The defendant, Donald Ristau, was charged with two counts of murder. On Count I, the jury returned a verdict of not guilty by reason ' of insanity. The jury found the defendant not guilty of murder on Count II, but guilty of the lesser included crime of manslaughter in the first degree. The assignments of error relating to the manslaughter conviction raise three issues. We affirm.
The murder charges involve the shooting deaths of the defendant’s parents, Lloyd Ristau and Jeanette Ristau, on January 12, 1979, in Pierre, South Dakota. Thе defendant’s relationship with his parents had been somewhat strained because of his inability to hold a job or fulfill their expectations of him. On the day of the tragedy, he had been drinking following an effort in the forenoon to find a job. It appears that when he returned home in the afternoon, an argument developed with his mother. Shortly thereafter, the killings occurred. It was determined that a total of five shots were fired from the gun, all within a very short timе.
Although the state argues otherwise, for purposes of this decision we will accept the position of defendant that the verdicts are inconsistent in that the defendant was found not guilty by reason of insanity as to one оf the homicides but was found sane with respect to the other.
There is a division among the authorities with regard to whether consistency in verdicts involving multiple counts in a criminal information is necessary. A majority of states follоw the landmark case of
Dunn v. United States,
We first addressed this problem in
State v. Sinnott,
Conceding that the jury was inconsistent in acquitting defendants on the one count and convicting on the other, we cannot inquire into the motives which prompted the jury to so find. We hold that a verdict on several counts need not be consistent.
Some thirty years later in
State v. Gerdes,
Shortly after the shootings occurred, the defendant called the Pierre Police Department аnd summoned the police to the residence. A tape recording of this call carrying the tone and quality of the defendant’s voice was received in evidence for the limited purpose of focusing on the issuе of the defendant’s sanity at the time of the homicides. Whether the defendant actually killed his parents was not in dispute. The defendant claims the court erred in admitting the tape of the telephone call becаuse of foundational deficiencies and certain technical defects and errors in the tape. The officer who took the recording did not testify, and no one at the police department could explain the interruptions or pauses in the recorded tape. It was admitted in evidence as an exception to the hearsay rule as a business record under the provisions of SDCL 19-16-10 3 which applies to criminal trials by virtue of SDCL 23-1-3 and 23-44-9. 4 The police dispatcher removed the tape containing the conversation from the recording machine on the evening the tragedy occurred and turned it over to Captain Abernathy, who immediately gave it to Detective Swanson. Detective Swanson testified that he was not present at the police station when the call came in, but that tapes such as this containing special information arе not put on an open shelf and then reused as are ordinary tapes; rather, they are placed in the custody of a special officer and locked in a receptacle. He stated that he listеned to the tape on the evening of Janu-' ary 12,1979, and that at the time of trial, it did not appear or sound as though it had been altered in any manner. The detective further testified that since the tape was delivered to him on January 12,1979, it had been locked up in a receptacle according to such police routine.
In
State v. Parker,
In
State v. Parker,
supra, there were numerous breaks in the tape; • the operator of the recorder said he turned it off while
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“kidding around” or tаlking about music or the weather. We there held that a showing that the person making the recording could control it by pressing a button to turn it off and that he had interrupted the recording for various reasons from time to time was nоt sufficient to require its exclusion where the evidence established that all pertinent parts of the conversation had been taken down. For the limited purpose for which the tape was introduced into evidence, the unexplained pauses and interruptions did not require its rejection as speculative. In
State v. Anderson,
The court refused the defendаnt’s proposed instructions concerning the definition of mental illness. The defendant argues that the definition as adopted by the legislature and followed by this court unduly restricts the application of modern psychiatriс techniques to analysis of criminal behavior because it ignores the situation where an accused, because of a mental disease or defect, could not help or restrain himself from committing the act in quеstion. It is urged that the Court should now correct this archaic rule.
The test as to whether a person lacks the capacity to commit a crime because of mental illness is statutorily imbedded in this state. 5 SDCL 22-3-1(4) states in part:
All persons arе capable of committing crimes except those belonging to the following classes:
(4) Persons who, at the time of committing the act charged against them, were mentally ill.
SDCL 22-1-2(22) defines “mentally ill” as:
[T]he condition of a person temporarily or partially deprived of reason, upon proof that at the time of committing the act charged against him, he was incapable of knowing its wrongfulness.
Essentially the same defense now urged by the defendant was аsserted shortly after statehood in
State v. Leehman,
In
State
v.
Violett,
Finally, in
State v. Kingston,
We have considered the other arguments of defendant relating to the mental illness test and find them to be without merit.
The judgment of conviction is affirmed.
Notes
. See: Annot.,
. Counsel for appellant conceded in argument that if the defendant had been tried under separate informations, the inconsistent verdicts would not be subject to attack.
. SDCL 19-16-10 states:
A memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, in any form, of acts, events, conditions, opinions, or diagnoses, made at or near the time by, or from information transmitted by, a person with knowledge, if kept in the course of a regularly conducted business activity, and if it was the regular practice of that business activity to make the memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, all as shown by the testimony of the сustodian or other qualified witness, is not excluded by § 19-16-4, even though the de-clarant is available as a witness, unless the source of information or the method or circumstances of preparation indicate lack of trustworthiness. The term “business” as used in this section includes business, institution, association, profession, occupation, and calling of every kind, whether or not conducted for profit.
.SDCL 23-1-3 provides:
All of the provisions of titles 15, 16, 19, 21 and 30, so far as consistent herewith, shall be applicable throughout this title except as to matters for which a different provision is made in this title or where from the context of this entire title or of any particular section of it a different intention plainly appears or where reasonable application of this title to the matter involved otherwise plainly requires.
SDCL 23-44-9 provides:
The rules of evidence in civil cases are applicable also to criminal cases, except as otherwise provided in this title.
These statutes were repealed by 1978 S.D.Sess. Laws, ch. 178, § 577, effective July 1, 1979. See SDCL 23A-22-2 for reenactment of former SDCL 23-44-9.
. The test as it exists now was first enacted in 1877 Revisеd Dakota Territory Laws; Penal Code, § 16.
. In Brawner, the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia formally adopted the ALI insanity definition.
. The legislature adopted the ALI definition in 1976 S.D.Sess. Laws, Ch. 158, § 1-1. This statute, however, was repealed by 1977 S.D. Sess. Laws, Ch. 189, § 11, and the legislature essentially re-enacted the M’Naghten rule.
