COMMONWEALTH vs. HARRY JOSEPH MUTINA
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts
February 11, 1975
366 Mass. 810
Middlesex. September 18, 1974. Present: TAURO, C.J., REARDON, QUIRICO, BRAUCHER, HENNESSEY, KAPLAN, & WILKINS, JJ.
Practice, Criminal, Capital case, Charge to jury. Insanity. Homicide. Jury and Jurors.
Where at a murder trial there was no affirmative evidence of the defendant‘s sanity, but there was extensive evidence of his lack of criminal responsibility, where an expert witness had testified that the prognosis was poor and that the defendant would continue to be dangerous, and where the judge refused to give instructions requested by the defendant explaining his postverdict status if found not guilty by reason of insanity, this court, under
In a criminal trial where the defense of insanity is fairly raised, an instruction regarding the consequences of a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity must be given at the option of the defendant. [817-823] QUIRICO, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part, with whom REARDON and WILKINS, JJ., joined.
INDICTMENT found and returned in the Superior Court on July 16, 1971.
William P. Homans, Jr., for the defendant.
Terence M. Troyer, Assistant District Attorney (Bonnie H. MacLeod-Griffin, Assistant District Attorney, with him) for the Commonwealth.
TAURO, C.J. The defendant appeals pursuant to
Briefly, the facts are these. Around midnight on March 16, 1971, the defendant approached Ruth Achorn on the front steps of her home as she returned from a date. He stared at Ruth and her companion for about a minute, then raised his hand and fired two shots. One shot hit Ruth and killed her. The defendant fled, disassembled the gun, and threw it in the woods. He was apprehended about an hour and forty minutes later at McLean Hospital, where he was found crouching in a corner. He was taken to the police station where he “just grunted” in response to Miranda warnings and madе no response to questions asked of him.
At trial, the prosecution offered no evidence regarding the defendant‘s mental capacity, relying instead on the “presumption of sanity” and on the circumstances surrounding the crime. The defendant presented lay witnesses who testified as to their observations of the defendant from his childhood up to the date of the offense. In addition, he called two qualified psychiatrists and introduced medical records of his stay at McLean Hospital. Relevant portions of this testimony will be discussed where appropriate in the course of this opinion.
The defendant assigns as error the trial judge‘s refusal to give requested instruction no. 9, which would have explained to the jury the defendant‘s postverdict status if found not guilty by reason of insanity.1 He further assigns
We recognize, of course, that the obligations imposed by § 33E require our most serious deliberation before we disturb the verdict of a jury who heard the evidence and saw the witnesses. “Regard for the public interest impels us to use with restraint our power under § 33E.” Commonwealth v. Williams, 364 Mass. 145, 151 (1973). However, “[o]ur power to award a new trial without regard to technical rules of law should be exercised with primary focus on ultimate justice in the particular case. This means to us that we must concern ourselves primarily with the particular defendant and the particular facts.” Commonwealth v. Geraway, 364 Mass. 168, 184 (1973). We turn to the particular facts which compel us to exercise this power in the instant case.
Although the fact is not mentioned in the briefs, there was testimony that the defendant is a young man with a history of mental illness on both sides of the family. He had bеen dating the deceased, Ruth Achorn, for a period from October, 1969, to July, 1970. At that time, the relationship began to deteriorate and Harry became very jealous and
About this time he began making bizarre statements; his speech became thick and he was “very quiet, very withdrawn, listless, pallid.” He became very secretive and quiet, while continuing to follow Ruth and to telephone her without speaking. Early in 1971 Harry was involved in a car accident near where Ruth lived, and two weeks later he was found in the Achorn house. When confronted, he told the Achorns he would never hurt “Ruthie,” but was told he had already done so twice. Harry cried, and was advised to seek psychiatric help.
