this presumption refers to the physical age of a child and does not extend to á person -above the age of fourteen. Commonwealth v. Trippi, 268 Mass. 227, 167 N. E. 354; State of New Jersey v. Ehlers, 98 N. J. L. 236, 119 A. 15, 25 A. L. R. 999; State v. Haw
We are unable to discover any evidence in this case which can reasonably be said to rebut the presumption of sanity. Although there is a showing of low mentality and some emotional instability, there is no evidence whatsoever that appellant was unable to distingush between right and wrong or to recognize the nature and quality of the act committed. His testimony that he doesn’t remember assaulting and killing his wife, standing alone, is insufficient to establish insanity. State v. Coyle, 86 S. C. 81, 67 S. E. 24. Otherwise, any defendant could always raise the issue of insanity by simulating loss of memory. His appearance and actions immediately after the homicide, as described by one of the officers, are insufficient to justify a plea of insanity. The uncontradicted evidence is that appellant was prefectly normal and composed just prior to the homicide and his statement immediately thereafter that he had- killed his wife and was “ready to be electrocuted” shows that he fully appreciated the gravity of his act. The fact that he may have hilled his wife while in a fit of passion does not show an insane mind. It must be remembered that we have never accepted in this State the doctrine of uncontrollable impulse. State v. Gilstrap, 205 S. C. 412, 32 S. E. (2d) 163, and
We do not undertake to foreclose appellant from entering a plea of insanity on another trial. There then may be additional evidence which, when considered in connection with circumstances herein mentioned, will be sufficient to justify such a plea. We only hold that on the record now before us, there was no error in failing to submit to the jury the question of insanity.
It is contended that the Court erred in admitting in evidence the statement or confession signed by appellant about four hours after the homicide. We think the statement was admissible. However, the Court below failed to give any instructions whatsoever as to the rules governing confessions. We think this was prejudicial error. State v. Scott, 209 S. C. 61, 38 S. E. (2d) 902. The question of whether appellant understood the contents of this statement and freely and voluntarily executed it should have been submitted to the jury under appropriate instructions.
The only other questions raised by the exceptions relates to a matter that will not likely arise on another trial and need not be determined.
Before concluding this opinion, we think it should be stated in fairness to the trial Judge that he was neither requested to charge the law of manslaughter nor re
We wish to take this opportunity of acknowledging our appreciation of the services rendered without compensation by counsel for appellant. They have conscientiously and ably discharged their duties.
Judgment reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial.