KAUS, P. J.
After a court trial defendant was convicted of murder in the second degree. On appeal, as below, he argues that uncontradicted evidence of diminished capacity due to mental illness shows him to be guilty of manslaughter only. These are the facts:
Defendant was born in 1931. He quit school at the age of 17. After doing various odd jobs he entered the army. He was assigned to a military fire department for a couple of years and spent eight months in Korea. He received an honorable discharge. He then went to work as a government security guard. He quit and joined the fire department in Troy, New York, his home town. There he became convinced that other firemen were ganging up ” on him. In 1955 he was admitted to the Veterans Administration Hospital in Albany, New York, with complaints of nervousness and tightening of the stomach “due to being picked on by his fellow employees.”
He was discharged on May 6, 1955, with the following diagnosis :
‘ Schizophrenic Reaction, acute, paranoid type in partial remission. Treated, improved. ’ ’
On October 10, 1963, he again entered the Veterans Administration Hospital in Albany. His then illness was summarized as set forth in the footnote.
The hospital record contains the following evaluation: “The patient is mentally clear and properly oriented. He becomes tearful when he speaks of his confusion and his lack of accomplishment. He speaks despairingly of himself at all times and insists that his plight is all his own fault. He states repeatedly that it is impossible for him to express himself so that anyone else will understand what he means. On admission he seemed definitely paranoic in his ideas that an employer was openly sadistic in his treatment of him which precipitated one of his hospitalizations. However this has been the only manifestation of paranoia elicited; he states merely that people know he is mixed up and he knows he is mixed up and that people avoid him because of this.”
After four days in the hospital defendant began to complain of “tightness” in his stomach. This was treated and disappeared. In conferences with a therapist he reported that he found his home town of Troy depressing. He wanted to go to the west coast where he had worked before. Early in January he received an offer of a room from a friend in California. He was discharged on January 8, 1964. The final diagnosis on that discharge was “Schizophrenic Reaction, paranoid type with anxiety, treated, improved. ’ ’
Although, as defendant told one of the examining psychiatrists, “he has been carrying a gun for protection because people pick on him,” defendant’s record contains no evidence of any prior acts of violence or tendencies in that direction. His only brush with the law was an arrest in New York in 1952 for carrying a gun.
The friend in California who had offered him a room was
one Douglas D. Carmack, whom defendant had met during an earlier stay in this state. Defendant traveled to California to join Carmack and on the way he acquired a pistol.
While defendant stayed with Carmack he felt depressed. He was again having stomach problems. He kept vomiting and could not hold his food down. On January 30 he was thinking about suicide. He told Carmack that he wanted to return to the hospital. Carmack tried to talk him out of it. Defendant then went into the bathroom, loaded his gun, returned to the room where Carmack was lying on a bed and emptied the gun in Carmack’s direction. Several bullets entered Carmack’s body and he eventually died.
Defendant, clad in underwear and a torn bathrobe, ran out into the street calling for help. He encountered the caretaker of the apartment house. Defendant shouted “I just shot a guy.” The caretaker said: “For God’s sake did you shoot Carmack?” Defendant replied: “Yep, I shot him. I am sorry, but I shot him. ’ ’
Officer Taylor of the Long Beach Police Department encountered defendant sitting on the steps in front of the apartment house still clad in his underwear and robe. Taylor asked him what happened. Defendant said: “I just shot Doug.” The officer then asked him: “Did you kill him?” Defendant answered: “Yes I did.’’
The preliminary examination was held on February 6, 1964. The information charging defendant with murder was filed in the superior court on February 18. On February 21 defendant pleaded “not guilty” and “not guilty by reason of insanity.” Pursuant to section 1027 of the Penal Code the court appointed Doctors Nielsen and Abe to examine defendant. In the meanwhile defendant had been hospitalized in the Los Angeles County jail hospital. His stay was stormy. When admitted he was screaming and hallucinating, “audio and visual.” For self-protection he was put in a padded cell. The next day he started to eat his feces. He slept on the floor. The following day'he smeared his feces all over himself and on the walls of his cell. He was treated with thorazine and after several other episodes gradually became more quiet and cooperative.
