217 Mich. 640 | Mich. | 1922
In January, 1920, the defendant, J. Glenn Toner, and Ellsworth Granzow were neighbors and resided out Woodward avenue north of Detroit near the 10-mile road. Granzow was without family and lived alone. Toner lived half a mile from him. He was temporarily estranged from his wife and was living alone. Both men were in the habit of indulging in intoxicating liquors. On Sunday, January 4th, at about 4 o’clock in the afternoon, they secured a 10-gallon cas,k of hard cider and a quart of whisky and drank some of it that evening. Monday and Tuesday, January 5th and 6th, they drank some but were about as usual. On Tuesday Toner went hunting for rabbits with an automobile party that stopped at his house. They left his home about 2 o’clock in the afternoon, and, when they left, Toner and Granzow were the only ones at Toner’s house. In the early evening Wednesday, Toner went to Royal Oak and asked the jailer to lock him up. He did so and released him the next morning, when he started for Detroit on the interurban. He alighted at the Ford automobile plant. About that time he took some bichloride of mercury tablets and, by reason thereof, he was taken to a hospital.- Later, at the hospital, an officer was called at his request and he disclosed to him that he had killed a man, that he had hit him on the head with a hammer. The officer obtained such details as he could and, from this information, an investigation was made, and Granzow was found at Toner’s house with his skull crushed and his body partially paralyzed. He was taken to a hospital but died the next day, Toner was subsequently arrested for murder. It was the theory of the prosecutor that
"Some claim is made that the testimony drawn out on the cross-examination of Mrs. Gosch was incompetent. Mrs. Gosch was introduced as a witness by the respondent, and gave testimony in his behalf. On taking the witness, counsel for the people had the right to, a full and fair cross-examination upon all matters relevant to the case; and the fact that she was the wife of the respondent could not, upon cross-examination, shield her from any inquiry which might properly be made of any other witness.”
Whatever the rule may be elsewhere we think this
Defendant cites, in support of his contention, the cases of Carter v. Hill, 81 Mich. 275, and People v. Gordon, 100 Mich. 518. Neither of these cases is in joint. In neither was the privilege waived by both husband and wife. In the first case cited the husband testified to communications with his wife before marriage without her consent. In the other case the wife was called by the prosecutor without the consent of either. The testimony given upon cross-examination should not have been stricken out.
*645 “If the respondent in this case from his past experience or information he had while sane, and before drinking on that day, or that period of the alleged murder or before that time, covering that period when he claims he first began the drinking which produced the alleged insanity, had good reason to believe that owing to a dormant tendency to insanity, intoxication would be likely to produce an extraordinary degree of mental derangement, beyond the effects likely to be produced upon persons clear of any such tendency, he must be held to have intended this extraordinary derangement, as well as the intoxication and other results produced by it. But if he was ignorant that he had any such tendency to insanity, that is if he did not know that insanity was going to be produced by that experience, and had no reason from his past experience or from his information derived from others, to believe that such extraordinary effects were likely to result from the intoxication, then he ought not to be held responsible for such extraordinary effects.”
