Grammer v. State

Decision Date11 January 1940
Docket Number6 Div. 458.
Citation196 So. 268,239 Ala. 633
CourtAlabama Supreme Court
PartiesGRAMMER v. STATE.

Rehearing Denied April 4, 1940.

Further Rehearing Denied June 6, 1940.

Appeal from Circuit Court, Jefferson County; Robt. J. Wheeler Judge.

C. E Grammer was convicted of murder in the first degree, and he appeals.

Affirmed.

BROWN and BOULDIN, JJ., and ANDERSON, C.J., dissenting on rehearing.

Andrew W. Griffin and Frank M. James, both of Birmingham, for appellant.

Thos S. Lawson, Atty. Gen., and Geo. Lewis Bailes, Circuit Sol., and Robt. G. Tate, Deputy Circuit Sol., both of Birmingham, for the State.

FOSTER Justice.

Appellant was tried and convicted of murder in the first degree for killing one Hammett by cutting him with a knife, and given a life sentence in the penitentiary. His plea was not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity.

There was no question reserved for our consideration under his plea of not guilty, but all questions relate to that of insanity.

The fight occurred August 3, 1937, and Hammett died September 3, 1937. On November 9, 1937, a hearing was had under section 4577, Code, as to the sanity of defendant then existing, the court having appointed a doctor to examine into his mental condition. Upon such hearing, the court ordered him to the State Insane Asylum. On July 2, 1938, the court made an order that, since the superintendent of the hospital had certified that he was not then insane, he be returned to the county jail for trial, and he was tried and convicted on January 9, 1939.

The evidence of insanity offered by defendant tended to show that his grandfather and grandmother were both insane, though none of their children had become so, and defendant is the only one of nine brothers and sisters to be so afflicted.

Defendant was a World War veteran, and was discharged honorably in 1919, and married in 1920, and had children. He was in various veterans' hospitals on account of his abnormal mental condition.

On October 22, 1933, he was adjudged insane in the Probate Court of Tuscaloosa County, and committed to the United States Veterans' Hospital. His record showed treatment at various facilities, and that about 1926, he was using alcohol excessively, and had a distinct change of personality, diagnosed as dementia præcox, simple type; and at another time it was diagnosed as a paranoid type. The report showed that afterwards in the hospital his only abnormality manifested was his inability to abstain from using liquor, and was criminally insane when under its influence.

He was in and out of the hospital on several occasions.

Dr. Edwards, a general practitioner of medicine, testified for defendant, that he was the family physician, but not a specialist on mental disorders. He diagnosed his condition prior to 1936, which was the last time he talked to him as "cyclic insanity." On some occasions he was practically normal; at other times he appeared nervous and was not normal, and at other times absolutely insane; that it was in the form of dementia præcox of which "cyclic" insanity was a type. His opinion was that defendant's condition was permanent, but "not always". When he is laboring under one of those spells of insanity, he might not be able to distinguish between right and wrong; that he is not at all times, at least, accountable for what he does, good or bad.

Dr. Littlejohn, a specialist on mental diseases, who examined defendant in November, 1937, at the instance of the court to determine his mental status at that time, examined him only one time in the county jail. He testified to various symptoms and his historic record. Upon the basis of a hypothetical question, he answered that defendant was probably insane August 3, 1937; that probably he had dementia præcox. It may be simple or paranoid, that is, without or with delusions. This is a permanent form of insanity with remissions. A patient under a remission probably would be able to determine right from wrong, probably not if he was in a spell, and not in a remission. That he would not express an opinion as to whether he was insane at the time of the killing; that it takes a long period of observation to diagnose dementia præcox.

Dr. Kay testified for the State. He is a specialist in mental diseases, and is a staff physician at the Bryce Hospital. Defendant was under his observation November 13, 1937, to July 2, 1938, when he was discharged. He was brought before the entire medical staff on several occasions for clinical conference; that it was the unanimous opinion of the entire staff in all the conferences that he was not insane, based on a review of the history of his case, his behavior in the hospital, and examinations and observations of him. Whereupon Dr. Partlow, the superintendent, directed his return for trial under this charge.

There were seven physicians and the clinical director on the staff. They thought he was not insane, but dangerous to society after a long period of anti-social and dangerous behavior; that he knows right from wrong, but does not always take into consideration the price he has to pay for his conduct; and when drinking he was a menace to society. That he did not have dementia præcox. A person with such affliction would have a different picture of symptoms, which Dr. Kay epitomized. But that there is a tendency when he is so afflicted to improve some, and be better at times--but it is present all the time when it exists. There are variations to the intensity with which the symptoms are evidenced; that a severe case would render one incompetent to control his acts.

