On the morning of March 10, 1972, defendant broke into the home of an estranged girlfriend, Rena Smith, and shot her twice in the head. In November of that year, he was tried on the charge of assault with intent to commit murder, MCLA 750.83; MSA 28.278.
Defendant testified at trial that anxiety over the loss of custody of his son combined with the ingestion of various amounts of alcohol and unknown drugs prevented him from forming the required specific intent. Moreover, he claimed affection for thе victim. Defendant did not deny the commission of the crime but claimed that he could not recall its occurence because of amnesia.
A defense psychiatrist testified. He related that the defendant had initially sought the psychiatric examination to establish an insanity defense. Those plans were frustrated by the defendant’s *354 amnesia. The doctor concluded that defendant was unable to recall the facts surrounding the shoоting, so he could not form an opinion on the issue of defendant’s sanity at the time of the shooting.
To support the intoxication defense, defense counsel attempted to pose several hypothetical questions to the psychiatrist about the effect that quantities of drugs and alcohol might have had on defendant. These attempts were unsuccessful, but the psychiatrist did state his belief that defendant’s amnesia was the result оf ingestion of drugs and alcohol.
When the defense motion for a psychiatric examination of defendant was granted, the prosecution was also granted a psychiatric examination. After the defense had rested, the prosecutor sought to endorse his psychiatrist for rebuttal. The endorsement was allowed over the defense objection, the trial judge saying:
"The defense of insanity actually hasn’t been offered. Now, I think the doctor can testify this afternoon to rebut allegations or claims made by your client as to factual matters. He can’t testify as to the defendant’s sanity or insanity because I don’t think there’s any evidence on that.”
The prosecution’s psychiatrist testified that during the psychological interview of the defendant, the defendant indicated that he had not been drinking prior to the incident for about 24 hours, that he had not recently consumed any drugs, and that he had no specific feelings of affection for the victim. The prosecution’s psychiatrist also testified that he believed defendant was, indeed, suffering from amnesia but that the amnesia was a defense mechanism formed after the commission of the crime rather than a result of the ingestion of *355 drugs and alcohol. These responses were in conflict with the testimony defendant and his psychiatrist had already given concerning his intoxication, ingestion of drugs, and his affection for the victim.
The jury convicted defendant as charged and the judge sentenced him to a term of 14 to 60 years in prison. The Court of Appeals affirmed the conviction.
In
People v Martin,
Brown’s psychiatrist, testifying as to the matter of amnesia, expressed his opinion that it was alcohol and drug induced and thereby buttressed defendant’s claimed defense of intoxication as a means of avoiding the requisite element of intent.
In this truth-ascertaining process, the people had at their disposal the testimony of their psychiatrist contradicting the factual basis of the new defense. No argument is made that the people’s psychiatrist obtained his information other than legally. The issue is whether that information can be used where the defendant does not raise the insanity defense at trial.
Defendant’s reliance on
People v Stevens,
386
*356
Mich 579;
The rationale of
Harris v New York,
"Every criminal defendant is privileged to testify in his own defense, or to refuse to do so. But that privilege cannot be construed to include the right to commit perjury. See United States v Knox,396 US 77 [90 S Ct 363 ;24 L Ed 2d 275 ] (1969); cf. Dennis v United States,384 US 855 [86 S Ct 1840 ;16 L Ed 2d 973 ] (1966). Having voluntarily taken the stand, petitioner was under an obligation to speak truthfully and accurately, and the prosecution here did no more than utilize the traditional truth-testing devices of the adversary process. Had inconsistent statements been made by the accused to some third person, it could hardly be contended that the conflict could not be laid before the jury by way of cross-examination and impeachment.” Harris, supra, at 225-226.
Defendant’s stаtements to the people’s psychiatrist were clearly prior inconsistent statements to those he made before the jury. They would, be admissible for impeachment purposes here under the rationale of Harris.
We note that by
*357 "Statements made by the defendant to personnel of the center for forensic psychiatry or to any independent еxaminer during an examination shall not be admissible or have probative value in court at the trial of the case on any issue other than his mental illness or insanity at the time of the alleged offense.” MCLA 768.20a(5); MSA 28.1043(1X5).