Shortly thereafter, Harry‘s parents arranged to have him taken to McLean Hospital where he was subsequently admitted. While at McLean, he refused visits from his parents and became very hostile. He was discharged from McLean against medical advice on March 3, 1971, and walked home through a snowstorm. After his return home, he screamed when spoken to, looked haggard and drawn, and continued to make bizarre statements.
Harry‘s father and a police lieutenant testified as to Harry‘s behavior after his arrest. He did not respond to questions and sat very rigid with his eyes closed tightly. He was asked what he had done with the gun, and after twenty minutes muttered “woods, woods.” The remainder of the time he just sat with his head down, tense and stiff.
At the trial, the McLean Hospital records were admitted and they included a consultation note signed by Dr. Leff, a staff physician, giving a brief history of the defendant‘s life and family. The provisional diagnosis on admission was “schizophrenic process, acute paranoid type,” with Dr. Leff‘s statement: “I feel that the danger оf loss of control of
Two qualified psychiatrists testified for the defendant. The first was Dr. Leonard R. Friedman, who saw him at the Billerica house of correction the day after the shooting. His ultimate diagnosis was “acute schizophrenic illness.” He stated that the defendant lacked substantial capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of law on March 16-17, 1971, and that he lacked substantial capacity to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct on those dates. The doctor felt more strongly about the former than the latter view.
Dr. Friedman described the defendant‘s mental illness and explainеd how the events beginning July, 1970, were symptomatic of his disorder. Additionally, he explained that the McLean diagnosis of personality disorder was not inconsistent with his diagnosis, since the defendant was not medicated while at McLean and did not talk freely with the doctors there. His testimony was consistent with the observations of the lay witnesses, and in fact supported them.
Dr. Samuel Epstein, who was appointed by the court on motion of the Commonwealth, testified that the defendant “is mentally ill with a schizophrenic disorder of insidious onset, [a]lthough the early manifestations were those of a passive-aggressive personality with paranoid trends.” He further stated that the defendant was suffering from this illness at the time of the shooting, and “was not able to conform his conduct to that which he knew was wrongful [sic] by virtue of his mental disorder.” Dr. Epstein explained the basis for his conclusions and attempted to harmonize the McLean diagnosis. In his opinion, that diagnosis reflected an earlier stage of the defendant‘s
In spite of a very detailed and skillful cross-examination, neither Dr. Friedman nor Dr. Epstein was shaken from his diagnosis as testified to in direct examination. Dr. Epstein did not retreat from his position, stating “to me, it is fairly classical that this is the way insidious, paranoid schizophrenics develop and behave.” Dr. Friedman testified on cross-examination that, although the defendant had some capacity to appreciate criminality, it was “[v]ery little. That is, if a policeman was standing over his shoulder relating the law to him, it still wouldn‘t help.” He denied this was a borderline case, and in answer to the last question on cross-examination, “Is it fair to say that you don‘t know how accurate your diagnosis is?” he answered, “I will disagree with you because I have a very good idea about the accuracy of my diagnosis.”
The prosecution did not introduce any independent evidence bearing on the sole issue of criminal responsibility. It relied instead on the “presumption of sanity,”2 on its cross-examination of the defendant‘s witnesses, and on the circumstances surrounding the shooting. Commonwealth v. Ricard, 355 Mass. 509, 514 (1969).
As previously noted, the defendant requested an instruction explaining what would happen if the jury found him not guilty by reason of insanity. This request was denied. The jury may well have misunderstood the consequences of such a verdict and may have based their verdict of guilty on fears that the defendant would go free if they acquitted him on the ground of insanity. This situation was aggravated by the testimony of Dr. Epstein, over the defendant‘s objection, that the prognosis was poor, that the defendant would continue to be dangerous and a menace, and that there was a likelihood of further trouble with the defendant unless he were treated in a maximum security hospital.3 Had the jury
In light of what we have said, this case will be remanded to the Superior Court for a new trial. Although our action pursuant to § 33E is dispositive, we would be remiss if we did not consider the defendant‘s request for an instruction regarding the postconviction status of one found not guilty by reason of insanity which, in all probability, will be raised if the defendant is retried.
