Alexander William Shoffner, Jr., was convicted of the crimes of armed robbery, arson, and burglary on his pleas of not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. Those convictions were reversed by this court and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
State v. Shoffner
(1966), 31 Wis. (2d) 412,
*613 Upon remand, Shoffner chose to be tried under the A. L. I. rule of insanity and the trial court pursuant to sec. 957.27 (1), Stats., the compulsory mental-examination act, appointed Dr. William Studley and Dr. Joseph Weber to examine Shoffner on his special plea of insanity. Upon Dr. Studley’s statement to the court that it was necessary that he examine Shoffner concerning the commission of the offense with which he was charged and his past prior criminal conduct, 3 Shoffner moved for an order vacating Dr. Studley’s appointment; but this motion was denied. Dr. Joseph Weber requested his appointment to be vacated and this request was granted and Dr. Edward Schmidt was appointed in his stead. Drs. Studley and Schmidt attempted to make a psychiatric examination of Shoffner but upon the advice of his counsel, who was present at the examination with permission of the court, 4 Shoffner refused to answer many of the questions asked by invoking his privilege against compulsory self-incrimination.
A motion was made by Shoffner to have the issue of his criminal responsibility under his plea of not guilty determined first and the proof adduced in a sequential manner so that the jury would not be informed of his special plea of insanity, and no psychiatric testimony be taken thereon until a verdict of guilty had been returned on the issue of his guilt or innocence. Although the trial court had previously denied Shoffner’s motion for a bifurcated or split trial or what the court considered to be two separate trials, it granted this motion for what was characterized as a sequential order of proof in a continuous trial. The state of Wisconsin promptly petitioned for and this court granted leave to bring this action for a writ of prohibition.
*614 Thus the question is presented whether the constitutional guarantee of a fair trial under the due process clause requires a trial court, in a criminal case where the defendant enters a plea of not guilty and a special plea of not guilty by reason of insanity and asserts he has a privilege against compulsory self-incrimination to the inquiries of a court-appointed psychiatrist, to so control the order of proof as to have presented sequentially to the jury the question of guilt first and then if necessary the issue of criminal responsibility under the special insanity plea. The state argues that under sec. 957.11, Stats., 5 such a bifurcated trial is not permitted, that there is no necessity for such trial, that no constitutional issue is presented because of a compulsory mental examination and in any event there has already been a finding of guilty in this case and hence no prejudice can attach from the admission of inculpatory statements. We think only the first argument has arguable merit.
The respondent contends sec. 957.11 (1), Stats., does not prohibit a bifurcated trial in the sense of a sequential order of proof before the same jury and to try Shoffner on both issues of insanity and guilt concurrently violates his constitutional right to a fair trial guaranteed him by sec. 8, art. I, of the Wisconsin constitution and by the Fourteenth amendment to the United States constitution.
While some cases refer to a “bifurcated trial,” “split trial,” “two-part trial,” or a “trial with a sequential order
*615
of proof” indiscriminately, such terms are not necessarily synonymous. A bifurcated trial or a split trial, as opposed to a unitary trial, sometimes mean complete separate trials before the same or different juries resulting in partial determinations of the controversy. While they are not common they are not unknown in the law. 23 C. J. S., Criminal Law, p. 754,
et seq.,
sec. 940 (7). Insurance-coverage questions are sometimes tried separate from the issue of negligence and damages. See sec. 260.11 (2), Stats. A split trial results when this court reverses and grants a retrial on one of the issues while affirming another issue. Ultimately, if there is a recovery, the result may be based on two partial verdicts and two separate trials by two separate juries. Recently much has been written for a split trial of the negligence and the damage issues in automobile-accident cases.
6
Bifurcation has been less common in criminal cases but the demands of a fair trial have caused some 30 states to make provision by statute in recidivist cases for the separation of evidence of prior convictions on the enhanced sentence issue from the issue of guilt on which the defendant is currently being tried.
Spencer v. Texas
(1967),
The question of a fair trial is raised in the instant case in the context of a compulsory mental examination and the privilege against compulsory self-incrimination. It is argued that if the compulsory mental examination includes confessions or inculpatory statements of the accused they are admissible on the insanity issue but their collateral effect on the guilt issue is so fatal and preju *616 dicial even under instructions to the jury to disregard the statements for such purpose as to deny the fundamental fairness required by due process in the trial. Hence in order to insure a constitutionally fair trial the two issues must be tried and determined separately and independently of each other. This contention would pose no great procedural problem excepting for sec. 957.11, Stats., which on its face requires the special plea of insanity to be interposed at the time of arraignment and “shall be tried with the plea of not guilty.”
