STATE OF ALASKA, Pеtitioner and Cross-Respondent, v. CONAR L. GROPPEL, Respondent and Cross-Petitioner, v. ALASKA COURT SYSTEM, Respondent and Cross-Respondent.
Supreme Court No. 16592
THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
November 2, 2018
Opinion No. 7313
Court of Appeals Nos. A-12662/12751; Superior Court No. 4FA-14-01954 CR
O P I N I O N
Certified Question from the Court of Appeals of the State of Alaska, on Petition for Review from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Fourth Judicial District, Fairbanks, Michael A. MacDonald, Judge.
Appearances: Kenneth M. Rosenstein and Patricia Haines, Assistant Attorneys General, Office of Criminal Appeals, Anchorage, and Jahna Lindemuth, Attorney General, Juneau, for Petitioner and Cross-Respondent. Brooke Berens, Assistant Public Advocate, and Richard Allen, Public Advocate, Anchorage, for Respondent and Cross-Petitioner. Thomas P. Amodio, Reeves Amodio LLC, Anchoragе, for Respondent and Cross-Respondent. Kelly R. Taylor,
Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, and Bolger, Justices, and Matthews, Senior Justice.* [Carney, Justice, not participating.]
STOWERS, Chief Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
When a criminal defendant asserts the defense of insanity or diminished capacity or the defendant‘s mental fitness otherwise is at issue,
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Conar L. Groppel is charged with first- and second-degree murder, manslaughter, first- and second-degree arson, first-degree criminal mischief, first-degree burglary, and evidence tampering. Groppel notified the superior court he might rely on the defense of diminished capacity, and pursuant to
Groppel was evaluated by Dr. Kristy Becker, a forensic psychologist at API. Although the superior court found Dr. Becker was “substantively qualified to give an opinion in this case,” it ruled she was not qualified under
The State petitioned the court of appeals for review, arguing the Office of Public Advocacy (OPA) — which represented Groppel — should bear the costs of both experts. Groppel cross-petitioned for review, arguing the Alaska Court System should pay the entire costs of both experts. The State responded, adopting Groppel‘s argument as an alternative position. The court of appeals then invited the Court System to file a
The court of appeals certified the question to this court, and we granted the сertification. On January 24, 2018 we issued an order vacating the superior court‘s order and remanding with the following instructions:
- The court shall appoint qualified API psychiatrists or psychologists to perform the required evaluations unless the court finds that no psychiatrists at API are qualified and no forensic psychologists at API are certified by the American Board of Forensic Psychology, or that there is another legitimate reason why API staff cannot perform the evaluations.
- If the court finds that there are no qualified psychiatrists and no board-certified forensic psychologists at API, the court shall appoint at least two neutral expert witnesses from outside API. The court may solicit recommendations from the parties when deciding whom to appoint. But the experts shall report to the court and not to the parties, and the scope of the evaluations shall be controlled by the court. The Court System shall pay for these non-API experts pursuant to
AS 12.47.070 and in accordance withAlaska Administrative Rule 8 .3
We stated that an oрinion explaining our order would be published at a later date. This is that opinion.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The interpretation of a statute is a question of law we review de novo.4 “We construe statutes according to reason, practicality, and common sense, considering the meaning of the statute‘s language, its legislative history, and its purpose.”5 We use “a sliding scale approach, under which ‘the plainer the language of the statute, the more convincing contrary legislative history must be.’ ”6
IV. DISCUSSION
A. Experts Appointed Under AS 12.47.070 Are The Court‘s Experts.
The superior court apparently viewed the two experts it sought to appoint as being the parties’ experts. It stated, “It is the court‘s intention that eaсh party will be
In 1972 the Alaska Legislature codified the defenses of insanity and diminished capacity and provided for psychiatric examination of defendants raising those defenses.9 The law directed the court to “appoint at least one qualified psychiatrist” or request API‘s superintendent “to designate at least one qualified psychiatrist . . . to examine and report upon the mental condition of the defendant” if there were reason to believe the defendant‘s mental condition would be at issue.10 With court permission, a qualified expert retained by the defendant would “be permitted to witness and participate in the examination.”11 The statute required the examination report to be filed with the clerk of the court, who would then distribute copies to the parties.12
The Alaska Legislature has twice amended this statute: first in 1981 in an act рrimarily concerning involuntary commitment,13 and again in 1982 to modify the defenses available to defendants claiming mental disease or defect.14 In 1981 it added the phrase “or a forensic psychologist certified by the American Board of Forensic
1. Thе history of the 1982 amendments reveals legislative intent to provide non-partisan experts.
An early House Judiciary Committee draft of the 1982 bill revising the psychiatric examination law called for “at least three” experts,17 and the final amendment required “at least two.”18 One legislator explained, “[G]etting the benefit of different opinions . . . [is] the real point here, not that they pick some guy who supposedly is super objective and scientifically accurate. It‘s not that. It‘s a subjective judgment.”19
The House Judiciary Committee hearings also make clear the court-appointed experts are separate from prosecution or defense experts. A representative
We‘ll have two disinterested psychiatrists, assuming a disinterested psychiatrist can be found. If they‘re disinterested, one is likely to go one way; another is likely to go the other way. And then each party is going to bring in further psychiatrists. I think we‘re doubling the number of psychiatrists likely to appear in any given trial. Currently, someone from API is usually appointed by the court. If that psychiatrist says the person is insane, the State usually goes along with that. If that person — if that psychiatrist says the person is sane, the defense goes out and gets its own psychiatrist. So there are usually two psychiatrists testifying in any trial. Here we‘re going to have two court-appointed psychiatrists and then it‘s very likely that the parties are going to go out and get their own psychiatrists. . . . And we‘re likely to have four psychiatrists instead of two. I don‘t see any need for this.20
The members of the Committee disagreed, expressing the view that psychiatry “is not an exact science” and that “it is better to have more than one opinion.”21 In another representative‘s view, “the worst case situation . . . is that we might have four psychiatrists instead of two. So what?”22 Moreover, at oral argument before us the Court System agreed that the experts were neutral experts for the court.