The principal argument for rejecting the practice of instructing juries as to the legal consequences of their verdicts in criminal cases seems to lie in the conviction that, in reaching their verdicts, jurors should be shielded from extraneous influences and should arrive at their verdicts only on a dispassionate consideration of the relevant and credible evidence presented to them in the adversary process. See, e.g., State v. Park, 159 Maine 328 (1963); People v. Adams, 26 N. Y. 2d 129 (1970), cert. den. 399 U. S. 931 (1970); Lonquest v. State, 495 P. 2d 575 (Wyo. 1972), cert. den. 409 U. S. 1006 (1972).4 To inform jurors of the consequences of their verdicts is apparently seen, and in most cases with good cause, as inviting result-oriented verdicts and possible deviation from the basic issues of a defendant‘s guilt or innocence. This process, if allowed without restriction, could lead to the jury‘s usurpation of the judge‘s sentencing prerogatives and duties and the Legislature‘s policy determining functions.
Nevertheless, it is unrealistic to deny what trial judges and lawyers have long recognized. Jurors do not come to their temporary judicial service as sterile intellectual mechanisms purged of all those subconscious factors which have formed their characters and temperaments such as racial or ethnic background, sex, economic status, in-
Indeed, this court has recognized that such factors can affect the intellectual judgments of a juror without any consciousness of bias or prejudice and, for this very reason, has supported the jury system -- which provides a fair cross section of the community -- as the best protection against possible abuse or failure of judgment by even best intentioned individuals. Commonwealth v. Bellino, 320 Mass. 635 (1947), cert. den. 330 U. S. 832 (1947). Commonwealth v. Ricard, 355 Mass. 509, 512 (1969). Opinion of the Justices, 360 Mass. 877 (1971). See Williams v. Florida, 399 U. S. 78 (1970).
In recognizing the operative effect of such factors on jurors’ deliberations and to counter balance them in so far as practically attainable, the courts have insisted on the establishment and maintenance of procedures to insure that juries are fairly drawn. By various procedural and evidentiary rules, the courts have established devices to withhold from jurors facts which might cause the subversion of their intellectual processes and, instead, elicit a verdict predicated on an emotional reaction.
For example, a trial judge acting in the exercise of his sound discretion may refuse to allow gruesome, color photographs of a murder victim to be entered in evidence even though, in the abstract, those photographs may be relevant and credible evidence. Compare Commonwealth v. Smith, 350 Mass. 600 (1966).
Again, the Bruton5 rule prohibiting the introduction in evidence of one defendant‘s statement incriminating a codefendant recognizes that, despite the intellectual accuracy of curative instructions and the good faith efforts of jurors to comply with them, it is unrealistic to expect that jurors can by some mental exercise blot from their minds
Despite his good will, maturity, acumen and sense of civic responsibility and despite his willingness to accept and his efforts to apply judicial instructions, the juror comes to the court room complete with that knowledge and those experiences, expectations, fears and frustrations which have shaped his character and attitudes. Quite apart from questions of obvious bias or admitted prejudice, no juror enters into his temporary judicial service stripped of his background and emotions. To hold otherwise would be to defy human experience. Indeed, the recognition of this fact underlies our system of peremptory challenges and challenges for cause.
Several frequently recurring types of situations substantiate the existence of this fact. Prosecutors know well the difficulty of obtaining convictions in drunken driving cases where conviction automatically leads to a license suspension.6 Quite often, the jurors’ aversion to convicting in such cases has little to do with the sufficiency of the admissible and credible evidence presented to them at trial. Rather, it is sometimes based on their social views toward drinking and their common knowledge of the inconvenient effects of the loss of a driver‘s license for an extended period of time. Furthermore, where the evidence reveals that the defendant depends on driving for his livelihood, the chance of conviction is substantially reduced, as jurors may acquit in order to avoid what they might consider to be unduly harsh economic sanctions.7
On the civil side, the so called “deep pocket” rationale may lessen the chance of a favorable verdict for an impersonal corporation, particularly if there is an appealing plaintiff such as a seriously injured child. This is true dеspite the fact that the law and the facts may strongly indicate the lack of the corporate defendant‘s liability.