This section has a long history in Wisconsin which furnishes the interpretative background of the phrase “tried with the plea of not guilty.” Prior to 1878 the two issues were tried together, at least the statutes made no reference to split trials. See sec. 13, ch. 148, R. S. 1849; sec. 11, ch. 179, R. S. 1858;
State v. Wilner
(1876),
The section came under constitutional attack as not providing a common-law impartial jury trial in
Bennett v. State
(1883),
The statute was again amended to provide the same jury could hear the issue of guilt but after passing upon the special insanity plea and in
Schissler v. State
(1904),
In 1911 the legislature turned away from split trials and by ch. 221, Laws of 1911, amended sec. 4697 to provide that a special plea of not guilty by reason of insanity “shall be tried and determined by the jury with the plea of not guilty.” Later the words “and determined by the jury” were eliminated and the section has remained substantially unchanged to the present. We think from this history the intent of the legislature is clear that the plea of not guilty and the plea of insanity are to be tried concurrently and not in a split trial. However, even under the present practice when the two pleas are tried concurrently the not guilty plea is to be determined by the jury in its deliberations first and the jury is instructed not to consider the defendant’s special plea of insanity before it finds the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of having committed all the essential elements of the crime. See Wisconsin Criminal Jury Instruction No. 600.
The fair trial problem can only arise if the mandatory mental examination requires the accused to disclose information which otherwise would be protected by the Fifth amendment. Under the compulsory mental-examination statute (sec. 957.27, Stats.) 7 when expert-opinion *619 evidence is desirable or necessary in a criminal case the trial court may appoint not more than three disinterested qualified experts to testify at the trial and the fact of their appointment by the court shall be made known to the jury. This section contemplates the defendant may be sent to a hospital for examination. The court may also limit the number of expert witnesses used by the parties and sub. (2) provides no testimony regarding the mental condition of the accused shall be received from witnesses summoned by the accused until the expert witnesses summoned by the prosecution have been given an opportunity to examine and observe the accused if such opportunity shall have been seasonably demanded. Such a demand was made in the instant case.
We think this section should be construed to require a mental examination which is efficient and complete and not limited by constitutional restrictions or dependent upon the waiver of the accused’s constitutional right not to give incriminating answers during the examination. There is no reason why a compulsory mental examination should be restricted and its purpose impaired if the constitutional rights of the accused can be protected by restrictions in the use of the examination. A critical analysis of this problem is made in Nuernberg, Compulsory Mental Examinations and the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination, 1964 Wisconsin Law Review, 671.
Sec. 957.27, Stats, (then sec. 357.12), was determined to be constitutional in
Jessner v. State
(1930),
Of course, if the compulsory mental-examination statute is restricted to only testimony which does not come within the scope of self-incrimination, then no constitutional issue is presented and the validity of the statutes of some of the other states providing for compulsory psychiatric examination of the accused has been put on this ground. See Anno. Criminal Law — Psychiatric Examination, 32 A. L. R. (2d) 434; Anno. Statutes— Validity — Plea of Insanity, 67 A. L. R. 1451; 21 Am. Jur. (2d), Criminal Law, p. 389, sec. 365. The state of Colorado has held that its statute which authorizes the examining physician to testify as to the patient’s statements and reasons in a unitary trial did not require the defendant to cooperate to the extent of divulging incriminating information and he could not be penalized for
*621
insisting upon his right against self-incrimination by striking the plea.
French v. District Court
(1963),
Failure to object to the mental examination has been held to constitute sufficient consent to amount to a waiver of the privilege against self-incrimination, but such expressions are generally found in the older cases and do not treat such consent factually as later cases do for waiver of the right to counsel or for determining volun-tariness of a confession. Such waivers are not now to be lightly inferred.
Emspak v. United States
(1955), 349
*622
U. S. 190, 75 Sup. Ct. 687,
It is argued also by the state the filing of the plea of insanity waives any privilege of self-incrimination and therefore the accused must answer questions in the examination even though the responses may be incriminatory. We do not agree. This concept puts a quid pro quo or price tag on the assertion of the plea of insanity. The right to this defense whether pleaded specially or under the general plea of not guilty had its roots in ancient common law long before the creation of our compulsory mental-examination statute.
