State v. Malley

285 N.W.2d 469, 1979 Minn. LEXIS 1798
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 27, 1979
Docket46659
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 285 N.W.2d 469 (State v. Malley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Malley, 285 N.W.2d 469, 1979 Minn. LEXIS 1798 (Mich. 1979).

Opinions

KELLY, Justice.

Defendant appeals from his conviction for first-degree murder entered in Henne-pin County District Court. There are only two issues presented to this court:

(1) Was defendant so mentally ill or deficient at the time of committing the murder that he did not know the nature of his act or that it was wrong? Minn.St. 611.026.

(2) Did the State of Minnesota prove beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant caused the death of his wife with premeditation and with the intent to effect her death so as to sustain the jury verdict of murder in the first degree? Minn.St. 609.-185.1 We affirm.

The basic facts are undisputed; the controversy focuses instead on the inference from those facts to defendant’s mental state at the time he killed his wife. At that time, defendant was 62 and his wife 63, and they had been married some 33 years. They did little socializing and little is known about their marriage. His wife was heavily dependent on defendant, especially so in the 20 years since her mother’s death, when she required that defendant cook all her meals as she feared food poisoning.

Defendant began work for the income tax division of the Revenue Department of the State of Minnesota in 1953. He was by all testimony a hard and conscientious worker, a gentle conservative man who rarely, if ever, displayed anger. In 1973 computers were introduced into the department, an innovation that caused stress generally to the employees but particularly to defendant, who had a limited educational background and who supervised approximately 50 persons in the accounting section. In March or April 1975, his supervisor criti[471]*471cized defendant for failing to delegate work and for lacking managerial ability. Defendant agreed with the appraisal and offered to resign. Instead, a lateral transfer effective May 19, 1975, to the sales tax division was arranged with defendant’s consent. During this period, defendant became more serious and withdrawn, lost weight, and expressed concern about his ability to perform his new assignment. He consulted a Christian Science practitioner to help him during the job transition.

As part of his new duties, defendant had to become acquainted with the sales tax regulations. He experienced some difficulty in learning the regulations and also realized that his wife had failed to collect a tax on porch sales of knickknacks she had crafted. He discussed this lapse with his supervisor who attempted to assure him the violation was minor but defendant remained bothered by the situation. A meeting was then arranged with the director of the sales tax division to reassure defendant. On June 4, 1975, the director told defendant the amount of the sales tax liability would not warrant the cost of processing a return and that he should forget about it. When defendant refused to dismiss the matter because in his eyes the tax collector was violating the tax laws and stated he felt that the department would prosecute him, the director suggested he seek medical help. Defendant reluctantly agreed, foreseeing objections of his wife, who was a Christian Scientist.

Defendant did not return to work after the day of the meeting. He utilized excess leave he had accumulated and called his supervisor to inform him of his absence. Defendant continued to express concern about the sales tax violations in these telephone conversations and also stated on June 12 to a fellow employee: “I am just having severe problems right now. * * * I don’t know how much longer I can cope.” The evening of June 12, however, defendant and his wife visited a neighbor and acted entirely normally. On June 5, defendant did see a physician, who concluded that defendant was depressed and recommended further treatment. Defendant returned for additional tests on June 10 but not thereafter.

The morning of June 13, 1975, defendant awoke at 5 o’clock, his usual hour. He dressed, went downstairs and got a shingle hammer, returned upstairs, and as his wife lay sleeping, repeatedly struck her skull with the hammer, causing her death. The victim also suffered other abrasions and lacerations, several broken ribs, and a thin line of discoloration around her neck.2 Defendant called the police at 6:27 a. m. and informed them that something had happened to his wife and that it was his fault. Earlier, he had called his Christian Scientist counselor so that she would not learn of the incident through the news media. The officer who went to the scene found defendant sitting calmly, dressed in a shirt and tie, a sport coat draped nearby. Upon arriving at jail, defendant told a deputy, “I guess I should feel some remorse, but I feel nothing.” Defendant then made a formal statement, confessing to the murder.

That afternoon fellow employees visited defendant in jail, where he told them of increasing pressures and that in recent days the radio, newspaper, and television, along with persons in the grocery store, had seemed to point to him and his wife as the subjects of an investigation. But, he said he now realized his fears were unjustified. He told defense psychologists that he had considered using the shingle hammer sometime earlier, and that he could not have killed his wife had she been awake. On June 16, he told two co-workers he had done a stupid thing.

Defendant was charged with first-degree murder. At trial he endeavored to prove that he was legally insane at the time [472]*472of his wife’s death.3 He advanced three expert witnesses in support of his position; the state rebutted with an equal number.

Mr. Don Anderson, a psychologist who had worked at various state institutions, was defendant’s first expert witness. He administered a number of tests to defendant and diagnosed his condition at the time of the incident as an obsessive compulsive schizoid personality with involutional paranoid depression psychosis. In Mr. Anderson’s opinion, this condition permitted defendant to realize the nature of the act, i. e., that he would effect his wife’s death by striking her with the hammer, but not that the act was wrong. He reconstructed defendant’s thought processes at the time as follows:

“ * * * [H]e saw his wife as someone who would suffer the agonies of hell if he were taken from her, or if, as he also thought was possible, that she might also be incarcerated as a result of this tax problem.
“So, he was faced with a very difficult problem, a woman by virtue of her own personality problems, to say the least, was incapable of living alone, and yet with the prospects that he would be snatched from her, or even worse, that would mean he would be confined. Here is a woman, from what Mr. Malley says, has been unable to eat, has been really unable to care for herself, has various fears that keep her, not totally confined to the house by any means, but still somewhat apart from society.
* He * * * *
“Incredibly enough, he was attempting to protect her in a sense.”

Dr. Carl Schwartz, a psychologist, concurred in this analysis, as did Dr. A. William Diessner, a psychiatrist and defendant’s third expert witness, who also found some evidence of brain damage.

None of the state’s witnesses was able to interview defendant, as the Rules of Criminal Procedure now permit, Rule 20.02, so each relied instead on the tests administered and the testimony given by defendant’s witnesses. Dr.

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State v. Malley
285 N.W.2d 469 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
285 N.W.2d 469, 1979 Minn. LEXIS 1798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-malley-minn-1979.