Juries are generally instructed by judges in their charges and urged by counsel in their argument that they must not leave their common sense outside the jury room. In rendering a verdict, the evidence and the judge‘s instructions are undoubtedly considered within the framework of that common sense which includes the jury‘s collective concept of justice derived in turn from an amalgam of the respective juror‘s lifetime of personal experience. It is for this reason that the jury system has been described from time to time as a necessary device in our jurisprudence to blunt the sometimes sharp cutting edge of the law.
This is not to say that a jury, in deciding questions of guilt or innocence, are entitled to disregard the law as given to them by the judge or, in effect, to become an ex post facto Legislature with respect to the case entrusted to them. Neither are they allowed to consider facts relating to the case but not presented to them at trial, such as an inadmissible confession previously reported by the news
If one accepts the rationality of this premise, then it is most difficult to rationalize with any compelling degree of logic or common sense the severe strictures against informing a jury of the consequences of a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity.
Ordinarily, a jury are confronted with only two alternatives - a verdict of not guilty or a verdict of guilty. Only in rare cases is there a third alternative - not guilty by reason of insanity. Ordinarily, the jury know that a verdict of guilty will lead to the imposition of an appropriate sanction including incarceration if necessary in the best interests of the defendant and of society. Conversely, the jury know that a verdict of not guilty will lead to the defendant‘s exoneration and physical freedom. Only where the insanity defense is raised are the jury given a third alternative whose lеgal consequences they may not know or fully understand. Not to inform the jury of these possible consequences, when so requested by counsel or by the jury themselves, invites unnecessary speculation into their deliberations. Assuredly, the jurors will discuss this phase of a case in which a plea of insanity has been entered, and such discussion without the benefit of correct instruction may very well cause them to proceed on an erroneous basis.
On balance then, we believe it is best to entrust jurors with a knowledge of the consequences of a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity.9 If jurors can be entrusted with
The instant case represents a classic example of the injustice which may occur when such information is withheld from the jury. The jury could have had no doubt that the defendant killed Miss Achorn. The jury also heard overwhelmingly persuasive evidence that the defendant was insane at the time of the killing and that, for a long time into the future, he will remain a menace to himself and to society. Foremost in their minds must have been a concern for the safety of the community.
In the absence of an instruction from the trial judge as to the effect of a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity, the jurors sought to render justice both to the defendant and to society, but theirs was not a true verdict. It is no answer that the defendant‘s counsel, with the judge‘s permission, briefly alluded to the existence of our commitment laws by saying that such a verdict “doesn‘t mean that Harry walks out of this courtroom a free man.” Juries are repeatedly told both by trial judges and counsel that they are to take the law from the judge‘s charge and not from counsel‘s arguments.10
Implicit in the jury‘s guilty verdict was a determination that the Commonwealth had proved the defendant‘s sanity beyond a reasоnable doubt. On the record before us, we have found no rational justification or basis for such a finding, except the jury‘s understandable concern for the need to confine an insane and still dangerous killer for the protection of society. The jury, lacking knowledge of the
Judgment reversed.
Verdict set aside.
QUIRICO, J. (with whom Reardon and Wilkins, JJ., join, concurring in part and dissenting in part). I concur with that part of the сourt‘s opinion which, exercising the power conferred by
It necessarily follows that the jury have no right to determine the crime of which the defendant is guilty, or the
The jury are as much excluded from the commitment of a defendant whom they have found not guilty by reason of insanity as they are from the sentencing of a defendant found guilty.
