State v. Patterson

146 So. 17, 176 La. 440, 1933 La. LEXIS 1558
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 3, 1933
DocketNo. 32139.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 146 So. 17 (State v. Patterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Patterson, 146 So. 17, 176 La. 440, 1933 La. LEXIS 1558 (La. 1933).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

Allen Patterson, Henry Woods, and Pearl Myers, all negroes, and Mrs. Nancy Stewart Thompson, a white woman, were jointly indicted for the murder of D. G. Thompson, the husband of Mrs. Nancy Stewart Thompson, on August 31, 1932.

After. a preliminary hearing before the trial judge on the question of his present sanity, Allen Patterson was ordered to trial on the charge set forth in the indictment.

On the trial, defendant confessed that, because Mrs. Thompson offered him $500 from the insurance money on Thompson’s life, and a home for life, he went to the Thompson home at night, armed with Thompson’s gun, with which he had been provided by Mrs. Thompson; that he shot Thompson through the window as he lay asleep in the bed; that he jumped from the gallery at a certain place, crossed a certain ditch at a particular place; and hid part of the gun under a certain house.

After telling the law officers about the killing, 'defendant admitted his tracks at the house and the ditch, pointing out both places, and took the officers to the place whore he hid part of the gun, where it was found. The other part of the gun was never found, defendant stating that, after the shooting, he had given it to a codefendant.

Defendant rested his case mainly on his special plea of insanity “at the time of the commission of the alleged offense.”

The trial resulted in an unqualified verdict of guilty, and defendant, in accordance with the verdict, was sentenced to death. • From the verdict and sentence, defendant appeals.

Defendant reserved numerous bills of exception, only four of which a.ppear in the record. In this court, defendant filed an assignment of eleven alleged errors committed in the court below.

The only complaint of defendant that we find necessary to notice is his complaint, presented under bill of exception No. 3, of the ruling of the trial judge that defendant was presently sane and was able to appreciate the nature of the proceeding against him and to assist his counsel in presenting his defense.

At the outset of the case, counsel for defendant gave notice in open court that de *443 fendant would urge insanity as a defense to_ the charge against him, and counsel requested the trial judge to appoint experts to examine defendant and report their findings on the trial. The trial judge, in response to this request, appointed a lunacy commission composed of Drs. S. O. Turner and J. B. Stanley, experts connected with the East Louisiana Hospital for the Insane. This commission, “after a thorough, complete mental examination and observation and also a serological examination and report,” filed a written report that the defendant is insane.

The trial judge, having been informed that the lunacy commission would find the defendant insane, concluded that it was his duty under the.first paragraph of Act No. 136 of 1932, p. 449, amending and re-enacting article 2GT of the Code of Criminal Procedure, to cause an inquiry to be made as to the question of defendant’s present insanity. And, in order to save time, the trial judge appointed the parish coroner, Dr. W. L. Fisher, and Dr. S. F. Hatchette as a commission to examine tlie defendant, with a view of ordering his commitment to the asylum in the event the court found the defendant insane on the trial of the question of present insanity.

On the day fixed for defendant’s trial, and before it began, and after the lunacy commission had presented their written report to the trial judge declaring that defendant was insane, the four doctors and the trial judge, sitting as a member of the commitment commission, submitted the defendant to a further examination. On the completion of this examination, at which defendant’s counsel were not present, a contradictory insanity hearing was had under the provisions of Act No. 136 of 1932, supra. At this hearing four witnesses testified, namely, Drs. S. O. Turner and J. B. Stanley, members of the lunacy commission, and Drs. W. L. Fisher and S. F. Hatchette, members of the commitment commission. All the witnesses were examined by counsel for the state and for the accused and by the trial judge. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial judge pronounced defendant presently sane, and lie was' immediately tried and convicted on the charge set forth in the indictment.

The trial judge assigned the following reasons for holding that defendant was presently sane, viz.:

“In a proceeding of this kind, we start out with the presumption of the law that the man is sane, until the contrary appears by a fair preponderance of the evidence. - I was present at the examination of this defendant, with all of the doctors -who have testified, and participated in the examination myself. I quite agree with Dr. Hatchette when he testified that nothing the defendant said, taken alone, indicated that he was insane. He conclusively showed a fair knowledge of what was right and wrong. He specifically said it was wrong to steal, wrong to murder, and for some of the things that he has done he expressed regret and sorrow, and said that unless something 'happened, he would be damned in the future for it.
“The defendant told a very connected story, in connection with his own case — coherent and well connected, both as to events and time. The defendant told me, in the presence of the doctors, that he knew he was on trial for his life, and that he would probably, or might be, hung for what he had done. If he answers his counsel as well as he answered *445 the Doctors and me in this examination, I see no reason in the world why he cannot assist in his defense.
“I believe the man to be sane in that degree which is required by law as a condition precedent to trial.
“I express no opinion as to the man’s sanity as a defense in this ease, but I have no -hesitancy in saying that the man at this time appreciates the nature of the proceeding against him, and can assist his counsel in his defense as well as a man might reasonably be expected to do under the circumstances.”

Counsel for defendant excepted to the ruling of the trial judge and to his consideration, in making the ruling, of the examination of defendant out of the presence of his counsel and of any statements or facts not elicited on the trial of the question of defendant’s present insanity.

At the insanity hearing three of the four witnesses examined, viz., Drs. Turner, Stanley and Hatchette testified, unequivocably, that the defendant is insane, suffering from a form of mental deterioration known as neurosyphilis, which is caused by syphilis, and that he was not in a condition to understand the proceeding against him nor to assist his counsel in his defense. These three witnesses qualified as experts on mental diseases. The fourth witness, Dr. Fisher, the parish coroner, testified, over defendant’s objection (no bill reserved), that he was not qualified as an expert, that defendant was capable of sensibly answering any question his counsel might ask him. The witness admitted that he was not an expert on insanity eases, but he had assisted in the examination of many such cases since he has been coroner. He saw defendant only once, which was-during the time defendant was privately examined by Drs. Turner, Stanley, Hatchette, the trial judge, and himself.

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Bluebook (online)
146 So. 17, 176 La. 440, 1933 La. LEXIS 1558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-patterson-la-1933.