delivered the opinion of the court:
Thе defendant, Robert J. Baker, was indicted in the circuit court of Marion County on a charge of murder. He pleaded guilty, and was sentenced by the court, after a hearing in mitigation, to the pеnitentiary for the term of 99 years.
The defendant now brings a writ of error contending that the trial court erred in allowing his counsel to withdraw a sanity petition previously filed by former counsel; that his aрpointed counsel was incompetent; and that counsel at the time of trial failed to produce all available evidence.
, The facts as found in lengthy written confessions taken in Benton County, Washington, where defendant was apprehended, and later in Marion County, Illinois, where defendant was subsequently brought, which confessions were admitted in evidence, are that on Dеcember 22, 1956, defendant and his wife were travelling on Route No. 50 in East St. Louis, Illinois, where they picked up a hitch-hiker in a Marine uniform. Shortly after being picked up, the Marine hitch-hiker fell asleeр, and defendant and his wife who had now driven into Marion County, Illinois, decided to rob him.
The defendant, while the Marine still slept, climbed into the back seat of the automobile, and shot the Marine with a model No. 94 Winchester 30-caliber rifle. There is at this point some immaterial discrepancy as to how soon after being shot, the Marine died, but medical testimony indicates that death was almost instantaneous. The defendant deposited the body of the Marine in some underbrush, and then proceeded in the same automobile eastward into Indiana. On December 26, 1956, the body of the Marine was discovered and the Marine was later identified as Larry M. Kirk of Petersburg, Indiana.
The record discloses that after being apprehended at Benton County, Washington, the defendant signed written confessions setting forth in detail, the killing of Marine Larry M. Kirk. Subsequent written confessions were also signed by defendant in Marion County, Illinois, the scene of the crime.
The trial judge initially appointed threе counsel to defend the defendant. Defendant’s initial counsel filed a petition requesting a determination of the sanity of Robert J. Baker. The defendant constantly opposed this petition; that he wished to plead guilty; that he could receive no cooperation in this request from counsel. The court after hearing defendant state that he was not able to cо-operate with his counsel, permitted counsel to withdraw. The court then appointed two new counsel to represent Robert J. Baker. The record indicates that defendant and new counsel were able to co-operate; that upon agreement of counsel for defendant and the State’s Attorney, the court appointed Dr. Groves B. Smith, a physician and surgeon, specializing in nerves and mental diseases connected with the State Hospital for the Criminally Insane at Menard, Illinois, to examine the defendant; that Dr. Smith did examine defendant аnd filed a written report regarding his observations during the examination of defendant; and that the written report of Dr. Smith was made available to counsel for defendant as well as the State’s Attorney.
The report of Dr. Smith found defendant to be a friendly, co-operative and intelligent person who nevertheless had exhibited by his conduct throughout his life a tendency to react in an impulsive irresponsible manner compared to conventional standards. Most importantly, the report of Dr. Smith stated that from a medical standpoint the defendant had a clear knowlеdge of the basic facts which led to his present difficulty with the law. When the written report of Dr. Smith was made known to defendant and his court-appointed attorneys, defendant elected through his attorneys in open court to make a motion to have the sanity petition, previously filed on his behalf by -former court-appointed counsel, withdrawn. The court at length questioned defendant about his right to a sanity hearing based on the sanity petition previously filed on his behalf. The defendant informed the court that the filing of the sanity petition was not his idea and that he, the defendant, had from its initial filing opposed said petition. In fact, it was defendant’s disagreement as to the filing of a sanity petition on his behalf that led to the dismissal of his prior counsel. In open court, dеfendant persisted in his request for a withdrawal of the sanity petition previously filed, and it was only after a thorough examination of the defendant by the court heretofore set forth, that the motion to withdraw the sanity petition was granted, and Dr. Smith’s report was made a part of the record in this case.
The defendant now contends that it was error for the trial court to take the dеfendant’s word as to his sanity, and that it was the court’s duty to impanel a jury to try the question of defendant’s sanity raised by the petition previously filed on the defendant’s behalf.
The trial, adjudication, or sеntence of a person charged with a criminal offense, while insane, violates his constitutional rights and is also expressly prohibited by statute. (People v. Robinson,
The key to requiring a sanity trial is the existence of a bona fide doubt as to the defendant’s present sanity. The trial court, therefore, has discretion in determining whether the facts of a particular case warrant a sanity hearing.
A recent enunciation by this court of the discretion of a trial court in this matter is found in Brown v. People,
The defendant in his brief relies upon People v. Maynard,
In People v. Maynard,
In Brown v. People,
In People v. Burson,
In the present case, there is no prior adjudicаtion of insanity as in People v. Maynard,
The defendant contends that his counsel was incompetent. Initially, three members of the bar werе appointed to represent defendant. Upon defendant’s inability to cooperate with counsel, counsel was permitted to withdraw and the court appointed two additiоnal counsel with whom defendant was able to co-operate. We have, examined the record carefully and cannot agree with defendant’s contention that his counsel wаs incompetent. It is apparent that counsel presented as good a defense to the charge as the nature of the case permitted. The defense lawyers were in a difficult situation. The defendant had made several written statements admitting the shooting of Larry M. Kirk. Defense counsel presented mitigation on behalf of defendant and succeeded in enabling thе defendant to escape the extreme penalty. The standard of performance laid down by this court in People v. Morris,
The contention of the defendant that all evidencе on his behalf was not presented before the trial court is, upon examination of the record, totally without merit.
From an examination of the record in its entirety we find that the defendant was properly convicted of the crime of murder. Accordingly the judgment and sentence of the circuit court of Marion County is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
