Commonwealth v. Ragone

176 A. 454, 317 Pa. 113, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 399
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 26, 1934
DocketAppeal, 283
StatusPublished
Cited by79 cases

This text of 176 A. 454 (Commonwealth v. Ragone) 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 v. Ragone, 176 A. 454, 317 Pa. 113, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 399 (Pa. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

There are twenty-three assignments of error before us but the central or planetary error to which all the others are merely satellitesimal is that a youth admittedly insane was forced to go through the travesty of a trial. The “trial” of one in the mental condition of the defendant irresistibly invites that characterization.

On or about June 23, 1933, William Reilly, a boy nine years of age, was murdered in Delaware County. He had been stabbed several times in the abdomen with an ice pick. Richard Ragone, the appellant, who was at the time four months under seventeen years of age, *115 was charged with the crime and made admissions as to his guilt. Without these admissions the Commonwealth would have had practically no case against the prisoner. (Defendant’s counsel contend that because of Eagone’s mental condition, his admissions were incompetent, but this question it is not necessary for us now to discuss or decide.)

On September 1, 1933, the prison warden filed a petition averring his belief that Eagone was insane and should be cared for in a hospital for mental diseases. He prayed the court “to order an inquiry into the prisoner’s condition,” etc. The defendant’s counsel asked that the commission be dissolved and the petition dismissed on the ground that its purpose was to deny the defendant a trial. The court held that “to permit this defendant to be committed to a hospital for the criminal insane without a trial on the charge under which he was committed to prison, would be unfair and unjust.” On October 9th, defendant was arraigned. The plea entered in his behalf was: “Not guilty by reason of insanity.” The case was called for trial on October 9th. Thereupon the defendant’s counsel made the following statement to the court: “The psychologists and neurologists, both those for the Commonwealth and those for the defense, are agreed, after examinations of the defendant, that he is insane and does not know the difference between right and wrong, and he was so afflicted at the time of the commission of the crime. We have suggested that our thought about the manner in which the trial should be conducted was to present the evidence in the regular way, the confessions and statements of the boy, and things of that kind, with the understanding that all the medical testimony would go on the record, and the Commonwealth will agree that a verdict of not guilty hy reason of insanity may he ultimately directed” The court asked: “The Commonwealth is willing to do that?” The assistant district attorney answered: “Yes, sir ” The court said: “Go on the record as an agreement *116 under instructions of the court?” The assistant district attorney answered: “Yes.” The court said: “. . . The Commonwealth is not really opposing the plea of insanity?” The assistant district attorney said: “No. Our neurologists support that theory” (Italics ours.)

After some further and immaterial discussion the court said: “Proceed to arraign the defendant.” This was done and his counsel entered a plea of “Not Guilty.” A short time later the court said: “Gentlemen, so there will not be any misunderstanding of the matter, the nature of the defense, as I understand it, is insanity.” The defendant’s counsel replied: “Not guilty on the grounds of insanity.” A jury was impaneled and sworn. Counsel for appellant claim that had they not relied on the stipulation that a verdict of not guilty would be directed at the close of the trial they would have taken more care in the selection of jurors. The Commonwealth proceeded to prove the corpus delicti and offered in evidence admissions of guilt on the part of Eagone and also an incriminating statement in writing, which it is claimed he voluntarily made and signed. The defense offered the testimony of three physicians who qualified as experts on clinical neurology. The first of these witnesses was a psychiatrist of standing whom the district attorney had employed to examine Eagone a few days after the latter’s arrest and who after making a thorough examination reported that the defendant had dementia prgecox and that he was “irresponsible” and “not legally accountable for his acts.” At the trial the district attorney stated: “We subpcenaed Dr. Wilson. If the defense wants to call him that is satisfactory to the Commonwealth.” The defense then did so. He testified that he examined the defendant on the 26th and 29th of June, 1933, and “found him to be what I consider a rather pronounced mental defective-; it was a case of dementia prsecox which had developed in a boy mentally defective and also with an organic brain disease.” He characterized this dementia prgecox as “ado *117 lescent insanity.” He averred that the defendant did not know the difference between right and wrong. The second witness to qualify as a psychologist and neurologist declared the defendant to be “mentally defective, below grade, very unstable, with very little comprehension, very little judgment, very little discrimination, and although he says he knows right from wrong I do not think he really does and in asking him many questions we found he did not seem to know it was wrong to kill.” This expert had also examined Ragone on the 3d of December, 1928, five years before the trial. The boy had then been sent to him for mental examination by one of the judges of the Municipal Court of Philadelphia. At that time he said he reached the conclusion that the boy “was mentally defective, psycho-neurotic,” and he recommended he “be placed in an institution for the feeble-minded.” This same witness on the 9th of December, 1933, ten days before the trial, again “reached the conclusion that he [Ragone] was more feeble-minded than he had been when I saw him before.” The clinical psychologist for the Sleighton Farms School for Girls and Friends School in Philadelphia, testified that she examined Ragone on September 29, 1933, and found that, although “his chronological age was sixteen years and eleven months, his mental age was eight years and two months.” She said her conclusion from the tests was “that the boy is mentally defective, of low grade, very little judgment, limited comprehension and only appreciable at the simplest types of manual tests. . . . His mental equipment is so constituted that he is unable to make a distinction between right and wrong.” All this testimony was uncon-tradicted and no attempt was made to cast doubt upon it by cross-examination.

This medical testimony furnished ample warrant for the acquiescence of the district attorney in the pretrial statement of defendant’s counsel that the Commonwealth and he agreed that defendant was insane then *118 and at the time of the commission of the crime charged and warranted the directed verdict of “Not guilty by reason of insanity” which the Commonwealth had at the beginning of the trial stated it was “willing” should be returned. No bad faith is anywhere imputed to the district attorney in agreeing that the defendant was insane and if such charge had been made, the undisputed testimony would have dispelled it.

That the district attorney acted within the scope of Iris official authority in committing the Commonwealth to the proposition that the defendant was insane is nowhere challenged.

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Bluebook (online)
176 A. 454, 317 Pa. 113, 1935 Pa. LEXIS 399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-ragone-pa-1934.