State v. Murphy

760 P.2d 280, 84 Utah Adv. Rep. 12, 1988 Utah LEXIS 58, 1988 WL 73240
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1988
Docket19824
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 760 P.2d 280 (State v. Murphy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Murphy, 760 P.2d 280, 84 Utah Adv. Rep. 12, 1988 Utah LEXIS 58, 1988 WL 73240 (Utah 1988).

Opinions

STEWART, Justice:

Appellant Bemt Murphy appeals an order of the district court denying his motion for release from the Utah State Hospital and denying his petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the State to provide him with post-release residential and treatment accommodations. We reverse and vacate the trial court’s order and remand for further proceedings.

I.

A. The Facts:

On September 10, 1957, when Murphy was nineteen years old, he was charged with the rape of a five-year-old girl. Subsequently, he was charged with the homicide of a young woman, but he was never tried on that charge. After a hearing on October 11,1957, a district court judge held that Murphy was incompetent to stand trial and committed him to the Utah State Hospital until such time as he became competent. The court made no finding as to the nature or type of insanity or mental illness that Murphy suffered from when the alleged crimes were committed.

Murphy’s commitment continued at the Utah State Hospital with no further judicial hearings until July, 1972, a period of almost fifteen years. Then a hearing was precipitated by a letter from Dr. Roger S. Kiger, Superintendent of the Utah State Hospital, and Dr. A. John Bennee, a psychiatrist, to the district court stating that Murphy was “no longer psychotic or insane” and was competent to stand trial. He recommended that “appropriate proceedings with respect to due process of the law be instituted.” Murphy was arraigned on the rape charge, and on December 6, 1972, after a bench trial, the court found Murphy not guilty by reason of insanity and again committed him to the Utah State Hospital. The court’s cryptic findings of fact did not specify the nature of the insanity. No judicial finding has ever been made specifying the nature of Murphy’s mental disorder other than mental retardation.

In 1983, Murphy filed a petition with the district court for release from the hospital. After a five-day hearing in January and February, 1984, the trial judge found that Murphy was still mentally ill and ordered his confinement continued. The trial court, in rendering its decision, stated:

The Court has had this matter before it on several occasions, this being the most complete analysis of the program that Mr. Murphy has been subjected to, and also the most complete analysis of the law pertaining to this kind of a question.
Articles ..., cases ..., and testimony of witnesses clearly indicate that Mr. Murphy could not be released to society without some specific guidelines. Mr. Murphy, had he not been mentally ill and had he been like most of the people who have been placed in the Utah State Pene-tentiary, would [now] be out. And those folks who were represented to be victims ... would not have been denied the opportunity for vengeance_ But because he has a mental illness which, according to the DSM-III and the testimony of the doctors is diagnosed as mild mental retardation, he must be and was placed in a mental institution for confinement. He was subjected to an enormous amount of medication. It appears to this Court that that medication effectively controlled him, if he needed control, and may have caused physical problems with him.... So what we have before the Court now is a 12-year-old man, age is not related to his mental capacity, who is mentally retarded, and his body has grown but his mind hasn’t, subjected to being imprisoned in a mental hospital and given an enormous amount of medi[282]*282cation. And the medication has kept him quiet. It’s kept him docile. And only recently when the medication was removed, because it was causing physical problems, has he reacted to the tragedy he finds himself in as a 12-year-old with a mental problem. He acts out in an attempt to be released. He appeals to our sympathy. He urges me to form a remedy and to give him an opportunity to enjoy some of the things in life which witnesses called on his behalf enjoy. One of the witnesses functions effectively ... and is a productive human being. The other witness also functions in society though both have some schizophrenia [qr retardation] which ... can [be] controlled] by medication.
Mr. Murphy did not get all the ... genes necessary for his mind to grow in his body, and for that reason society feels that he must be controlled.
... He’s not released because he’s twelve years old. And he’s not released because society has no place to release him to. For this Court to be in a position to forge a new remedy and forge an alternative, is, as I view 77-14-5, circumscribed by legislative prerogatives ... [The] tragedy of Bemt Murphy would have to stay like it is with no alternatives either because the state of the art of psychiatry and psychology won’t forge one or because the legislature won’t impose one through the statutes. I hope this doesn’t mean we are turning the clock back 300 years to the period when people because of mental illness are incarcerated because society didn’t know what to do with them. Maybe that’s what the cases are saying to us: [W]e don’t understand this. We understand that mental retardation is not curable. You’re born with it. If you commit a crime when you have that problem society puts you away, maybe for all of your life, because there is no willing — opportunity or willingness on the part of most people who have the opportunity to do anything about it.
For the reasons just stated ... this Court finds that the mental illness defined as ... mild mental retardation with an adult adjustment disorder seems to be Mr. Murphy’s only problem. There’s no clear indication that he constitutes a danger to society or to himself. He’s reacting now to a desire to be released, for after being held all these years as a person with mental retardation. There’s no clear and present danger to society that I see, nor is there any indication that he is not dangerous. That issue is left without clear cut resolution by this Court and the witnesses who testified....
Because of the reasons I’ve stated ... at this time the Court denies the motion on behalf of Mr. Murphy.

(Emphasis added.)

An appeal was filed from that order to this Court. While that case was in the preliminary stages of the appellate process, the trial court held another hearing in April, 1985. During the 1985 hearing, which is discussed in some detail below, two psychiatrists and one psychologist appeared on behalf of the hospital and unanimously testified that Murphy was not mentally ill and that he suffered only from mild mental retardation.

At the conclusion of the 1985 hearing, the trial court stated, “Now, we learn for the first time that [Murphy’s] only real problem is that he’s retarded and probably always was.... ” The trial court’s finding was supported by all three mental health experts from the state hospital, each of whom testified that Murphy was not mentally ill.

Just prior to the 1985 hearing, three doctors from the state hospital who had examined Murphy wrote to the trial judge stating: “[Unhealthy behaviors displayed by Murphy] do not approach the threshold necessary to diagnose a mental illness.... [W]e are prepared to certify to the court that Mr. Murphy does not currently have a mental disease.” (Emphasis added.) At the hearing, one of the doctors, Dr. Van 0. Austin, testified:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
760 P.2d 280, 84 Utah Adv. Rep. 12, 1988 Utah LEXIS 58, 1988 WL 73240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-murphy-utah-1988.