432 Pa. 44 | Pa. | 1968
Opinion by
Appellants John Williams and Ardry Jones are presently incarcerated in the State Correctional Institution at Dallas, having been adjudged defective delinquents with criminal tendencies by the Juvenile
Appellants’ arguments before this Court break down into three categories: (1) an attack upon the expert medical testimony introduced before the juvenile court; (2) an attack upon the constitutionality of the Dallas Act under which Jones and Williams were committed. Act of May 25, 1937, P. L. 808, §3, as amended, 61 P.S. §541-3;
Expert Medical Testimony
In order to evaluate properly the testimony introduced beloAv upon which appellants were found both delinquent and mentally defective, it is first necessary to revieAV in some detail the personal history of Williams and Jones.
John Williams was born in 1950. At the age of six he was placed with foster parents, began school, and became' such a behavior problem that he was finally excused from further attendance. In 1962, at the age of tAvelve, Williams was arrested on charges of larceny, receiving stolen goods and incorrigibility. Shortly thereafter he was adjudged delinquent by the juvenile court and given a series of psychiatric and psychological tests, the results of which were unanimous
During the next three years Williams embarked upon a campaign of misconduct ranging from the simple teasing of low-grade patients to such crimes as larceny, assault and battery, and sodomy. A total of 56 instances of misconduct were reported by the Pennhurst authorities who, in April, 1966, petitioned the Juvenile Court for Williams’ removal. Two hearings were held thereafter by the Juvenile Court. The first hearing resulted in Williams being found mentally defective, the second in his being adjudged delinquent, this time on the basis of the offenses committed while at Pennhurst.
The life of Ardry Jones has been equally tragic. Born in 1949, Jones had his first contact with the Juvenile Court in 1956 as a result of behavioral problems in school. In 1962 he was arrested and charged with indecent exposure. As with Williams, the Juvenile Court suspected Jones’ mental condition and ordered medical examinations. Again the diagnoses of the psychiatrist and psychologist were in accord: subject was mentally defective. Jones was therefore ordered held at the Youth Study Center pending acceptance by Pennhurst. He finally entered that institution on the same day as John Williams, April 11, 1963.
Jones’ deportment record at Pennhurst unfortunately is practically a carbon copy of Williams’. A total of 40 disciplinary violations in three years, including repeated acts of assault, larceny and sodomy. Accordingly, Pennhurst petitioned the Juvenile Court for Jones’ discharge. Hearings were held and Jones was also found mentally defective and delinquent on the basis of his Pennhurst escapades. He too, of course, was committed to Dallas.
Appellants’ attack upon the medical testimony used to find both boys defective is twofold. It is first claimed that the psychiatrists and psychologists who examined Jones and Williams failed to find them mentally defective according to the statutory definition of that term. Although the Dallas Act does not define the term “mental defective” both sides concede that the relevant definition is contained in the Mental
It cannot be gainsaid that one of the thorniest legal problems connected with mental status, as either a defense or a reason for confinement, is the increasing reluctance of psychiatrists and psychologists to testify using language that conforms to statutory definitions
Moreover, the testimony of all four doctors who examined Williams and Jones satisfies us' that the Juvenile Court could have quite properly made the finding it did—that appellants were mentally defective within the meaning of the statute. Each boy was examined by both a psychiatrist and a psychologist. Dr. Robinson, the psychiatrist who examined Williams, testified that he found his patient to have “poor social sense, poor self-control and hardly any tolerance for frustration.” He further testified that Williams’ “hostile and aggressive impulses are acted upon with no judgment or concern for consequences.” When asked how he defined the term “mental defective,” Dr. Robinson included in his definition the fact that a person so affected would have a “limited ability for judg
Dr. Stickler, a psychologist, also examined Williams. He was concerned primarily with intelligence level, as measured by the standard I.Q. test. Dr. Stickler told the court that mental defectives generally had I.Q.’s ranging all the way from zero to 80, with three subdivisions existing: zero to 50, severe defective; 50 to 70, moderate defective; 70 to 80, mild defective. He found Williams’ I.Q. to be 58, thus making him, by this standard, a moderate defective. Dr. Robinson had also classified Williams as a moderate defective.
Ardry Jones was likewise examined by a psychiatrist and a psychologist. Dr. Wouters, the psychiatrist, concluded that Jones was a mental defective on the basis of a personal interview as well as numerous reports submitted by other doctors who had examined Jones previously. Dr. Wouters testified that Jones had “well-established patterns of handling stress by agression.” He also said that “this young man showed very poor judgment, did not grasp situations, did not grasp implications, . . . [and] was unable to adapt to the situation.”
Dr. Carol Andrews was the psychologist assigned to Jones’ case. She measured his I.Q. at 67, within the moderate defective range. Dr. Andrews reported that psychological tests administered at the direction of Dr. Wouters showed Jones to suffer from “emotional impulsivity and aggressiveness.” Furthermore, “difficulties in interpersonal relationships . . . with sexual implications” were detected. It was the firm opinion of this psychologist that appellant was a menace to society.
