Price v. State

627 S.W.2d 253
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 1982
DocketNo. 2-81-040-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 627 S.W.2d 253 (Price v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Price v. State, 627 S.W.2d 253 (Tex. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

JORDAN, Justice.

Appellant was convicted in January of 1979 of aggravated robbery of a Zale’s Jewelry Store in Arlington, Texas. His punishment, enhanced by one prior felony conviction to which he pled true, was set by the jury at fifty years in the Texas Department of Corrections. He was first found incompetent to stand trial by a jury in April of 1978. At the competency trial the State’s witness, psychiatrist Dr. Sanford Lehrer, testified that in his opinion appellant was “schizophrenic”. After approximately four months at Rusk State Hospital appellant was released and found competent to stand trial. At his trial in January, 1979, appellant pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity at the time of the commission of the offense.

The appeal is on two grounds of error. We sustain the first ground of error and reverse the judgment of the trial court.

In his first ground of error appellant complains of the trial court's refusal to admit into evidence five different writings of appellant, all of which were offered to show that he was mentally ill and was suffering from hallucinations and delusions during the time he was in custody following the offense for which he was charged and for some years prior thereto.

It should be emphasized before discussing the exclusion from evidence of these writings, exhibit nos. 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, that the sole issue before the jury on this trial was whether appellant was sane or not at the time of commission of the offense in January, 1978. He had pled not guilty by reason of insanity. Appellant says that all of these writings, excluded from the jury by the court, contained recitals of delusions and hallucinations of appellant.

Exhibit nos. 1 and 2 were rambling, somewhat disoriented writings of appellant on plain paper which were found at his home by his mother and which were written by appellant in 1969 or 1970, some eight or nine years prior to the offense. Dr. William Frederick Craig, a psychiatrist, testified on behalf of appellant that he had examined him and it was his opinion that in January 1978, at the time of the offense in question, appellant was a paranoid schizophrenic. He also testified that these writings, exhibit nos. 1 and 2, made in 1969 or 1970, which he admitted he had not had an opportunity to examine closely, were consistent with his findings that appellant was a paranoid schizophrenic. The trial court, quite properly we think, held that these writings were too remote in point of time, were not relevant to the issue of whether appellant was sane at the time of commis-' [255]*255sion of the offense, and neither added to nor detracted from the testimony of Dr. Craig. It was not error for the court to refuse admission of exhibit nos. 1 and 2.

The exclusion of exhibit nos. 3, 4 and 5, is a different matter. These exhibits were all letters written by appellant while he was in custody awaiting trial for the offense of aggravated robbery on January 16, 1978. The letters, produced at trial by appellant’s mother, were written during 1978 from his county jail cell to his mother and stepfather. An examination of parts of these letters, exhibit nos. 3, 4 and 5, does, as appellant contends, reveal delusions and hallucinations and were quite possibly indicative of his mental status at the time they were written and as of the time of the offense in January, 1978.

The following excerpts from these letters will demonstrate the nature of the expressions which were offered to show that appellant in fact was suffering from delusions and hallucinations. Exhibit no. 3 read in part as follows: “I can’t get any pills form (sic) these people because they hate me. They all wish I was dead but I’m not yet. They stand outside my cell and talk about killing me all the time. They will try something soon. I don’t sleep very much so they can’t do anything. I wish they would give me something for my head. I stay scared all the time. I want out of here before they kill me. There is a lot of things in my cell but I can’t find them. I don’t know who all these people are. They come here all the time.”

In the letter marked exhibit no. 4, he wrote: “I have had a headache for a long time now but they won’t give me anything for it. They all hate me and want to kill me. They tried to poison me but I wouldn’t eat so they couldn’t.... They come by at night and let bad spirits in my room and they keep me awake all night. They took me to see a Doctor yesterday but he wouldn’t give anything for my head.... I didn’t like him, I think he was one of them and wants to kill me.... ”

Exhibit no. 5 contained these ramblings: “I don’t know how much longer I can go on .like this, it’s sure getting rough. It seems like there are forces trying to tare (sic) me apart. I can’t keep my thoughts straight anymore. I’m not sure who’s doing this to me, but they’ve about got me this time, I suppose.”

At the trial the State’s witness, psychiatrist Dr. Sanford Lehrer, testified that although he originally diagnosed appellant as being schizophrenic, after examining appellant again at time of trial and after reviewing the records at Rusk State Hospital, he thought appellant was malingering. The letters from appellant to his mother and stepfather, excerpts from which are quoted above, were offered to refute this testimony. The State objected to these letters on the grounds that no proper predicate was laid for their admission and that they were self-serving. We think the objection actually was insufficient because we question whether there is any valid objection to the admission of evidence such as “self-serving”.

Practically any evidence offered by a party litigant is self-serving, else it would not be offered. This objection does not reveal to the trial judge any valid legal objection or reason to exclude it. It tells him nothing. Likewise the objection of no proper predicate is meaningless as far as informing the court of valid reasons for excluding evidence. What proper predicate is lacking? What prefatory material is missing?

See Ray, Law of Evidence, sec. 786, (1980): “If evidence of the party’s declaration is offered to prove the facts declared by the party-declarant in his own favor, the evidence is hearsay and the admissions-exception is of course inapplicable. Unless the declaration comes within some other exception to the hearsay rule, the all-sufficient objection is the general hearsay principle.

“Rather unfortunately, however, the practice has arisen of objecting to the evidence as a ‘self-serving declaration’. It is thought that there is no independent rule of exclusion for self-serving declarations apart [256]*256from the general hearsay rule. The use of the term tends, however, to suggest that there is such a rule and to the view that if the party’s declaration were within some established exception that it would nevertheless be inadmissible because ‘self-serving’. The law as gathered from the decisions of the courts which have passed on the question is to the contrary.”

Though no hearsay objection was made by the State to these letters, we hold that even if it had been made, the letters were not hearsay evidence. They were not offered for the truth of their contents, but to show the state of appellant’s mind at the time they were written. See Ray, Law of Evidence, sec. 801, (1980).

When the question of sanity is raised, the policy of the law is that everything relevant, which has anything to do with that question, and which can shed any light whatever on the question of sanity, is admissible. See Miguez v. Miguez,

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627 S.W.2d 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/price-v-state-texapp-1982.