Battalino v. People

199 P.2d 897, 118 Colo. 587, 1948 Colo. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 1, 1948
DocketNo. 16,049.
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 199 P.2d 897 (Battalino v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Battalino v. People, 199 P.2d 897, 118 Colo. 587, 1948 Colo. LEXIS 301 (Colo. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiff in error, Robert S. Battalino, was convicted of murder of the first degree for the killing of Michael Hugh Randolph.

Randolph, at the time of his death, was engaged in the operation of a restaurant in Denver. Battalino and his wife both had been employed briefly at the restaurant, the latter as a waitress and the former as a fry cook. *589 Some time before the homicide that employment had terminated. Battalino testified both that they quit, and that they were “fired.” Other employees testified that Battalino and Randolph engaged in frequent disputes, that the latter accused Battalino of taking money from the cash register and that Battalino threatened “to get” Randolph or to “rub him out.” Another employee of Randolph in the restaurant named Miller became intimate with Battalino and left his employment there at about the same time. The two men, according to the statement of each of them, went together to the restaurant in Miller’s car late on the evening of the homicide, taking a gun which was being kept by Miller at the request of a friend, and waited until Randolph closed the restaurant for the night, when Battalino forced him at gunpoint to climb into the Miller car and ordered Miller to drive toward the mountains. After driving up the main highway some distance beyond Conifer Battalino ordered the car stopped, the other two men out, through the fence and down a slope some 125 feet from the main highway beside a large rock where he first gave Randolph an opportunity to pray and then shot him in the forehead. Battalino and Miller returned to the car and came back to Denver. The following morning Battalino left town and shortly thereafter was joined by Miller in Omaha. Randolph’s body was discovered several weeks later, whereafter, Battalino and Miller were traced to Omaha and placed under arrest. Each made a written statement admitting his part in the kidnapping and killing. Miller in his testimony at the trial in all essentials corroborated Battalino’s written confession and there was other substantial corroborating evidence. Upon arraignment defendant pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity. He was given a separate trial whereat the jury returned a verdict of guilty of murder of the first degree and fixed the penalty at death.

The first assignment of error here urged is the refusal of the trial court to give the jury an instruction on mur *590 der of the second degree and a form of verdict permitting it to find defendant guilty of murder in that degree. This assignment is based on the ground that there was evidence of insanity of defendant introduced, and although the jury found that the defendant was not so diseased in mind as to be incapable of distinguishing right from wrong or of choosing the right and refraining from doing wrong, still if permitted, it might have found that he was incapable of that wilful deliberation and premeditation essential to murder of the first degree, and, therefore, he was guilty of murder of the second degree only.

In support of this assignment counsel relies particularly on Ingles v. People, 92 Colo. 518, 22 P. (2d) 1109. Our statute provides that if one of the defenses interposed by one charged with a criminal offense be insanity, said defense must be pleaded orally as a specification to the plea of not guilty. The question, there posed was whether evidence of insanity offered, not for the purpose of defense, but for the purpose of mitigation only, was within the restriction of the statute, and we held that where a defendant chooses not to interpose a plea of not guilty by reason of insanity, but to stand upon the general plea of not guilty, he may hot claim irresponsibility by reason of insanity and demand an acquittal on that ground, but that he is entitled to introduce evidence of insanity or mental derangement short of insanity, for the purpose, not of seeking an acquittal, but of reducing the grade of the crime from murder of the first degree to murder of the second degree.

In the present-case, it could hardly be otherwise than that the jury found defendant guilty of murder of the first degree because the murder was committed in. the perpetration of robbery. Defendant stated in his confession that after he shot Randolph, he “took the dough out of his pocket”; that he kept the money, and that there was $450.00; and there was no evidence be *591 fore the jury to the contrary. But even assuming the jury found that defendant’s motive was not robbery, but revenge for Randolph’s having beaten him, as he said, out of some money in a bootlegging deal in 1937, still a different question is involved from that in the Ingles case.' Here insanity was pleaded as a defense and the question is whether, when insanity is so pleaded, evidence of insanity should be considered by the jury both in defense and in mitigation; whether, if the jury finds defendant not so insane as to be entitled to acquittal, it may still find him so insane as to be guilty only of murder of the second degree. The weight of authority is to the contrary. In California the rule has been stated as follows: “The insanity of a defendant cannot be used for the purpose of reducing his crime from murder in the first degree to murder in the second degree. If responsible at all in this,respect, he is responsible in the same degree as a sane man, and if he is not responsible at all' he is entitled to an acquittal in both degrees.” People v. Troche, 206 Cal. 35, 273 Pac. 762, 772.

Like rule has been stated and followed in: State v. Maioni, 78 N.J.L. 339, 74 Atl. 526; Sage v. State, 91 Ind. 141; United States v. Lee, 4 Mackey 489; State v. Kotovsky, 11 Mo. App. 584; Commonwealth v. Hollinger, 190 Pa. 155, 42 Atl. 548; Hogue v. State, 65 Tex. Cr. 539, 146 S.W. 905; Foster v. State, 37 Ariz. 281, 294 Pac. 268; State v. Fisko, 58 Nev. 65, 70 P. (2d) 1113. And it is stated in 1 Michie on Homicide, p. 199, §61; Wharton on Homicide (3d ed.),p. 803, §539; Glueck, Mental Disorder and the Criminal Law, 200; 76 Am. S.R., p. 84.

Yet several states have recognized limitations to this rule. In Andersen v. State, 43 Conn. 514, where defendant, without substantial grievance, appeared at the shop in which he had formerly been employed, and with a revolver in each hand started shooting promiscuously, killing a man with whom he had had no trouble, and there was much evidence as to his irrational excitability and suffering from fancied injuries, the court said:. “It *592 is not our purpose either to ignore or recognize this form of insanity as an excuse for crime. The question is not whether an act committed under its influence is criminal; whether the actor should be punished or be exempt from punishment; but whether he is a proper subject of capital punishment.

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199 P.2d 897, 118 Colo. 587, 1948 Colo. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/battalino-v-people-colo-1948.