This statute in no way influenced our decision in this case. This defendant, tried nearly three years prior to the enactment of this statute, cannot avail himself of its protection.
Defendant’s conviction is affirmed.
(for reversal and a new trial). We would rеverse the defendant’s conviction and remand for a new trial because of instructional error, an issue not considered in our colleague’s opinion although raised and preserved.
Brown was convicted of assault with intent to commit murder. 1 The evidence showed use of a gun.
The judge instructed the jury that intent to commit murder was an element of the offense, and that the requisite intent could be "presumed” from the circumstances and the use of "a dangerous weaрon and in such a manner as an inquiring mind can come to no other conclusion than that the death of the victim was intended” and that the willful use of a deadly weapon is "almost universally recognized as showing a felonious intent”. The instruction was erroneous in categorizing intent as a presumption of law rather than a permissible inference.
*358 We agree with our colleague, for different reasons, that the testimony of the people’s psychiatrist was admissible and that at a retrial, in similar circumstances, it would again be admissible.
The testimony of the people’s psychiatrist was not admissible simply because the sanity issue had been raised by Brown. Evidence, obtained by the people during a psychiatric interview to which the defendant is required to submit, that would not be admissible as part of the people’s case-in-chief would not be admissible for purposes of imрeachment.
We would predicate the admissibility of the psychiatrist’s testimony on the ground that the statements he attributed to Brown were material to the basis of his opinion concerning Brown’s mental condition and were responsive to factual testimony, also based on an interview with Brown, of the psychiatrist who testified for Brown.
I
Before the instructions were given the defendant’s counsel objected to the murder with intent instruction on the ground that it is "so incredibly complicated it’s practically impossible to follow”. We think this sufficiently preserved the deficiency which we note.
The following is the judge’s instruction on intent:
"In prosecution for assault with intent to commit murder it is immaterial whether the murder intended, if consummated would have resulted in murder in the first or second degree. You should first deliberate to determine whether or not the defendant was guilty under the evidence and these instructions of an assault with intent to commit the crime of murder.
*359 "Murder, as I have told you, is the unlawful killing of a human being with malice. You are instructed that malice means a wicked intent to do an injury. It may be express or implied malice. Express malice in cases of wilful killing of a human being exists where one acts with a sedate, deliberate mind and formed design to kill another which design is evidenced by acts and conduct and external circumstances showing that design. Implied malice is such malice as is inferred by law from deliberate and cruel acts, presumed from the circumstances, though no particular enmity can be proven. Malice aforethought in the charge of murder means the killing must be done with a wicked intent previously formed to take life. Malice is here used in the technical sense, including not only anger, hatred and revenge, but every other wilful and unjustifiable motive prompted by a wicked mind. It’s not confined to a particulаr ill will, but is intended to denote an action flowing from a wicked, depraved, and corrupt motive where the act has been attended with such circumstances as carry in them a plain indication of a mind, regardless of social duty, fatally bent upon mischief.
"In this respect, you are instructed it is not material as to the length of time this wicked motive existed, length of time this malice existed prior to the undertaking, if you find malice did exist. Malice aforethought does not imply prudent deliberation or the lapse of considerable time between the formation and the execution of the intent to take life, but rather denotes purpose and design. It means malice existing for any length of time before the act as long as it was a moving cause of that act. You will understand, of course, it’s not — it is for you to determine from all the evidence in this case and these instructions whether оr not there was any act by this defendant or any such intention in this defendant’s mind.
"In some instances some proof of the intent is furnished by the manner of the act itself, as when the killing or attempt to kill is done with a deadly weapon or a dangerous weapon and in such a manner as an inquiring mind can come to no other conclusion than that the death of the victim was intended. In such cases the law presumes every person to intend the usual *360 consequences which follow the use or means employed and the manner in which they are employed when it is not justified or excused. The wilful use of a deadly weapon without excuse or provocation in such a manner as to imperil life, while not recognized as being sufficient proof of malice if standing alone is almost universally recognized as showing a felonious intent, provided you do not find the defendant’s acts were exсusable or justifiable in accordance with these instructions. Whether malice, which the law speaks of and which I have endeavored to explain as being an element of murder, was present in this case, is to be found out by you by an examination of all the evidence in this case throwing light on this question. The actual intent to commit murder must be proved and under such conditions and circumstances as would make the killing murder. However, you can’t look into a man’s mind and know his motive and intentions. You have a right to infer his intent from the evidence in the case if you find the evidence warrants it beyond a reasonable doubt based upon these instructions. Considering the question of intent you have a right to take into consideration the nature of the defendant’s acts constituting the assault, if you find there was an assault, and the temper or disposition of the mind with which any such acts were apрarently performed, and whether the instrument and means used were naturally adapted to produce death, and the defendant’s conduct and declarations prior to, and at the time, and after any such assault and, in fact, all circumstances in the case calculated to throw light upon the intention with which an assault, if any, was made.”
