Davis v. State

1956 OK CR 61, 300 P.2d 1000, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 217
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 23, 1956
DocketA-12277
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 1956 OK CR 61 (Davis v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. State, 1956 OK CR 61, 300 P.2d 1000, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 217 (Okla. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

POWELL, Judge.

Roy Lee Davis, plaintiff in error, hereinafter referred to as defendant, was charged by information filed in the district court of Tulsa County with the crime of assault with intent to kill; was tried before a jury, convicted and his punishment fixed at ten years confinement in the State penitentiary. Appeal has been perfected to this court.

Sortie six propositions of error are argued in the briefs, and will be treated in the order presented.

At this point a brief summary of the record and evidence is in order.

On October 2, 1953 District Judge W. Lee Johnson entered, an order committing defendant for mental observation to the Eastern Oklahoma Hospital at Vinita for a period of thirty days, or until such time as the mental examination could be completed. The parties concede that based on observations made, Dr. Adams, Superintendent of the Hospital in question, did not believe-defendant insane, and returned him to< stand trial.

On December 15, 1953 defendant's case was called for trial. The record shows that on the same day there was filed for defendant a “Special plea and motion for trial pursuant to Section 1161, Title 22, Oklahoma Statutes Annotated”. The pertinent grounds will be set out hereinafter. Suffice-to say, by reason of the wording of the motion, a doubt arose in the mind of the court as to defendant’s then “present sanity”.

*1004 Under such situation, in a special proceeding under 22 O.S.19S1 § 1162, Judge: Eben L. Taylor, to whose court the case had been assigned for trial, ordered a jury empaneled to determine the defendant’s present sanity, limited to a determination of whether the accused was mentally competent to make a rational defense. The court apparently was aware of the holding of this court concerning a situation where doubt would arise in the mind of the court regarding the sanity of accused, as set out in Bingham v. State, 82 Okl.Cr. 5, 165 P.2d 646. And see Wallin v. State, 84 Okl.Cr. 194, 182 P.2d 788; Weiland v. State, 58 Okl.Cr. 108, 50 P.2d 741. The jury found the defendant “insane at this time”, and accordingly he was on December 17, 1953 recommitted to the Eastern State Hpspital at Vinita.

Thereafter on May 27, 1955, the case was again set for trial and for June 8, 1955, but it actually came on for hearing on'June 14, 1955, and at that time counsel for the State announced ready and defendant’s counsel announced, “The defendant will be ready”. At the conclusion of the opening statement by the assistant county attorney counsel for defendant interposed objection to the introduction of evidence’ on the ground, principally, that there had been no judicial determination of the present sanity of the defendant. The ’ record does not reflect whether or not any evidence was heard in support of the objection.

Concerning the evidence, the State offered proof that defendant and the prosecuting witness, Mary Francis Davis, were husband and wife; that they were estranged and were living separate and apart on August 13, 1953 when the assault took place. Three daughters, ages 10, 11 and 14 years, were at the time residing with their mother, but the older girl was not at home on the day in question. Early in the morning defendant went to the home of his wife’s parents who lived next door to where his family resided, and called his wife and two daughters home. He then went with the two girls to an old creek bed about 500 yards away from the house, picked up-some scrap iron and junk and carried it home and piled it back of a smoke house.

One of the girls, Peggy, went to the store for a soft drink in exchange for some bottles she had and three pennies her father gave her. Defendant sent the other girl, Billie Jean, to a neighbor’s for a hack saw to cut up a piece of scrap iron. While the two girls were away from the premises, defendant went into the house where it appears his wife was sitting at a sewing machine, and with a. claw hammer assaulted her and beat her about the head, rendering her unconscious and seriously injuring her. Before she became .unconscious she had screamed. When found she still had grasped in her hand some of her sewing.

Peggy Charlene Davis testified that as she rode her bicycle back from the grocery store she heard her mother screaming. That she hurried to her home, dropped her bicycle and rushed in the house; that her mother was lying on the floor and her daddy was bending over -her and she saw him strike her mother twice with a claw hammer. The daughter said that when she saw-this she screamed and her father, the defendant, turned around and started after her, and she ran next door to the home of her grandparents, went into the house and phoned for’ an ambulance.

Billie Jean, one of the daughters, had heard thé screams of her sister Peggy and rushed into the house and found her mother on the floor with blood coming out of her head. Billie Jean then went out and called to her grandparents who lived next door. Her father told her to “call the.'law”.

Defendant offered proof that he was an ex-service man, but he had no hospital record while in the service. After being discharged it was developed that he had been seized with fits of violence. He was also addicted to the use of alcohol. He was eventually, by some Legion- friends, taken over to a Government hospital at Little Rock, Arkansas for physical and neuropsy-chiatric examination where his case was diagnosed as one of acute, severe, depressive reaction under external precipitating *1005 stress of unemployment and separation from his family; a premorbid personality and predisposition by reason of low average intelligence, whose estimated resultant incapacity was minimal at the time. Because he was then (July 7, 1949) believed competent, the patient was discharged for the assigned reason that he had received the maximum hospital benefit. He had been in the hospital less than thirty days.

On rebuttal the State called four lay witnesses who testified that in their opinion defendant was sane at the time he assaulted his wife. Dr. Felix Adams gave as his expert opinion that the defendant was sane at the time of the commission of the crime charged.

In the first proposition it is urged that the information is insufficient in law to charge a public offense under 21 O.S. 1951 § 652, and at most charges an assault with intent to kill, pursuant to section 653.

The pertinent portion of the information' will be detailed hereinafter.

We have noted that the crime set out in the information is charged to have taken place on August 13, 1953, so that this was before the statute forming the basis for the crime charged, 21 O.S.1951 § 652, was amended by S.L.1955, p. 186, § 1. 21 O.S. 1951 § 652 reads :

“Every person who intentionally and wrongfully shoots, shoots at, or attempts to shoot at another, with any kind of firearm; airgun or other means whatever, with intent to kill any person, or who commits any assault and battery upon another by means of any deadly weapon, or bysuch other means or force as is likely to produce death * * * is punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary not exceeding ten years.”

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Bluebook (online)
1956 OK CR 61, 300 P.2d 1000, 1956 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-state-oklacrimapp-1956.