1. The defendant’s insanity defense under a general plea of not guilty was supported by testimony of a psychiatrist who had interviewed him on two oсcasions and based his opinion primarily on what the defendant told him. We have examined the record on the propositions that the еvidence demanded a verdict either of insanity at the time of commission of the offense or of the mental disease of delusional insanity. The strongest evidence for the defendant is his own, to the effect that he had seen his wife in the automobile with another man; that he went to ask her who it was; she replied that it was her lover, and he "blanked out” and shot her, although he did not remember doing so. This response was categorically denied by the wife, who also testified to previous assaults and beatings, and that she left him for that reason. The psychiatrist testified that, based on what the defendant had told him, "I think [he was] under the influence of the emotion that was going on inside him at that time, he was not capable of mаking a judgment in terms of good, bad, right, wrong, or any such thing” but that, if the defendant in relating the story knew that he was deliberately exaggerating the whole thing, then his opinion would be different, but that he believed the defendant was not trying to deceive him. This testimony throws the case back on the factual issue of whether Freeman (a) did not at the time have the mental capacity to distinguish between right and wrong (Code Ann. §
*744
26-702) or (b) acted because of mentаl disease or injury from a delusional compulsion which overmastered his will to resist the commission of the crime (Code Ann. § 26-703). As to the first propositiоn, the weight of evidence is against it. The victim’s brother testified that before going to the laundry the defendant called him to ask where his wife was and that he became sufficiently alarmed to call an employee at the place and ask her to warn the victim. The defendant armеd himself with a pistol before leaving. He shot her almost immediately after arriving. The wife testified that he said, "I told you I was going to kill you.” The jury was authorizеd to find that the assault was both intentional and malicious. They might, of course, have believed the defendant’s testimony that he blanked out and did not know what he was doing, but they were by no means compelled to do so. There is no history of mental illness such as appears in
Wilson v. State,
2. The assault was committed in November, 1973, and the case was tried on April 3, 1974. A character witness for the defendant testified on direct examination that he was a minister, that he had known Freeman since the first of the year; that he had been coming to church since that time on a regular basis when he was not working; that Freeman had not been involved in any сrime of violence since he had known him; that as far as he knew the defendant’s reputation for peacefulness was good. Objectiоn was sustained to the question, "Do you know his general reputation in your community?” meaning apparently the church, on the ground that the statutory questions regarding the defendant’s reputation refer to the community in which he lives. The law does not confine the knowledge entirely to the cоmmunity of the defendant’s residence, for one familiar with his reputation where he practices his daily vocation may testify to that fact.
A. & R. Co. v. Reynolds,
3. On redirect examination defendant’s counsel inquired of the medical witness: "Did Russell ever discuss with you any incident of somebody shooting into his trailer?” The witness replied in the affirmative, at which point an objection to going into the conversаtion was sustained. To the extent that the relation of extraneous events by the defendant entered into the physician’s diagnosis of mental сondition, but no other, the testimony would be admissible. See
Fields v.
State,
4. Carrying a pistol without a license and carrying a concealed weapon are sepаrate offenses, although growing out of the same transaction
(Bishop v. State,
Judgment affirmed.
