185 Ga. 317 | Ga. | 1938
The defendant was indicted and found guilty, without recommendation, of the rape of a seven-year-old girl. It was admitted in open court by the defendant and his counsel that the act charged had been committed on the child by “a male human being.” She identified the defendant as the person who persuaded her to enter his truck when she left her home at night to look for “little brother;” and testified that he committed the offense out of the city, and had also beaten her. Dr. Seaman testified that, after an examination of the defendant at the request of the court, he thought him of “low development” and a “sexual pervert, . . a type of individual that gets sexual satisfaction other than through normal channels. . . This man is the type that gets sexual satisfaction out of infliction of pain on other individuals, and is known as the sadist type of sexual pervert. . .
1. On the defense of insanity at the time of the criminal act, there being a presumption of sanity, the burden is upon the accused to show by a preponderance of evidence, but not beyond
2. The test of criminal responsibility in this State is that “if a man has reason sufficient to distinguish between right and wrong in relation to a particular act about to be committed, he is criminally responsible;” and there has been but one recognized exception, which is that although “a man has reason sufficient to distinguish between right and wrong, . . yet [if] in consequence of some delusion the will is overmastered and there is no criminal intent,” he is not responsible, “provided that the act itself is connected with the peculiar delusion under which the prisoner is laboring.” Roberts v. State, 3 Ga. 310; Taylor v. State, 105 Ga. 746 (31 S. E. 761); Hinson v. State, 152 Ga. 243 (3) (109 S. E. 661); Hargroves v. State, 179 Ga. 722 (3) (177 S. E. 561); Code, § 26-301. In this and most of the States, no cognizance is taken of what has been termed “impulsive” or “emotional” insanity, where a criminal act is done under some overwhelming and irresistible impulse, unless it be that such impulse is the result of a mental disease or mental defect, overriding reason and judgment and obliterating the sense of right and wrong, so as to fall within the generally accepted “right and wrong test,” or the exception, above referred to, of “delusional insanity.” See Brinkley v. State, 58 Ga. 296 (4), 300; 16 C. J. 100-103; 32 C. J. 599-601.
Nor, under our Code and decisions, is any recognition taken of so-called “moral insanity,” or of an irresponsibility “from an inability to control the will from the habit of indulgence.” Choice v. State, 31 Ga. 424 (11). Nor does mere weak-mindedness, unless amounting to imbecility or idiocy, which like lunacy or insanity may be held to deprive' the offender of the sense of right and wrong, and relieve him of responsibility. Code, §§ 26-301 to 26-304, inclusive; Studstill v. State, 7 Ga. 2 (6), 12.
3. Applying the foregoing rules to the instant case, although the evidence at the trial of this adult defendant for the rape of a seven-year-old girl showed that he was of low mental development and a sexual pervert, it not being shown that he was an idiot or an imbecile or insane to the extent of being unable to distinguish be