Doctor Nielsen reported to the court on March 3, 1964. His
summary was as follows: 1 ‘ The defendant is a chronic schizophrenic and is dangerous. He was insane at the time of the commission of the crime and he is insane at the present time.” Doctor Abe’s report is dated April 12, 1964. His conclusion is as follows: “Defendant probably was legally sane at the time of commission of offense. Although difficult to ascertain, defendant possibly did not form intent in view of his prior history of mental illness and his unstable paranoid personality. Defendant, however, appears to have known that he did wrong. ’ ’
Before the case was called for trial on June 3, 1964, defendant was also examined by the only psychiatrist who later testified at the trial, Doctor Kurt Fantl. Doctor Fantl’s conclusion was that defendant was insane at the time of the homicide and at the time of the doctor’s examination on May 15.
On the basis of these reports the court, on June 3, expressed a doubt concerning defendant’s then sanity. (Pen. Code, § 1368.) A hearing was set for June 5. On that date the court found that the defendant was not capable of cooperating with his attorney and he was duly committed to the state hospital at Atascadero.
In December 1965 defendant, in propria persona, filed a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. In essence he contended that he was then sane. A writ was issued, returnable January 7, 1966. On that day, two more physicians, Doctors Bielinski and Tatunjian were appointed to examine defendant pursuant to section 1368—not 1027—of the Penal Code. Doctor Tatunjian, by report dated January 25, found him to be sane then and at the time of the offense.
On February 3, 1966, defendant was found presently sane and after various continuances at defendant’s request, trial actually started on May 31.
By stipulation the People’s case was submitted on the transcript of the preliminary hearing and some additional testimony. The only defense witness was Doctor Fantl.
Doctor Fantl had spent the entire morning of May 15, 1964, with defendant and another two and one-half hours just before testifying on June 2, 1966. Admittedly his testimony is based on his acceptance of defendant’s version of the incident.
This, he reported as follows: “He describes the
incident, as to him an entirely unexplainable event. He says that he absolutely had no reason to kill Doug, that Doug was his only friend. Doug had never offended him. Doug had never done anything to hurt him. There was never any quarreling. There was never any difficulty. That this particular day when the incident occurred, he was in very severe pain. He had very severe pain in his stomach. That he was distraught. That his mind kept racing back and forth. And suddenly, he has no idea for what reason and why, he got up, went into the bathroom, loaded his gun and started shooting. He claims that it was not until after he heard the noise of the gun, the discharge of the gun that he actually realized what he had been doing. He claimed that he had absolutely no motive. That he was terribly upset when he saw what he had done. That he immediately ran downstairs yelling for help. That he was so upset that he didn’t even bother to put on any clothing. He claims that he did not know at the time whether he had killed the man but that he did not really find that out until the following day. ’ ’
In Doctor Fantl’s opinion defendant, “when he did what he did, he was reacting. He was not thinking. He was not deliberating. He was simply acting like a sleepwalker would act or a person under hypnosis. ’ ’
Aeording to the witness, schizophrenia is today thought to be an illness with a hereditary chemical basis. The adrenal glands produce poisonous chemicals which in turn cause ‘ disturbance in perception so that a person is unable to perceive the world the way we perceive it.” The production of these chemicals is more marked under stress. Under such circumstances schizophrenics “are living in a nightmare from which they cannot wake up. ’ ’ In the doctor’s opinion defendant did not premeditate, did not deliberate, did not even intend to injure the deceased. He was in a fugue state, a condition of automotism, which the doctor also described as a “state of altered consciousness. ’’
The People offered no evidence bearing directly on the issue of diminished capacity. After argument and discussion with the court defendant was found guilty of murder in the second degree.
On the insanity phase of the trial it was stipulated that Doctor Pantl would testify that at the time of the killing defendant was insane within the meaning of the M’Naughton rule. The psychiatric reports of Doctors Nielsen, Abe, Tatunjian and Bielinski were offered in evidence by defendant, as were certain hospital records. Defendant was found sane.
On appeal the main thrust of defendant’s argument is the same as below: that from the uncontradicted evidence the court could not have found him guilty of a crime greater than voluntary manslaughter. He urges this court to exercise its power to reduce the degree of the crime. (Pen. Code, § 1181, subd. 6.) An alternative argument, advanced more forcefully at the oral hearing than in the brief, is that the trial court did not fully appreciate the import of certain recent cases in the field of diminished capacity.
