[¶ 1.] Defendant, Ben Laible, appeals a jury verdict finding him guilty but mentally ill of second degree murder. He asserts multiple evidentiary and constitutional errors in his trial. We affirm on all issues.
Facts
[¶ 2.] Kathleen Laible, a sixty-seven-year-old widow, lived on her farm near Howard, South Dakota. In August 1996, her adult son, Ben, moved back in with her. It was not the first time. Over the years he often stayed with her for extended periods. Although she loved all hеr children, she felt especially protective of her “Benny.” He suffered from long-term mental illness, requiring frequent hospitalization for treatment. In between, he struggled to live and work on his own. His condition, variously diagnosed as bipolar disorder, schizoaffective disorder, and schizophrenia, required a regular dosage of antipsychotic medicine. As he had a history of noncompliаnce with taking his prescription, community health providers usually administered it in monthly injections. At home, especially when off his medication, he occasionally became abusive toward his mother. These episodes included profanity and, sometimes, physical violence. At the time of her death, Ben reportedly had not been regularly taking his medication.
[¶ 3.] On September 26, 1996, the Sheriffs Office in Miner County received a telephone call from one of Kathleen’s out-of-state family members, asking for someone to check on her. Unable to reach her by telephone for two days, the family had grown concerned. Sheriff 'Tim Reisch drove out to her rural residence. When he arrived, he noticed there had been no travel on the driveway for at least a day. Wet from a heavy rain the day before, the road would have revealed vehicle tracks.
[¶ 4.] Reisch found Kathleen on her kitchen floor — shot to death. She was on her back, her left arm outstretched, her right arm across her chest, with an unmistakable shotgun wound to her head. Resting between her arms, with the barrel facing toward her, was a .12 gauge shotgun. To Reisch, the scene first suggested suicide. But оn closer inspection he noticed the gun’s partly open chamber and a spent shell on the floor nearby. Fragments of a telephone that once hung on the wall were scattered next to and underneath her body.
[¶ 5.] Ben, an immediate suspect, could not be found. A day later he was apprehended in Storm Lake, Iowa. He was indicted for first degree murder, and in the alternative, second degree murder. In the months that followed he told family members that his mother’s death was an accident. He told a cellmate, on the other hand, “Well, if you had a mother like mine, *331 you’d shot her, too.” Following a competency hearing, the trial court ruled Ben mentally competent to stand trial. He pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity to both charges.
[¶ 6.] At trial, the state introduced remarks Kathleen had made to her daughters about her difficulties with Ben. She told them that Ben pushed and shoved her, knocked her down, put his hands around her neck, and called her crude and abusive names. The daughters personally witnessed some of Ben’s name calling and abusive behavior. The trial court admitted these statements and events as relevant to prove a motive for murder and the hostile attitude toward his mother that Ben sometimes revealed. On cross-examination, these same witnesses admitted that Ben at times had.been verbally abusive to them. The defense also brought out that Ben had struck his mother so hard once that it left a “huge bruise on her buttocks.” Kathleen had reported to one of her daughters that Ben kept “a sawed-off shotgun.” The gun found lying on hеr body had its stock sawed off. Ben himself told various people about his desire to have the farm and predicted he was “going to shoot [his mother] some day.”
[¶ 7.] In the medical examiner’s assessment, a single shot to the head killed Kathleen. He pronounced it a homicide. She died on September 24, two days before the Sheriff discovered her remains. Forensic analysis revealed that, at the time of firing, the gun was between eight inches and three feet from her face. And her head was approximately twenty-two inches from the ground, meaning she was on the floor at the time of the shooting. She had bruises on her arm signifying that during the attack she may have put her arms up to defend herself. A bruise on her shoulder, according to the medical examiner, could have been caused by a blow from a tubular object, like a gun barrel.
[¶ 8.] Before jury deliberations, the defense moved to have SDCL 22-16-7 declared unconstitutional for vagueness absent a clarifying jury instruction on the definition of “depraved mind.” The trial court denied the motion. The jury returned a guilty but mentally ill verdict of second degree murder, pursuant to § 22-16-7. Ben'was sentenced to life in prison.
[¶ 9.] He now appeals his conviction raising the following issues: (1) “Is the evidence insufficient to sustain a verdict of guilty of second degree murder (but mentally ill)?” (2) “Under the facts of this case, is SDCL 22-16-7 unconstitutional because of vagueness?” (3) “Is SDCL 22-16-7 unconstitutional because of the equal protection clause of the United States Constitution?” (4) “Was the defendant denied a fair trial because the trial court refused his proposed jury instructions relating to the charge of second degree murder?” (5) “Should testimony that the defendant called his mother horrible names have been admitted into evidence at trial?” For the sake of clarity and brevity, we combine issues 2, 3 and 4 in Part 2 below.
Standard of Review
[¶ 10.] When examining the sufficiency of the evidence on appeal, the question is whether the evidence will support a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Baker,
Analysis and Decision 1. Sufficiency of the Evidence
[¶ 11.] In trial, the State sought a conviction on the more serious charge of first degree murder, but the jury returned a verdict on the lower alternative сharge of second degree murder. Defendant contends the evidence was insufficient to sustain this verdict. The offense is defined in SDCL 22-16-7:
Homicide is murder in the second degree when perpetrated by any act imminently dangerous to others and evincing a depraved mind, regardless of human life, although without any premeditated design to effect the death of any particular individual.