These legislators’ оpenness to multiple psychiatric opinions is consistent with comments from the drafters of the Model Penal Code, upon which the original 1972 statute is based.
2. The Model Penal Code drafters’ comments are persuasive authority supporting our interpretation.
The principal goal of the 1972 law was to overhaul Alaska‘s legal standard for the insanity defense, which this court declined to do in Pope v. State.23 Justice Connor filed a lengthy dissent on this issue, criticizing the “retrograde decision” formulating the state‘s then-extаnt insanity test and praising the approach of the Model Penal Code.24 This critique apparently proved persuasive to Representative William Moran, who chaired the House Judiciary Committee.25 The committee took care to incorporate substantially all of Sections 4.01 (insanity or diminished capacity) to 4.05 (psychiatric examination) of the Model Penal Code into the 1972 bill.26
Although a robust draft of the Model Penal Code was completed by 1962, it was not published officially until 1985.27 Thе 1985 version included extensive commentary by the drafters, including their discussion of the model provision for court-appointed experts. The commentary notes this section
allows, but does not require, the court to order that a psychiatrist representing the defendant be permitted to
witness and participate in the examination. This is meant to assure the defendant opportunity for an adequate psychiatric examination by an expert of his choice. By making it possible for cоurt-appointed and defense experts to participate in the same examination, it may also ameliorate some of the problems of the so-called “battle of the experts.”28
The drafters also contemplated defense-side experts: “The Model Code does not guarantee [the] defendant an expert of his own choice if he is unable to afford one,” but “[g]iven the central place of psychiatric testimony for claims of irresponsibility . . . , the praсtice of providing such an expert at government expense seems reasonable.”29
The purpose of the Model Penal Code‘s psychiatric examination section is clear — to furnish a court-appointed expert, separate from the experts of the prosecution or the defendant. This expert would provide to the court a report addressing “the crucial questions the court must answer.”30 The court-appointed expert‘s report would be
In its response to the cross-petitions for review the Court System argued the inclusion of two experts shows the legislature envisioned one expert for the prosecution and one for the defense. The superior court apparently shared this interpretation when it announced its “intention that each party [would] be entitled to [its] own expert.” But this interpretation is not consistent with the structure of
We hold experts appointed under
B. If Possible, API Must Perform Psychiatric Examinations.
The statute provides little guidance as to whom the court should appoint as experts. The only statutory requirement is that an expert be a “qualified psychiatrist[]” or a “forensic psychologist[] certified by the American Board of Forensic Psycholоgy.”32 But Alaska trial courts have historically appointed API to perform these psychiatric evaluations. There is even a form order that the superior court uses to appoint API for
We believe this historical practice is sound: API is an agency of the State of Alaska which exists in large part to serve the people and needs of the State, including the Court System. The superior court must appoint qualified psychiatrists or psychologists employed by API for evaluations under
If API cannot provide qualified experts to complete these examinations — either because the court finds no psychiatrists at API are qualified and no forensic psychologists at API are certified by the American Board of Forensic Psychology, or because there is another legitimate reason why API cannot perform the evaluations — then the court shall appoint experts from outside API. The court may solicit recommendations from the parties when deciding whom to appoint,35 but it is not
Here, the superior court explained in its order that it had “confirmed that [API] ha[d] no psychiatrist qualified according to the statute to conduct the examination.” It is not clear from the record whether the court made its own independent determination on this issue or simply accepted API‘s representation. In a letter to the superior court, API‘s clinical director stated API had only one forensic psychologist on staff and she was not board-certified. But the letter did not discuss the qualifications of any of API‘s psychiatrists; it merely said, “API does not have psychiatrists who conduct forensic evaluations for Competency to Stand Trial or Mental Culpability.” Whether a psychiatrist is qualified within the meaning of
We note the legislature did not define or limit the word “qualified” preceding “psychiatrists” as it did in specifying the qualifications it wanted an appointed psychologist to possess — namely that the psychologist be a forensic psychologist certified by the American Board of Forensic Psychology. We hold API is required to provide qualified psychiatrists or psychologists as defined by the statute to serve as
C. If The Court Appoints Non-API Experts, The Court System Must Bear Their Costs.
Historically, API has performed psychiatric or psychological evaluations under
The superior court‘s order that the parties each bear the cost of one expert was error. If API cannot provide experts to perform the evaluations, then the Court System must bear the costs of the court-appointed experts.37
V. CONCLUSION
For the above-stated reasons, we VACATE the superior cоurt‘s order on the appointment and payment of experts and REMAND with the following instructions:
- The court shall appoint qualified API psychiatrists or psychologists to perform the required evaluations unless the court finds that no psychiatrists at API are qualified and no forensic psychologists at API are certified by the American Board of Forensic Psychology, or that there is another legitimate reason why API staff cannot perform the evaluations.
- If the court finds that there are no qualified psychiаtrists and no board-certified forensic psychologists at API, the court shall appoint at least two neutral expert witnesses from outside API. The court may solicit recommendations from the parties when deciding whom to appoint. But the experts shall report to the court and not to the parties, and the scope of the evaluations shall be controlled by the court. The Court System shall pay for these non-API experts pursuant to
AS 12.47.070 and in accordance withAlaska Administrative Rule 8 .
STOWERS, Chief Justice.
