State v. Gramenz

126 N.W.2d 285, 256 Iowa 134, 1964 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 812
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 11, 1964
Docket51111
StatusPublished
Cited by97 cases

This text of 126 N.W.2d 285 (State v. Gramenz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gramenz, 126 N.W.2d 285, 256 Iowa 134, 1964 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 812 (iowa 1964).

Opinion

Stuart, J.

— Donald Gramenz was convicted of second-degree murder in connection with the fatal shooting of Diehard Hoeppner, who had been keeping company with his estranged wife. We need not detail the facts as defendant concedes there was sufficient evidence to support the verdict of the jury. Defendant’s assigned errors relate to the court’s instructions, rulings upon evidence and offers of proof and the severity of the sentence.

I. Defendant did not urge insanity as a defense, but introduced testimony of a clinical psychologist and a psychiatrist relating to his mental condition. D. L. Flenniken, chief clinical psychologist at Cherokee Mental Health Institute, found defendant to be in a state of severe emotional turmoil and testified:

“I simply do not think that he is capable of coming to any premeditated decision about hardly anything. It is just not characteristic for this man’s way of responding. He is so much pushed this way and that way by his feelings at the moment, which are constantly a conflicting turmoil and a flipping back and forth like I said, I just don’t see how this person can come to any decision and stick to it for any length of time.”

He defined premeditation as a thought-out plan involving thinking and rational thought processes in which planning and thinking it out in a logical, systematic sort of way is a necessary part. He concluded that defendant “is not able to come to any thoughtful decision about the matter whatsoever.”

Dr. Emil P. Eckart, a psychiatrist associated with Kersten Clinic in Fort Dodge, also found intense emotional turmoil in defendant. He testified; “Premeditation, as I understand it, is *137 meditation and thoughtful planning for an act. In my opinion, this man did not have premeditation in connection with this act.”

He found no evidence of disassoeiation from reality. On cross-examination he said:

“Q. (By Mr. McCormick) You think that if he did shoot Richard Hoeppner, that he did so thinking he was resolving this turmoil ?

“A. I don’t believe, in my opinion, I don’t think so. I can’t say that it was his purpose to shoot Richard Hoeppner. We all have conscious and unconscious motivations. The defendant is not psychotic. I did find mental incapacity, in using the intellectual process. This was because of the emotional turmoil and workings of his mind. At the time of his examination, I think he knew what he was doing.

“Meditation requires thoughtful planning. Because of my knowledge of Mr. Gramenz’s personality and psychodynamics, in my opinion, premeditation did not exist.”

The trial court in its instructions restricted the jury’s consideration of this testimony to the following issues:

“1. Whether defendant acted upon the occasion charged willfully, deliberately, and premeditatedly, in connection with the State’s charge of first-degree murder;

“2. Whether, if you find defendant guilty of first-degree murder, he shall die or be imprisoned for life; and

“3. Whether defendant’s alleged written statement was voluntary.”

Defendant was not satisfied with this instruction and takes the “position that he was not mentally capable of committing either first-degree or second-degree murder and if the jury had been properly instructed the verdict would have been manslaughter or possibly an acquittal.

“Defendant feels that the court did not give him the full benefit of the doctrine of diminished responsibility and the jury was not told or instructed that they might consider his mental condition on the elements of specific intent to kill, malice aforethought and general criminal intent (mens rea).”

Most of the authorities cited by defendant relate to mental *138 disorders which justify an acquittal on a plea of insanity for lack of criminal responsibility. He continues the century-old debate over the propriety of the M’Naghten rules requiring the mental illness to be such that it destroys the defendant’s power rationally to comprehend the nature or consequences of the act which constitutes the criminal charge against him. He espouses the cause of “irresistible impulse” and the New Hampshire rule revitalized in 1954 by the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in Durham v. United States, 94 App. D. C. 228, 214 F.2d 862, 45 A. L. R.2d 1430, which held that an accused is not criminally responsible if his unlawful act is the product of mental disease or mental defect. As defendant did not plead insanity, a detailed discussion of these authorities is not in order. It is sufficient to say the opinions of psychiatrists on the M’Naghten rules vary from that of Dr. Gregory Zilboorg, who claims it forces a psychiatrist to violate both his Hippocratic Oath and his oath to tell the truth as a witness, to that of Dr. Fredric Wertham, who experiences no difficulty in expressing his medical opinion in response to questions propounded under these rules. In spite of the recognized scientific deficiencies in the M’Naghten rules exposed by the advancements in the field of psychiatry in the last twenty-five or thirty years, legal scholars and psychiatrists are far from unanimous in presenting a more practical approach which will offer better protection to society and greater safeguards for the rights of the individual. The courts have been reluctant to depart from the right and wrong test in view of this uncertainty. See 22 Chicago Law Review 317, 404; Perkins on Criminal Law 738, 776; Psychiatry and the law, Guttmaeher and Weihofen, pages 380 to 452, and its review in 38 Iowa Law Review 687.

We are committed to the M’Naghten rules or the “right and wrong” test and have rejected the “irresistible impulse” modification except when it so operates upon a diseased mind as to destroy the comprehension of consequences. State v. Beckwith, 242 Iowa 228, 46 N.W.2d 20; State v. Hodge, 252 Iowa 449, 465, 105 N.W.2d 613.

We have not heretofore considered the theory of diminished responsibility. It is not dependent upon a plea of *139 insanity, but permits proof of defendant’s mental condition on the issue of his capacity to form a specific intent' in those instances in which the State must prove defendant’s specific intent as an element of the crime charged. Perkins on Criminal Law 767-771; Volume 8 Am. Jur., Proof of Facts, 35, 36; Wei-liofen, Mental Disorder as a Criminal Defense, 182. The trial court instructed upon this doctrine when it permitted the jury to consider testimony relating to defendant’s mental and emotional condition in connection with the charge of first-degree murder. It allowed the jury to consider such evidence in deciding whether the defendant acted “willfully, deliberately and premeditatedly.” Defendant took exception to the instruction because it did not permit the jury to consider his mental and emotional condition on the elements of malice aforethought and general criminal intent.

The State urges us to follow those jurisdictions which have rejected the doctrine of diminished responsibility citing Fox v. State, 73 Nev.

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Bluebook (online)
126 N.W.2d 285, 256 Iowa 134, 1964 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gramenz-iowa-1964.