None of the psychiatrists except Doctor Pantl addressed themselves to the question of diminished capacity as distinguished from legal insanity. Unquestionably, if we were able to say that the trial court was bound to accept Doctor Pantl’s testimony, his conclusions point to manslaughter rather than murder and the proper thing for us to do would be to reduce the degree and affirm the judgment as modified.
This division of this court in two recent opinions
(People
v.
Farr,
255 Cal.App.2d 679 [63 Cal.Rptr. 477] and
People
v.
Hoxie,
252 Cal.App.2d 901 [61 Cal.Rptr. 37]) has recognized that in at least four cases
(People
v.
Goedecke,
65 Cal.2d 850 [56 Cal.Rptr. 625, 423 P.2d 777] ;
People
v.
Nicolaus,
65 Cal.2d 866 [56 Cal.Rptr. 635, 423 P.2d 787] ;
People
v.
Ford,
65 Cal.2d 41 [52 Cal.Rptr. 228, 416 P.2d 132] and
People
v.
Wolff,
61 Cal.2d 795 [40 Cal.Rptr. 271, 394 P.2d 959]), the Supreme Court has reduced convictions of murder of the first degree to murder of the second degree after holding that the uncontradicted psychiatric testimony on the issue of diminished capacity so demanded. In
Hoxie
we noted that we knew of no comparable appellate reduction from murder to manslaughter. In
Farr
we refused to so reduce a conviction although there, as here, the People did not offer any evidence on the issue of diminished capacity. We pointed to certain weaknesses in the testimony of the psychiatrist who testified for Parr, which made his conclusions less than compelling.
Although Doctor Pantl’s testimony hangs together far better than that of the psychiatrist in
Farr,
we still cannot
say that a trial court applying correct legal principles to his testimony was bound to accept it.
The trouble is that the record reveals beyond a doubt that at the time the court found the defendant to be guilty of murder it was not aware of the full significance of the doctrine of diminished capacity.
During his final argument, counsel for defendant placed heavy reliance on
People
v.
Borchers,
50 Cal.2d 321, 329 [325 P.2d 97], a case in which the trial court, on motion for a new trial, reduced a verdict from second degree murder to manslaughter. Defense counsel was pointing out that “passion” need not mean “rage” or “anger.” He proposed to read a passage from
Borchers.
He was interrupted by the court as follows: ‘ The Court : Counsel, before you read on, is there anything within the statutory definition in this case, within the meaning of the statutory definition of manslaughter upon which this Court could find? Mr. Warner: Yes. This is the way I understand it. You have three things. You have, (1)- The Court: I assume that is the purport and trend of your argument. Mr. Warner: That is what we are here for. We are here for, as I see it, to label this offense either Murder, First, Murder Second or Manslaughter. The Court : How does Manslaughter get into this picture? Mr. Warner: Because there are no elements of Murder First and no elements of Second Degree. The Court: Then the man should be acquited-- Mr. Warner : No, no. The Court :-according to that argument
because Manslaughter isn’t shown by any statutory definition here.
...” (Italics added.)
The Attorney General concedes, as he must, that this passage demonstrates an erroneous concept.
People
v.
Conley,
64 Cal.2d 310 [49 Cal.Rptr. 815, 411 P.2d 911], decided a few weeks before the trial of the case at bar—but not brought to the attention of the trial court—holds that the statutory enumeration of ways in which the crime of manslaughter may be committed is not inclusive, because section 192 of the Penal Code was enacted before the development of the concept of limited capacity.
(Ibid.,
p. 318.)
The People suggest however, that whatever error there may-have been apparent from these remarks, the court’s finding of second degree murder was based simply on the fact that Doctor Pantl’s testimony did not create a reasonable doubt concerning defendant’s capacity to harbor malice; but after a certain passage in the court’s remarks on which the People rely,
the court again said, in reply to defense counsel’s renewed appeal to
Borcher
s: He [Borchers] was being divorced and he wanted to conceal this long-standing relationship, and this mistress for whom he had sacrificed so much was unfaithful to him. Things of that kind entered. There was a passion toward this woman that the Court said would form the basis to support the Manslaughter. But we have here, and the only testimony we have in this connection is ‘He was my friend. ’ There is where the difference is.
My hands get tied by
this hind of picture and I must limit myself to the evidence.
’
’
(Italics added.)
