THE PEOPLE, Respondent, v. LEANDRESS RILEY, Appellant.
Crim. No. 5185
In Bank. Supreme Court of California
June 29, 1951.
37 Cal.2d 510
Edmund G. Brown, Attorney General, and Clarence A. Linn, Deputy Attorney General, for Respondent.
On September 20, 1949, defendant was found guilty of first degree murder and was sentenced to be executed. The judgment was affirmed by this court upon an automatic appeal. (People v. Riley, 35 Cal.2d 279 [217 P.2d 625].)
During incarceration at the state prison and while awaiting execution, defendant became somewhat uncooperative and uncommunicative. Such conduct on the part of defendant created some doubt in the warden‘s mind as to defendant‘s sanity, and he called six psychiatrists to examine defendant. The views of these experts were submitted to the jury in the present sanity proceeding. They were not entirely in accord in their conclusions. While they apparently agreed that defendant was suffering from a genuine fear concerning his fate as the date of his impending execution approached, they disagreed on the matter of whether or not defendant was feigning the majority of the symptoms to which they referred in their respective reports. Three of the six psychiatrists—Dr. Rapaport, Medical Director of the Agnew State Hospital; Dr. Williams, Medical Director of the Mendocino State Hospital; and Dr. Miller, Medical Director of the Napa State Hospital—were of the opinion that defendant was sane and was feigning the majority of his symptoms. The other three experts—Dr. Schmidt, Dr. Rogers, and Dr. Kirksey, all psychiatrists at San Quentin—while concluding that defendant was insane, gave certain testimony on cross-examination which tended to detract from the force of their general conclusions. For example, defendant‘s condition was described as a “mild mental instability,” with “too much of the feigning element” at times. Dr. Schmidt testified that “one out of every twelve people received at San Quentin is . . . insane.” He further stated that in his opinion defendant would improve if the “prospect of capital punishment . . . was removed.” The jury, by a vote of nine to three, found defendant to be sane. The order from which this attempted appeal is taken was thereupon entered.
At the outset, respondent made a motion to dismiss this appeal upon the ground that the trial court‘s order in this
The procedure for determining the question of the sanity of a prisoner under sentence of death is specified in
From a reading of these statutory provisions, it is apparent that the instant proceeding, initiated after final judgment, is not one to determine the guilt or innocence of
But there is no real finality to any verdict or order entered in such proceeding. Recognizing that the mental condition of a convicted person may change from time to time, there is statutory provision for the determination of a defendant‘s restoration to sanity following an adjudication of his insanity at the time of the prior inquiry into the matter. (
A study of the historical background of the cited statutes does not disclose that a convicted person, who may become insane following his conviction, has any constitutional or inherent right to have the execution of his sentence suspended by reason of such insanity. At common law the granting of an application for such suspension appears to have been discretionary with the court or the executive power in the exercise of clemency, as a merciful dispensation, an act of grace. In such cases there was no absolute right to a hearing and the ruling of the trial court was not subject to review by appeal. (Blackstone‘s Commentaries, Book IV, pp. 395-396 [Cooley‘s Fourth Ed., 1899, Vol. II, pp. 1523-1524]; State ex rel. Lyons v. Chretien, 114 La. 81 [38 So. 27, 28]; People ex rel. Best v. Eldred, 103 Colo. 334 [86 P.2d 248, 249-250].) The same humane considerations which early prompted the court or the executive to exercise the power to grant suspensions in such cases probably motivated our Legislature in adopting the cited statutory provisions.
Under these circumstances, it seems clear that a convicted person awaiting execution has only such rights and remedies as may be conferred by the statutory provisions, and that these provisions should be construed in the light of their historical background. To this point, it has been held that after conviction and the imposition of sentence, due proc-
Moreover, it is plain that while there is adequate statutory provision for the protection of a defendant who may have become insane after his conviction and sentence (People v. Sloper, 198 Cal. 601, 607-608 [246 P. 802]), the prescribed inquiry does not purport to be a true adversary proceeding surrounded by all the safeguards and requirements of a common-law jury trial. (Nobles v. Georgia, supra, 168 U.S. 398, 405.) The rights of a defendant as an offender on trial for an offense are not involved. But if, following his conviction and his delivery to the warden of the state prison for execution, there is good reason to believe that a defendant under judgment of death has become insane, the warden must call such fact to the attention of the district attorney of the county in which the prison is situated, and the latter, not the defendant, petitions the court for a hearing before a jury, a proceeding which is distinguished by its designation as an “inquiry.” (
These statutory provisions establish the measure of a defendant‘s right to any determination of the question of his present sanity, “purely a matter of legislative regulation” (Nobles v. Georgia, supra, 168 U.S. 398, 409; People v. Trippell, 20 Cal.App.2d 386, 389 [67 P.2d 111]), a postconviction proceeding as distinguished from the ordinary criminal proceeding to determine the issue of a defendant‘s guilt (Wil-liams v. New York, 337 U.S. 241, 246-247 [69 S.Ct. 1079, 93 L.Ed. 1337]). In the absence of statutory provision for an appeal from the order made in consequence of the jury‘s finding as to a defendant‘s postconviction sanity, it is apparent that the Legislature, in acting upon a subject properly within its control, intended that there should be no such judicial review from the adjudication of the matter as determined in the trial court. It therefore follows that the order which defendant seeks here to have reviewed must be held nonappealable, and his purported appeal therefrom must be dismissed.
