Lead Opinion
Petitioner, Dale Lee Owens, was convicted, after a jury trial in Kentucky state court, of three counts of first-degree rape and three counts of first-degree burglary. He is presently serving sentences totaling 105 years for those crimes. Owens filed a petition in the Eastern District of Kentucky pursuant'to 28 U.S.C. § 2254, alleging that
The issue of Owens’ competency was initially raised by his counsel prior to trial. Counsel moved that Owens be examined by a psychiatrist and attached an affidavit to the motion in which counsel expressed doubts concerning Owens’ competency to stand trial. The trial court apparently ordered the examination, as one was conducted. Owens was admitted to the Forensic Psychiatry Division of the Kentucky Department of Mental Health on November 26, 1976. He was discharged on December 8,1976 with a diagnosis of “Transient situational disturbance; adjustment reaction of adult life.” The Clinical Director, Dr. N. S. Chaudri, reported that he found Owens to be in good physical condition. Dr. Chaudri also reported that Owens had been taking hard drugs for some time, but expressed the opinion that Owens was not psychotic. In Dr. Chaudri’s opinion Owens was “competent to stand trial and aid in his defense.” A copy of this report was given to Owens’ counsel, but it does not appear that the trial court ever received a copy.
Other indicia of possible incompetency were revealed during the trial and involve rather unusual aspects of Owens’ criminality. All three rape victims were named Patricia. One victim testified that after Owens raped her he offered her his pistol and told her to shoot him. His last rape victim testified that, after the rape, Owens asked her whether she would “freak out” if he committed suicide. Receiving an affirmative answer, Owens promptly fell asleep in the victim’s bed, to be awakened shortly thereafter by the arresting officers.
It was in the Kentucky appellate courts that Owens initially pressed his claim that counsel’s affidavit and the rape victims’ testimony required the trial court to conduct, sua sponte, a competency hearing. The Kentucky Supreme Court held that the record did not “present any factor that would even tend to alert a trial court that the defendant may be incompetent . . . . ” Owens v. Commonwealth,
It is, of course, well settled that a defendant’s due process rights are violated if he is subjected to a trial while incompetent. See, e. g., Drope v. Missouri,
[Wjhether [the defendant] has sufficient present ability to consult with his lawyer with a reasonable degree of rational understanding — and whether he has a rational as well as factual understanding of the proceedings against him.
Id., reaffirmed in Drope, supra, at 170 n.7,
Although the Supreme Court has not articulated “a general standard with respect to the nature or quantum of evidence necessary to require resort to an adequate procedure,” Drope, supra,
In the instant case counsel’s affidavit expressed counsel’s doubts concerning his client’s competency and reported that Owens mentioned suicide and complained of hallucinations to members of his family, to counsel, and to other inmates. Mention is made of “prior psychiatric records” but none were presented with the affidavit or at any subsequent time. The only other pertinent observation in the affidavit was that counsel found Owens to be “extremely agitated” and had difficulty impressing Owens of the seriousness of his predicament. In addition to this affidavit, the rape victims’ testimony is urged as indicative of incompetence. This court is of the opinion that, on the facts of this case, counsel’s concern and Owens’ subjective complaints did not require a competency hearing, even when considered in conjunction with the rape victims’ testimony. Several considerations lead us to this result.
First, counsel made no further mention of the competency issue after receiving the psychiatrist’s report. It seems highly unlikely that counsel sensitive to this issue would not have complained further had Owens been unable to understand the proceedings or participate in his defense. In this regard, the trial court could reasonably infer from counsel’s silence that his doubts had been allayed, either by the report, by Owens’ conduct, or by both. Second, Owens, by his own admission, was a chronic drug user. This fact alone could account for Owens’ complaints in the early part of his incarceration and for his bizarre behavior during the commission of the rapes. Third, whatever questionable relevance his behavior at the time of the crimes has to his ability to cooperate with counsel and understand the proceedings is diminished somewhat by the delay between the commission of the crimes and the trial. Finally, Owens’ testimony at trial does not indicate incompetence. Indeed, the other courts that have considered this testimony have concluded that Owens did the best he could in the face of overwhelming evidence. After a review of this testimony we are constrained to agree. Thus, we conclude that no due process violation occurred as a result of the trial court’s failure to conduct a competency hearing sua sponte.
Turning to Owens’ other claim on appeal, this court rejects his contention that the district court erred in not reviewing the entire trial transcript. Owens’ testimony was a part of the record, as was counsel’s affidavit. The other evidence urged as evidence of incompetency, the victims’ testimony, was undisputed. No disputed fact question was before the district court such that review of the trial transcript was necessary for proper disposition of Owens’ petition.
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. This report was not a part of the record before the state appellate courts. Nor was this report a part of the record before the magistrate and the district court, although they were apparently made aware of its contents. Owens’ appellate counsel submitted the report to this court at oral argument.
. Under Kentucky law, a competency hearing must be ordered by a trial court, sua sponte, only if there are reasonable grounds to believe the defendant incompetent and these grounds are “so obvious that the trial court cannot fail to be aware of them.” Matthews v. Commonwealth,
Concurrence Opinion
Circuit Judge, concurring.
I agree with the conclusion of the majority that the trial court’s failure to conduct a competency hearing sua sponte did not deprive Owens of his federal constitutional right to due process of law. Dusky v. United States,
I write separately only to emphasize my view that the better practice under the circumstances of the present case would have been for the trial court to conduct a competency hearing. When a defendant’s counsel harbors doubts about his client’s competency to stand trial and when the circumstances suggest an inexplicable and irrational pattern of criminality coupled with suicidal manifestations, I believe that a competency hearing becomes appropriate. The majority observed, and the point merits repetition, that the signs of incompetency are not “fixed or immutable . . . [rather] the question is often a difficult one in which a wide range of manifestations and subtle nuances are implicated.” Drope v. Missouri, supra, at 180,
