In Re Craft

109 A.2d 853, 99 N.H. 287, 1954 N.H. LEXIS 70
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedDecember 15, 1954
Docket4320
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 109 A.2d 853 (In Re Craft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Craft, 109 A.2d 853, 99 N.H. 287, 1954 N.H. LEXIS 70 (N.H. 1954).

Opinion

Goodnow, J.

The sexual psychopath act, Laws • 1949, c. 314, does not provide and was not intended to provide that a person concerning whom a petition has been filed under section 3 shall be notified of the petition or be heard thereon before the Court’s entry of an order appointing an examining board to ascertain whether he is a sexual psychopath (s. 4).

The sole authority to file a petition requesting the Court to conduct an inquiry as to whether a person is a sexual psychopath is vested by statute in the county solicitor (s. 3). Under some circumstances, he is required to do so (s. 3 I); under others he may be directed by the Court to do so (s. 3 II (2) ) or may exercise his discretion as to whether a petition should be filed (ss. 3 11(1), (3) ). Sections 4 and 5 do not distinguish between mandatory, directed and discretionary petitions but provide that the “court with which the petition . . . was filed shall appoint an examining board ... to examine forthwith” the person named in the petition (s. 4) and that a hearing on the question of the defendant’s mental condition shall be held if a majority of the board so appointed find that he is a sexual psychopath (s. 5 I). No provision is made for notice or hearing before the appointment of the board.

The act deals with the care, control and treatment of sexual psychopaths on the basis that they are mentally ill. The final determination of whether a person is so afflicted “is based primarily on medical evidence.” In re Miller, 98 N. H. 107, 108. Because of its recognition of the importance of such expert opinion, the Legislature provided in sections 4 and 5 that when either a mandatory, directed or discretionary petition is filed by the solicitor, no hearing thereon shall be held unless supported by the majority opinion of a medical board which “shall” be appointed by the Court to examine the defendant “forthwith.” S. 4. This language of section 4 was intended to provide a summary procedure through which the necessary medical opinion could be obtained, not alone to aid the Court in the event of a hearing on the defendant’s mental condition (In re Mundy, 97 N. H. 239, 241; In re Miller, supra, 108), but also to indicate as a preliminary *289 matter whether sufficient cause exists to reasonably require a hearing to determine that condition.

Such a procedure which requires the defendant to submit to an examination by a board of medical experts without notice or a right to be heard does not violate due process. See State v. Allen, (Mo. App.), 255 S. W. (2d) 144, 149. The act seeks not only to protect society but also to benefit those who are sexual psychopaths. In re Moulton, 96 N. H. 370, 373. Its provisions are analogous to proceedings concerned with insane or mentally ill persons (In re Miller, supra, 108) in which the importance and necessity of a summary order for medical examination is recognized to the extent that no prior notice or hearing is there required. R. L., c. 17, ss. 11, 17, 18. An individual’s right of personal liberty is subject to such restriction as is reasonably necessary for the common welfare of society. Keleher v. Putnam, 60 N. H. 30, 31. The examination required by s. 4 may result in a discontinuance of further proceedings under the petition or in a hearing and judicial determination of the defendant’s mental condition. The necessity for the summary nature of the order providing for it lies in the absence of any basis for judicial action until a medical opinion is available. Such interference with the defendant’s rights as occurs by reason of this procedure is reasonably required.

The solicitor’s discretionary authority to file a petition requesting the Court to conduct an inquiry as to whether a person is a sexual psychopath exists “whenever facts are presented to [him] which satisfy him that good cause exists” for such an inquiry. S. 3 11(1). Whenever a person is arrested and charged with lewdness (R. L., c. 449, s. 3) or indecent exposure (R. L., c. 440, s. 6), that fact alone is not a sufficient basis for the filing of such a petition but if facts concerning a person so arrested and charged are presented to the solicitor which constitute good cause, in his opinion, for judicial inquiry, he may elect to exercise the discretionary power granted to him. S. 3 11(3).

The facts of this case upon which the solicitor exercised his discretionary authority are stated in the petition as follows: the defendant was arrested and charged with indecent exposure on May 14, 1953; in February, 1947, he admitted upon police interrogation that he had indecently exposed himself to a girl about eight years of age on January 16, 1947; on February 7, 1947, he pleaded guilty to a charge of being a disorderly person (R. L., c. 440, s. 22) “such charge involving indecent exposure on February *290 4, 1947” to a girl seventeen years of age; on February 13, 1950, he was arrested on the same charge “involving lascivious behavior at the Concord Theatre toward a girl” about ten years of age, the disposition of the case not being recited in the petition.

While it has been recognized by this court that the act “could be the subject of abuse” in its unwise application to minor sex offenses {In re Moulton, 96 N. H. 370, 375), no such abuse appears in this case. The facts relied on by the solicitor in exercising his discretion were not alone the defendant’s arrest on May 14, 1953, on a charge of indecent exposure but also other episodes indicating a consistent pattern of sex deviations. These facts, if true, are sufficient indication that the defendant may be “irresponsible with respect to sexual matters and thereby dangerous” (s. 2 I) to support the solicitor’s opinion that good cause exists for an inquiry as to the defendant’s mental condition.

By the terms of section 3 II (3), whenever a person is arrested and charged with indecent exposure or lewdness, the solicitor is authorized to “exercise the powers conferred upon him under paragraph II (1).” Under those powers, if the facts satisfy him that good cause exists for judicial inquiry, he may prepare and file a petition meeting the requirements of paragraph II (1). That paragraph requires that such a petition shall set forth the facts upon which the solicitor relies and “shall be executed and verified by a person having knowledge of” those facts. That part of section 3 II (3) which provides that if the solicitor elects to exercise his powers under paragraph II (1) “the provisions of this act shall apply in like manner as if the petition had been required under paragraph I of this section” has reference to those provisions of paragraph I dealing with offenders under eighteen years of age and postponement of the trial on criminal charges pending the outcome of proceedings under sections 4 and 5. It was not intended to authorize the filing of an unverified petition such as is permitted by paragraph I. ■

The petition in this case did not comply with the requirements of section 3 II (1).

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Bluebook (online)
109 A.2d 853, 99 N.H. 287, 1954 N.H. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-craft-nh-1954.