As stated in Jessner, page 187, the purposes of compulsory examination grew out of the conviction that under the prior existing procedure “there was a striking tendency on the part of experts to accommodate their opinions to the necessities of that side of the case upon which they were testifying, and that such opinions were to a very large extent prejudiced and unreliable. To secure the reliable and unprejudiced opinions of the ablest experts in such cases, to the end that the purest degree of justice might be promoted,” the statute was sponsored and enacted. To obtain the full benefit of compulsory examination we think it should not be limited in scope to the observation of physical characteristics of the subject but may encompass inquiries concerning past conduct of the accused and requires testimonial response to questions which would be within the privilege of self-incrimination. The submission to such an examination under the plea of insanity should not constitute a waiver of privilege against self-incrimination. When it appears any inculpatory statements have been made by the accused during the examination, he should have his privilege against self-incrimination recognized and protected at the trial by a sequential order of proof so that such *623 evidence will not be admitted while the jury is determining the issue of guilt.
We think sec. 957.11 (1), Stats., cannot be applied to require the trial of the issue of guilt and the issue of insanity concurrently where the psychiatric testimony, whether direct or on cross-examination, will disclose in-culpatory statements made during the compulsory mental examination. Such an application of the section would render the trial unfair and violate the accused’s constitutional right to due process. An analogous problem of the unfairness of a trial in the commingling of issues is encountered in recidivist cases, and while it has not been uniformly held that due process requires a separation of such issues, we think the tendency is correctly in that direction. The two issues should be separated when it is necessary to avoid confusion and prejudice to the jury from inculpatory statements which were not given or intended to be used on the issue of guilt.
In Spencer v. Texas, supra, the Texas procedure allowed the jury to try concurrently the issue of guilt and to fix the penalty which depended upon prior convictions under a repeater statute; Spencer objected to the introduction of evidence showing his prior conviction of murder with malice, but the court considered the defendant’s interest in freedom from prejudice to be outweighed by the validity of the state’s purpose and was protected by giving the jury instructions on the limited use of such evidence. Importantly, however, the court stated the due-process clause of the federal constitution did not establish the supreme court as a rule-making organ for the promulgation of state rules of criminal procedure. This view does not foreclose but rather enhances what a state court should do under its constitution to provide a fair trial in such cases.
In Wisconsin the practice under our repeater statute (sec. 959.12, Stats.) has generally been not to put the proof of prior crimes before the jury. The older version
*624
of the statute allowed in some cases a determination by a jury of the fact of prior convictions.
State v. Meyer
(1951),
The unfairness of trying the issue of guilt with a collateral issue of an enhanced sentence has been recognized in some 30 states whose recidivist procedure prohibits the introduction of prior convictions until after the jury has found the defendant guilty of the crime currently charged. “In England, the prejudice which results from proof of prior crimes before a finding of guilt has been recognized for more than a century, and the rule has been that a finding as to prior crimes is made in a separate hearing after the finding of guilt.”
Spencer v. Texas, supra,
dissenting opinion of Warren, C. J.,
Some United States courts of appeal have adopted the view that recidivist procedure authorizing the admission of prior-conviction evidence before the jury determines the defendant is guilty is so fundamentally unjust as to be a violation of due process. Lane v. Warden, Maryland Penitentiary (4th Cir. 1963), 320 Fed. (2d) 179; United States ex rel. Scoleri v. Banmiller (3d Cir. 1962), 310 Fed. (2d) 720; United States ex rel. Thompson v. Price (3d Cir. 1958), 258 Fed. (2d) 918. But see Pope v. United States (8th Cir. 1967), 372 Fed. (2d) 710.
