State v. Harden

480 P.2d 53, 206 Kan. 365, 1971 Kan. LEXIS 300
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJanuary 23, 1971
Docket45,788
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 480 P.2d 53 (State v. Harden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Harden, 480 P.2d 53, 206 Kan. 365, 1971 Kan. LEXIS 300 (kan 1971).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Schroeder, J.:

This is a criminal action wherein the defendant was charged with the first degree murder of his wife pursuant to K. S. A. 21-401. He was convicted by a jury of second degree murder pursuant to K. S. A. 21-402 and was sentenced in accordance with K. S. A. 21-403 and K. S. A. 76-2306 to the Kansas State Industrial Reformatory for a term of twenty years. Appeal has been duly perfected.

The appellant contends the trial court erred in three particulars: (1) In allowing the appellant’s confession to police officers to go to the jury; (2) in failing to give an instruction on insanity; and (3) in permitting certain rebuttal testimony to go to the jury.

The facts disclosed from the evidence are that in the early morning hours of December 1, 1968, Roy Harden (defendant-appellant) called the Wichita police officers to his residence at 3544 Munger Lane in Wichita, Kansas. Officer Hampton was the first to arrive and as he approached the appellant, who was standing at the north *367 front door of the duplex, he asked, “Roy, did you call the police?” The appellant replied, “I shot my wife.”

Officer Hampton placed the appellant in a police vehicle and then went into the house to ascertain the condition of Katie J. Harden, the appellant’s wife. Katie was found lying face up in the back yard approximately six feet from the back porch. She had a gunshot wound to her left eye bordering near the bridge of the nose directly between the eyes. The projectile entered her brain.

Shortly thereafter the appellant was taken by police officers to the Wichita police department. At approximately 1:25 a. m. on December 1, 1968, Detectives Gerald Skelton and Karl Triplett interviewed the appellant at the police department. The interview was commenced by advising the appellant of his' constitutional rights in accordance with Miranda. The appellant acknowledged that he understood his rights and would speak to the detectives. He thereupon related to the detectives his activities from Thanksgiving Day, 1968, up to and including the time of the shooting of his wife. His recollection of such activities was specific and clear.

On the evening of November 30, 1968, Floyd Meade and his wife, Lois, came to the home of the appellant at about 8:00. Floyd Meade was a staff sergeant at the McConnell Air Force Base employed with the appellant who also worked at the air base. They were friends and spent the evening visiting and drinking from a half gallon bottle of Jim Beam liquor until approximately 11:30 p. m., at which time the Meades left and went to their home. The Meades testified on direct examination for the defense at the trial that the appellant was drunk when they left his home on the night of November 30, and was in a condition incapable of reporting for work or driving a car. On cross-examination, however, they admitted having made a statement to the police officers which was tape-recorded on December 1,1968. Lois Meade in the the tape-recorded statement said, “He didn’t seem drunk to me. . . . No, he wasn’t staggering. He wasn’t slurring words or anything that would show drunkenness.” Sgt. Meade in the tape-recorded statement said, “I wouldn’t say he appeared drunk, no.” These tape recordings were introduced in evidence and heard by the jury.

The appellant in his statement at 1:25 a. m. on December 1, 1968, informed the detectives that after the Meades had left at approximately 11:30 p. m. on November 30, 1968, he started to argue *368 with his wife, the decedent, as to her treatment of his friends; that he then went to the night stand in the bedroom and removed a loaded revolver and went back in the kitchen where his wife was standing, and while holding the gun beside his leg he cocked it by pulling back the hammer. When asked why he did this, he replied that in the past when his wife started getting upset the sight of the gun would calm her down.

The appellant further informed the detectives that his wife went running out the back door and he gave pursuit. When he caught up with her the argument resumed. The appellant stated he started waving the pistol and while he was waving it the pistol discharged. He said he saw blood on her face and he ran into the house and called the police. He then sat in a chair and waited until the officers arrived.

Testimony from a ballistics expert of the Wichita police department indicated the absence of nitrates on the person of the decedent. In his opinion, based on this fact, the shot when fired at the decedent was fired from a distance exceeding three feet.

The police detectives took another statement from the appellant at 11:50 a. m. December 1, which confirmed almost word for word the appellants previous statement. Twice, however, the appellant refused to permit his statement to be tape-recorded. But according to the officers the appellant at no time requested an attorney.

The appellants evidence centered on the testimony of a psychiatrist, Dr. C. J. Kurth. In Dr. Kurth’s opinion, because of the enormous consumption of alcoholic beverage by the appellant and its effect on his mental condition, the appellant could not formulate the necessary criminal intent at the time of the shooting of his wife.

The appellant testified at the trial and his testimony virtually confirmed most of the statements he had previously made to the detectives at 1:25 a. m. on December 1,1968, and later at 11:50 a. m. the same day. By his testimony and that of his friends, the Meades, the appellant sought to establish that he had consumed an enormous amount of alcoholic liquor on the night of November 30, 1968, and that he was not aware of his surroundings.

Was the appellant’s statement given to the police detectives in the early morning hours of December 1, 1968, properly admitted in evidence?

*369 Counsel for the appellant contends the appellant could not have consumed liquor all evening, shot his wife, coupled with the existing mental condition, and then knowingly, voluntarily and intelligently waive his constitutional rights and confess.

It is argued the appellant’s testimony at the trial discloses that he can only remember certain things during his purported interrogation.

Relying upon the testimony of Dr. Kurth it is argued:

“Only a competent and qualified Doctor of Psychiatry can look into the mind of the appellant, only then after a battery of tests and examinations and be able to say if the appellant was or was not able to intelligently, knowingly and voluntarily waive his constitutional rights and the Doctor’s statement was that the appellant could not knowingly, intelligently and voluntarily waive his constitutional rights.”

It is further argued on behalf of the appellant:

“There is more to consider in this case than the alcoholic intake of the appellant. We must bear in mind, ‘the guilt’ complex and ‘shock’ that was weight upon the appellant’s mind of having just shot his wife and seeing the result of the projectile from his weapon.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
480 P.2d 53, 206 Kan. 365, 1971 Kan. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-harden-kan-1971.