Thus it seems quite plain that the court was still engaged in the unnecessary search for “heat of passion. ’’ Finding none it declared that its hands were tied, when
Conley
makes it clear that they were not.
On July 14, 1966, about a month after the court had resolved defendant’s insanity plea against him, a motion for new trial was argued and denied. The matter was then continued for sentencing to August 11. On that date defense counsel was given permission to renew the motion for a new trial.
A discussion between the court and defense counsel ensued. It is apparent from certain remarks made by the court that it had become familiar with
Conley.
At the oral argument before us it was suggested that any error committed at the time defendant was found guilty of murder was thereby cured. The theory is that on the renewed motion for new trial the court reconsidered the evidence in the light of
Conley
and reached the conclusion that defendant was still guilty of second degree murder.
There are two answers to that suggestion: first, it is very doubtful whether the court had any jurisdiction to entertain the renewed motion for a new trial. It is not necessary here to attempt to reconcile somewhat conflicting decisions on the point. (Compare
In re Levi,
39 Cal.2d 41, 45 [244 P.2d 403] ;
People
v.
Martin,
199 Cal. 240, 242 [248 P. 908] with
People
v.
Risenhoover,
240 Cal.App.2d 233 [49 Cal.Rptr. 526] ; and
People
v.
Hensel,
233 Cal.App.2d 834, 837-838 [43 Cal.Rptr. 865].) Of course, if there was no jurisdiction to entertain the motion, it cannot be said that the court’s reconsideration of the evidence under proper guidelines cleansed the record of the previous error. Had the motion been granted or the degree of the crime reduced, the People would have been assured a
successful appeal.
(People
v.
Martin, supra;
Pen. Code, § 1238, subd. 3.)
Further, even if the court had jurisdiction to entertain the renewed motion, the record demonstrates that it continued to entertain certain views with respect to the rule of diminished capacity which, we think, are wrong.
During further discussions the court made the following statements: “. . . [W]hen we adopt the diminished responsibility rule to reduce it to two from one, I think we are being very progressive. We are going along and we shouldn’t lose sight of this fact that we are going along with the concept of the diminished responsibility. . . .
But diminished responsibility doesn’t mean no responsibility. It means partial responsibility.
It means a lesser responsibility but not as one counsel urged in a homicide case before me, why, I can even find an acquittal under the circumstances. Not under diminished responsibility. . . . However, we are getting into a philosophical discussion. The thought occurs to me that we do have a problem in this particular case and that is a societal problem. What is the responsibility of the Court? Mr. Moore, afflicted as he is unfortunately with this mental pressure, what is society’s right in the face of the advanced theory of responsibility ? The unexplained act here.
Something that we hope to avoid by some structuring of a more permanent, more lengthy,
rather, degree than just the temporary admission until a remission appears and then society again is at the mercy of him. We can’t in all conscience balance legally the theory of diminished responsibility in any other light than the fact that society, in the face of that concept, which is advanced as you say and which I am ready to go along with and I do go along with, but society is entitled to some consideration for these premises. ...” (Italics added.)
These remarks indicate, we believe, misconceptions concerning the role of the court during the guilt phase of a trial in general and the nature of the rule of diminished capacity in particular.
It is fundamental that the trier of fact, be it court or jury, must not consider the subject of penalty or punishment in arriving at its decision of guilt or innocence. We so instruct our juries. (CALJIC 9, 9-A (revised);
People
v.
Shannon,
147 Cal.App.2d 300, 306 [305 P.2d 101].) In particular, it has repeatedly been held misconduct for prosecutors to urge jurors to find defendants to have been sane because they should be in prison and not in a hospital or “on the
street.”
(People
v.
Sorenson,
231 Cal.App.2d 88, 91-92 [41 Cal.Rptr. 657] and cases cited therein.)
It seems inescapable from the quoted remarks that at least one of the reasons why the court refused to reduce the degree of crime to manslaughter was its belief that society needed protection from defendant by “a more permanent, more lengthy ’ ’ period of confinement.
The “structure” of a more lengthy confinement of which the court spoke, should be left to the Adult Authority which, after all, can keep a person convicted of manslaughter in prison for a longer period than the minimum imprisonment— before parole—for first degree murder. (Pen. Code, § 3046.)
Further, even after a person convicted of manslaughter has served his full term, the provisions of sections 2960 et seq of the Penal Code are designed to keep him indefinitely off the street if, by reason of continued insanity, he still represents a danger to society.