In
United States v. Curry
(2d Cir. 1965), 358 Fed. (2d) 904, the majority stresses the failure of the defendant to object to a unitary trial or move for severance of the guilt and punishment issues and left the question
*625
of a two-stage trial to the discretion of the court. The question of the fairness of a unitary trial split the court sitting
en banc
in
Frady v. United States
(D. C. Cir. 1965), 348 Fed. (2d) 84, certiorari denied (1965),
While on facts like the instant case the United States supreme court has not compelled a two-part trial as a matter of constitutional law or as a matter of federal procedure, it has been held that the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure do not prevent a bifurcated trial or require a unitary trial in those cases where such substantial prejudice would result from the simultaneously trying of the pleas of insanity and not guilty as to render the trial unfair. In
Holmes v. United States
(D. C. Cir. 1966), 363 Fed. (2d) 281, the court considered the solution to the problem as essentially one of controlling the submission of the issues to the jury which was the court’s common-law right. We think the unfairness is greater and more apparent in the instant type of case than in a recidivist case. The admissions and statements made by defendant to the medical expert once heard by the jury considering the guilt issue cannot effectively be erased from their minds and limited to the issue of insanity. Such evidence by its very nature is so prejudicial it cannot be cured in a realistic sense by instructions. See
Nash v. United States
(2d Cir. 1932), 54 Fed. (2d) 1006, and
United States v. Pugliese
(2d Cir. 1945),
*626
153 Fed. (2d) 497. This same reasoning was applied in
Jackson v. Denno, supra,
and very early in this state in
Shephard v. State
(1894),
By solving the constitutional issue through procedural control of the trial many other problems are avoided. A bifurcated trial eliminates problems which usually occur during examination and cross-examination of the expert witness concerning the basis of his opinion. Since the issue of guilt is not present, the procedure which invites the improper use of evidence for its collateral effect is eliminated. The sequential order-of-proof procedure should also eliminate any claim under sec. 957.27 (2), Stats., of lack of cooperation between the accused with the prosecution experts. Under this section the accused must make himself available for examination upon demand of the prosecution or he may be unable to adduce evidence of his own expert witnesses. Examination by the prosecution witnesses should be governed by the same rules as examination by court-appointed experts. Bifurcation will also eliminate questions arising not only from proof but also from comment. See
Griffin v. California
(1965),
We hold, therefore, when the accused who was subjected to a compulsory mental examination can show a disclosure of inculpatory statements, admissions or confessions in response to questions of the examining doctor, he is entitled to ask for a sequential order of proof on the issues of guilt and insanity in order to assure himself of his constitutional rights of a fair trial, and such compulsory statements and confessions can only be used on the issue of insanity and not in any way upon the issue of guilt.
We think the trial court should vacate its order for a bifurcated trial because it is too broad and beyond what is now permitted in this opinion. The court should also require Shoffner to resubmit himself to a mental examination since his refusal to answer certain questions limited the permissible scope of the examination. At such examination, Shoffner’s counsel is not entitled to be present as there is no need for advice to claim at that time any constitutional rights against self-incrimination. If after such examination the record discloses grounds *628 for a trial with a sequential order of proof, Shoffner may reapply to the trial court.
Since this case has the stature of a test case to raise the question of the power of the trial court to separate in a criminal trial the issues of guilt and insanity under sec. 957.11 (1), Stats., and since we hold the court has such power in certain circumstances, the writ should not he granted.
By the Court. — Writ of prohibition denied.
Notes
See also
Kwosek v. State
(1960), 8 Wis. (2d) 640,
“The presumption of the defendant’s sanity and mental normality at the time he committed the alleged crime shall prevail on the trial of the special issue unless the evidence creates in the minds of the jury reasonable doubt of his sanity or mental responsibility at said time.”
This included some 44 charges of burglary.
As to the right to have counsel at such an examination, see
State v. Snyder
(1966),
“957.11 Plea of insanity as defense. (1) No plea that the defendant indicted or informed against was insane or feeble-minded at the time of the commission of the alleged crime shall be received unless it is interposed at the time of arraignment and entry of a plea of not guilty unless the court for cause shown otherwise orders. When such plea is interposed the special issue thereby made shall be tried with the plea of not guilty; and if the jury finds that the defendant was insane or feeble-minded or that there is reasonable doubt of his sanity or mental responsibility at the time of the commission of the alleged crime, they shall find the defendant not guilty because insane or feeble-minded.”
See Civil Rule 21, Federal District Court Northern District, Ill. 2 Fed. Rules Service (2d) p. 1048 (1960); Miner, Court Congestion: A New Approach. 46 American Bar Association Journal, Dec. 1959, p. 1265; Weinstein, Routine Bifurcation of Jury Negligence Trials: An example of the questionable use of Rule Making Power, 14 Vanderbilt Law Review (1961), 831.
“967.27 Expert witnesses. (1) EXPERTS To Be Appointed By Judge. Whenever, in any criminal case, expert opinion evidence becomes necessary or desirable the judge of the trial court may after notice to the parties and a hearing, appoint one or more dis *619 interested qualified experts, not exceeding three, to testify at the trial. . . . The fact that such expert witnesses have been appointed by the court shall be made known to the jury, but they shall be subject to cross-examination by both parties, who may also summon other expert witnesses at the trial, but the court may impose reasonable limitations upon the number of witnesses who may give opinion evidence on the same subject.”
