1 Conn. App. 697 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1984
The defendant appealed1 from his conviction, in a single trial, of the following crimes: two counts of robbery in the first degree in violation of General Statutes
The first set of convictions involves evidence from which the jury could have found the following facts. At about 1:20 p.m. on March 1, 1978, the defendant, armed with a sawed-off shotgun, with two accomplices robbed two victims at a package store in Middletown. This robbery was immediately followed by an automobile chase of the defendant and his accomplices by the police. This chase was interrupted by the following confrontation. The defendant had stopped his car due to a collision. A police officer had left his cruiser and was walking toward the defendant's car with his gun drawn. The defendant then drove his car past the officer, who jumped from its path, fired at the defendant's fleeing car and resumed the chase in his cruiser.3 A few minutes later the police found the car abandoned nearby, with the shotgun and some of the money from the robbery. The accomplices were discovered almost immediately, both within one quarter of a mile from the abandoned car.4
The second set of convictions involves evidence from which the jury could have found the following facts. The victim, 93 years old, lived in Middletown within three quarters of a mile from where the defendant and his accomplices abandoned their car. At about 8:15 p.m. on that same day, the victim went to the cellar of his home, where the defendant, who had broken in, was hiding. The defendant hit the victim on the head with *700 a hammer; took his wallet; tied his legs with ropes; hit him again repeatedly on the head with the hammer; placed a chopping block on his chest, cracking three of his ribs; threw kerosene and oil into his eyes; pulled the victim, still tied at his legs, into a cold storage room and shut the door; and went upstairs, where he took more cash and some rings of the victim. The victim managed to untie himself and leave the cellar. When he went outside to summon help, the defendant was there and hit the victim again on his head with the hammer. The defendant left the victim in the snow and went back into the house. The victim crawled back into the cellar and eventually the defendant left the house. At about 10 p.m. the defendant was hitchhiking out of town about one quarter of a mile from the victim's house when he was picked up by a police officer. The defendant was in possession of the victim's social security card.
The defendant's principal defense at the trial was lack of mental capacity, or insanity, under General Statutes
The defendant's appeal raises three grounds. We find no error.
The defendant's principal claim is that the court erred in its charge to the jury on the issue of mental capacity under General Statutes (Rev. to 1977)
Because the defendant neither filed a request to charge nor took an exception to the charge as given, in order to review this claim under the Evans bypass doctrine we must first determine whether the charge raises a question of constitutional dimension and, if so, whether the claim has merit. State v. Kurvin,
It is clear that the inclusion in the charge of the challenged language, which involved the abandoned M'Naghten test, was error. State v. Jones,
This does not end our inquiry. We must still determine whether the error was reversible. "An error of constitutional dimension in the instructions in a criminal case is reversible error when it is reasonably possible that the jury were misled by the instructions." State v. Kurvin, supra, 572 (Speziale, C. J., dissenting); see also the majority opinion in State v. Kurvin, supra, *704
558-66. "The scope of appellate review of [a claim under the Evans exception] is, however, limited by virtue of its constitutional origin." State v. McCalpine,
State v. Kurvin, supra, makes clear that, in reviewing such a claim, we must balance "two concepts which if not mutually exclusive at least appear to lead us in opposite directions." Id., 561. The first is that a claimed error involving an essential element of the crime "must be examined . . . in a constitutional penumbra. "Id. This involves an inquiry into whether the error had substantial influence on the result. Id., 562. The second is that, "absent real rather than abstract constitutional violations criminal prosecutions should, at some point, be laid to rest." Id., 563. This involves several related notions: that rarely will an improper instruction, which was not so obviously prejudicial that the defendant himself disregarded it, justify reversal of a criminal conviction; that requiring such claims of error to be made at trial has the salutary purposes of permitting their correction before it is too late, and of avoiding subjecting an accused to needless multiple prosecutions, which is not in the public interest and which contributes to the economic waste and court congestion caused by *705 unnecessary trials; and that such a requirement discourages trial by ambuscade and avoids transforming criminal trials into games of chance. Id., 563-66.
Furthermore, and most significant for this case, Kurvin makes clear that, in deciding whether an error of constitutional dimension in a charge is reversible, the charge "is not to be examined in a vacuum. Rather, it is to be viewed in the context of the factual issues raised at the trial." Id., 558. We must "`view the charge itself as part of the whole trial.' United States v. Park,
Applying these principles to this charge, we conclude that the error was not reversible because, in view of the factual posture of the case, it is not reasonably possible that the jury was misled.
The defendant points to two sentences in the charge which he claims misled the jury. The first is as follows: "The definition of insanity, or lack of capacity, would include a mind which is either so naturally weak or so impaired by disease or otherwise as to make its possessor incapable of distinguishing right from wrong." See footnote 6, supra. This was a shortened version of our prior law, derived from M'Naghten's Case, 8 Eng. Rep. 718 (1843). See State v. Toste, supra, 630. This aspect of the prior law stated the cognitive, as opposed to the volitional, element of the insanity defense. The cognitive element of the prior insanity defense was replaced by that part of General Statutes (Rev. to 1977)
The second sentence to which the defendant points is as follows: "It would not include a mind which, while weak or incapable in some measure, is still sound enough to make an essential choice in the course of conduct." See footnote 6, supra. This does refer to the volitional element of the defense. The defendant argues that, because the use of this sentence has in other cases been followed by language incorporating the abandoned irresistible impulse test, which was the volitional element of the prior law; see State v. Toste, supra, 630-31; the trial court improperly injected that test into this case. We disagree. Nowhere does there appear any reference to the notion of irresistible impulse. The jury was properly told twice before and once after this challenged sentence that the test was whether the defendant lacked substantial capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law. Due process is not concerned with claims of error which appear only "upon microscopic examination of the trial record." State v. Kurvin, supra, 564. Assuming arguendo that it was erroneous to include this rather innocuous language, we conclude that it is not reasonably possible that the jury was misled by it. *708
The defendant's final claim is that there was not sufficient evidence of an abduction; see General Statutes
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.