Lead Opinion
The State appeals from a ruling of the trial court which granted the motion of Suzanne DeConingh to suppress statements made by her when she was hospitalized shortly after the shooting death of her husband. DeConingh was subsequently charged with second-degree murder.
We cite verbatim the findings made by the trial court in granting DeConingh’s motion to suppress:
1. The death of the victim occurred on September 30, 1978, and the defendant herein, the victim’s wife, was hospitalized soon thereafter. A deputy sheriff of the Monroe County Sheriff’s Department, hereinafter referred to as deputy, not in uniform and who was personally acquainted with the defendant, went to see the defendant at the hospital on October 2nd, and upon approaching her, addressed the defendant by her first name. The deputy testified that he did not read her her rights from his Miranda card, nor did he verbally advise her of her Miranda rights; but, instead, he gave her a so-called “advice of rights” form; he testified that she read it, signed it, and said she understood it. Admittedly, the deputy made no attempt whatsoever to ascertain if the defendant did in fact understand what she read, what she signed, or whether she understood the consequences of giving a statement. No statement was taken at this time. The said “advice of rights” form was not offered in evidence and this Court is unaware of its contents.
2. On October 4, 1978, the same deputy again went to the hospital to interrogate the defendant, and this time her attorneys were present. Defendant’s attorneys admitted they did not advise her of her rights or the consequences of giving a statement, but merely told her that she did not have to give a statement and that she should not. Again, the deputy testified that he did not advise her of her rights; but, instead, he indicated to her the “advice of rights” form signed by her two days previously, and stated did she know it was still in effect, to which she replied yes. Again the deputy did not advise the defendant of her rights, neither from the Miranda card, nor verbally, nor by reading her the “advice of rights”*1000 form; again no effort was made to ascertain whether or not she even remembered what was on the “advice of rights” form and whether or not she understood the consequences of giving the deputy a statement. A statement was taken from the defendant on this occasion.
3. The testimony of the witnesses indicates that on both October 2nd and October 4th, as well as at other times, the defendant’s condition was described as upset, crying, confused, disoriented, at times catatonic, not rational, under medications of thorazine and valium, and hysterical.
4. On October 2, 1978 and on October 4, 1978, the defendant was not properly advised of her constitutional rights; the defendant did not understand her constitutional rights; the defendant did not waive her constitutional rights; and, that the defendant was so emotionally upset or distressed, and of such an irrational state of mind that any statements given or made on either of those two occasions were not made voluntarily or knowledg-ably or with a full understanding of the consequences of making any such statement. Such statements, therefore, must be suppressed.
We must reverse on the grounds that Miranda does not apply to non-custodial situations and that the statements sought to be suppressed were given voluntarily.
In Miranda v. Arizona,
DeConingh had been hospitalized on the advice of her personal physician and the record is devoid of facts establishing that hospitalization or questioning of DeCo-ningh constituted a custodial situation. It is well established that Miranda does not apply outside the context of inherently coercive custodial interrogation (emphasis added), Roberts v. United States,
It is widely held that a general questioning by police officers in a hospital room does not constitute custodial questioning. See, e. g., State v. Fields supra; State v. Alston,
Further there was no interrogation. DeConingh’s statements were not made in response to police interrogation, see, e. g., Reddish v. State,
We turn next to the question of voluntariness which on the facts of this case must be considered on general due process grounds as distinct from the issue of waiver. U.S.Const. Arts. Y, XIV; Art. I, § 9, Fla.Const. (1968). See, e. g., Malloy v. Hogan,
Generally a confession which is the product of a mind confused by intoxication, excitement or mental disturbance not induced by extraneous pressure, raises a question of credibility to be determined by the jury and not a question of admissibility as a matter of law. Absent evidence of threats or promises or other improper police procedures, testimony about state of mind is irrelevant at pretrial hearing. See, e. g., Palmes, supra; Reddish v. State, supra; State v. Caballero,
We hold that because DeConingh’s statements are not the product of a coercive custodial interrogation, and the record establishes that the statements were voluntary, the trial court erred in granting the motion to suppress those statements.
