Sharkey v. State

4 Ohio C.C. 101
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedFebruary 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio C.C. 101 (Sharkey v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharkey v. State, 4 Ohio C.C. 101 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Shauck, J.

The defenses relied upon under the plea of not guilty were (1) a failure of the state to prove that the accused had caused his mother’s death, and (2) that he was insane when that act was committed.

To prove that the accused took his mother’s life, the state, against his objection, was permitted to introduce a confession made by him while in the custody of an officer, but before a [102]*102warrant had been issued for his arrest. This confession was properly held to be voluntary. While“the testimony of the officer is somewhat confused as to the circumstances under which the confession was made, it shows thatfno promise of advantage was made to induce the confession, but that he was pressed to confess the truth because that would be best. The testimony of the prosecuting attorney shows that he had explicitly informed the accused that he could not hope for clemency in consideration of a confession, and that, if innocent, he ought to assert his innocence to the last.

This confession and the circumstances shown upon the trial warranted the jury in finding that on the night of January 11th, when the accused and his mother were alone at their home upon her farm, and when she was in bed, he took her life by crushing her skull with a maul.

But in connection with the defense of insanity,__the record presents more difficult questions as to both the rulings of the court and the weight of the evidence. The homicide occurred between six o’clock in the evening and two in the morning, and during that time no witness has any knowledge of the movements of either the accused or his mother. She was the owner in fee of the farm upon which they lived, and he was an only child, but no evidence tended to show that he coveted it, or that there had ever been trouble between them concerning it. Against the objection of counsel for the accused the state was permitted to elicit the opinions of medical witnesses upon an hypothetical case, which assumed, among other things, that after completing his work on the evening preceding the homicide, he ate supper, talked rationally with his mother, rested by the fire, and read while she attended to her duties, went to his room as usual, retired to bed, and passed into a natural sleep; that prior to this tragedy he had been very anxious to have control of the property which had been the subject of “sharp dispute and disagreement, sometimes amounting to angry talk and ugly feeling” between him and his mother. The question assumed these, and other less important facts, which no evidence in the case tended to establish. The objection of the accused to the question thus put was overruled by the court upon the ground that the jury were to determine whether the [103]*103facts assumed had been established by the evidence. That view would have been correct if it had been limited to such assumed facts as the evidence tended to establish. The question is to be settled by the familiar rule that the tendency of evidence is to be determined by the court, and its effect by the jury. In the absence of evidence tending to establish the material facts assumed as the basis of a professional opinion, the opinion is irrelevant. In the admission of such opinions in this case, the trial court erred. Williams v. Todd’s Ex’r, 28 Ohio St. 547. Certainly the admission of evidence that is irrelevant merely, does not always require the reversal of the judgment rendered, for it may not be prejudicial. But considering the circumstances of excitement under which this case is shown to have been tried, it would be unsafe to say that the opinions of eminent physicians based upon the hypothetical question were not pressed upon the jury to the prejudice of the accused. Especially is this true, in view of an instruction that was given, perhaps, for the purpose of relieving him of possible prejudice in this respect. The court said, “ I need hardly remind you that an opinion based upon an hypothesis incorrectly assumed, or incorrect in its material facts, and to such an extent as to impair the nature of the opinion, is of little or no weight.”

This instruction not only authorized a jury of laymen to determine what facts were material to a professional opinion, but it gave them discretion to attach a little weight to such opinions, no matter to what extent they were based upon facts falsely assumed. It cannot be said that the defense stood as well, as though the court had recognized the right of the accused to have such opinions wholly excluded from the consideration of the jury.

The defense of insanity presented in this case,was entitled to unprejudiced consideration from both court and jury. The homicide was most unnatural and cruel. The accused, twenty-two years of age, had always lived with his mother, except for a few months in the year preceding her death. He had never courted evil associations, did not drink, quarrel or fight, or in any other way educate himself for murder. There had never been any members of the immediate family except [104]*104himself, his father and his mother. His father was for many years subject to epilepsy, and the evidence leaves no doubt that its repeated seizures had seriously impaired his mental faculties. His mother was always peculiar, and in some respects unnatural, and at one time she was undoubtedly insane to such an extent as to justify her commitment to an asylum. His grandmother, an aunt, an uncle and a great aunt were insane. A number of his father’s relatives were victims of epilepsy, which in some cases induced imbecility, and, in one, a cousin, suicidal mania. Certainly, it cannot be said that every one is insane who has even so unpromising an heredity as this. But considering that so large a proportion of the insane — perhaps seventy-five per cent. — are found to have the inherited taint or predisposition, and considering further in how very small a proportion of the members of society this taint is found, proof of the heredity of the accused went far toward establishing the defense of insanity.

It was further proved that he had always shown marked peculiarities; that his eye was wild and unsteady, his gaze often fixed at a distance in space, his face showing at times extreme pallor, occasionally followed by flushes; that without known cause he would sometimes run swiftly for considerable distances, and that his nights were often followed by extreme languor. These are the most striking features of appearance and conduct, which sometimes attracted the attention of strangers, and excited the apprehension of friends. Their significance to a physician is made clear by that portion of Dr. Cook’s testimony, in which he gives the symptoms of mild epilepsy. Their effect upon others appears from the fact, that long before this tragedy, his mental condition was a cause of anxiety to his mother and to himself, and that while she was opposing his contemplated marriage to a young lady in the neighborhood, the family and friends of the latter sought to dissuade her, because of the conviction that he was mentally unstable, and the fear that he would become insane.

Opposed to this was the testimony of many witnesses who knew the accused well, and had seen nothing in his appearance or conduct to lead them to doubt his sanity; the testi[105]

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Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio C.C. 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharkey-v-state-ohiocirct-1888.