Under these circumstances we do not think it appropriate for judges or lawyers to question the ability of admittedly qualified doctors to administer accepted tests, conduct interviews, and make diagnoses. Of course, it is up to the trier of fact to accept or reject any expert’s ultimate opinion; but that does not mean that laymen should be permitted to speculate on the medical conclusions to be drawn from the specific questions asked and tests administered by trained persons. Thus, the court below, when called upon to determine whether appellants were or were not mentally defective with criminal tendencies had to consider several pieces of evidence, among them being the diagnoses of four doctors. Had that court decided to reject those diagnoses as unworthy of belief we would probably not question its right to do so; however, we will not say as a matter of law that the medical opinions were not valid matters of evidence simply because the doctors relied on hearsay during their examinations, or because counsel believes that he is better qualified to evaluate the psychiatric and psychological tests administered.
Finally, the court below heard substantial testimony on the actual behavior of both boys at Pennhurst. Professional and lay personnel from Pennhurst recounted, often with lurid details, the 96 separate offenses committed by appellants during their three year stay in that institution. As noted earlier, these offenses ranged from minor disciplinary problems all the way to numerous criminal acts, including assault, larceny, sodomy and arson. In sum, there was more than enough evidence for the trier of fact to conclude, as he did, that these boys were delinquent and had serious criminal tendencies. We therefore hold that the evidence was sufficient to meet the requirements of the Dallas Act.
The Constitutionality of the Dallas Act
Appellants’ constitutional arguments are based on the contention that confinement in Dallas is punish
In Robinson a California statute was challenged which made it a crime to be addicted to the use of narcotics. It was possible for an individual to be convicted of this offense even though the state introduced no proof whatsoever that the defendant used narcotics in California or had been apprehended with the drugs in his possession. The trial judge in that case instructed the jury that the violation need not be based on any specific act, but could be based simply upon a “condition or status” of the defendant. In declaring this statute violative of the eighth amendment, the Supreme Court said: “This statute, therefore, is not one which punishes a person for the use of narcotics, for their purchase, sale or possession, or for antisocial or disorderly behavior resulting from their administration. It' is not a law which even purports to provide or require medical treatment. Rather, we deal with a statute which makes the ‘status’ or narcotic addiction a criminal offense.” 370 U.S. at 666, 82 S. Ct. at 1420. In analogizing the California statute to one which might make having a common cold a crime, the Supreme Court indicated clearly the evil in the challenged legislation. Under it a man could be punished for doing nothing; he could be criminally prosecuted for merely being found in a condition, recognized to be a disease, and over which he no longer had any control.
The Chief Justice, Justices Black, Harlan and Marshall took the position that Robinson should not extend to specific criminal acts allegedly done because of a disease such as narcotics addiction or alcoholism. The four dissenters (Justices Douglas, Brennan, Stewart and Fortas) however, maintained that being in a state of intoxication in public was a “characteristic part of the pattern of his [Powell’s] disease and . . . was not the consequence of appellant’s violation but of ‘a compulsion symptomatic of the disease of chronic alcoholism.’ ” They therefore voted to reverse Powell’s conviction on the authority of Robinson. Mr. Justice White was, in a very real sense, the “swing man” in this case. While concurring in the result, he did so only because, in his view, there was no evidence to show that Powell’s appearing drunk in public was in fact a characteristic part of his disease. Mr. Justice White found nothing on the record to indicate that appellant could not have confined his drinking to his private house. However, his opinion
In the present case, appellants seek shelter under either or both of the Supreme Court’s eighth amendment umbrellas. Their Robinson claim, that Williams and Jones are being punished merely for being mental defectives, is clearly without merit. These boys are not confined to Dallas solely because they are mental defectives. Indeed, were that their only problem they would still be in Pennhurst, a nonpenal institution specifically designed for mental defectives. Bather, appellants were transferred to a penal institution because of their antisocial conduct while at Pennhurst, specific criminal acts sufficient to support findings of delinquency.
Appellants concede, as they must, that there was no direct testimony introduced below to show that their Pennhurst misconduct was anything other than voluntary. Nevertheless, Jones and Williams point to our statutory definition of “mental defective” and argue that the language of that definition itself necessitates a conclusion that one so afflicted cannot control his behavior. The statutory language, set out supra, indicates that defective status is reached when a person “has not acquired enough self-control, judgment and discretion to manage himself and his affairs.” We do not think this definition so colors the status of mental defectives in Pennsylvania however as to make criminal conduct an actual symptom of the condition itself. Simply because a man lacks the ability to manage himself or his affairs does not mean that he will, of necessity, commit crimes. And, as we read the language of the Powell dissent, any act that is not so necessitated by the condition may still be criminally proscribed. It is simply not enough to say that in a
The dissenters in Powell specifically stated that the case before them did not “concern the responsibility of an alcoholic for criminal acts. We deal here with the mere condition of being intoxicated in public.” 392 U.S. at 559, 88 S. Ct. at 2167. (Emphasis in original.) Even more significant is the footnote to this quoted passage. “It is not foreseeable that findings such as those which are decisive here—namely that the defendant’s being intoxicated in public was a part of the pattern of his disease and due to a compulsion symptomatic of that disease—could or would be made in the case of offenses such as driving a car while intoxicated, assault, theft, or robbery. Such offenses require independent acts or conduct and do not typically flow from and are not part of the syndrome of the disease of chronic alcoholism. If an alcoholic should be convicted for criminal conduct which is not a characteristic and involuntary part of the pattern of the disease as it afflicts him, nothing herein would prevent his punishment.” 392 U.S. at 559, n.2, 88 S. Ct. at 2167, n.2.
