Tim Brоwn shot and killed Terri Brown, his estranged wife, and Gary Sentell. He was charged with murder and convicted by a jury of two counts of voluntary manslaughter. At trial, Brown claimed he was legally insane when he shot the two. His sole enumerаtion of error on appeal is that the trial court erred by allowing the State’s expert psychiаtrist to render an opinion as to his sanity which was improperly *801 based on hearsay.
To refute expert psychiatric testimоny presented in support of Brown’s insanity defense, the State presented testimony from a psychiatrist who examined Brown and stated that in his opinion Brown was not legally insane at the time of the shootings. The Statе’s expert formed his opinion based on his own personal observations of the defendant, and on the conclusions reached by a psychologist who, at the request of the State’s expert, persоnally administered and interpreted a battery of psychological tests given to the defendant to determine the existence of any mental illness, personality disorder, or organic brain disorder. The psyсhologist did not testify at trial, nor were the test results and conclusions drawn by the psychologist otherwise madе a part of the trial record.
Generally, an expert cannot state his opinion based upоn facts not within his personal knowledge which are not otherwise admitted in evidence.
Stouffer Corp. v. Henkel,
“It is the rule in Georgia that the opinion of an expert witness on the sanity of a person must be based on his own оbservation of facts personally known to him, or he must give his opinion on hypothetical questions basеd on facts supported by evidence in the case. . . . [The expert] may give an opinion based upon his own examination of a person, upon his observation of that person, or upon any statе of facts, supported by some evidence in the case, which he assumes as true.”
Moore v. State, 221
Ga. 636, 643 (
Judgment reversed.
Notes
The testimony at issue was introduced, by аgreement of the parties, in a videotaped deposition of the State’s expert. Although no objections were made when the deposition was shown at trial, the defendant made specific hearsay objections to the relevant portions of the deposition at a pre-trial hearing at which the court deleted portions of the deposition testimony, but denied defense motions to delеte other portions relating to the expert’s opinion as to sanity. Since the court, in effect, denied a defense motion in limine seeking exclusion of the opinion testimony, no objection was necessary to preserve the issue for review.
Harley-Davidson Motor Co. v. Daniel,
