Donald E. Martin v. United States

284 F.2d 217, 109 U.S. App. D.C. 83, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4179
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJune 23, 1960
Docket15444_1
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 284 F.2d 217 (Donald E. Martin v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donald E. Martin v. United States, 284 F.2d 217, 109 U.S. App. D.C. 83, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4179 (D.C. Cir. 1960).

Opinion

PRETTYMAN, Chief Judge.

Appellant Martin was indicted for the illegal possession and sale of narcotics. Upon motion of his counsel (court-appointed) he was committed to the D. C. General Hospital for examination as to his mental competency. The report being that he was psychotic and incapable of assisting in his own defense, he was committed to St. Eli2iabeths Hospital. Five months later he was certified as competent to stand trial, and he was tried, convicted and sentenced. The present appeal is, upon appellant’s pe *218 tition and an order of this court, at Government expense.

The problems posed here concern the defense of insanity to a criminal charge. Martin says the evidence required the judge to direct a judgment of acquittal by reason of insanity, and says that the judge also erred in his instructions to the jury.

There was little or no doubt of Martin’s guilt, apart from the issue of insanity. He made two sales of narcotics to an officer in the Metropolitan Police Department, working under cover. The evidence was direct and precise as to detail.

The real dispute concerns the issue of insanity. We consider first whether, when both sides had rested, the evidence presented a question for the jury upon this issue. Martin’s prior history was shown in some detail. This is as it should be. We have pointed out in other opinions 1 that the material from which an expert fashions his opinion constitutes one of the most important features — if, indeed, not the most important feature — of expert testimony. Martin was born out of wedlock. At four years of age he was taken into the home of a person variously described as a foster mother or a godmother. This woman seems to have had high ambitions for the boy. She sent him to a private school in Andover, Massachusetts, and to a summer camp in Pennsylvania. Up to this point, at almost seventeen years of age, he did well. Then he refused to return to Andover, and she put him in a private high school in Washington. He was expelled for fighting and then was expelled successively from two public high schools. At about that time he began to live part of the time with his natural mother in Baltimore. In his brief here he recites testimony to the effect that his mother’s associates were quite different from his godmother’s standards. He went into the Air Force, ran away, and, after a short period in a mental hospital, was released with a bad-conduct discharge. The medical report in the Air Force was “emotional instability reaction, chronic, severe.” He went back to his mother in Baltimore and became involved in a number of “anti-social activities”. He “got with a bunch of fellows”, and they wandered over the country. He knew their nicknames — Car, Bolt and Huss. “[T]hey were addicts too,” and “[m]ost of them are in jail now.” He gambled a lot. “I always cheat.” In the early part of 1958 he was using heroin — “to the extent of all I could get”- — -“sometimes my shot would be 10, 11 of them at a time.” He could not keep a job and repeatedly got into trouble with the police. He was restless and nervous, sweating heavily at night, and thought people were against him.

Four psychiatrists and a psychologist testified for Martin, and the Government called two psychiatrists. All were questioned about the presence vel non of a mental disease and about the causal connection between the disease, if any, and the alleged criminal act, i.e., the sale of narcotics.

The terms “probable” and “possible” occur frequently in this testimony. And this is often necessarily so from the viewpoint of experts. In many fields, of which medicine, nuclear physics, and oftentimes unexplained accidents are examples, the utmost that the best of scientists can say is that such- and-such is “probable” or is “possible”. But when it comes to translating that testimony into findings of fact, which is the duty of a judge or a jury, we have another problem. What is probable as a scientific fact may under some circumstances be a consideration in the finding of a fact. So the “probable” may be admissible and may be considered. What weight the merely probable should be given is a serious and delicate problem. Certainly such testimony is short of direct assertion. But what is merely possible is not a basis for finding a fact. A person perfectly well today may possi *219 bly be ill tomorrow or may possibly have ■been ill last month. Of course an opinion that a certain something is possible may be, and frequently is, useful and of probative value as a buttress to a flat assertion that the something is a fact. .Such is frequently the case where the issue of fact lies in an area of doubt; for example, blood tests in a paternity ■case. And assertions that a thing or act is possible may be useful, and admis.sible, as a response to an opponent’s assertion that the thing or act is impossible. But mere possibility is not an affirmative basis for a finding of fact. In the language of the law of evidence, that which is merely possible, standing alone ■and not offered as auxiliary or rebuttal testimony, is immaterial to the ascertainment of the fact and so is inadmissible as evidence of that fact. So, if an expert scientist can say only that such-and-such is possible, he has done the best he can do from the scientific point of view, but from the standpoint of the law such testimony does not permit the finder of fact to say that such-and-such is actually a fact.

The expert testimony in this case was ■not uniform. The alleged offenses occurred in March, 1958. Dr. Mclndoo, the first expert called by the defense, said that in July, 1958, the doctors who examined Martin at D. C. General Hospital made a diagnosis of “schizophrenic reaction; paranoid type.” Asked as to Martin’s condition in March, 1958, Dr. Mclndoo replied, “He was addicted to heroin.” She testified: “I have no specific way of knowing what his mental condition was in March.” It was possible, or probable, she said, that he was suffering from a sociopathic condition or a psychoneurotic condition at that time. She said that the alleged criminal acts were “[njot directly” the product of the mental condition from which Martin suffered. She later said, as to a mental disease at the time of the offenses, “I cannot answer yes or no. I can say it is possible.” And she said the causal connection was “possible”.

Dr. Platkin, called by Martin, said that in August, 1958, he diagnosed Martin’s condition as “sociopathic personality disturbance, antisocial type”, a mental illness. He believed Martin had been suffering from that disease in March. Asked whether the alleged acts were the product of the disease, Dr. Platkin said: “I believe they probably were, in as far as I can go in forming a concrete definite opinion.” Dr. Holt, called by Martin, was one of a conference of doctors who examined him in January, 1959. Dr. Holt found Martin “to be suffering from psychoneurotic reaction; mixed type; with anxiety and depressive features.” He said Martin was so suffering in March, 1958. Asked as to the causal connection between this disease and the alleged criminal acts, Dr. Holt said: “I would have to say on that I am not sure.” Asked whether there was a strong probability he first said, “There is.” However he later said, “I would say slightly less than strong.”

In his turn at rebuttal, after the Government’s rebuttal, Martin presented as a psychiatrist Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
284 F.2d 217, 109 U.S. App. D.C. 83, 1960 U.S. App. LEXIS 4179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-e-martin-v-united-states-cadc-1960.