Reversed and remanded to the circuit court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. A second appeal was filed by the state, seeking to overturn a separate judicial ruling as to the admissibility in evidence of certain blood samples taken from the defendant and/or certain physical evidence seized at the home of the victim and defendant where the shooting allegedly occurred. In our opinion in State v. DeConingh,
. But see Johnson v. State,
. Reddish, supra, was decided before Miranda and the court never addressed the issue of custody. Reddish, however had been served with an arrest warrant prior to hospital admission and his statements were the product of police interrogation.
. The court in Reddish, supra, established that:
1. The court had before it a precise record of the drugs administered to Reddish by name, date, and hour.
2. The record before the court related the time significance of the narcotic dosages to the obtaining of the confessions.
3. The initial confession was obtained from Reddish the same day he entered the hospital. Reddish was suffering from an almost fatal pistol wound, had bled profusely and had received three transfusions of blood. He was in a condition of great physical shock.
4. There was testimony of a medical doctor as to the effect of the drugs administered to Reddish.
5. The suppressed statements were in the form of questions propounded by the state attorney and answered by Reddish.
There is no evidence in the record of the exact medication that DeConingh received while in the hospital by name, hour or dosage. The most that DeConingh can point to is testimony of Serna McAninch, who has a degree in psychology, that she knew appellee had been prescribed 50 milligrams of thorazine and 10 milligrams of valium because she had discussed DeConingh’s medical plan with DeConingh’s doctor. McAninch did not know how many times a day DeConingh received medication. The record is devoid of any hospital record or testimony by a medical doctor as to whether DeConingh had actually received any medication. There is no testimony by a medically trained expert as to the effects of the drugs allegedly administered to DeConingh and there is no evidence that DeConingh was in a weakened physical condition.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion. The circumstances surrounding the making of the inculpatory statements by the appellee present an interesting variation on the case law relating to the standards to be applied in determining whether a confession may constitutionally be admitted in evidence against its maker. Let us consider first whether an application of the requirements of Miranda v. Arizona,
It is my view based upon my review of the record that the trial court’s ruling is supported by competent, substantial evidence and was a proper exercise of the court’s function of hearing the evidence, resolving evidentiary conflicts and ruling on the admissibility of a confession which is sought to be suppressed on the ground that its taking was in violation of the defendant’s privilege against compelled self-incrimination.
Moreover, my conclusion as to the correctness of the ruling on a constitutional basis appears to be at odds with the majority’s view that the question of voluntariness presented here did not raise a constitutional violation which would prevent its admissibility, and thus the confession should have been allowed to go to the jury.
I find inapplicable the line of cases typified by State v. Williams,
The uncontroverted facts establish that appellee was hospitalized by her personal physician, due to hysteria, soon after the shooting death of her husband which occurred on September 30,1978. While in the hospital and on the dates in question herein, appellee was diagnosed by a psychologist as having a “dissociative reaction,” a severe mental disturbance characterized by depersonalization and loss of touch with self and the external environment, and was regularly and continuously receiving medical administration of the drugs Thorazine and Valium.
On October 2, 1978, appellee was visited in her hospital room by Deputy Sheriff Rick Roth of the Monroe County Sheriff’s Department and another officer. Deputy Roth was a friend of appellee. He used her first name in addressing her, said something like ‘things will work out,’ and then told her he wanted to know what had happened. He showed her an “advice of rights” form, which he gave her to read and asked her if she understood, which she said she did, and signed. The deputy did not read appellee’s rights to her, nor did he attempt to determine if she had in fact understood what she had been given to read and had signed. Appellee began to make a statement, but was stopped when a friend who was also present in the room suggested she wait for her attorneys to be present. Her attorneys arrived and after speaking to her privately, suggested to Roth that the taking of the statement be delayed until the following day as she was in no condition to testify, at which point both officers left.