This Court has recently "reaffirmed the responsibility of the trial judge to insure that cases are presented to the jury in an intelligent manner ' "so that they may have a clear and correct understanding of what it is they are to decide.” ,[
2
] An
*361
erroneous or misleading charge denies defendant the right to have a properly instructed jury pass upon the evidence.[
3
]”
People v Martin,
In Martin we held it was "grievous error” to instruct the jury "as a matter of law” that "if a man kills another suddenly without any warning, where a deadly weapon is used the law implies malice and the killing is murder”. 3 4
In rеmanding for a new trial, we said that "malice [intent to kill] was erroneously categorized as a presumption of law rather than a permissible inference”.
In this case the judge instructed the jury that "some proof of intent is furnished” when the attempted killing "is done with a deadly weapon or a dangerous weapon and in such a manner as an inquiring mind can come to no other conclusion than that the death of the victim was intended. In such cаses the law presumes every person to intend the usual consequences which follow the use” of the means employed (a weapon); while use of a weapon was not sufficient proof of malice "if standing alone is almost universally recognized as showing a felonious intent”.
*362 The charge was tantamount to an instruction as a matter of law that use of a deadly weapon implies the requisite felonious intent. "The jury was left with no alternative other than to logically deduce that since a deadly weapon was used, the defendant must be guilty [of assault with intent to commit murder]. The law does not imply malice where a deadly weapon is used. Michigan has long ago considered malice a permissible inference to be drawn by the jury rather than a presumption of law.” People v Martin, supra, p 561.
II
A psychiatrist called by Brown testified that, during an interview, he learned that Brown had ingested drugs аnd alcohol shortly before committing the offense, and expressed the opinion that Brown’s amnesia was caused by the resulting intoxication.
The testimony of the people’s psychiatrist was that during an interview with him Brown said that he consumed no alcohol or drugs before committing the offense. The psychiatrist was of the opinion that Brown’s amnesia was a "defense mechanism”.
The factual testimony of the people’s psychiаtrist was thus in direct response to the testimony of Brown’s psychiatrist regarding the factual predicate for his opinion.
The people’s psychiatrist also testified that Brown had "indicated that he did not have much interest” in the victim. We need not consider whether a defendant’s affection or disaffection for the victim is generally material to his mental condition at the time of the offense. The testimony *363 of the people’s psychiatrist was, again, responsive to the testimony of Brown’s psychiatrist who had testified that Brown expressed no malice toward the victim. Both psychiatrists apparently thought that Brown’s attitude toward the victim was material to his amnesia and ability to reason.
We conclude that in these circumstances the judge did not err in admitting the testimony of the people’s psychiatrist. The factual testimony of the people’s psychiatrist was responsive to the testimony of Brown’s psychiatrist and appears material to the issue of Brown’s mental condition at the time of the offense.
We note the recent amendment of the statute, applicable in cases where the offense was committed after the amendment’s effective date, limiting the use of statements made by a defendant to an examiner for the state. 5
Ill
Our colleague’s opinion states that the rationale of
Harris v New
York,
Evidence excluded from the people’s case-in-chief under a prophylactic rule may not, in general, be
*364
used for rebuttal.
