State v. Conte

251 A.2d 81, 157 Conn. 209, 1968 Conn. LEXIS 505
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 26, 1968
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 251 A.2d 81 (State v. Conte) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Conte, 251 A.2d 81, 157 Conn. 209, 1968 Conn. LEXIS 505 (Colo. 1968).

Opinion

King, C. J.,

The defendant was charged with murder in the second degree in the fatal shooting of Pasquale Caricchio on June 14, 1966. In this appeal from his conviction, the defendant assigns error in the refusal of the court to submit the issue of his sanity to the jury; in the court’s refusal to adopt the definition of insanity approved in United States v. Freeman, 357 F.2d 606 (2d Cir.); and in a ruling on evidence.

.(1)

For convenience, we first take up the claimed error in refusing to adopt the test of insanity approved in the Freeman case. Our common-law test *211 or definition of insanity as a defense to crime provides (1) that an accused, to be the subject of punishment, must have had mind, capacity, reason and understanding sufficient to have enabled him to judge of the nature, character and consequences of the act charged against him, that the act was wrong and criminal, and that the commission of it would justly and properly expose him to punishment; and (2) that, in committing the act, he was not overcome by an irresistible impulse arising from mental disease. State v. Davies, 146 Conn. 137, 144, 148 A.2d 251, cert. denied, 360 U.S. 921, 79 S. Ct. 1441, 3 L. Ed. 2d 1537; State v. Donahue, 141 Conn. 656, 664, 109 A.2d 364, cert. denied, 349 U.S. 926, 75 S. Ct. 775, 99 L. Ed. 1257; and State v. Wade, 96 Conn. 238, 242, 113 A. 458.

Some ten years ago, an attempt was made to induce this court to adopt a definition or test of insanity which at that time had recently been promulgated by the United States Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia in the case of Durham v. United States, 214 F.2d 862 (D.C. Cir.). We rejected the Durham definition, as did many other courts. State v. Davies, supra, 147; see also United States v. Freeman, 357 F.2d-606, 621 (2d Cir.). In 1967, the United States Court of Appeals of the Second Circuit, in United States v. Freeman, supra, 622, approved, as a common-law definition of insanity, a definition propounded in 1962 in a draft of the American Law Institute’s proposed Model Penal Code.

There is inherent difficulty in formulating a definition of insanity which is sufficiently specific to permit its accurate application by a jury and which is also broad enough to give effect to advancements in scientific knowledge in the area of mental illness. *212 Probably no definition can be formulated which is above criticism in all applications. This difficulty is recognized in United States v. Freeman, supra, 623, 628.

The test of insanity in the Model Penal Code, adopted as a common-law definition in the Freeman case, was enacted by our General Assembly as a statutory test to be applied in Connecticut on and after June 13, 1967. Public Acts, 1967, No. 336 (General Statutes § 54-82a).

We find no error in the court’s use of our common-law test in the trial of the present case. Obviously, the statutory test did not become effective until long after the conviction of the accused in October of 1966.

(2)

The next question is whether, under our common-law test, the court was in error in not submitting the issue of insanity to the jury. Insanity, although often referred to as a defense in a criminal case, may more properly be referred to as a fact inconsistent with guilt. Although the state in the first instance may rely on the presumption that all persons accused of crime are sane, as soon as substantial evidence tending to prove insanity comes into the case, the presumption loses all operative effect, and the burden, which rests throughout upon the state, of proving beyond a reasonable doubt each essential element of the crime charged becomes inclusive of the essential elements of the mental condition requisite to legal responsibility under our governing test. State v. Joseph, 96 Conn. 637, 639, 115 A. 85; O’Dea v. Amodeo, 118 Conn. 58, 61, 170 A. 486.

Whether, as the defendant claims, there was sub *213 stantial evidence of insanity so as to place that issue in the case depends on whether there was evidence sufficient, if credited, to raise a reasonable doubt as to the sanity of the defendant at the time of the homicide.

The state’s claims of proof were to the effect that the defendant, while driving in his automobile, saw the car of the decedent, Pasquale Caricchio, parked across the street from a tavern known as the Friendly Tavern; that the defendant waited for Caricchio to come out; and that, when Caricchio appeared, the defendant called him over to the defendant’s car and told him that he (the defendant) had a gun and wanted to talk to Caricchio, who was unarmed. Caricchio evinced contempt for the defendant and slapped aside the revolver, which the defendant had pointed at him. The defendant then fired some eight bullets into Caricchio, instantly killing him. The defendant drove from the scene but was soon after overtaken by the police and captured at gunpoint. It is hardly necessary to point out that this evidence in nowise indicated insanity, nor does the defendant make any claim that it did.

The claims of proof of the defendant were that, in October of 1965, he learned that his wife had had improper relations with Caricchio, that the defendant then spoke to his wife, that thereafter she never saw Caricchio again, and that the defendant and his wife continued to live together. Caricchio occasionally taunted the defendant about his wife’s prior infidelity when they met on the street. On at least one occasion, Caricchio drove his car in front of the defendant’s automobile, and he drove by the defendant’s house two or three times a week, at night, blowing his horn. Since the defendant’s place of *214 work was near the Eriendly Tavern, which Caricchio frequented, they often met. At such meetings, they quarreled, and Caricchio taunted the defendant about his wife. On the day of the shooting, Caricchio had been sitting in his car in front of the tavern and had made insulting remarks to the defendant as he passed. Later that afternoon, Caricchio drove by the defendant’s house, shouting and blowing his horn. The defendant’s claims of proof, as disclosed in the finding, did not cover the actual shooting, although the shooting does not appear to have been seriously contested.

The defendant called as witnesses his wife, his mother, and two of his sisters-in-law, who testified that, since his difficulties with Caricchio, the defendant was uncongenial, disagreeable, preoccupied, and like a different person.

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Bluebook (online)
251 A.2d 81, 157 Conn. 209, 1968 Conn. LEXIS 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-conte-conn-1968.