On October 4, 1978, Roth and another officer returned to appellee’s hospital room. Her two attorneys were also present. Again Roth did not advise appellee of her rights, but indicated to her the “advice of rights” form she had signed two days before and asked if she knew it was still in effect, to which she responded yes. Although her attorneys advised her against doing so, appellee insisted on making a statement. She said repeatedly that Rick Roth was a friend and she wanted and had to tell him what happened; she could not let him think bad of her. The statement, given in the form of a narrative at her attorneys’ suggestion, was recorded and later transcribed and is the chief subject of appellee’s motion to suppress which is the basis of this appeal.
Deputy Roth testified that appellee was visibly upset during the meetings, but could carry on an intelligent conversation and understood what was happening; however, this testimony is controverted by that of her two attorneys, the state’s own witnesses, that she was not able to understand
Let us next consider the relevant l°gal authorities, beginning with Miranda v. Arizona, supra, and then take up other decisions which I find applicable to the facts before us. The state has urged and the majority opinion has similarly held that the trial court’s application of the Miranda doctrine was not warranted by the facts in that they do not comprise the type of in-custody interrogation contemplated by Miranda. I agree that this case does not fall squarely within the well defined pattern of circumstances which would require the exclusion of a confession based on noncompliance with Miranda.
In support of its holding that Miranda is not applicable, the majority has cited numerous cases from other jurisdictions for the rule of law that police interrogation of a hospital patient concerning a criminal episode of which he may have knowledge does not amount to in-custodial interrogation so as to trigger Miranda. A review of these cases discloses that, while their main concern is the question of applicability of Miranda, they do not preclude a finding that under some circumstances, a confession given by a hospital patient to a police officer may be so lacking in voluntariness that it may not be used against its maker. See, e. g, People v. Phinney,
While I would hold that the instant case is not directly controlled by Miranda, and thus the trial court’s ruling, if it were based solely on that ostensible violation might require reversal, I find, however, that the trial court’s suppression ruling may be sustained upon the basis that its extensive factual findings relative to appellee’s mental condition, the influence of drugs and the surrounding circumstances under which the confessions were made, could be said to have reasonably led it to the conclusion that suppression of the confession was necessary to safeguard the appellee’s constitutional rights.
My view in this regard is, I think, supported by the leading Florida case of Reddish v. State,
If for any reason a suspect is physically or mentally incapacitated to exercise a free will or to fully appreciate the significance of his admissions, his self-condemning statements should not be employed against him.
Applying these standards enunciated in Reddish to the facts of the present case, I find in the “totality of the circumstances” which the record presents, an individual who was seriously mentally incapacitated and under the influence of two sedative drugs at the time she made the challenged confessions. The record further supports the conclusion that the appellee, in her impaired state of mind, was influenced by her friendship with deputy Roth and apparently felt some compulsion to make a statement to him because of this.
I find it appropriate to note at this point a strand of legal authority which lends additional support to the suppression ruling, to-wit: the confession of a person who is mentally or physically incapable at the time is considered inadmissible against him, as involuntarily given, 3 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence § 672 (13th ed. 1973); Blackburn v. Alabama,
For the foregoing reasons, and based upon the authorities cited, I would affirm the order of the trial court.
. Peterson v. State,
. The Physicians’ Desk Reference, 35th ed., (1981), provides the following information as to the nature and effects of these drugs:
Thorazine is the brand name for chlorproma-zine, a strong central nervous system depressant used in treatment of psychotic disorders. It also has sedative effects, may impair mental and/or physical abilities, especially during the first few days of therapy, and may cause adverse reactions such as drowsiness.
Valium is the brand name for diazepam, a central nervous system depressant used in treatment of anxiety disorders. Its side effects may include drowsiness, fatigue and infrequently, confusion or depression. It is also a controlled substance pursuant to section 893.-03, Florida Statutes (1980).
.I note that the standard to be applied in appellate review of a trial court’s determination of fact questions in a suppression hearing is a deferential one; such determination will not be reversed unless clearly shown to be without basis in evidence or predicated upon an incorrect application of law. State v. Riocabo,
. For a discussion of the relevant Miranda factors, see page 1000 of the majority opinion.
. My review is limited to considering the record evidence on this point in the light most favorable to the successful movant and resolving evidentiary conflicts in her favor. State v. Williams,
. Although this factor alone would not be determinative, see, e. g., Halliwell v. State,
