CARITATIVO v. CALIFORNIA ET AL.
No. 561
Supreme Court of the United States
June 30, 1958
357 U.S. 549
Argued May 21, 1958.
A. J. Zirpoli argued the cause and filed a brief for petitioner in No. 562.
Clarence A. Linn, Assistant Attorney General of California, argued the cause for respondents in No. 561, and Arlo E. Smith, Deputy Attorney General of California, argued the cause for respondent in No. 562. With them on the briefs was Edmund G. Brown, Attorney General.
*Together with No. 562, Rupp v. Dickson, Acting Warden, also on certiorari to the same Court.
The judgments are affirmed. Solesbee v. Balkcom, 339 U. S. 9, 12.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring.
Being uncertain as to the full implications of Solesbee v. Balkcom, 339 U. S. 9, I prefer not to rely on that decision in disposing of these cases.
I proceed on the premise that the
The California statute in substance imposes on the warden a mandatory duty to make a continuing check on the mental condition of condemned prisoners and to notify the district attorney whenever he finds grounds for belief that a prisoner has become insane. Upon being so advised, it is the unqualified duty of the district attorney to submit the issue of the prisoner‘s sanity to a jury in judicial proceedings in which the prisoner is entitled to be heard. The prisoner is given no right to commence such proceedings himself, or to be heard in connection with the warden‘s initiating determination. Affidavits submitted by the warden disclose that his statutory duty is carried out under a regular procedure pursuant to which the prison psychiatric staff submits reports to the warden as to all condemned prisoners soon after their arrival at the prison, and also submits a special psychiatric report within 20 days of a scheduled execution.
This procedure, in my opinion, satisfies the test of fundamental fairness which underlies due process. At the post-conviction stage of a capital case, it seems to me
Granting that under the
In the absence of any challenge to the warden‘s affirmations that he followed the customary California procedure, that is, that he determined petitioners’ sanity on the basis of responsible medical advice and on his own personal observations, and in the absence of any allegation that he acted in bad faith, I cannot say that the petitioners were denied due process solely because the warden declined, in the exercise of his discretion, to consider also the professions sought to be made on their behalf.
For these reasons I concur in the Court‘s affirmance of the two judgments.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER, whom MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS and MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN join, dissenting.
By its summary disposition of these cases, the Court extends the disturbing decision in Solesbee v. Balkcom, 339 U. S. 9, where it was found that a State did not offend due process by leaving to the private judgment of its governor, in which the victim had no part, the determination of the sanity of a man condemned to death. Now it appears that this determination, upon which depends the fearful question of life or death, may also be made on the mere say-so of the warden of a state prison, according to such procedure as he chooses to pursue, and more particularly without any right on the part of a man awaiting death who claims that insanity has supervened to have his case put to the warden. There can hardly be a comparable situation under our constitutional scheme of things in which an interest so great, that an insane man
Petitioners in both these cases have been convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death. Their convictions were affirmed by the Supreme Court of California. People v. Caritativo, 46 Cal. 2d 68, 292 P. 2d 513; People v. Rupp, 41 Cal. 2d 371, 260 P. 2d 1. Subsequently, each petitioned that court for habeas corpus to review the determination of the warden of San Quentin, where they are confined awaiting execution, that there is no reason to believe petitioners insane and his refusal to institute proceedings under California law to determine their present sanity. To review the denial of these petitions, Caritativo v. Teets, 48 A. C. (Minutes, May 8, 1957); Rupp v. Teets, 49 A. C. (Minutes, Aug. 27, 1957), we granted certiorari. 355 U. S. 853, 854.
Sections 3700 and 3701 of the California Penal Code set forth the procedure to be followed in determining the sanity of a person condemned to death. Section 3700 provides that, “No judge, court, or officer, other than the Governor, can suspend the execution of a judgment of death, except the warden of the State prison to whom he is delivered for execution, as provided in the six succeeding sections, unless an appeal is taken.” Section 3701 provides that, “If, after his delivery to the warden for execution, there is good reason to believe that a defendant, under judgment of death, has become insane, the warden must call such fact to the attention of the district attorney of the county in which the prison is situated, whose duty it is to immediately file in the superior court of such county a petition, stating the conviction and judgment, and the fact that the defendant is believed to be insane, and asking that the question of his sanity be inquired into. Thereupon the court must at once cause to be
The warden in the present cases did not institute proceedings pursuant to these sections leading to a judicial determination of petitioners’ sanity. According to the petitions for habeas corpus filed in the California Supreme Court, he did not do so in spite of the fact that “there is good reason to believe” that petitioners are insane. Affidavits of the warden, appended to briefs filed in this Court, state that he has observed the petitioners and examined reports submitted to him by prison psychiatrists, and that he has no reason to believe that petitioners are insane. Furthermore, that he “intends to follow the statutes of California and to institute proceedings to determine [petitioners‘] . . . sanity pursuant to section 3701 of the Penal Code, if and when he has ‘good reason to believe’ [they are] . . . insane.”
In Rupp‘s petition for habeas corpus, it is stated that the conclusions of the prison psychiatrists, upon which the warden professed to rely in reaching his determination that there was no reason to think Rupp insane, were made without benefit of the complete medical and psychiatric reports relating to Rupp‘s past history of mental disease. This history is set forth in detail in the petition and shows a continuous record of mental disease extending over many years. It is also stated that the warden has refused to allow a private psychiatrist, employed by Rupp‘s sister, to examine the prisoner to determine his sanity, and has refused to let Rupp‘s attorneys examine the prison psychiatric records. In regard to Caritativo, it is clear from the warden‘s affidavit that he refused counsel permission to have the prisoner examined by a private psychiatrist, and declared that he would “rely on the advice of the members of his staff as to the mental condition of Bart Luis Caritativo.”
Under the California statute, what information the warden considers, and the manner in which he considers it, in the common experience of lawyers a factor vital in determining the outcome of any legal inquiry, are matters resting solely with the warden. He may make his determination ex parte, and, as evidently was true in the
In considering the adequacy of this procedure, it is important to bear in mind that California does not tolerate the execution of the insane.
Surely the right of an insane man not to be executed, a right based on moral principles deeply embedded in the traditions and feelings of our people and itself protected by the Due Process Clause of the
Audi alteram partem—hear the other side!—a demand made insistently through the centuries, is now a command, spoken with the voice of the Due Process Clause of the
It may well be that if the warden of a California prison cannot act on his arbitrary judgment—for it is inherently arbitrary if the condemned man or those who speak for him are not allowed to be heard—in deciding whether there is good reason to believe that a person about to be executed is insane, that unworthy claims will be put to the warden and perchance add to delays in the execution of the law. But far better such minor inconveniences, and an effective penal administration ought to find no difficulty in making them minor, than that the State of California should have on its conscience a single execution that would be barbaric because the victim was in fact, though he had no opportunity to show it, mentally unfit to meet his destiny.
