State v. Romero

269 N.W.2d 791, 1978 S.D. LEXIS 207
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 7, 1978
Docket12275
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 269 N.W.2d 791 (State v. Romero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota 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. Romero, 269 N.W.2d 791, 1978 S.D. LEXIS 207 (S.D. 1978).

Opinion

WOLLMAN, Justice.

Defendant was charged with first degree burglary and assault with a dangerous weapon. Defendant entered pleas of not guilty and not guilty by reason of mental illness. Following a trial to the court, defendant was found guilty of first degree burglary and of assault and battery. We affirm.

Defendant’s sole contention on appeal is that the evidence was insufficient to support the trial court’s finding that at the time appellant committed the offenses he was not mentally ill nor so intoxicated as to be incapable of forming the specific intent to commit the offenses of which he was found guilty.

Viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the verdict, State v. Geelan, 80 S.D. 135, 120 N.W.2d 533; State v. Henry, 87 S.D. 454, 210 N.W.2d 169, we find that the state’s evidence established that at approximately 1:00 a. m., December 17, 1976, the victim of the offenses, a nineteen year old woman, was awakened while she lay asleep in her Belle Fourche apartment by the sound of footsteps coming up the stairs and a subsequent loud clunking noise at the door to her living room. She walked to her living room and observed an intruder standing in the room in front of the door, which he had apparently closed behind him. Upon receiving no response to her inquiry concerning the intruder’s identity and purpose, the victim began screaming. She ran to the door and unlocked it, whereupon the intruder grabbed her by the arm and began saying over and over, “Your bedroom, your bedroom.” He then produced a pocket knife, opened the blade with his thumb, brought the knife towards the victim in a sideways motion and cut her on the side at a point approximately eight inches above her hip. (The cut was so superficial that the victim was not aware at the time that she had been wounded.) The victim backed away into the corner of the room, and as she cowered there in a squatting position defendant began choking her by pinching her throat between his thumb and forefinger tightly enough to cut off her air, all the while repeating, “Your bedroom, your bedroom.” The victim starting pleading with the intruder not to hurt her, whereupon he released his grip and let her stand up. The victim again started screaming and began pounding on the floor in the hope that she would awaken her downstairs neighbors. The intruder grabbed the victim and again began choking her. She pled with him not to hurt her, whereupon the intruder released his grip, enabling the victim to run from the apartment and summon help. After the police arrived, the victim began driving around town with her parents. She saw a pickup truck driving slowly past her house and observed that the passenger therein appeared to resemble the individual who had been in her apartment a few minutes earlier. The victim and her parents followed the pickup truck to a local cafe, where shortly thereafter she identified the defendant as the person who had broken into her apartment earlier that morning. The victim had seen defendant a number of times prior to this occasion as she walked by his house to use the telephone. The victim *793 testified that defendant’s breath “smelled like he was very, very drunk,” that defendant was unsteady on his feet, and that his speech was slurred.

The officer who was present at the time the victim identified defendant in the cafe testified that although it appeared that defendant had had something to drink, defendant appeared to have no trouble understanding. the officer upon being taken to the sheriff’s office.

Defendant testified that he began drinking beer in various bars in Belle Fourche early during the evening preceding the events giving rise to this prosecution. After depleting his own supply of money, defendant borrowed forty dollars from his employer and resumed his journey from bar to bar. At closing time, defendant rode around town as a passenger in a pickup truck driven by a companion whom defendant had met at some point late in the evening. Defendant testified that he remembered “parking down by my house and I was supposed to go and ask somebody for a date. I remember walking up to the door and knocking on it.” Defendant testified that the next thing he remembered was being at the cafe with his new-found companion and being arrested shortly thereafter. He denied any recollection of the events that occurred between the time that he knocked on the door and the time that he found himself at the cafe. ' Defendant acknowledged that he had seen the victim walk by his house on earlier occasions and that he could recognize her by sight. Defendant testified that he drinks almost every day, that he frequently becomes intoxicated, and that he considers himself an alcoholic.

Testifying in defendant’s behalf, Dr. Donald W. Burnap, a psychiatrist, stated that he believed that defendant had no significant psychiatric illness, with the exception of chronic alcoholism. In response to a hypothetical question based upon the events of the night in question, Dr. Burnap testified that it with his opinion that defendant was experiencing an acute organic brain syndrome, secondary to alcohol, at the time he was alleged to have committed the offenses charged. He further testified that it was his opinion that because of defendant’s intoxication at the time, defendant would not have been able to appropriately distinguish right from wrong, nor would he have been able to form the specific intent to commit the offenses charged. In response to a question during cross-examination regarding defendant’s capacity for violence, Dr. Burnap testified that it was his subjective feeling that defendant would not harm someone else and that he would trust defendant alone with his (Dr. Burnap’s) family-

In rebuttal, the state offered the testimony of Dr. Costas Hercules, a psychiatrist, who testified that he found no evidence of any psychiatric impairment in defendant. His diagnosis was that defendant was suffering from chronic, excessive alcoholism. During his interview with Dr. Hercules, defendant stated that he could not remember anything about the alleged incident. Accordingly, when asked by the state whether he could make any diagnosis concerning defendant’s capacity for knowing the difference between right or wrong or for forming the specific intent at the time of the alleged offenses, Dr. Hercules testified:

I reviewed the information that he provided, and I could form some vague opinion based on that, but I think that kind of decision could be best made by people for [sic] direct testimony and direct evidence about what actually transpired. How he behaved at the time, did there seem to be a logical progression to what he was doing, what kind of interaction took place between him and other people involved. . I think that [whether defendant knew right from wrong at the time] could best be gauged by what actually happened then.

In response to defense counsel’s hypothetical question based upon the facts established by the testimony, Dr. Hercules replied that he could not form an opinion based upon a reasonable medical certainty on the question whether defendant was capable of forming the specific intent re *794 quired of those offenses at the time he was in the victim’s apartment. Dr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 N.W.2d 791, 1978 S.D. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-romero-sd-1978.