25 F. 710 | E.D.N.C. | 1885
The defendant, a postmaster in this district, has been convicted under section 4053 of the Eevised Statutes of embezzlement of government money. His defense upon his trial was based upon alleged insanity, and, as this was not established by evidence, the jury properly found a verdict of guilty. The testimony offered merely showed eccentricity. “There are many persons who, without being insane, exhibit peculiarities of thought, feeling, and character which render them unlike ordinary beings, and make them objects of remark among their fellows. They may or may not become actually insane, but they spring from families in which insanity or other nervous diseases exist.” See Mauds. Eesp. 40. The defendant would seem, from his neighbors’ testimony, to belong to the class of persons so described by Dr. Maudsley.
This is a motion for a new trial, based upon the testimony of two physicians who have examined the prisoner since his conviction. Were the case any other than one of alleged insanity the motion would be deified upon the preliminary ground that the evidence ,was not newly discovered. There is no reason why the examination should hot have been made before the trial; more especially, as the defense of insanity was made at the spring term of this court. I am not disposed, however, to put the denial of the motion on the ground of laches. If the defendant ought not to be punished for his admitted-violation of the law, he surely ought not for failure to introduce his evidence in due time.
“To establish a defense on the ground of insanity, it must be clearly proved that, at the time of committing the act, the accused was laboring under such a defect of reason from disease of the mind as not to know the nature and quality of the act he was doing; or if he did know it, that he did not know he was doing what was wrong.”
The rule was clearly laid down in North Carolina by Green, J., in a case tried in this city, (State v. Haywood, Phil. Law,) in 1867, in these words:
“If the prisoner, at the time he committed the homicide, was in a state to comprehend his relations to other persons, the nature of the act and its criminal character, or, in other words, if he was conscious of doing wrong at the time of committing the homicide, he is responsible. 13ut if, on the contrary, the prisoner was under the visitation of God, and could not distinguish between good and evil, and did not know what he did, he is not guilty of any offense against the law, for guilt arises from the mind and wicked will.”
This instruction was approved by the late chief justice, and is law in North Carolina, as it is in most of our state and federal courts. The deviations that have been made from it have not been systematic, have introduced no new rule, and have been merely productive of confusion. So well-established a principle ought not to be changed otherwise than by legislation. I certainly do not feel at liberty to depart from it.
The right and wrong test has been attacked by medical writers with great vehemence, and sometimes with intemperance. It has been treated often as an attempt to state a rule which should test sanity. Yery few enlightened lawyers would, in 1843, have denied the possibility of the existence of cases where the rule would fail even as a test of moral responsibility. I do not doubt but that a man may be mad without delusion, or may be driven to a desperate and homicidal act by morbid impulse. But such cases in which physicians have considered a defendant wholly irresponsible are rare; few of them, comparatively, are given even in books, written by those who have access to the statistics of innumerable cases of insanity. The legal view does not deny the possibility of affective insanity, but holds it unsafe to make it a legal defense. If such cases could be tested in any way, perhaps some other rule than the one now acted upon
Conceding that the rule, as it exists, is defective, its liability to operate unjustly in exceptional cases does not often result in injustice. The prisoner is tried by a jury of bis neighbors and has the benefit of the public opinion of the community, which rarely ."-tils to be correct on the question of whether one accused of crime ought to be punished. In those cases in which that fails, as it sometimes does by reason of local feeling, there is the power of pardon vested in the executive,—a power more often abused by excess of mercy than of severity. If all these safeguards fail, there remains the case, which must sometimes occur in communities of men, of an individual compelled to suffer because, by the defect of human skill, he could not be protected without public injury. The instances of the punishment of men irresponsible through insanity in modem times, even allowing all the eases claimed as such by medical writers, do not equal in number the failures of justice through false testimony or false inferences from circumstances. With the most earnest desire to do exact justice, our courts must always occasionally fail because judge, jury, and witnesses are men, and subject to the limits of human nature.
But this would bo no reason for an adherence to the present rule wore a sounder and safer one discovered. Medical writers have suggested none. The alternative, which would seem to be the outcome of its objections to the right and wrong test, would be to allow the medical experts summoned as witnesses to give their opinions upon the question of the defendant’s responsibility, and instruct the jury to decide upon the weight of medical authority.
