Commonwealth v. Woodhouse

164 A.2d 98, 401 Pa. 242, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 522
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 26, 1960
DocketAppeal, 7
StatusPublished
Cited by131 cases

This text of 164 A.2d 98 (Commonwealth v. Woodhouse) 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. Woodhouse, 164 A.2d 98, 401 Pa. 242, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 522 (Pa. 1960).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Eagen,

The defendant, Samuel Lawrence Woodhouse, Jr., shot and killed his sixteen year old adopted daughter, Elizabeth Love Woodhouse, who had suffered from Yon Recklinghausen’s disease from an early age. He was indicted and tried for her murder. The jury adjudged him guilty of murder in the first degree and fixed the punishment at life imprisonment. From the conviction, he appeals.

The defendant was born October 16, 1904, and became engaged in the general practice of medicine about the year 1932. On August 6, 1953, while his wife and mother were away from his home for the day, he went to the daughter’s bedroom on the third floor and found her sleeping in bed. Having assured himself that she was asleep, he went downstairs to his drug room on the first floor, took four shells from a box of twenty-twos, returned to the third floor and inserted the four shells in the clip of a bolt action .22 rifle. He aimed the gun at the back of his sleeping daughter’s head. The shot misfired. He went to the second floor to secure something to aid in removing the misfired cartridge. He reloaded the rifle, returned to his daughter’s bedroom, and fired one shot into the back of her head. He placed her on the floor and folded her arms over her chest. He wiped the blood from the floor, replaced the two remaining shells in the box, and threw the discharged shell and the one that misfired into a creek located to the rear of the property. [245]*245Then he treated two patients in the office of his home, one for poison ivy, the other for a puncture wound. He paid a young man for cutting the lawn. Sometime later, he checked his daughter’s condition and, finding her still alive and breathing, injected two doses of 5 cc of methadone into her body to hasten death and alleviate suffering. He also injected a total of 25 ce of the same drug into his own body, intending to commit suicide. When his wife and mother returned home late in the afternoon, they found Betsy dead on the floor of her bedroom and the defendant draped over a swivel chair in his office. A local doctor was called, who administered first aid to the defendant and arranged his transfer, by ambulance, to a hospital. The State Police were summoned. At the hospital, defendant’s attorney advised him against making any statement to the police.

On August 12th, the defendant was discharged from the hospital; and, with his attorney present at all times, the investigating officers were given their first opportunity to question him. He was taken to his home and he re-enacted the events of August 6th as, he said, they happened. His statements were steno-graphically recorded. Among other things, he said that he had been having trouble with his daughter for sometime as far as obedience was concerned. He also stated that “the plans to take Betsy’s life had been in my mind for a year or more1 and when my mother went with my wife, I realized here was my opportunity.”

On February IS, 1954, upon petition of defendant’s counsel, the court appointed a commission (under the provisions of the Mental Health Act of July 11, 1923, as amended, 50 PS §1224), to inquire into the defendant’s mental condition. After hearings, the commis[246]*246sion concluded that the defendant was mentally ill and recommended that he be institutionalized. On February 25, 1954, by court order, he was committed to the Farview State Hospital for the criminal insane. On September 29, 1955, Dr. John P. Shovlin, superintendent of this institution asked for the defendant’s discharge therefrom stating that “lie had sufficiently recovered ... to no longer need custodial care and remedial treatment.” By agreement of defendant’s counsel and the district attorney, the defendant’s transfer to the county jail was deferred. On December 29, 1955, a supplemental petition was presented to the court as a result of which the defendant was ordered transferred to the Harrisburg State Hospital. One year and three months later, the superintendent of this hospital petitioned for his release on the ground that he had fully recovered. The trial began May 6, 1957.

The defendant did not take the stand on his own behalf at the trial. The only defense offered was insanity. His wife testified that the defendant appeared tired and worried about himself for several months before the day involved; that his daughter’s disease gave him great concern and that she presented a personality problem which added to his worries; that he frequently indicated an intention to commit suicide; and, that he imbibed intoxicants freely. Other lay Avitnesses called by the defense testified that for at least a year before the shooting noticeable changes were apparent in the defendant, manifesting signs of unhappiness, irritability, moroseness, lack of memory and a Avorried attitude about his own health, that of his daughter, and her anti-social attitude.

The defense also introduced the testimony of three members of the medical profession, who for years had specialized in the science and practice of psychiatry. [247]*247One of these experts first examined the defendant a little more than three months after the tragedy. He testified that, in his opinion, the defendant at the time of the killing and for sometime previous was suffering from a paranoid involutional psychosis or insanity, and that the defendant acted, at the time involved, under the delusions that he himself was suffering from a hopeless illness and that his daughter was disintegrating both physically and mentally. These delusions, he said, prevented the defendant from completely appreciating the quality of his act, when he killed his daughter.

Another such expert, who first examined the defendant two months and ten days after the killing, opined that, at the time in question and for two years previously, the defendant had suffered from a severe psychosis; that the mental illness came Avith the defendant’s change of life and Avas accompanied by serious delusions. He further expressed the belief that, Avhile the defendant had some aAvareness that the act of killing Avas wrong, his insanity Avas so strong and his judgment so clouded that in his mind the act had to be done regardless.

The third such Avitness Avas a medical member of the commission, Avho examined the defendant approximately six and one-lialf months following the commission of the crime. His diagnosis that the defendant was suffering from paranoid schizophrenia differed from that of the two experts mentioned aboA’e. He stated, however, that in his opinion the defendant had been mentally ill for more than a year before the day he first examined him and that, during this period, he did not appreciate the complete quality of his actions and that, due to delusions from which he suffered, at times the defendant failed to knoAv the difference betAveen right and wrong.

[248]*248All three psychiatrists expressed surprise at the defendant’s rapid recovery. During their previous medical examinations, they definitely concluded the prognosis was very poor.

In rebuttal, the Commonwealth called lay witnesses, who had excellent opportunities to talk with and observe the defendant within a short period folloAving the shooting. Tavo saAV him in his office almost immediately after the unfortunate occurrence. They testified that the defendant appeared calm and rational and that there Avas nothing in his speech, manner or conduct indicating any abnormality or mental disturbance.

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Bluebook (online)
164 A.2d 98, 401 Pa. 242, 1960 Pa. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-woodhouse-pa-1960.