Commonwealth ex rel. Hilberry v. Maroney

207 A.2d 794, 417 Pa. 534, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 444
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 16, 1965
DocketAppeal, No. 167
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 207 A.2d 794 (Commonwealth ex rel. Hilberry v. Maroney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth ex rel. Hilberry v. Maroney, 207 A.2d 794, 417 Pa. 534, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 444 (Pa. 1965).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Roberts,

William Bilberry stands confined for life under a sentence imposed for the brutal murder of his wife on April 4, 1952. In 1963, Bilberry sought a writ of habeas corpus, but the petition was denied without hearing. Since the case involves homicide, the appeal from the dismissal comes directly to us.1

The grounds upon which the petition builds deal with the petitioner’s sanity at crucial moments in the' conviction and sentencing chain. Because of this, a complete statement of the proceedings is required.

Five months after the murder, in open court and with two court appointed attorneys, petitioner-appellant entered a plea of guilty. The record reveals that the following dialogue occurred at the time the plea was taken: “The Court: Mr. Bilberry, the Court has before it an indictment at No. 1 June Term, in the Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1952, wherein you are charged in two counts, the first count charging murder and the second count charging manslaughter, what is your desire at this time? Mr. Bilberry: Guilty. The Court: Is it your desire to now enter a plea to the indictment? Mr. White : That is the defendant’s desire. The Court : And you are represented by Robert White and Gilbert Long? Mr. Bilberry : That is right.”

The court directed the reading of the indictment and the clerk concluded with the traditional question to the accused: “Bow say you, are you guilty in the manner and form as you stand indicted?” to which petitioner replied, “Guilty.” Petitioner subsequently [537]*537signed the indictment which his attorneys also signed as witnesses.

A month after the plea, the conrt en banc heard testimony to determine the degree of guilt and to fix the penalty. Petitioner did not testify. The court filed its opinion one month after the hearing, fixing the degree of guilt at murder in the first degree and setting the penalty at life imprisonment. On that same day, petitioner appeared with counsel in open court and sentence was pronounced. No statement was made by petitioner and none was requested of him.

Petitioner was spared a sentence of death because the court en banc determined that his mental condition and history were a substantial mitigating factor.2

[538]*538During the hearing at which testimony was taken to determine the degree of guilt, four physicians who examined petitioner while he was in custody placed his mental age between that of an 8 to 12 year old child. Three of these physicians were of the view that he knew right from wrong. A fourth physician, the only psychiatrist, expressed the opinion that petitioner was not normal when born, that he suffered from organic deterioration of his faculties, and that he possessed the capacity of an eight year old child and less responsibility than such a child. The psychiatrist further concluded that while petitioner knew what other people said was right or wrong, he had no self feeling of what was right or wrong.

The court, writing in support of its sentence, made these observations: “[Considering his history as we now know it, the fact that there could be no mercenary motive, he had nothing to gain but to end the nagging and berating of his wife, who was and had been suffering from depressive psychosis, cannot be overlooked and cast aside if human justice is to be conscientiously administered. The defendant’s act in killing his wife under such circumstances certainly substantiates the medical and psychiatric evidence before us. Mentally retarded and immature, an individual of constitutional psychopathic state and emotionally unstable, with no understanding of the difference between right and wrong within himself, choosing to rid himself of annoyance, real or imaginary, by killing his tormentor, where a normal individual with the power of reason would have found the reasonable solution to his problems.” (Emphasis supplied.)

[539]*539In concluding, the court added: “Our observation of the defendant during these entire proceedings serves but to confirm our analysis as above set forth.”

Petitioner was transferred to Western Correctional Diagnostic and Classification Center, Pittsburgh, two weeks after the sentencing. Following a determination by the resident physician that petitioner was of unsound mind and unfit for penal discipline, the warden forwarded to the court an application for the appointment of a “commission in lunacy”. Shortly thereafter, the commission was appointed by the court and a commission report followed five days later.

The lunacy commission deemed the petitioner to be a schizophrenic-paranoid. Its report found: “He was directed by a voice to kill his wife. ‘Something came into my mind.’ Prior to the act the patient was hunting in the house for someone hiding in house. Today [he] has visual hallucination — seeing members of his family.” The commission determined petitioner to be insane and of criminal tendency. On the same day the report was filed with the court (January 8, 1953), the court ordered petitioner committed to Farview State Hospital, a mental institution. He was admitted on January 13, 1953, and remained until September 9, 1958, at which time he escaped.3

At Farview State Hospital a report was made on January 22, 1963, classifying petitioner’s illness as schizophrenia, paranoid type. An evaluation of petitioner’s mental status unequivocally concluded: “There is no doubt that at the time of commission of the crime he had lost his hold on reality and was driven to the act by his delusions with probably no thought of resisting impulse.”

[540]*540Petitioner’s self-drawn habeas corpus petition raises several questions of constitutional significance. He contends that at the time of sentencing he was insane and that, therefore, the imposition of sentence was invalid. He urges that he was not able to assist his counsel at any stage of the proceedings because he was mentally ill, and, therefore, he was “forced” to plead guilty. Finally, he attacks the validity of his confession because it was procured while he was insane. Petitioner makes the additional contention that he was insane when he killed his wife and that, accordingly, he should not have been convicted.

In the court below and in this Court, the Commonwealth takes the position that the “defense” of insanity was presented and rejected by the sentencing court.4 Since no appeal was taken, the Commonwealth contends these issues cannot now be raised. Similarly, the court below, in rejecting the petition without a hearing, held that since petitioner was represented by counsel when he entered his plea, the issue of his legal sanity at the time the offense was committed has been determined and cannot be raised successfully in the present proceedings.

Our review of the petition and the entire record in the trial court satisfies us that the petition is non-frivolous, that it is not contradicted by the record, and that it raises material and substantial questions of fact which, if established, would entitle petitioner to a writ of habeas corpus. In such a situation a hearing is compelled. See Commonwealth ex rel. Wilson v. Rundle, 412 Pa. 109, 111, 194 A. 2d 143, 144 (1963).

[541]*541In onr view, both tbe Commonwealth and tbe court below misconceive the import of tbe petition.5

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Bluebook (online)
207 A.2d 794, 417 Pa. 534, 1965 Pa. LEXIS 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-ex-rel-hilberry-v-maroney-pa-1965.