This case, however, is one of first impression and in the interest of furnishing guidance to the trial courts in the conduct of such sanity proceeding, it seems appropriate to discuss briefly the points raised by defendant herein. In passing, it might be mentioned that defendant makes no challenge of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict and order, but he limits his contentions solely to alleged errors of procedure.
Defendant first claims that he did not have effective legal representation in that counsel was not appointed to act on his behalf until a few minutes before the scheduled hour of 10 o‘clock on the morning designated for the hearing, so that counsel had no time to prepare himself adequately for the presentation of defendant‘s case. While, as above noted, our statutory provisions do not require such appointment of counsel in this type of collateral proceeding and the trial court‘s failure to take such action, upon defendant‘s appearance in court without counsel, would not offend the standards of due process (Solesbee v. Balkcom, supra, 339 U.S. 9, 10-12), the court here is to be commended in that it very properly did appoint counsel for defendant, for the purpose of affording him the fullest protection in the sanity proceeding. Furthermore, in fairness to defendant‘s appointed counsel, it should be said that an examination of the record reveals that he acted zealously and competently in aid of defendant in every phase of the case—introducing expert testimony of the mentioned psychiatrists from San Quentin, diligently examining and cross-examining witnesses at the hearing, and arguing to the jury the evidentiary considerations bearing upon the question of defendant‘s mental condition. Accordingly, defendant may not justifiably complain on this score, as he had effective legal representation. It should be further stated that the district attorney is to be
Defendant next objects to the procedure followed in the impanelment of the jury. It appears that upon the filing of the petition for inquiry into defendant‘s present sanity, the court fixed the time for the hearing and “ordered that a jury be summoned and impanelled from the regular jury list of the County of Marin.” (See
Defendant finally contests the validity of the jury‘s verdict of nine to three, and maintains that a unanimous concurrence should be required as in a criminal trial. The governing statutory provisions (
Defendant has also presented for consideration a motion for the augmentation of the record, whereby he would include herein various factual matters which were not presented to the trial court at the time of the sanity hearing. Such motion finds no support in the law. (People v. Porter, 82 Cal.App.2d 585, 586-587 [186 P.2d 704].)
From the foregoing discussion, it is clear that defendant has been afforded the full protection accorded by statute for inquiry into his present sanity, and that he had a fair hearing thereon. However, the judicial procedure so provided does not contemplate that the order made by the trial court upon the determination of the jury should be subject to appeal. To require such judicial review would submit the possibility of carrying out a sentence to interminable delay “inconsistent with the due administration of justice.” (Nobles v. Georgia, supra, 168 U.S. 398, 407.) As was said in Solesbee v. Balkcom, supra, 339 U.S. 9, at page 13: “To protect itself society must have power to try, convict and execute sentences.” Our statutory provisions envisage a postconviction sanity hearing conducted with entire fairness
The motion for augmentation of the record is denied. The purported appeal from the order entered pursuant to
Gibson, C. J., Edmonds, J., and Traynor, J., concurred.
SCHAUER, J.—I dissent.
The majority hold that the “sanity hearing has none of the elements of a criminal proceeding but rather is collateral thereto, and, as such, has been designated a ‘special proceeding of a civil nature,’ to which the rules prevailing in criminal trials have no application,” that the defendant has no right of appeal, and, accordingly, dismiss what they designate as the “purported appeal.”
But
As far back as People v. Ah Ying (1871), 42 Cal. 18, 21, this court, in reversing a conviction for murder in a case wherein the trial court had failed of its own motion to suspend the trial pending determination of a question of present sanity, said, “There is no plea of present insanity required. If at any time a doubt arose as to the sanity of the defendant, it was the duty of the Court, of its own motion, to suspend the trial or further proceedings in the case, at whatever stage the doubt arose, until the question of sanity was determined. Common humanity requires that one should not be tried for his life while insane . . .” No more should an insane man be put to death. The majority holding here seems to me to be a regrettable retrogression in the standards of civilization.
Since the majority decision dismisses the appeal no useful service would be rendered by a discussion herein of its merits.
For the reasons stated the motion to dismiss the appeal should be denied.
Shenk, J., and Carter, J., concurred.