Appellant assigns errors. The first argued in brief are 2, 3 and 4, which are discussed together. They are refused charges, as follows:

"18. The court charges the jury that if you are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that prior to the time of the difficulty between defendant and deceased, the defendant was afflicted with a mental disease, and that the mental disease was of a permanent type, then the mental disease is presumed to continue and the burden rests on the State to prove to your reasonable satisfaction that the defendant was not suffering from the mental disease at the time the defendant had the difficulty with deceased."
"19. The court charges the jury that if you are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that the defendant, prior to the time of the difficulty between defendant and deceased, was insane, and that his insanity was of a permanent type, then there is a presumption that the insanity continued."
"23. The court charges the jury that if you are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that prior to the time of the difficulty between defendant and deceased, that defendant had been judicially declared insane by the Probate Court of Tuscaloosa County, Alabama, and if you are further reasonably satisfied from the evidence that the insanity he was declared to be afflicted with was of a permanent type, then it is presumed that the insanity continued, and the burden rests on the State to prove to your reasonable satisfaction that the crime charged against defendant, was committed at a time when the defendant was not laboring under the duress of the disease."

Charges 18 and 23 misplace the burden of proof in respect to the plea of not guilty by reason of insanity. Such a defense must be "clearly proved to the reasonable satisfaction of the jury." Section 4572, Code. This puts the burden on the defendant, not to make out a prima facie case of insanity, nor to raise a reasonable doubt as to it, and to carry that burden throughout the trial, not discharged until the jury is reasonably satisfied of defendant's insanity. The burden in this respect never shifts to the State nor rests on the State. Parrish v. State, 139 Ala. 16(24), page 50, 36 So. 1012; Anderson v. State, 209 Ala. 36(9), 95 So. 171; Boyle v. State, 229 Ala. 212, 154 So. 575.

Charge 19 is the statement of what is supposed to be a scientific fact of more or less value in such a trial as this.

But it gives no direction to the jury as to the effect of such a presumption from such a finding as here applied. And has a misleading tendency whereby the jury might conclude that such a presumption required a finding of not guilty. But the evidence is that though he might have had a permanent form of insanity, it was such as that at times he was legally responsible for his misconduct. At times, he may not have been. Under the statute the burden was on defendant to show that at the time of doing the act, he was incompetent to control himself, though he may have had a permanent form of insanity, if in such condition there were times when he was competent to know right from wrong, and control his actions.

When there is proof of such intervals of lucidity, the principle that a permanent form is presumed to continue (Odom v. State, 174 Ala. 4, 56 So. 913) does not mean that there is a presumption against the idea that he may have acted in a lucid interval. Talbert v. State, 140 Ala. 96, 37 So. 78.

Moreover, the jury might suppose from this charge that any form of permanent insanity existing at the time of the offense prevented a finding of guilty whether or not the crime was the effect of the insanity. The unsoundness of mind may have had no influence upon the act of defendant on that occasion. To be in position of irresponsibility for the commission of an alleged crime by reason of insanity, the act of defendant, alleged to be a crime, must have been the product solely of the deranged mental condition. Parsons v. State, 81 Ala. 577, 2 So. 854, 60 Am.Rep. 193

.

There may be other reasons why the charge was refused without error, not necessary here to consider.

Assignments 5 and 6. The court is here requested to charge the jury that dementia...

To continue reading

Request your trial
46 cases
  • Cunningham v. State
    • United States
    • Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
    • 12 Octubre 1982
    ...the jury. The burden of proving insanity never shifts to the State but remains on the defendant throughout the trial. Grammer v. State, 239 Ala. 633, 196 So. 268 (1940). "(A) reasonable doubt of sanity, raised by all the evidence, does not authorize an acquittal." Boswell, 63 Ala. at 326. "......
  • Ellis v. State
    • United States
    • Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
    • 11 Mayo 1990
    ...v. State, 133 Ala. 43, 31 So. 953 (1901). In this respect, the burden never shifts to the State nor rests on the State. Grammer v. State, 239 Ala. 633, 196 So. 268 (1940). "In applying these propositions of statutory and case law, it has been stated that the question of insanity at the time......
  • Barbour v. State
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • 7 Octubre 1954
    ...154, 22 So.2d 713; Coffey v. State, 244 Ala. 514, 521, 14 So.2d 122; George v. State, 240 Ala. 632, 637, 200 So. 602; Grammer v. State, 239 Ala. 633, 638, 196 So. 268; Brothers v. State, 236 Ala. 448, 451, 452, 183 So. 433; Deloney v. State, 225 Ala. 65, 70, 142 So. 432; Birchfield v. State......
  • Knight v. State
    • United States
    • Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals
    • 1 Octubre 2004
    ...insanity.' (Footnote omitted.) "See, e.g., Watts v. State, 282 Ala. 245, 210 So.2d 805 (1968); Nichols v. State, supra; Grammer v. State, 239 Ala. 633, 196 So. 268 (1940). "`Evidence of the prosecution tending to rebut a defense will not be excluded because it also tends to show the commiss......
  • Request a trial to view additional results

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT