State of Arizona v. Stephen Jay Malone Jr
This text of 444 P.3d 733 (State of Arizona v. Stephen Jay Malone Jr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
JUSTICE TIMMER, opinion of the Court:
¶1 Although a defendant cannot use evidence of a mental disease or defect to show he did not form a crime's requisite mental state (mens rea),
see
State v. Mott
,
BACKGROUND
¶2 Stephen Jay Malone Jr. and A.S. lived together in a tumultuous romantic relationship. On June 9, 2013, A.S. left Malone, moving from their home with their three children. Two evenings later, A.S., along with her sister, E.S., and two of the children, drove to the home to return a gift to Malone. On the way, A.S. spoke to Malone by phone and told him that despite his threats, she was leaving him. When A.S. arrived, Malone came up to the car, took the returned gift, and asked her to stay so his mother, who was in the house, could see the children. A.S. refused and drove away; Malone quickly followed in another car. After a five-to-six-minute chase, during which Malone blocked A.S.'s car twice, Malone jumped from his car and fired multiple gunshots into A.S.'s car, killing A.S. and injuring E.S.
¶3 The State indicted Malone on several charges, including premeditated first degree murder, see § 13-1105(A)(1), the only charge at issue here. Before trial, the State moved to preclude expert testimony from psychologist James Sullivan, Ph.D, that Malone's performance on neuropsychological assessment tests was "consistent with significant and permanent diffuse brain damage," meaning Malone was "more likely to have a character trait for impulsivity." (Dr. Sullivan did not obtain an MRI scan or like evidence to bolster his assessment that Malone had brain damage.) While acknowledging that Christensen permitted Dr. Sullivan to testify that Malone had a character trait for impulsivity, the State argued that Mott precluded evidence that brain damage made the existence of this trait more likely. Over defense objection, the trial court granted the motion and precluded Dr. Sullivan from offering an opinion at trial regarding brain damage.
¶4 At trial, Malone rebutted the State's allegation that he premeditated A.S.'s murder by introducing evidence suggesting he had acted impulsively. To that end, Dr. Sullivan testified that, based on his observations and psychological tests, Malone had a character trait for impulsivity. Dr. Sullivan explained that people with this character trait are compromised in their ability to think through the consequences of their actions before acting, although they are capable of doing so. The State did not contest that Malone had a character trait for impulsivity but nevertheless maintained he premeditated A.S.'s murder. The jury agreed and found Malone guilty as charged.
¶5 In a split decision, the court of appeals concluded the trial court erred by precluding Dr. Sullivan's testimony concerning brain damage.
State v. Malone
,
¶6 We granted Malone's petition for review (challenging harmless error) and the State's cross-petition for review (challenging error) because they involve a recurring issue of statewide importance. We have jurisdiction pursuant to article 6, section 5 of the Arizona Constitution.
DISCUSSION
I.
¶7 We review the trial court's preclusion of Dr. Sullivan's brain-damage testimony for an abuse of discretion.
See
State v. Leteve
,
II.
¶8 Before addressing the admissibility of Dr. Sullivan's brain-damage testimony, we set forth general legal principles underlying the issue. First, apart from insanity, Arizona does not permit a defendant to introduce evidence of a mental disease or defect as either an affirmative defense or to negate the mens rea element of a crime.
See
Mott
,
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JUSTICE TIMMER, opinion of the Court:
¶1 Although a defendant cannot use evidence of a mental disease or defect to show he did not form a crime's requisite mental state (mens rea),
see
State v. Mott
,
BACKGROUND
¶2 Stephen Jay Malone Jr. and A.S. lived together in a tumultuous romantic relationship. On June 9, 2013, A.S. left Malone, moving from their home with their three children. Two evenings later, A.S., along with her sister, E.S., and two of the children, drove to the home to return a gift to Malone. On the way, A.S. spoke to Malone by phone and told him that despite his threats, she was leaving him. When A.S. arrived, Malone came up to the car, took the returned gift, and asked her to stay so his mother, who was in the house, could see the children. A.S. refused and drove away; Malone quickly followed in another car. After a five-to-six-minute chase, during which Malone blocked A.S.'s car twice, Malone jumped from his car and fired multiple gunshots into A.S.'s car, killing A.S. and injuring E.S.
