State v. Colby

215 N.E.2d 65, 6 Ohio Misc. 19, 35 Ohio Op. 2d 61, 1966 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 285
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedMarch 25, 1966
DocketNo. 83131
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 215 N.E.2d 65 (State v. Colby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Colby, 215 N.E.2d 65, 6 Ohio Misc. 19, 35 Ohio Op. 2d 61, 1966 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 285 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1966).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

A jury having been waived, the defendant in this case was tried for first degree murder before Judges John M. Manos, John L. Angelotta and Donald F. Lybarger.

The basic facts in the case, established either by direct or circumstantial evidence, are fairly simple. On August 24,1965, [20]*20the defendant, a Shaker Heights housewife, without any rational motive, shot and killed an eight year old neighbor boy, a sometime playmate of her own nine year old son, with a revolver held approximately two inches from the back of his skull. The child had come to the defendant’s home at her suggestion at about 8.30 a. m. to identify a jacket which was believed to be his. The defendant immediately concealed the dead body in her station wagon; drove to a wooded area ten minutes away; placed the child’s body there; fired into the ground the rest of the shells in the revolver; went shopping; returned home and concealed the gun in three pounds of ground beef in the bottom of a deep freezer; and burned the coat in which the boy’s body had been wrapped. When suspicion was directed toward her she gave the police and others several conflicting versions of what happened on the morning in question, including one that her own son had shot the boy accidentally and two peculiar narrations claiming that she shot the victim accidentally. Upon indictment for first degree murder, and at her arraignment thereafter, the defendant pleaded not guilty and not guilty by reason of insanity.

On trial the evidence revealed that there had been some friction between defendant and the family of the deceased child because the latter’s parents preferred that their boy not play so often with defendant’s son since they felt he was a ‘ ‘ slow learner, ’ ’ somewhat childish and aggressive. The defendant resented this attitude and expressed her feelings rather openly in this regard. However, thé evidence is that on the day of the homicide she called to invite the neighbor child to a birthday party for her son.

At the end of the state’s case the court, ruling on a motion, held that the state had established a prima facie case of first degree murder.

The defendant did not take the stand. Her witnesses were two eminent psychiatrists and two clinical psychologists who, in the judgment of the court, established by the greater weight of the evidence that about fourteen years ago the defendant had suffered a traumatic emotional episode which, aggravated by other incidents since then, led the experts to diagnose that she for a long time had been suffering from a chronic schizophrenic reaction — paranoid type — which progressively was becoming [21]*21more pronounced, and that she was so afflicted on the day of the tragic homicide.

The state also relied upon two outstanding psychiatrists and a psychologist. One diagnosed defendant as a borderline person, between normal and psychotic, stating she has suffered from mental illness and that in a medical sense her ability to choose right from wrong “was seriously threatened.” He said guardedly that in the simplest terms of right and wrong she appeared to operate as if she knew right from wrong. He further stated that one could “not rule out that defendant’s distorted thinking played a part in the act itself.”

A second psychiatrist for the state diagnosed the defendant as a passive-aggressive personality aggressive type, who was at no time psychotic, and who was responsible for her act on the day of the homicide.

Now the court noted that after each of the psychiatrists had completed narrating his observations and conclusions concerning the mental condition of the defendant, based upon many and varied signs and symptoms of significance to specialists in their field, each doctor was asked to compress his final conclusion into the straight jacket popularly known as the M’Naghten Rules, that is, the knowledge of right and wrong test, as applied in Ohio since Clark v. State (1843), 12 Ohio 483.

The court is well aware that at the present time the legal test of insanity in Ohio “is a test of responsibility rather than a medical test as to insanity.” 27 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 618, Homicide, Section 76. The test is thus defined: “The general test as to responsibility where insanity is set up as a defense is whether the accused’s mind was so afflicted with disease as to render him incapable of distinguishing between right and wrong as to the particular act done and as of the time when the act was done.” Id. 620, Section 77. Ohio has said that the accused “must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that at the time of committing the act he was laboring under such defective reason from disease of mind as not to know the nature or quality of the act he was doing, or if he did know it, he did not know it was wrong.” Id. 620, Section 77. (Emphasis added.)

In the instant case it was obvious that in answering the key questions the psychiatrists were doing what their brethren have been doing for years in Ohio under similar circumstances, [22]*22namely, arriving at their respective conclusions as to the defendant’s sanity in as scientific a manner as is possible today, and then answering the key question (to conform to existing necessity).

The court must emphasize that in the instant case all the accustomed formalities of framing and answering the classic Ohio questions as to insanity were complied with. Thus the present test for insanity in a criminal case was followed. On the basis of the psychiatrists’ replies thereto, the court judged that defense had proved by the greater weight of the evidence that the defendant was not guilty by reason of insanity. That ended the case.

The court is convinced, however, that, having carefully examined into all facets of the “right and wrong” test, it has a duty to speak out on the subject of Ohio’s legal test for insanity in criminal eases. Unless and until some trial court under proper circumstances has the courage to point the way to a better method of submitting to the triers of the facts the issue of the insanity of the accused when insanity is tendered as a defense, then Ohio will continue to adhere to criteria which more and more are challenged as being false.

The court has reached the conclusion that the present “right and wrong” test, the M’Naghten rules, for deciding criminal responsibility is “based on an entirely obsolete and misleading conception of the nature of insanity, since insanity does not only, or primarily, affect the cognitive or intellectual faculties, but affects the whole personality of the patient, including both the will and the emotions. An insane person may therefore know the nature and quality of his act and that it is wrong and forbidden by law, and yet commit it as a result of the mental disease.” (Report of the Royal Commission on Capital Punishment, 1949-53, Cmd. No. 8932 at pg. 80.)

For many years the American Law Institute has been working upon a Model Penal Code, the final draft of which was issued in 1962. In the Code, Section 4.01 provides as follows:

“A person is not responsible for criminal conduct if at the time of such conduct as a result of mental disease or defect he lacks substantial capacity either to appreciate the wrongfulness of his conduct or to conform his conduct to the requirements of law.”

This court is of the opinion that the American Law Insti[23]

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Related

State v. Staten
247 N.E.2d 293 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1969)
State v. Shoffner
143 N.W.2d 458 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
215 N.E.2d 65, 6 Ohio Misc. 19, 35 Ohio Op. 2d 61, 1966 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-colby-ohctcomplcuyaho-1966.