6
In
People v Reed,
"In order to deter the police from breaking the law, stаtements made prior to the Miranda warnings are unusable to prove the elements of the offense charged. However, such statements may still be used for impeachment purposes if otherwise trustworthy. Involuntary confessions, on the other hand, may never be used, both because the police broke the law but more importantly because an involuntary confession is always of questionable 'trustworthiness.’ ”
In
Kidd v State,
'Miranda, however, is not coextensive with the fundamental constitutional right under the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments against compelled self-incrimination. The erosion or demeaning of Miranda by no means implies the erosion or demeaning of the fundamental constitutional right itself. That right stands as it stood before Miranda was ever promulgated. Neither Harris v New York [supra] nor Oregon v Hass [420 US 714 ;95 S Ct 1215 ;43 L Ed 2d 570 (1975)] has eroded it in any sense.
* * *
*365 "It is now undisputed that a violation of the Fifth Amendment right against compelled self-incrimination can trigger the 'fruit of the poisonous tree’ doctrine. [Citations omitted.] It is also undisputed that once the 'fruit of the poisonous tree’ doctrine comes into play, the use of a tainted 'fruit’ would be barred for all purposes, for impeachment purposes in rebuttal just as surely as for more directly inculpatory purposes in the case in chief.”
A defendant who gives notice of an insanity defense is generally required to submit to a psychiatriс examination. His presence at the interview is involuntary. In responding to his interrogator, the defendant waives — but only • conditionally — his privilege against self-incrimination; the waiver does not go beyond the reason for requiring his appearance for examination.
The examination is required so that if the defendant does call an expert witness to testify concerning his mental condition the people can offer respоnsive expert testimony without delaying the trial to interview the defendant. If, however, the defendant does not call an expert witness the predicate for waiver of the privilege is gone.
The policy considerations here are similar to those in a case where a defendant pleads guilty and is called upon to relate the facts surrounding the commission of the offense to establish a factual basis for accеptance of his plea. If the plea is not accepted or is set aside his statements are not admissible at trial. 7 The evidence is excluded to *366 facilitate the administration of justice by encouraging defendants to state the facts fully and honestly and without fear that they will be offered in evidence against them.
In this case, conducting the interview in advance of trial, before it is known whether the defendant will actually offer psychiatric testimony, facilitates the administration of justice by enabling the people to prepare to meet testimony that may be offered by an expert witness called by the defendant. Limiting the waiver of the privilege and making it coextensive with the purpose of the psychiatric interview is consistent with the objective of encouraging defendants to state fully and honestly the facts necessary to form an expert opinion on mental condition. If, however, opinion testimony is not offered by the defendant, evidence disclosed at the psychiatric interview may not be used by the people. 8
In sum, Brown’s statements to the people’s psychiatrist were not admissible as prior inconsistent statements for impeachment purposes or as admissions.
Notes
MCLA 750.83; MSA 28.278.
This footnote is from the Court’s opinion in
People v Martin,
"People v Townes,391 Mich 578 , 587;218 NW2d 136 (1974), quoting from People v Murray,72 Mich 10 , 16;40 NW 29 (1888).”
This footnote is from the Court’s opinion in People v Martin, supra, viz.:
"People v Visel,275 Mich 77 ;265 NW 781 (1936); People v MacPherson,323 Mich 438 ;35 NW2d 376 (1949).”
"This portion of the instructions effectively eliminated the verdict of manslaughter from the jury’s consideration. The court charged as a matter of law that the use of a deadly weapon implies malice. The jury was left with no alternative other than to logically deduce that since a deadly weapon was used, the defendant must be guilty of murder. The law does not imply malice where a deadly weapon is used. Michigan has long ago considered malice a permissible inference to be drawn by the jury rather than a presumption of law.” People v Martin, supra, p 561.
See People v Stevens,
Agnello v United States,
See People v Trombley,
The weight of authority is that a plea of guilty that has been set aside or withdrawn may not be used for impeachment purposes.
See People v Spitaleri,
Cases holding that a plea that has been withdrawn or set aside may
*366
not be used at the trial, but not considering the precise question of whether it may be used for impeachment purposes, include
People v Street,
The American Bar Association Standards provide:
"A plea of guilty or nolo contendere which is not accepted or has been withdrawn should not be received against the defendant in any criminal proceedings.” ABA Project on Minimum Standards for Criminal Justice, Standards Relating to Pleas of Guilty (Approved Draft, 1968), § 2.2, p 59.
See fn 5, supra.