¶3 The State indicted Malone on several charges, including premeditated first degree murder, see § 13-1105(A)(1), the only charge at issue here. Before trial, the State moved to preclude expert testimony from psychologist James Sullivan, Ph.D, that Malone's performance on neuropsychological assessment tests was "consistent with significant and permanent diffuse brain damage," meaning Malone was "more likely to have a character trait for impulsivity." (Dr. Sullivan did not obtain an MRI scan or like evidence to bolster his assessment that Malone had brain damage.) While acknowledging that Christensen permitted Dr. Sullivan to testify that Malone had a character trait for impulsivity, the State argued that Mott precluded evidence that brain damage made the existence of this trait more likely. Over defense objection, the trial court granted the motion and precluded Dr. Sullivan from offering an opinion at trial regarding brain damage.
¶4 At trial, Malone rebutted the State's allegation that he premeditated A.S.'s murder by introducing evidence suggesting he had acted impulsively. To that end, Dr. Sullivan testified that, based on his observations and psychological tests, Malone had a character trait for impulsivity. Dr. Sullivan explained that people with this character trait are compromised in their ability to think through the consequences of their actions before acting, although they are capable of doing so. The State did not contest that Malone had a character trait for impulsivity but nevertheless maintained he premeditated A.S.'s murder. The jury agreed and found Malone guilty as charged.
¶5 In a split decision, the court of appeals concluded the trial court erred by precluding Dr. Sullivan's testimony concerning brain damage.
State v. Malone
,
¶6 We granted Malone's petition for review (challenging harmless error) and the State's cross-petition for review (challenging error) because they involve a recurring issue of statewide importance. We have jurisdiction pursuant to article 6, section 5 of the Arizona Constitution.
DISCUSSION
I.
¶7 We review the trial court's preclusion of Dr. Sullivan's brain-damage testimony for an abuse of discretion.
See
State v. Leteve
,
II.
¶8 Before addressing the admissibility of Dr. Sullivan's brain-damage testimony, we set forth general legal principles underlying the issue. First, apart from insanity, Arizona does not permit a defendant to introduce evidence of a mental disease or defect as either an affirmative defense or to negate the mens rea element of a crime.
See
Mott
,
¶9 Using mental disease or defect evidence to refute the mens rea element of a crime is commonly referred to as a "diminished capacity" or "diminished responsibility" defense.
Mott
,
¶10 Second, evidence of a defendant's behavioral tendencies is not diminished capacity evidence and may be admitted to challenge the mens rea of premeditation for a first degree murder charge.
See
Christensen
,
¶11 The United States Supreme Court in
Clark v. Arizona
,
III.
A.
¶12 Turning to this case, the dispute is whether Dr. Sullivan's proffered brain-damage testimony was inadmissible diminished capacity evidence under
Schantz
and
Mott
, as the trial court ruled, or admissible behavioral-tendency evidence under
Christensen
, as the court of appeals concluded. We quickly reject Malone's assertion that
Mott
could not apply here because it only considered psychological conditions, not brain damage, as mental diseases or defects underlying prohibited diminished capacity defenses. Nothing in
Mott
draws this fine distinction. Significantly, in overruling
State v. Gonzales
,
¶13 Malone next argues that mental disease or defect evidence is only inadmissible under Mott if that disease or defect rendered the defendant entirely incapable of forming the requisite mens rea. Thus, because Dr. Sullivan's proffered brain-damage testimony purportedly would have shown only that Malone was impulsive and therefore less likely to premeditate but not incapable of doing so, Mott is inapplicable. The State counters that Mott precluded all mental disease or defect evidence unless used to show legal insanity under § 13-502, meaning the brain-damage evidence here was properly precluded.
