Eidinoff v. Connolly

281 F. Supp. 191, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8287
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 1968
DocketCiv. A. 5-383
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 281 F. Supp. 191 (Eidinoff v. Connolly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eidinoff v. Connolly, 281 F. Supp. 191, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8287 (N.D. Tex. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAM M. TAYLOR, Jr., District Judge.

On June 11, 1959, Harold Eidinoff was indicted by a grand jury in El Paso County, Texas, for the offense of murder with malice in the shooting death of one Theodore Andress. On Eidinoff’s motion for a change of venue the district court in El Paso transferred the case to Lubbock, Texas. Eidinoff filed a motion requesting a pre-trial hearing on the issue of his sanity at the time he committed the shooting. 1 A district court in Lubbock, Texas, impaneled a jury which, after hearing the evidence, returned a verdict of insanity at the time of the act and insanity at the time of the hearing. 2 The jury’s verdict of insanity at the time of the act operated as an acquittal of the charge of murder; the verdict of insanity at the time of the hearing required that Eidinoff be committed to a state mental hospital until he became sane. 3 The district court in Lubbock committed Eidinoff to the Rusk State Hospital on November 19, 1959. At all times since that date Eidinoff has been confined in the maximum security unit of Rusk Hospital.

On August 28, 1961, Eidinoff filed in the county court of Cherokee County, Texas, a petition for reexamination and for a hearing to determine whether he required continued hospitalization as a mentally ill person. A six-man jury in the county court was unable to reach a verdict and a mistrial was declared. 4 In August 1962, another hearing was held on the 1961 petition. After hearing more than 4 days of testimony, which produced a record of some 560 pages, the jury found that Eidinoff was mentally ill and that he required further hospitalization for his own protection and for the protection of others. Judgment was entered on the jury’s verdict on October 18, 1962, and no appeal was taken therefrom.

On October 29, 1962, Eidinoff filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, alleging that he was sane and not mentally ill and was being illegally confined in the Rusk Hospital. The district court dismissed the application because state remedies had not been exhausted.

On April 24, 1963, Eidinoff filed another writ application in the Eastern District of Texas, restating the allegations of his former petition and further alleging that the state remedies available to him were inadequate to protect his constitutional rights. On June 20, 1963, the district court dismissed the application, finding from the transcript of the Cherokee County proceedings that ample *193 evidence existed to support the jury’s verdict. The district court also concluded that the Texas procedures available to Eidinoff were an effective means for resolving his mental status.

Upon receiving the order of the district court dismissing his application, Eidinoff sought to file another petition for reexamination and hearing in the county court of Cherokee County. The county judge exercised the discretion accorded him by the Texas Mental Health Code to deny such a petition if filed within two years of judgment entered on a previous petition, 5 and refused to accept the petition for filing.

This action of the county judge was made the basis of another federal writ application filed by Eidinoff in the Eastern District on September 24, 1963. The district court dismissed the application on October 16, 1964, stating that Eidinoff had available in the state courts the writ of mandamus to correct any wrongful action by the county judge.

On July 10, 1964, prior to the entry of the district court’s order, Eidinoff filed another petition for reexamination and for a hearing in the county court of Cherokee County. On Eidinoff’s application for change of venue, the proceeding was transferred to the county court of Smith County, Texas. In the petition filed in this cause Eidinoff alleged that he was “sane” under the M’Naghten test and therefore entitled to his release. The state’s attorney excepted to the allegation of sanity on the ground that “mental illness” was the relevant standard in a reexamination hearing. 6 The county court sustained the objection, whereupon Eidinoff voluntarily dismissed the cause and took a non-suit. 7

On that same day, and while in custody of the sheriff of Smith County, Eidinoff filed an application for a writ of habeas corpus in the district court of Smith County. For some reason the writ' was made returnable by the district court for November 8, 1965, more than a year later. The application was not heard on that day. On December 23, 1965, the state filed a motion to dismiss the application. After a hearing on the motion to dismiss, the district court, on December 30, 1965, entered an order dismissing the writ application.

The dismissal was appealed by Eidinoff to the Texas Court of Civil Appeals, Tyler Division, wherein he prayed that the order of dismissal be reversed and the cause remanded to the district court “to hear the case on the merits and determine whether he is now sane and entitled to release.”

While awaiting the appeals court to render its decision, Eidinoff filed, on September 17, 1966, another writ of habeas corpus in the Eastern District of Texas. On September 26, the district court dismissed the application because Eidinoff was in the process of pursuing an appeal in the state courts, the determination of which was necessary to satisfy the doctrine of exhaustion of state remedies.

On October 20, 1966, the Court of Civil Appeals dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction, stating that the dismissal order was not a final order and was not *194 appealable. Ex parte Eidinoff, Tex.Civ.App.1966, 408 S.W.2d 540, 542. Eidinoff then applied for a writ of error to the the Texas Supreme Court. The high court denied the application “No Reversible Error.” 8 Certiorari was denied by the Supreme Court of the United States, Eidinoff v. Kreimeyer, 1967, 386 U.S. 905, 87 S.Ct. 898, 17 L.Ed.2d 801.

The proceeding which led to an application for writ of habeas corpus being filed in the Northern District of Texas was commenced by Eidinoff on August 8, 1966, in the state district court in Lubbock, Texas, from which he had been originally committed.

Apparently pursuant to a 1966 revision of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, Eidinoff filed in the Lubbock court an application for a sanity hearing. This procedural revision, Article 46.02, provided that persons committed to a state hospital on a finding of insanity in a criminal proceeding could be released from the hospital on a jury finding of sanity in the committing court, but only after the superintendent of the hospital certified to the trial court that the patient was sane.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ex Parte Webb
625 S.W.2d 372 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1981)
Reynolds v. Sheldon
404 F. Supp. 1004 (N.D. Texas, 1975)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
281 F. Supp. 191, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eidinoff-v-connolly-txnd-1968.