202 Wis. 530 | Wis. | 1930
The plaintiff in error, hereinafter called the defendant, was charged with murder. He interposed a' plea of not guilty because insane and a plea of not guilty. Upon trial the court submitted to the jury the issue of insanity and several degrees of homicide. It is conceded by defendant’s counsel that the evidence would support a verdict of
(1) Error is assigned because the judge stated at one place in his instructions to the jury: “If upon the whole case you and each of you are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was insane at the time of the shooting, you will return the verdict not guilty because insane.” It is contended that this puts the burden of proving insanity upon the defendant. But before the statement complained of was made the court had instructed the jury that if they were “satisfied by the credible evidence that at the time of the shooting the defendant was insane, or if after giving the evidence full, careful, and fair consideration there is in your minds a reasonable doubt as to defendant’s sanity,” they should find him not guilty because insane. This is conceded to be correct. The instruction complained of was given near the close of the charge to the jury, in reviewing the different verdicts that might be returned. At conclusion of the charge defendant’s counsel immediately called to the court’s attention that he had omitted to state, in such review, that if the jury had any reasonable doubt of the defendant’s sanity they should acquit. The court then said to the jury, in substance, that if he had omitted so to say in connection with the verdict as to insanity he should have done so, and that “if there is any reasonable doubt as to sanity at the time in question you will give the benefit of that doubt to the defendant.”
This court has held that where the court gives two conflicting instructions to a particular point, one correct and the other erroneous, it cannot be determined which the jury followed and the error will be presumed prejudicial. Meyer v. Hafemeister, 119 Wis. 539, 97 N. W. 165; Colbert v. State, 125 Wis. 423, 104 N. W. 61, But here the erroneous
(2) The defendant assigns error on what occurred between the court and jury when the jury after retiring came into court for further instruction. The foreman said: “We have disagreed on some of the — on the first verdict, and are we allowed to pass on to the second?” This he restated as: “If we disagree on any one verdict are we allowed to pass on to the next one?” The court by inquiry ascertained that the foreman meant that if the jury had failed to agree on one verdict in taking the verdicts up for consideration in the order in which the court had taken them up in his instructions, the jury wanted to know whether they might consider the next verdict in such order, and the court told them that they might do so. We see no error in this. In the charge the court told the jury that the first question they would have to consider was that of insanity. He then instructed on that subject and then instructed on the other degrees of guilt submitted, beginning with murder in the first degree and took up the others in order of magnitude. But this did not preclude the jury from proceeding as the court told them they might.
(4) Error is assigned because testimony of Dr. Deer-hake, superintendent of the Central Hospital for the Insane, as to the sanity of defendant, was received in evidence. This testimony was to the point that the defendant was not insane. On cross-examination the doctor stated that he meant “medical insanity” in saying the defendant was not insane. He was then asked if the defendant was “legally sane or legally insane” and answered that he .was “only acquainted with insanity, or medical or organic insanity.” He gave his own definition of insanity, however, which was: “An abnormal condition of the mind characterized by many deviations, the chief ones being not knowing the difference between right and wrong.” This definition shows that the doctor, whether he knew it or not, applied the test of legal insanity, which is “such a perverted condition of the mental and moral faculties as to. render the person incapable of distinguishing between . right and wrong.” Jessner v. State, ante, p. 184, 231 N. W. 634, 639. He further testified that the defendant was emotionally stable; harbored no delusions, was not hallucinated by either sight or hearing; was well.oriented; knew the time, place, and was acquainted with his surroundings. We are of opinion that this was clearly to the point that the de-: fendant was not insane in the legal sense and rendered the doctor’s testimony admissible.
(5) The last assignment of error is that the sentence imposed was not in accordance with sec. 54.03, Stats., which
The defendant raises the further point that the language of the statute implies that the court must in each case insert the minimum and maximum of the statute as the minimum and maximum of the sentence. This is not correct. The statute does not say that the limits shall be inserted as fixed by the statute. It says that they are to be inserted as fixed “by the court.” To require insertion of them as fixed by the statute would entirely take from the courts the judicial function of fixing the punishment which quite likely was vested in them by the constitution according to the practice of the common law. A statute that attempted so to do would quite likely have to be held unconstitutional as intimated in In re Pikulik, 81 Wis. 158, 51 N. W. 261, in reference to a previous indeterminate sentence statute repealed before being brought before this court for review as to its constitutionality. The legislature in enacting the present statute carefully sought to avoid the constitutional question by expressly leaving it to the court to fix the extreme limits of the imprisonment and the defendant does not raise the constitutional question here.
By the Court, — The judgment is affirmed.