The court’s particular misconception of the rule of diminished capacity is closely interwoven with the error just discussed and appears to be this: the court seems to have thought of the rule as one of mercy toward persons convicted
of crime
who are not quite “responsible.” Thus, while it recognized that the means of exercising that mercy is a reduction of the degree of the crime, it is still the exercise of mercy. From this view it follows quite logically that the interest of society in protection is a legitimate factor which the court should take into consideration in deciding just how merciful it should be.
As we read the eases this is an erroneous view. There is certainly nothing in the two earliest cases on the subject,
People
v.
Wells,
33 Cal.2d 330 [202 P.2d 53] and
People
v.
Gorshen,
51 Cal.2d 716 [336 P.2d 492], to support it. Each purports to lay down nothing but a rule of relevance. A defendant must be permitted to raise all reasonable doubts concerning every element of the crime with which he is charged.
When one of those elements happens to be a specific mental state, evidence that for one reason or another— intoxication, trauma or disease—the defendant did not have such specific mental state, must be admitted. If it raises a reasonable doubt in the mind of the trier of fact the defendant cannot be convicted of a crime of which the particular mental state is an essential element. He is, in the eyes of the law, not partially, but totally unresponsible for that crime. This is not an act of mercy at all but simply an application of the law to the facts.
The First Report of the Special Commissions on Insanity and Criminal Offenders (1962) says: “The rule of the
Wells
and
Gorshen
decisions is sometimes inaccurately referred to as a rule of ‘partial insanity’ or ‘partial responsibility.’ This way of describing the rule is inaccurate because the question is not whether the defendant is or is not responsible; the question is whether he had the mental state that is an essential element of the crime charged. Voluntary intoxication does not make a defendant unaccountable under the criminal law, but it may show that he did not have the intent required for the crime of which he is accused. The
Wells-Gorshen
rule is simply an application of that principle to the situation where it is the defendant’s mental condition rather than his state of intoxication that renders him incapable of forming the required intent or possessing the required mental state.”
(Ibid.,
p. 29.) This report was cited with approval by our Supreme Court in
People
v.
Anderson,
63 Cal.2d 351, 364, footnote 7 [46 Cal.Rptr. 763, 406 P.2d 43],
The application of the rule of diminished capacity is a fact finding process and nothing more. As we indicate in other portions of this opinion, had the trial court, acting strictly in its capacity as a trier of fact, found that Doctor Fand’s
testimony did not raise a reasonable doubt, there would be little we could do. As it was, however, when the court found defendant guilty of murder it thought that its options were limited by the statutory definition of manslaughter. At the renewed motion for a new trial it adulterated a fact finding function with extraneous notions not relevant at that stage.
Nothing we have said should put us in disagreement with the trial court’s views that society’s right to protection is a vital consideration. As we have shown the Legislature has not been insensitive to that need, but the way to achieve that protection is by the utilization of appropriate statutory procedures, not by the application of an emasculated version of the rule of diminished capacity.
The judgment must therefore be reversed.
Defendant raises certain other points which we will discuss only to the extent that they have not become academic by this opinion.
One of the physicians whose written report was offered in evidence apparently based his opinion, in small part at least, on certain statements which the defendant had made after his arrest and which were contained in the transcript of the preliminary examination held in 1964. Upon proper objection by defense counsel the statements were stricken but the doctor ’s report was not.
There was nothing in the transcript of the preliminary hearing which did not find its way into the record through the testimony of Doctor Fantl, given before the particular psychiatrist’s report was received. Therefore, if there was any error, it was entirely harmless.
Defendant also argues that it violates several provisions of the United States Constitution to keep a mentally sick person “in a cold prison cell instead of a hospital.” No authorities are cited.
People
v.
Wolff,
61 Cal.2d 795, 823 [40 Cal.Rptr. 271, 394 P.2d 959] seems directly contra. (See also Pen. Code, § 6102.)
Finally we are urged that the evidence demonstrates legal insanity as a matter of law. Although the evidence of legal sanity is extremely weak, consisting as it does of Doctor Tatunjian’s and Doctor Abe’s unsworn reports, it is not unsubstantial.
The judgment is reversed.
Hufstedler, J., arid Stephens, J., concurred. •
A petition for a rehearing was denied February 2, 1968.