Manifold, and apparently fatal, objections exist to this: (1) It would he contrary to the course of law, and a practical substitution of a tribunal unknown to our system for trial by jury. As Lord Campbutil remarked, to allow a witness to give his opinion as to the responsibility of the accused would bo to leave to him the precise question which the jury is impaneled to decide. (2) Expert witnesses are employed by parties to the litigation. Thus they are selected not with a view to the discovery of the truth, but to serve a particular side. The medical men most likely to be favorable to the cause of,
But I do not consider the present case as one of which from any point of view irresponsibility could be predicated. There can be no doubt but that Jones Young knew that he was doing wrong in committing the acts which led to his conviction. His case is not one of irresistible impulse, for his embezzlement of government funds was the result of years of criminal conduct. His disease is not general mania. On the contrary, both of the doctors say that he was only occasionally insane. In cases of crime from what is called a morbid, irresistible impulse the criminal act of the patient is the evidence of his insanity. In this case the acts of the defendant are the best evidence of his responsibility. During a period of many years he has been guilty of systematic fraud. His quarterly returns rendered to the post-office department, and sworn to, each quarter have been regularly false. The amount of overcharges have been each time about the same, and yet have each time varied. It is impossible to suppose uniform conduct covering a series of years to be the result of an insanity consisting of an occasional incapability of appreciating obligations when in a “state of depression.” The prisoner’s conduct has been that of an adroit criminal. The doctors both say that he may have known right and wrong as to the acts with which he is charged. One of them believes him only partially responsible. The other says:
“He is irresponsible from a disordered brain from conducting himself as a •sane person should, and that with, possibly, not an absolute ignorance of right and wrong he is, when his brain is in a state of depression, unable to •do right or to resist wrong. His reason is in abeyance or perverted. He .seems to be non compos mentis, and has mismanaged his public as his private affairs.”
The reasons given by the expert witnesses for their opinions are: eccentric actions; mental peculiarities exhibited in conversation; ex
If, upon the arrival of the defendant at the penitentiary, he shall be or become, in the opinion of the physician in charge, insane, he may, under section 4852 of the Bevised Statutes, ho confined in tho government hospital for the insane, and be cared for as an insane man; and this result will, in such event, he obtained without the ill consequence which would flow from giving unnecessary weight to a defense so dangerous in a case of systematic, ingenious, and long-continued fraud, as that of insanity. The motion for a new trial is denied.
NOTE.
Insanity as a Defense—Knowledge of Right and Wrong.
For a full discussion of the subject of insanity as a defense, see Guiteau’s Case, 10 Fed. Rep. 161, and notes by Dr. Wharton and Robert, Desty, 189-204.
Insanity cannot be proven by reputation. Walker v. State, (Ind.) 1 N. E. Rep. 856. The supreme court of Nebraska say, in the ease of State v. Priebnow. 16 N. W. Rep. 907, that “the better rule, we think, aiid the one adopted by this court in Wright v. People, 4 Neb. 407, is, in effect, that if one accused of crime' have the mental capacity to <listinguish right from wrong, in respect to the particular act charged, he is responsible; and the"converso of this proposition would also ho true.” See Hawe v. State, (Neb.) 10 N. W. Rep. 452. It was held by the supreme court of Iowa, in State v. Jones, 17 N. W. Rep. 911, S. C. 20 N. W. Rep. 470, that an instruction in a trial in a case of homicide, where insanify is set up as a defense, which tends to confine the attention of the jury to the appearance, conduct, and language of the defendant at the time of the killing, and excludes testimony as to insanity at other times, is erroneous. It was declared by the supremo court of Kansas, in State v. Nixon, 4 Pac. Rep. 159, that “where a person, at the time of the commission of an alleged crime, has sufficient mental capacity to understand the nature and quality of the particular act or acts constituting the crime, and the mental capacity to know whether they are right or wrong, lie is generally responsible, if'he commits such act or acts, whatever may be his capacity in other particulars. But if he does not possess this degree of capacity, then he is not so responsible.” It was said by the supreme court of Oregon, in State v. Murray, 5 Pac. Rep. 55, that “if the prisoner knew enough to know he was violating the law by the commission of the act, the delusion will not excuse him, although ho had surrendered his judgment to some mad passion, which, for the time being, was exercising a strong influence over his conduct.” The court in this case say that “ when the commission of the act charged as a crime is proven, and the defense sought to be e-dablislied is the insanity of the defendant, the same must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt.”
St. Paul, Minn. James M. Kebb.