583 N.E.2d 414 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1990
On June 29, 1988, defendant-appellant, Candace Kay Bell, pled guilty to a violation of R.C.
On November 30, 1988, appellant filed a motion for shock probation. The trial court granted said motion, suspended the above sentence, and placed appellant on probation for four years upon certain terms and conditions.
On January 24, 1989, appellant's probation officer filed a motion seeking to revoke appellant's probation. Said motion alleged that appellant assaulted Priscilla Weir on December 31, 1988, and that this conduct violated Condition One of appellant's probation, to wit: appellant was not to violate any federal, state, or local laws.
Prior to the scheduled revocation hearing, appellant filed a motion requesting a competency evaluation and an evaluation regarding her sanity at the time of the alleged probation violation. On March 1, 1989, the trial court, through judgment entry, granted the competency motion but overruled the sanity evaluation. Dr. Kathleen P. Stafford, Director of the Summit County Psycho-Diagnostic Clinic and a clinical psychologist, evaluated appellant's competency and opined that appellant was incompetent to stand trial.1 Nevertheless, the trial court, by way of an April 4, 1989 judgment entry, found that the competency-to-stand-trial provisions of R.C.
On April 26, 1989, an evidentiary hearing was held and appellant proffered the competency and sanity reports. On May 2, 1989, the trial court revoked appellant's probation.
Appellant now seeks our review and raises the following assignments of error:
The two leading United States Supreme Court cases dealing with the due process requirements for revocation of parole and probation are Gagnon v. Scarpelli (1973),
Here, there is sufficient evidence contained in the record to support the finding that appellant violated Condition One of her probation. The question *56 is whether appellant under due process requirements is afforded the defense of insanity for such violation.
In both Gagnon and Morrissey, the United States Supreme Court emphasized that probation/parole revocation proceedings are not considered stages of criminal prosecution. Gagnon, supra,
In Bearden v. Georgia (1983),
"We do not suggest that, in other contexts, the probationer's lack of fault in violating a term of probation would necessarily prevent a court from revoking probation. * * *"
In Knight v. Estelle (C.A.5, 1974),
"Whether the act which made the failure apparent was culpable or punishable is no concern of the revocation authority, which does not sit to punish. Its concern is whether the law has been obeyed, not whether it has been culpably broken. And, thus, it is that the same act at variance with the law may, for a variety of reasons, be the occasion of both a successful criminal defense and a parole revocation."
The Tenth District Court of Appeals relied on the above cases when it decided State v. Qualls (1988),
"[I]nsanity is not a complete defense in a probation revocation hearing but is a mitigating factor which a court should consider when the issue is timely raised." Id. at 60,
It is noteworthy that the above holding does not require a trial court to consider the defense of insanity even when timely raised.
From the foregoing, we believe due process does not require a court to consider the defense of insanity in revocation proceedings. Had appellant here violated a condition that she would not leave the state of Ohio, we do not find it fundamentally unfair to revoke her probation even though appellant *57 claims ignorance of the state border. The privilege of probation rests upon the probationer's compliance with the probation conditions and any violation of those conditions may properly be used to revoke the privilege. It is not fundamentally unfair to require an individual who has been convicted of a crime and granted conditional probation to adhere strictly to those conditions. An insanity defense focuses on the probationer's state of mind. However, the true focus of the probation revocation proceeding is whether a condition of probation has been violated, and if so, what should be done. The welfare and safety of society outweigh the interest of the probationer who has violated a condition of probation while sane or insane.
Accordingly, the trial court properly ruled on the insanity issue and we overrule appellant's first assignment of error.
As previously stated, the probation revocation proceeding is not a stage of a criminal prosecution. Therefore, the due process rights afforded a probationer are more limited than a defendant in a criminal prosecution.
In Qualls, supra,
From these facts, we believe the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying a competency hearing in the instant case.
Accordingly, appellant's second assignment of error is hereby overruled.
Accordingly, appellant's third assignment of error is hereby overruled.
We agree with reasoning espoused by the Supreme Court of Illinois in People v. Allegri (1985),
"It is critical to note that in refusing to recognize the insanity defense in a revocation proceeding, the court is not imposing criminal punishment on the defendant for her present excusable conduct. The criminal punishment results from the past conduct which was not excused by insanity and for which defendant has been duly convicted."
Additionally, as stated above, there is evidence in the record indicating that appellant was not incompetent to assist her counsel in the probation revocation proceeding.
For the foregoing reasons, we believe the trial court did not violate appellant's rights under the
From the above, the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas, Stark County, is hereby affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
MILLIGAN, P.J., and JOHN R. HOFFMAN, J., concur.