Defendant believes that nothing presented at trial proved he acted with a depraved mind. He points to the lack of evidence to show he acted “without any premeditation to effect the death of any particular individual.” The bulk of the State’s evidence, defendant argues, was offered to prove premeditation by showing he had a motive to kill his mother (he wanted the farm), exрressed the thought of killing her to others, told people his mother was “just about dead,” engaged in a pattern of behavior that upset and tormented her in the last days of her life, arranged the crime scene so that it appeared she committed suicide, attempted to get rid of evidence (a blood spattered shirt) that linked him to Kathleen’s death, and then fled South Dakota. These actions, he contends, show an apparent deliberative plan to kill, not the type of reckless behavior evincing a depraved mind. Therefore, defendant concludes, he is either guilty of first degree murder or manslaughter, or he is guilty of nothing, but he is not guilty of second degree murder.
[¶ 12.] In support of his argument, defendant relies on
Godfrey v. Georgia,
[¶ 13.] Defendant’s reliance on
Godfrey
is misplaced.
Godfrey
interpreted a death penalty statute, not a murder statute.
Godfrey
did not give a definition of depraved mind; it merely stated that God-frey’s actions indicated no state of mind any more depraved than others guilty of murder.
Id.
at 433,
*333 [¶ 14.] The evidence was sufficient to show that defendant committed an imminently dangerous act evincing depravity of mind, without regard for human life. Kathleen’s bruised body was found lying amid smashed telephone parts, indicating a struggle, and perhaps extreme rage and intent to deny her contact with family members. She was shot in the' face at extremely close range while on the floor. We cannot say the jury erred in finding defendant’s actions showed indifference to human life and behavior evincing depravity. . The trial court correctly instructed that “whether conduct is imminently dangerous to others and evincing a depraved mind regardless of human life is to be determined from the conduct itself and the circumstances of its commission.” We conclude the evidence was sufficient to sustain the second degree murder conviction.
2. Constitutionality of SDCL 22-16-7
[¶ 15.] Defendant asserts that § 22-16-7 is unconstitutionally vague as applied to him under thеse facts. We considered a similar constitutional attack in
State v. Primeaux,
[¶ 16.] At trial, several mental health experts explained the typical symptoms of defendant’s diagnosed mental illnesses, the fоrce those illnesses had on his thought processes, the effect of his medication, and the consequence of not taking it. The court properly instructed on the definition of “depraved mind.” Jurors were thus able to compare the expert testimony and the definition to determine the difference between actions evincing a depraved mind and those stemming strictly from defendant’s mental disorders. “Sanity and intent are distinct issues.”
Godfrey v. Kemp,
[¶ 17.] Nonetheless, defendant fears the jury may still have mistaken mental infirmity for moral depravity. To what degree his expressed animosity for his mother was a product of his illness was not quantifiable. He believes that if his proposed instructions on the issue had been given the problem would have been allayed. His first proposed instruction stated: “A ‘depraved mind’ is a self-created condition and is not a mentally ill mind. Conduct arising from a mentally ill mind is not conduct evincing a depraved mind.” His second proposed instruction defined conduct imminently dangerous evincing a depraved mind regardless of human life as being determinable by examining the conduct itself and the circumstances surrounding the act, and gave examples of particular conduct that would show a depraved mind. Defendant argues that he was denied a fair trial because the jury did not have adequate instructions to differentiate between mental depravity and mental illness. He urges us to create a requirement that juries be given instructions distinguishing the two. Defendant, however, cites no authority for the proposition thаt this type of jury instruction is either warranted or constitutionally required. In our own research, we found no dispositive case *334 supporting defendant’s position. Nothing in the record suggests confusion over the differences between depravity of mind and mental illness.
[¶ 18.] Next, defendant contends § 22-16-7 denies equal protection to the mentally ill. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits enactments creating different classes based on criteria unrelated to any valid legislative purpose, resulting in disproportionate, uneven application or treatment of individuals or classes.
Baker,
[¶ 19.] Defendant argues that absent clarifying instructions informing the jury that mental illness is not equivalent to mental depravity, the statute imposed a burden on mentally ill defendants, not placed on others, thereby denying equal protection. In effect, defendant asks us to declare the mentally ill a suspect class. He believes the second degree murder statute treats the mentally ill differently and, in cases where such persons are at risk, strict scrutiny should be aрplied. Although this is an interesting argument, we cannot find any case, and counsel cites us to none, holding that mentally ill persons form a suspect class. On the contrary, what sparse authorities can be found generally suggest that the mentally impaired are not a suspect class, and therefore, laws touching on their criminal accountability are only entitled to rational basis scrutiny.
See generally City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr.,
3. Vulgar and Abusive Names
[¶ 20.] Finally, defendant asserts error in allowing testimony detailing the abusive and vulgar names he called his mother. Defendant’s primary concern is that the evidence of name calling by itself, unattached to any alleged aggressive acts, simply portrayed him as a bad person. Proving thé commission of a charged crime *335 by showing an accused committed other wrongs is impermissible character evidence. Admission of other acts evidence is permissible, however, when appropriate to prove some fact other than character.
Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, оr acts is not admissible to prove the character of a . person in order to show that he acted in conformity therewith. It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.
SDCL 19-12-5 (Rule 404(b)).
[¶ 21.] Domestic abuse often has a history highly relevant to the truth-finding proсess.
See generally Burtzlaff,
[¶ 22.] Other courts have also held admissible prior abusive behavior against the same victim by the same defendant in a domestic relationship.
See People v. Linkenauger,
[¶ 23.] Next, we review the trial court’s ruling that this evidence was not substantially more prejudicial than probative. SDCL 19-12-3 (Rule 403) provides:
Although relevant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.
The court excluded some of the past remarks, allowing only those statements relevant to defеndant’s motive, state of mind, or the nature of the relationship. Defendant was certainly not entitled to have the jury decide his case on a pretense that his behavior and feelings toward his mother were nothing but routinely warm and affectionate.
See Zack,
[¶ 24.] Affirmed.