¶14 We do not view
Mott
as precluding only mental disease or defect evidence that renders a defendant incapable of forming mens rea. Malone relies on language in
Mott
that, in isolation, supports his interpretation.
See
Mott
,
¶15 Elsewhere in
Mott
, the Court indicated that prohibited mental disease or defect evidence included anything affecting a defendant's actions, excepting evidence of legal insanity.
See
¶16 This Court's pre-
Mott
decisions are in accord with our view.
See, e.g.
,
State v. Ramos
,
¶17
Mott
's focus on the adoption of our criminal code further illuminates the Court's view that prohibited diminished capacity evidence includes a mental disease or defect that reduces the likelihood that a defendant formed the requisite mens rea. The Court noted that the legislature "declined to adopt the defense of diminished capacity" set forth in the 1962 version of the Model Penal Code ("MPC") § 4.02(1) : "Evidence that the defendant suffered from a mental disease or defect is admissible whenever it is relevant to prove that the defendant did or did not have a state of mind that is an element of the offense."
¶18 The court of appeals acknowledged that Dr. Sullivan's proffered brain-damage testimony was diminished capacity evidence.
See
Malone
, 245 Ariz. at 106 ¶¶ 7, 9,
¶19 We reject the court of appeals' purpose-oriented standard for admitting mental disease or defect evidence to negate mens rea. As previously discussed, see supra ¶ 17, Arizona has not adopted MPC § 4.02(1), which would have permitted Dr. Sullivan's brain-damage testimony as relevant to the existence of mens rea. Consequently, mental disease or defect evidence, whether introduced to show a defendant's inability to form mens rea or a likelihood he failed to do so, cannot be used to negate mens rea.
¶20 We are not persuaded to reach a different result because the proffered brain-damage testimony corroborates the existence of a behavioral tendency. We agree with the court of appeals' dissent that, regardless of the corroborating character of this evidence, it was inescapably offered to refute premeditation and is therefore inadmissible under
Schantz
and
Mott
.
Malone
, 245 Ariz. at 111 ¶ 38,
¶21 In sum, mental disease or defect evidence cannot be admitted to show that a defendant was less likely to have formed the mens rea element of a crime even if that evidence corroborates behavioral-tendency evidence. Here, the trial court correctly precluded Dr. Sullivan from testifying that Malone suffered from brain damage even if that impairment made it more likely that he had a character trait for impulsivity.
B.
¶22 Although neither the parties nor the court of appeals challenged the oft-cited statements in
Schantz
and
Mott
that evidence of a mental disease or defect cannot be admitted to negate mens rea, our dissenting colleague does. He asserts that
Schantz
's rejection of then-draft MPC § 4.02(1), which makes mental disease or defect evidence admissible if relevant to whether a defendant acted with the requisite mens rea, was dicta that
Mott
mistakenly repeated.
See
infra
¶¶ 32, 36. We disagree. The defendant in
Schantz
raised the issue to this Court by arguing that then-draft MPC § 4.02(1) supported the propriety of his requested jury instruction, and this Court thoroughly discussed and resolved the issue by declining to adopt that provision.
¶23 The dissent also argues that Schantz and Mott wrongly conflated the issues of whether Arizona recognizes a diminished responsibility defense (excusing criminal acts) with whether mental disease or defect evidence is admissible to challenge the prosecution's proof of mens rea. See infra ¶¶ 34, 38. We agree that the substantive viability of a diminished responsibility defense is different from the evidentiary admissibility of diminished responsibility evidence to refute mens rea. But for our purposes, this distinction is meaningless. As previously explained, this Court in Schantz , Mott , and other cases concluded that mental disease or defect evidence cannot be used to refute mens rea. See supra ¶¶ 15-17.
