Hoye v. State

152 So. 644, 169 Miss. 111, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 15
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1934
DocketNo. 31073.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 152 So. 644 (Hoye v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoye v. State, 152 So. 644, 169 Miss. 111, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 15 (Mich. 1934).

Opinion

Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

*115 Dr. M. J-. L. Hoye, superintendent of the Bast Mississippi Insane Hospital at Meridian, sued out a writ of habeas corpus seeking to recover, the custody of Boland Eatman, an alleged escape from said East Mississippi Insane Hospital, and who was in jail in Clarksdale, Coahoma county, Mississippi, under an indictment charging him with a felony. It was alleged by Dr. Hoye that Eatman had been adjudged to be insane, and ordered to be confined in said East Mississippi Insane Hospital by the chancery court of Lauderdale county, in 1927, and that he escaped from said institution in April, 1928, and that the petitioner had not discharged Eatman; that he is still insane; and that petitioner is entitled to the custody of Eatman. Dr. Hoye testified as a witness, saying that, while Eatman was suffering from psychopathic delinquency, and given to criminal tendencies, and not being able to resist temptation to commit crime, he was not properly an insane person, and that he was not properly a subject for the penitentiary either, but as the state had no provision for caring for such persons, it is necessary that they be restrained, and that Eatman should be awarded to his custody. The hospital records show a notation that Eatman was discharged in March, 1928, but Dr. Hoye testified that he had never discharged him, and that from time to time during the period of escape and the suing out of the writ, he (Dr. Hoye) knew where Eatman was, but made no effort to retake him, and that no warrant was issued for that purpose until just prior to the suing out of the writ of habeas corpus, when, at the instance of an attorney employed by the falher of Boland Eatman, said warrant was issued. Dr. Hoye further testified that Eatman was very troublesome and nobody wanted him.

It is shown by the evidence in the case that Eatman had escaped from the hospital at Jackson, Mississippi, having been transferred from Meridian, and went into Louisiana; committed a crime there, and was confined *116 to the state institution for the insane in Louisiana, hut that he was afterwards adjudged to be sane and was discharged from the Louisiana institution. It appears that he was reconsigned to the Hospital for the Insane at Jackson, Mississippi, some time prior to the suing out of the writ of habeas corpus, and was kept under medical observation there, and on an inquiry before the medical staff of said institution, he was discharged and a certificate of his discharge and his sanity was certified to the sheriff of Coahoma county, at Clarksdale. The assistant superintendent of the Hospital for the Insane at Jackson, Mississippi, who is also chief of the medical staff there, and is an expert psychiatrist, testified that Eatman is not insane; that he knew the nature and consequences of his acts, but claimed that he could not resist committing crime; that Eatman was disposed to crime and did not restrain himself; and that there are many persons inside and outside institutions for the insane similarly defective, but not insane.

The habeas corpus was heard before the circuit judge in the district in which Clarksdale is situated, and, after hearing the evidence, the judge dismissed the habeas corpus and held that Eatman was sane. It was also found, as a fact, that Eatman had been discharged from.. the Insane Hospital at Jackson, and that the action of the superintendent of the Insane Hospital at Meridian amounted to a discharge.

Dr. Hoye further testified that he frequently permitted patients to leave the institution and to remain away, where they did not receive adverse reports within three months after their discharge, and that they treated their patients on parol as discharged unless they found some evidence that such patients were still insane, after ninety-days.

It appears that Dr. Hoye was proceeding under the theory that Eatman having been adjudged insane by the chancery court, and not having been discharged by the *117 authorities of the Insane Hospital at Meridian, the circuit court did not have the jurisdiction to withhold the custody of said Eatman from him.

It will be noted that the commitment was made in 1927, and that Dr. Hoye had not had custody of Eatman since 1928, and from the evidence it appears that the trial judge had the right to believe that Eatman was transferred from Meridian to Jackson on account of his escaping and returning home to his people, who lived in Meridian. It is shown by the evidence that after his escape from the Meridian Hospital for the Insane he had been adjudged to be sane in a judicial proceeding in Louisiana, and discharged from an insane hospital there, and that he had been examined by a medical staff of the Insane Hospital at Jackson, Mississippi, and had been declared to be sane.

The effect of the judgment of the chancery court is merely to adjudge that he was insane at the time of the hearing in that court. The fact that he was so adjudged can be introduced as evidence of his subsequent insanity, but it is not conclusive. "When the chancery court commits a party to the insane hospital, it does not pass upon his right to a discharge, but, under the statute (Code 1980, sec. 4583), the authorities of the insane hospital pass judgment upon that question, and if they adjudge a patient to be sane, or' to have recovered his sanity, the patient is discharged. See Ervin v. State (Miss.), 151 So. 177, decided December 4, 1933; Hawie v. State, 125 Miss. 589, 88 So. 167. In this latter case, the court held that if, “at the arraignment of a defendant charged with the commission of a crime, it is suggested or appears to the court that he may be insane, the question of his sanity vel non should be inquired into and determined, and, if he should be found to be then insane, his trial should not be proceeded with unless and until he recovers his sanity,” citing many cases; and further, that “this rule cannot be complied with by simply post *118 poning a trial • or setting aside a verdict once because of the defendant’s insanity, hut each time thereafter when he is again called for trial, if a doubt arises as to his sanity, the court should proceed to determine that question anew (People v. Farrell, 31 Cal. 576), the test of insanity each time being whether the defendant can then make a rational defense.” 2 Bishop’s Criminal Procedure (4 Ed.), 297.

It will thus be seen that adjudication as to insanity at one time is not conclusive of insanity at another time. The. matter is open to inquiry. It is well known that people recover their sanity, and also that people may be partially insane. In Smith v. State, 95 Miss. 786, 49 So. 945, 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) 461, Ann. Cas. 1912A, 23, it was held that where the defense is insanity, total or partial, the test of defendant’s criminal responsibility is his ability, at the time he committed the act, to recognize and appreciate the nature and quality thereof, and his ability to recognize right from wrong, applying the same rule as to irresistible impulses. The appellant relies largely upon the case of Mabry v. Hoye, 124 Miss. 144, 87 So.

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Bluebook (online)
152 So. 644, 169 Miss. 111, 1934 Miss. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoye-v-state-miss-1934.