205 P. 869 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1922
Defendant was convicted of "making, drawing, uttering and delivering a check for the payment of money on a bank, without having sufficient funds in or *456 credit thereat with intent to defraud," and he has appealed from the judgment. The only defense was insanity, and it is not disputed that the evidence upon that issue is abundantly sufficient to support the implied finding of the jury against appellant, but it is contended that the trial court committed prejudicial error in admitting in evidence a certain purported discharge from the hospital for the insane at Stockton and in refusing to give certain proposed instructions in reference to the invalidity of such discharge and the effect of defendant's commitment to the asylum. The defendant was adjudged insane upon two different occasions. The first time was in 1915, when he was committed by the superior court of Alameda County to Agnews, whence he escaped after six or seven months. On September 24, 1919, he was again examined and committed to Agnews by the superior court of San Francisco, and after escaping and being recaptured he was transferred to the Stockton asylum on March 16, 1920. On June 6th, following, he was paroled and leave of absence granted, the parole providing that he "must be returned every thirty days for renewal." The parole was regularly extended to September 6th, but before this date he broke his parole, of which the police and asylum authorities were notified. On February 16, 1921, he was discharged from the hospital as "not insane." Defendant had not been there nor had he been seen by the physicians since June 6, 1920, and the last complete examination that they made of him was on March 20, 1920. On March 24, 1921, the check was passed, upon which the indictment was based.
[1] The court permitted said certificate of discharge to be introduced in evidence, and by appellant it is claimed that this was error under the authority of Aldrich v. Barton,
[2] Indeed, an examination of the record is convincing that there is no substantial ground for a rational inference that appellant was irresponsible at the time he committed the offense; in other words, that he did not understand the nature of the act and appreciate the fact that he was doing wrong. It is well settled, as stated in People v. Willard,
[3] The court committed no error in refusing to give the following instruction: "You are instructed that if you find that defendant was committed to a state Hospital in California as insane by the superior court of any county of California that the law presumes that defendant continues insane until such time as he was lawfully discharged from the state Hospital or was legally adjudicated sane." This instruction proceeds upon the mistaken assumption that such adjudication is conclusive evidence that the party was *459 insane; whereas, it was only evidence to be weighed by the jury, and the effect of which was to be determined by them, but they were not in anywise concluded by the opinion of the medical examiners or by the judgment which declared appellant insane. (People v. Willard, supra.) In the Willard case the defendant, just a few minutes after he had been examined and found insane and ordered committed to the asylum, killed the sheriff of Mendocino County, before he had left the judge's chambers where the examination was held, but his conviction for murder of the first degree was sustained by the supreme court, said commitment being regarded as merely evidence of insanity to be overcome by other evidence that he was sane.
[4] Another proposed instruction herein was: "You are instructed that a discharge or certificate of discharge given by the superintendent of a state asylum or hospital is of no effect, is illegal and void, if at the time it was given the person whom it purports to discharge had been paroled and while on parole had escaped and at the time of the purported discharge was not present at the hospital, nor had been there for some months previous, and was purported to be discharged without examination or observation at the time of the purported discharge and for a considerable period of time previous thereto." We think the instruction properly characterized said discharge and the instruction might well have been given. But for reasons already stated the action of the court was not prejudicial. The purported discharge was not received as conclusive evidence that the defendant was sane, and in view of the whole of the testimony of Dr. Clark the jury must have regarded it simply as his opinion of the mental condition of appellant based upon his knowledge of the prior history of the case. Besides, if the instruction had been given, we think the verdict would and should have been the same.
The only other rejected instruction worthy of notice was based upon the theory that if the defendant had been committed as insane to the hospital at Agnews and was afterward transferred to the one at Stockton and then paroled and afterward escaped, and that the only evidence of his discharge was one purporting to have been made after such escape and while he was not in the custody "of the said state hospital or any state hospital for some time previous, *460 and if there is no evidence of any adjudication by a superior court of the state of California that defendant is sane, then you must find at the time that defendant was alleged to have defrauded George Buthenuth, as alleged in the indictment herein, that he was insane." But it is manifest that this instruction is also based upon the erroneous theory that the commitment to the hospital was conclusive evidence that appellant was insane at the time and that his insanity continued until he was regularly discharged by the hospital or adjudicated to be sane. [5] The fact is, as already seen, that it was evidence of insanity that could be rebutted by counter-evidence, and even if the jury believed that he was then insane, the prosecution was not precluded from showing by other evidence than such discharge or adjudication that he was sane at the time he committed the offense charged against him. The instruction was likely also to be construed by the jury as implying that sanity or insanity was the ultimate question to be determined instead of the capacity of the defendant to understand the legal and moral quality of his act in passing said check.
Appellant's counsel deserves commendation for the zeal and ability with which, without compensation, he has represented his client, but we are satisfied that justice has been done in the case and that no prejudicial error has been shown.
The judgment is affirmed.
Hart, J., and Finch, P. J., concurred.