¶24 Finally, the dissent asserts that Mott incorrectly reasoned that the legislature's refusal to adopt MPC § 4.02(1) evidences its rejection of that provision. See infra ¶ 39 ("The legislature fails to do things for many reasons."). The dissent then implies that any such rejection would violate separation of powers as this Court is empowered by the Arizona Constitution to develop rules of evidence. Id. This implication is incorrect.
¶25 First, legislative history reflects that the legislature considered and rejected the evidentiary rule set forth in MPC § 4.02(1). In 1983, the legislature reformed the insanity defense in the wake of two high-profile acquittals in murder cases.
See
Renée Melançon, Note,
Arizona's Insane Response to Insanity
,
This approach provides that mental disease or defect does not constitute a separate defense to a criminal charge, but provides for the introduction of expert evidence on the defendant's ability or inability to form the culpable mental state required to be convicted of the crime. Thus, the focus is on the question of whether or not the defendant acted with the requisite culpable mental state....
See Final Report of the Senate Judiciary Interim Subcommittee on the Insanity Defense
, 13, 17 (1982) (hereinafter "Report"). The subcommittee remarked that this approach had been adopted in Idaho and Montana and, as noted in the legislative history for the Insanity Defense Reform Act of 1984, Pub. L. 98-473,
¶26 Second, although MPC § 4.02(1) is an evidentiary rule within this Court's authority to enact, the dissent overlooks that we have declined to do so in the fifty-four years since Schantz . There, the Court expressed "hesitan[ce]" about adopting then-draft MPC § 4.02(1) without the legislature first adopting the entirety of MPC article 4 which, among other things, contained involuntary commitment provisions:
If we accept defendant's proposal and decide that psychiatric evidence of a mental disease or defect is relevant to prove that a defendant did not have a state of mind which is an element of the offense, the jury would be put to the compulsion of releasing upon society many dangerous criminals who obviously should be placed under confinement.
¶27 Although this Court is constitutionally empowered to promulgate evidentiary rules, we can elect to defer to legislative policy.
See
Readenour v. Marion Power Shovel, a Div. of Dresser Indus., Inc.
,
CONCLUSION
¶28 We vacate the court of appeals' opinion and affirm Malone's convictions and sentences.
BALES, C.J., dissenting in part and concurring in the judgment.
¶29 I agree with the court of appeals that, based on our decision in
State v. Christensen
,
¶30 Our decisions regarding the admissibility of impulsivity evidence are, as the court of appeals charitably noted, "nuanced."
State v. Malone
,
¶31 Setting aside
Mott
and
Schantz
, the evidentiary issue in this case would be straightforward. Rule 404(a) allows a defendant to offer evidence of a pertinent character trait, and since
Christensen
we have recognized that this rule allows a defendant to show that he possesses a trait of acting impulsively, and thus it was less likely that he acted with premeditation.
See
¶32 The issue thus becomes whether Schantz or Mott bars the admission of proof of brain damage to support a defendant's claim to have a character trait for impulsivity. Neither case decided this issue and we should not extend their dicta to preclude such evidence.
¶33 In
Schantz
, the defendant argued that the jury should have been instructed to acquit on a charge of second degree murder unless it was "satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused ... was mentally capable of entertaining, and did entertain," an intent to kill.
¶34 The defendant's argument conflated two separate issues. The first - and the only issue presented in
Schantz
- was whether Arizona recognizes a substantive defense of diminished capacity. One version of that defense, as
Schantz
recognized, was reflected in draft MPC § 4.01(1), as it relieves a defendant of criminal responsibility not only if he is insane under the
M'Naghten
test, but also if he "lacks substantial capacity ... to conform his conduct to the requirements of the law" due to a mental disease or defect. Whether to recognize such a defense, however, is distinct from the second issue - the admissibility of evidence of mental disease or defect to prove whether the defendant acted with the mental state required for the offense, an issue addressed in MPC § 4.02(1).