Defendant's counsel insist that this was error, that if defendant was suffering from delirium tremens to such an extent that he was unable to distinguish between right and wrong, and to know the quality of his act, then he could not be convicted of the charge. The rule contended for by counsel is laid down in United States v. Drew, 5 Mason (U. S.), 28 (25 Fed. Cas. No. 14,993):
“We are of the opinion that the indictment upon these admitted facts cannot be maintained. The prisoner was unquestionably insane at the time of committing the offense, and the question made at the bar is, whether insanity, whose remote cause is habitual drunkenness, is, or is not, an excuse in a court of law for a homicide committed by the party> while so insane, but not at the time intoxicated or under the influence of liquor. We are clearly of opinion that insanity is a competent excuse in such a case. In general, insanity is an excuse for the commission of every crime, because the party has not the possession of that reason, which includes responsibility. An ex*646 ception is, when the crime is committed by a party while in a fit of intoxication, the law not permitting a man to avail himself of the excuse of his own gross vice and misconduct, to shelter himself from the legal consequences of such crime. But the crime must take place and be the immediate result of the fit of intoxication, and while it lasts; and not, as in this case, a remote consequence, superinduced by the antecedent exhaustion of the party, arising from gross and habitual drunkenness. However criminal, from a moral point of view, such an indulgence is, and however justly a party may be responsible for his acts arising from it to Almighty God, human tribunals are generally restricted from punishing them, since they are not the acts of a reasonable being. Had the crime been committed while Drew was in a fit of intoxication, he would have been liable to be convicted of murder. As he was not then intoxicated, but merely insane from an abstinence from liquor, he cannot be pronounced guilty of the offense. The law looks to the immediate, and not to the remote cause; to the actual state of the party, and not to the causes which remotely produced it. Many species of insanity arise from what, in a moral view, is a criminal neglect or fault of the party, as from religious melancholy, uh-due exposure, extravagant pride, ambition, etc. Yet such insanity has always, been deemed a sufficient excuse for any crime done under its influence.”
Counsel also cite in support of this rule: State v. Kidwell, 62 W. Va. 466 (59 S. E. 494, 18 L. R. A. [N. S.] 1024) ; United States v. McGlue, 1 Curtis (U. S.), 1 (26 Fed. Cas. No. 15,679); People v. Travers, 88 Cal. 233 (26 Pac. 88) ; Beasley v. State, 50 Ala. 149 (20 Am. Rep. 292); Maconnehey v. State, 5 Ohio St. 77; State v. Hand, 1 Marv. (Del.) 545 (41 Atl. 192) ; State v. Kavanaugh, 20 Del. 131 (53 Atl. 335); State v. Dillahunt, 3 Har. (Del.) 551; State v. McGonigal, 5 Har. (Del.) 510; French v. State, 93 Wis. 325 (67 N. W. 706) ; People v. Rogers, 18 N. Y. 9 (72 Am. Dec. 484); 2 Crim. Def. 629, 630; Perkins v. State, 228 Fed. 408, 142 C. C. A. 638; Martin v. State, 100 Ark.
The prosecutor cites the case of Roberts v. People, 19 Mich. 400, and contends the charge was in accord with this case. It was there said in part:
“If,' therefore, the intoxication was voluntary on his part — as all the evidence tended to show unless he had become insane before he resorted to drinking, as presently explained, — any degree of insanity thus produced would be a part of the consequences of such voluntary intoxication. And if, from his past experience or information, he had, while sane and before drinking, on that day, good reason to believe that, owing to a dormant tendency to insanity, intoxication would be likely to produce an extraordinary degree of mental derangement beyond the effects likely to be produced upon persons clear of any such tendency, he must be held to have intended this extraordinary derangement as well as the intoxication and the other results produced by it. And the same degree of mental incompetency would be required to render him incapable of entertaining the intent, whether caused by the intoxication combined with the insanity thus produced, or by the intoxication alone. And the same principle , already laid down in reference to the question of capacity, as affected by intoxication alone, would apply with equal force to this aspect of the case.”
We are not impressed that Roberts v. People is out of harmony with the cases cited. The trial court obviously intended to follow the rule as announced in this case, but we think the charge gave the following language in Roberts v. People too broad a construction:
“If, therefore, the intoxication was voluntary on his part — as all the evidence tended to show unless he had become insane before he resorted to drinking, as presently explained — any degree of insanity thus produced would be a part of the consequences of such voluntary intoxication.”
“Embraced in this information also is the third offense known as manslaughter, although if you should find that the respondent struck the blow which killed the deceased Granzow, as claimed by the prosecution, there is very little, if any, evidence which would reduce the crime from murder to manslaughter.”
Counsel say it was the province of the jury and not of the court to decide whether there was much or little testimony which would reduce the crime from murder to manslaughter. Counsel are, undoubtedly, correct in this. If we, however, keep in mind the contention of the prosecutor that the blow was struck in an attempt to rob Granzow, the statement that there
We are unable to find in the record any errors which should reverse the case.
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.