In those jurisdictions where the jury have no mandated or permitted responsibility or function in connection with the imposition of sentences in criminal cases, it is generally accepted that a party may not as of right require the judge to instruct the jury about the penalty which may or must be imposed in the event of a conviction. The principal reasons for this rule are that such an instruction does not assist the jury in determining the issue of guilt or innocence and that knowledge of the permitted or prescribed penalty may cause or influence the jury to return a verdict designed to result in a particular penalty rather than one based on the facts and the law of the case.4
For substantially the same reasons, it is generally held that a party to a criminal case may not as of right require the judge to instruct the jury about the possibility that the penalty imposed pursuant to a conviction may be suspended or cancelled or that the period of imprisonment may be reduced under laws relating to pardons or parole. In
In my opinion, the question whether a jury should be informed about the legal consequences of a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity, in particular the consequence that the defendant in such a case, although acquitted, may be committed to a mental institution, is but a refinement of the general question whether the jury in a criminal trial should ever be informed of the legal consequences of their verdict. Admittedly, there are numerous judicial precedents which support a position on one or the other side of this question. The court in this case has elected to adopt the view which appears to have its genesis, at least as to Federal courts, in Taylor v. United States, 222 F. 2d 398, 404 (D. C. Cir. 1955), where the court said: “[W]e think that when an accused person has pleaded insanity, counsel may and the judge should inform the jury that if he is acquitted by reason of insanity he will be presumed to be insane and may be confined in a ‘hospital for the insane’ as long as ‘the public safety and... [his] welfare’ require.”
Unlike the court in today‘s opinion, I find more persuasive the logic and reasoning of the three judges who dissented on this point in the Lyles decision,7 and the similar or parallel logic and reasoning of the many decisions of other State courts which have reached a similar conclusion. I therefore respectfully dissent from that part of the court‘s opinion in this case.
A large majority of the jurisdictions which have faced this question have come to the same conclusion as the minority in the Lyles decision, some, for example State v. Park, 159 Maine 328 (1963), expressly rejecting the majority view in that case. In the Park decision (at 336), the court said that the jury were not concerned with “whatever may transpire after the verdict,” and it refused to make an
In State v. Garrett, 391 S. W. 2d 235, 242 (Mo. 1965), the court expressly refused to follow the Lyles case, referring to the division of the court оn the present question. It categorized the legal consequence of an acquittal by reason of insanity as an “extraneous consideration” and said the requested instruction was “nothing less than an invitation for the jury to find the defendant mentally irresponsible because he would then be confined anyway.”
In State v. Conforti, 53 N. J. 239 (1969), the Supreme Court of New Jersey quoted with approval, at 244-245, the following language from the decision of the Appellate Division in State v. Bell, 102 N. J. Super. 70, 75-76 (1968), cert. den. 52 N. J. 485 (1968): “[W]e decline to adopt the minority view, as exemplified by Lyles v. United States ... that a jury must be informed of the consequences of a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity unless the defendant specifically requests otherwise. ... Generally speaking, the jury‘s duty, as distinguished from that of the
In People v. Adams, 26 N.Y. 2d 129 (1970), the court said in declining to follow the Lyles rule, at 138-139: “There is conflict amоngst the courts throughout the country on this issue. In a few jurisdictions it has been held that the instruction is proper and should be given.... However, in a majority of the jurisdictions, the courts have held that such an instruction should not be given.... It was, and is, our view that it would be improper for the court to give the instruction requested by the defendant. Consideration of punishment or disposition of the defendant is beyond the province of the jury. While it might be argued that the jury presently tends to consider possible punishment even though it is beyond their province, we conclude that to permit the instruction requested would only tend to exacerbate this problem. Such instruction might, as some of the majority jurisdictions have noted, prompt a jury to find insanity where the evidence might not otherwise have warranted such a finding.”