See
United States v. Pohlot
,
¶35
Schantz
recognized that the "diminished capacity" defense as reflected in the MPC focuses on whether "an accused lacks the capacity to conform his conduct to the requirements of law,"
¶36 In dicta, the Court also rejected the defendant's reliance on MPC § 4.01(2), observing that article 4 of the MPC is a "comprehensive scheme" and that the Court lacked constitutional authority to adopt it as Arizona law.
¶37
Schantz
was correct as to the issue it decided - Arizona does not recognize a defense of "diminished responsibility" that relieves a defendant of criminal responsibility if a mental disease or defect renders him incapable of forming a mental state. Similarly, the
Court was correct in suggesting that evidence of a mental disease or defect is not admissible to show a defendant lacks the capacity to form a requisite mental state, as allowing such evidence would be tantamount to allowing a diminished capacity defense. Indeed, the rejected instruction in
Schantz
would have told the jury it could consider such evidence "to
negate
the accused's capacity to entertain the required malice aforethought, specific intent or knowledge."
¶38
Mott
followed
Schantz
both in rejecting a defense of diminished capacity and in confusing that issue with the admissibility of evidence to show whether a defendant acted with a requisite mental state. In
Mott
, the Court upheld the exclusion of expert testimony regarding "battered woman syndrome" offered to establish that the "defendant was not capable of forming the requisite mental state of knowledge or intent."
¶39
Mott
, like
Schantz
, said more than was needed to resolve the issue before the Court, and some of its extraneous comments were unclear or simply wrong. Noting that Arizona's legislature had declined to adopt the defense of diminished capacity as reflected in the MPC, the Court then observed that this action implied a decision "not to adopt" MPC § 4.02(1), which in turn "evidences its rejection of the use of psychological testimony to challenge the
mens rea
element of a crime."
¶40 In short, neither
Schantz
nor
Mott
addresses the admissibility of evidence of mental disease or defect to show that a defendant has a character trait for impulsivity as distinct from the use of such evidence to show that a defendant lacked the capacity to form a requisite mental state. Barring the latter does not require also barring the former. Although
Mott
contains some vague
language about rejecting the use of psychological evidence to challenge or "negate" mens rea,
¶41 The majority does not identify good reasons for extending Schantz and Mott to preclude evidence of brain damage when offered to support a claim that the defendant has an impulsive character. Though the Court now recognizes that we have previously conflated a defense of diminished capacity with the use of mental defect evidence more broadly, it declines to alter course. See supra ¶¶ 22, 26. We should not infer from the legislature's rejecting a defense of diminished capacity - or its not adopting an evidentiary rule - some implicit intent generally to preclude evidence relevant to whether a defendant acted with a requisite mental state.
¶42 If defendants can offer evidence that they have an impulsive character trait, there is no logical reason to categorically bar them from offering evidence of brain damage that is associated with such a trait. Excluding such evidence would be particularly unfair when the prosecution challenges the defendant's claim to have an impulsive character. Moreover, because our understanding of the relation between brain physiology and behavior (including "character traits") is incomplete and still evolving, instead of relying on Schantz and Mott to categorically bar brain damage evidence, I would trust our trial judges to decide its admissibility and jurors to assess its weight under our Rules of Evidence.
¶43 Our evidentiary rules expressly contemplate the admission of evidence that can be considered for some purposes but not others. Ariz. R. Evid. 105. Thus, concerns about jurors considering the evidence for purposes other than proof of a trait for impulsivity can be addressed through limiting instructions, and we generally presume that jurors can and will follow such instructions.
State v. Ovante
,
¶44 Although I do not support the majority's blanket bar on brain damage evidence to support a claimed character trait for impulsivity, it is not necessary here to decide whether the evidence of Malone's brain damage was properly excluded under Rule 403 or for other reasons. As noted by the court of appeals, any error in excluding this evidence was harmless, given the other admitted evidence showing that Malone had a character trait for impulsivity and the fact that the State did not challenge this evidence or the existence of the character trait. Accordingly, I concur in the Court's judgment.
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