People v. Garbutt

17 Mich. 9, 1868 Mich. LEXIS 32
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 28, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by170 cases

This text of 17 Mich. 9 (People v. Garbutt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Garbutt, 17 Mich. 9, 1868 Mich. LEXIS 32 (Mich. 1868).

Opinion

Coolev Oh. J.

The defendant was convicted in the Becorder’s Court of the city of Detroit, on an information charging him with the murder of one La Plante. On the trial, it was shown that La Plante, and a young woman named Emily Boucher, were coming down Woodward Avenue together, on the afternoon of September 21, 1867, when they were overtaken by the defendant, who, after a few words, fired a pistol at La Plante, wounding him mortally. No question was made that La Plante died of this wound, but it was insisted, on behalf of defendant, that it was inflicted by him under circumstances of great provocation, sufficient to reduce the offense from murder to manslaughter; and it was further claimed that he was at the time mentally incompetent of a [15]*15criminal intent; the reason being temporarily overthrown through the combined influence of intoxicating drinks, the great provocation, and perhaps of hereditary tendencies also.

The defendant’s statement went to show that he was engaged to be married to Emily Boucher — the first day of May, 1868, being fixed upon for the ceremony; that he visited her twice a week, and had spent the evening of Tuesday, September 18th, with her as usual, but was informed by his mother on the next day of rumors that Emily was to be married to La Plante; that these rumors received confirmation from the statements of others, who added the circumstance that La Plante — who would appear to have been in better circumstances than the defendant — had deeded her forty acres of land; that defendant came to Detroit on the day of the homicide, saw La Plante and Emily get into a buggy together; followed them to a milliner’s shop, where he succeeded in getting an interview with her, which he describes as follows:

“I said, 'I hear you are going to get married to La Plante?’ She said, 'Yes.’ I said 'Do you love him better than me?’ She made no reply. I said, 'Do you love him or his property?’ She said nothing. I went closer to her, put my arm around her and kissed her, and said, 'Emma, are you going to do as you promised?’ She answered, ' Come up in the morning and I will tell you.’ She made no resistance when I kissed her, but said, 'You must be careful.’ We parted, and she got into a buggy; we got to the house, No. 58 Dubois street: from there I don’t know where I went.” Other evidence showed that he went immediately for the pistol with which the fatal wound was inflicted, but it tended to corroborate the statement of the prisoner as to his engagement, and there was also evidence tending to show that he was at this time considerably under the influence of liquor.

The first exception that appears in the record, was taken to the ruling of the Recorder, excluding evidence offered by [16]*16the defense to show that La Plante was reputed to be a quarrelsome man, who carried weapons and threatened to use them, and had threatened the defendant. This ruling was correct beyond question. There was no pretence that defendant had killed La Plante in self defense; but on the contrary, lie had followed him for the apparent purpose of inflicting the mortal wound. La Plante’s reputation or threats could have no possible relevancy to the case.

, Exception was also taken to the exclusion, by the Recorder, of evidence offered to show that the defendant, while in the army from 18G2 to 1865, was reputed a good and valiant soldier; but there is quite as little question of the correctness of this ruling. It is somewhat difficult to suggest any plausible reason in favor of the admission of such evidence, and it was clearly irrelevant.

As 'bearing, upon the question of insanity, a witness for the defense, who had been in the army with defendant, was asked to state whether he saw, during any engagements, any undue and unnatural excitement about the defendant. This question was objected to, and excluded by the Recorder, and we think correctly. The opinions of witnesses as to what is undue and unnatural excitement in time of battle, can not generally afford ground for safe conclusions as to a person’s mental condition years afterwards, unless it appears that the excitement actually mastered the intellect, and deprived the person of accountability, which rve do not understand was pretended here.

The most important questions arise upon the exclusion, by the Recorder, of evidence offered to show the insanity of a brother of the prisoner, and upon his charge to the jury, and refusals to charge as requested on behalf of defendant.

Those questions which relate to the discovery and proof of insanity in criminal cases, are perhaps the most difficult of any with which courts and juries are compelled to deal. Mental* disease is itself so various in character, so vague, sometimes, in its manifestations, and so deceptive, especially [17]*17in its early stages, and its canses are so subtle and so difficult to trace, that the most experienced experts are sometimes obliged to confess that, however careful and thorough their investigations, they still prove unsatisfactory, leaving the mind not only in a condition of painful uncertainty upon the principal question whether mental disease actually exists, but when its actual presence is demonstrated, failing utterly, in many cases, to trace it to any sufficient cause. This fact is very forcibly brought home to ns by the conflicting views expressed on criminal trials by careful, experienced and conscientious medical experts, who, regarding the same state of facts in the light of their scientific investigations and actual but diverse experience, are forced to express differing views, in consequence of which juries, in these difficult cases, are sometimes left in a state of greater doubt and difficulty, if possible, than if no such evidence had been given. The case of Freeman v. People, 4 Denio, 9, and the more recent and noted case of the forger Huntingdon, are conspicuous instances in illustration of this truth; but others will readily occur to the mind.

The defense sought to show hereditary tendency to insanity on the part of the defendant. That insane tendencies are transmitted from parent to child, there is now no longer a doubt; and though it was once ruled that proof that other members of the same family have decidedly been insane is not admissible either in civil or criminal cases (McAdam v. Walker, 1 Dow. P. C. 148, 174; Chitty’s Med. Juris. 354-5,) yet this ruling has since been rejected as unphilosophical and unsound, and it is now allowed to prove the insanity of either parent, or even of a more remote ancestor, since it seems well established that insanity sometimes disappears m one generation and reappears again in the next ( Taylor’s Med. Juris. 628-9, and cases cited; Whart. and Stille Med. Juris. 85 et seq.).

In the case at bar it was not claimed that either parent, or any other ancestor, had been insane; but the defense [18]*18offered to show' that insanity had been developed in a brother, arising from a cause similar to that which, it was alleged, had induced the destructive act of the defendant; and this fact was sought to be placed before the jury as throwing some light on the defendant’s conduct and accountability.

Although this evidence could not be very satisfactory in character, we think it was legally admissible. It is now generally believed that other things besides actual mental disease in the parents may cause the transmission of taints to their offspring, which result in some cases in idiocy or insanity.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Mich. 9, 1868 Mich. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-garbutt-mich-1868.