Pace v. State
Decision Date | 18 September 1969 |
Docket Number | 8 Div. 341 |
Citation | 226 So.2d 645,284 Ala. 585 |
Parties | Ernest Calvin PACE v. STATE of Alabama. |
Court | Alabama Supreme Court |
Jos. A. Lee and Robert E. Carter, Scottsboro, for appellant.
MacDonald Gallion, Atty. Gen., and David W. Clark, Asst. Atty. Gen., for the State.
Appellant was sentenced to thirty years in the penitentiary following his conviction for robbery. His motion for a new trial was overruled.
Appellant was charged with robbery of an A & P grocery store in Scottsboro. The undisputed evidence shows that appellant, armed with a shotgun, and another, armed with a pistol, entered the store on July 2, 1968 and forced an employee to give them about $550.00 and left with it in a brown sack. Several employees and customers identified appellant as being the man with the shotgun. Several witnesses testified that the robbers left in a maroon Plymouth Barracuda and two witnesses took the license number of the automobile. The tag number was the same as that on the car when appellant purchased it on February 17, 1968.
Counsel for appellant open their argument in brief with this statement:
'Defense counsel for the appellant would be less than honest if they did not admit that the jury was justified in finding that the appellant was identified beyond a reasonable doubt as being one of the two men who robbed the A & P Grocery Store in Scottsboro, Alabama, on July 2, 1968.
The trial court held a hearing on this petition. At the hearing, the defendant testified that he had been given psychiatric examinations by the Air Force on at least three occasions. Friends, acquaintances and relatives of the defendant testified that appellant's father had been under the care of Bryce Mental Hospital for many years, that his mother had spent some time in the same hospital and that two of appellant's sisters had been treated at Bryce. Defendant's mother testified that defendant had threatened to kill himself once but could not give any of the circumstances other than that he had been depressed. All of the defense witnesses who testified as to defendant's mental condition stated they felt he 'was not right' or 'had a mental problem' or that he 'needed help' or evaluations of defendant's mental state of similar import. However, when pressed for reasons for the evaluation of defendant's condition, the only example of unusual behavior anyone mentioned was that defendant would talk about events in the past as though they had occurred recently and might tell the same story twice within a short period of time.
On cross-examination, some of the defense witnesses stated that they did not think the defendant so deranged that he did not know what he was doing. A former girlfriend said she did not regard defendant as dangerous. A brother said defendant could look after himself and handle his own business affairs. The State presented no evidence on the issue of insanity or incompetency. No psychiatrist or doctor testified for either side. After the hearing, the court denied the petition. At trial, the defendant sought to prove insanity at the time of the crime with substantially the same evidence that the defense had presented at the hearing on defendant's petition for a mental examination.
Appellant cites Eaton v. State, 280 Ala. 659, 197 So.2d 761, as one of a line of cases which hold that a trial court has the right but not the duty to procure an examination and report from a lunacy commission under the provisions of Tit. 15, § 425, Code 1940, 'when in the discretion of the court it considers such aid will be helpful.' But appellant then draws an incorrect conclusion by making the following statement in brief:
'In effect, these cases hold that a Circuit Court has complete and utter discretion, and can never be reversed for overruling a petition for a mental examination.'
In Eaton v. State, supra, we said:
But this is not the equivalent of the incorrect conclusion quoted supra from appellant's brief.
It is the general rule that matters resting in the sound discretion of the trial court will not be disturbed on appeal unless there has been a clear abuse of discretion. Colquett v. Williams, 264 Ala. 214, 86 So.2d 381, and cases there cited.
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...'The legislature has not given a right to a defendant to receive a mental examination whenever he requests one.' Pace v. State, 284 Ala. 585, 587, 226 So.2d 645 (1969); Nelson [v. State, 405 So.2d 392 (Ala.Cr.App.1980), reversed on other grounds, 405 So.2d 401 (Ala.1981) ]. Absent such a ri......
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