In State v. Hood, 123 Vt. 273 (1963), the court quoted from both the Taylor and the Lyles cases. As to the statement in the Lyles case about the jury‘s not being well informed on the legal consequences of an acquittal by reason of insanity, Chief Justice Hulburd said at 276: “We break off the quotation in order to observe that we doubt that people in general are as ill-informed on the subject as the opinion assumеs.” He then quoted further from the Lyles opinion‘s holding that such an instruction shall be given unless it “appears affirmatively on the record” that the defendant does not want it given. To this Chief Justice Hulburd makes the pithy comment: “We think that the latter part of the opinion discloses the unacceptable nature of the reasoning upon which the holding rests. It is not one
The court‘s opinion in the present case concludes with a holding that the judge may properly instruct the jury on the legal consequences of an acquittal by reason of insanity only when the defendant requests such an instruction. The cоmparable language in the Lyles decision is (pp. 728-729): “Sometimes a defendant may not want such an instruction given. If that appears affirmatively on the record we would not regard failure to give it as grounds for reversal.” This is the language which Chief Justice Hulburd said, in State v. Hood, 123 Vt. 273, 276 (1963), “tends to give justice, as applied to this situation, an a la carte quality in which the defendant may make as wily a choice as possible.” I agree with that criticism. By giving all the options to the defendant supposedly to avoid the possibility that a jury will convict a defendant out of fear that to acquit him by reason
One possibility is that the jury, knowing that acquittal by reason of insanity will result in the defendant‘s hospitalization rather than release, may return that verdict in a case where they would otherwise totally acquit him. We must remember that in the instant case the defendant‘s commission of the homicide was appаrently not seriously controverted, and the defendant‘s sanity seemed to be the only seriously contested issue. Where the defendant‘s commission of the act in question and his criminal responsibility are both closely disputed matters, an instruction such as that permitted by the court today may well provide the jury with an irresistible temptation to compromise on a verdict of not guilty by reason of insanity. Another such possibility is that the jury, having the information the judge would provide, may find it much easier to acquit a defendant by reason of insanity than to convict him in a case where the evidence and the law require a conviction.
In our desire to afford the defendant a fair trial, we should not lose sight of the fact that the Commonwealth too has a right to a fair trial. Commonwealth v. Roy, 349 Mass. 224, 227 (1965). The defendant is entitled to a verdict by a jury who are not influenced by the legal consequences of that verdict. The Commonwealth is entitled to no less. I do not believe that the rule adopted in the court‘s opinion recognizes the Commonwealth‘s right, equal to that of the defendant, to a just verdict.
Both possibilities mentioned above point up the fundamental distinction between my view and that of the court on the issue before us. The court apparently believes that the jury cannot be restrained from considering matters not germane to their proper duties and that, accordingly, they should be permitted to consider at least one such nongermane matter in cases where that might be advantageous to the defendant. I believe, on the other hand, that while the jury undisputably have the power to make irreversible
Before departing from the long established salutary rule that a jury may not consider the legal consequences of their verdict, I would consider any other proper measure which might ensure the return of a verdict based on the evidence and the law applicable to the case. One such measure would be the giving of appropriate instructions to the jury on what they may and may not consider in reaching a verdict. It is not uncommon for a trial judge to instruct a jury in the trial of a claim for money damages, particularly in the trial of an action of tort for personal injuries, that they may not speculate on or consider such factors as the fee which the plaintiff‘s counsel may charge in event of recovery, the amount of insurance, if any, the defendant may have, or whether the amount recovered by the plaintiff will be subject to an income tax. I see no reason why a judge presiding over a criminal trial which involves a defense of insanity should not instruct the jury that they may not concern themselves with the legal consequences of an acquittal by reason of insanity.
That is exactly the approach which was upheld as long ago as 1909 in State v. Barnes, 54 Wash. 493, 494-496, 499-500. There the jury reported that they had agreed that the