The Treatment Afforded at Dallas
Appellants rely on two authorities for the proposition that their commitments to Dallas must be overturned due to inadequate treatment at that institution: an extensive discussion of the defective delinquent in Pennsylvania appearing at 12 Vill. L. Rev. 545 (1967), and a case decided by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, Rouse v. Cameron, 373 F. 2d 451 (D.C. Cir. 1966). While we are in sympathy with appellants’ contention that Dallas may be far from a model institution, we fail to see how either of the cited authorities supports court intervention in the area of defective treatment.
The authors of the Yillanova study conclude with an appeal to the Legislature, not the courts. In committing appellants to Dallas, the court below acted in accordance with the statute then in effect. It properly
Admittedly, Rouse v. Cameron supra, is authority for the proposition that courts, under proper circumstances, will pass judgment on the treatment being afforded persons confined to state institutions. However, for any one of a number of reasons, Rouse has absolutely no application whatsoever to this case. First, and most significant, Rouse proceeds on the notion that one has a constitutional right to treatment when involuntarily confined to a mental hospital following an acquittal, by reason of insanity, of a criminal offense. This result follows not from the mere fact that one is in custody, but rather from the nature of that custody. Eelator in Rouse was not in a penal institution, he was in a mental hospital whose only justification for confining him was his need for medical treatment. Having been found guilty of no crime, he could not be kept in custody for any reason other than treatment. It follows inexorably therefore that the court in Rouse had no choice but to find relator entitled to proper treatment. To hold otherwise would be tantamount to permitting involuntary hospitalization for no reason other than pure confinement, an obvious due process violation.
For all the foregoing reasons, we hold that appellants were properly committed to Dallas under the laws in effect at the time of those commitments.
Orders affirmed.
On July 20, 1968 the Dallas Act was repealed by Act No. 206 (Senate Bill 1225). Although the effect of this repealer is that no more commitments to Dallas may be made, unlike a retroactive declaration by this Court that a statute is unconstitutional the mere repeal of the Dallas Act will not operate to void all prior commitments. Thus, appellants’ constitutional arguments must still be faced.
More specifically, both appellants were found “moderately defective”. There are, according to the expert testimony below, three levels of mental defectives: mild, moderate and severe. From the standpoint of the psychologist these levels depend on the I.Q. of the individual; an I.Q. less than 50 equates with a severe defective, 50 to 70 with a moderate defective, 70 to 80 with a mild defective. It appears that these gradations were formally associated with the terms idiot, imbecile and moron, although doctors now prefer a more clinical nomenclature.
Counsel for appellants initially argued before the Juvenile Court that his clients could no longer be sent to Dallas since they were no longer delinquent. He claimed that their institutionalization at Pennhurst, a noncorreetional facility, operated to erase
In the 1966 Mental Health Act, Act of October 20, 1966, P. L. 6, §101 et seq., 50 P.S. §4101 et seq. (Supp. 1967), the term “mental defective” is included within the definition of “Mental Disability.” The definition of “mental disability” recites: “ ‘Mental disability’ means any mental illness, mental impairment, mental retardation, or mental deficiency, which so lessens the capacity of a person to use his customary self-control, judgment and discretion in the conduct of his affairs and social relations as to make it necessary or advisable for him to be under care as provided in this act. . . .”
The effect of this new definition is to make possible the non-penal commitment of persons mentally defective who have nonetheless committed crimes. This is so because the various commitment sections of the act, including those authorizing the commitment of persons charged with crimes, released on bail, awaiting trial, freshly convicted or serving sentences, are all keyed to the term “mentally disabled” and that phrase is in turn keyed only to nonpenal institutions, called “facilities” by the act.
To the extent that appellants are kept in Dallas beyond the time during which they could have been confined to a normal institution for delinquents, such as Camp Hill, this additional confinement would, of course, be solely because of their mental status and accordingly violative of both Robinson and Powetl. However, this situation could never arise by reason of the fact that appellants’ commitments to Dallas must expire when they reach the age of twenty-one, a point coterminous with the maximum sentence they could have received had they been sent to Camp Hill as normal delinquents. The Juvenile Court, by which both boys were sentenced, loses jurisdiction over persons when they attain majority.
Should it be felt that either appellant requires continued care after he reaches twenty-one, the 1966 Mental Health Act permits only civil commitment, as though no crimes have been committed. Since Williams and Jones would have already served the maximum correctional sentence which the Juvenile Court could have meted out, any post-majority proceedings in the absence of any